Peekaboo

Album: GNX (2024)
Charted: 13
Play Video

Songfacts®:

  • "Peekaboo" is both playful and menacing, equal parts children's game and cutting critique. The title suggests a disarming innocence, though in Kendrick Lamar's hands, it becomes a layered metaphor. Sure, it evokes the classic game of surprise and delight, but here it's tinged with menace, as if the next thing peeking out might be something - or someone - far more disruptive than you bargained for. The word bounces through the song like a rubber ball in a hallway, introducing punchlines, critiques, and unexpected shifts in tone.
  • At its heart, the song is a commentary on the music industry's obsession with façades. Lamar uses "Peekaboo" as a symbol for the act of exposing hidden truths - calling out phoniness, especially among social media-savvy rappers whose carefully curated personas are a house of cards waiting to tumble. The chorus crystallizes this disdain:

    What they talkin' 'bout? They ain't talkin' 'bout nothin'
    Huh? They ain't talkin' 'bout nothin', hm


    This refrain, borrowing from Lecrae's 2024 track "Nuthin'," underlines Lamar's point with a kind of withering nonchalance. The interpolation serves to reinforce K-Dot's critique of superficiality in rap, using a similar refrain to emphasize his point about the lack of substance in some contemporary hip-hop.
  • Lamar trades bars with AzChike, a South Central LA rapper whose gravelly delivery acts as a counterweight to Lamar's nimble flow. The back-and-forth between them mirrors the song's themes of duality - playfulness versus aggression, surface versus substance.
  • Originally, AzChike was meant to perform the song's hook, but he reportedly found its rapid-fire cadence a challenge, leaving Lamar to take the reins.
  • Speaking on Brown Bag Mornings on Power 106, AzChike shared that not only did he record verses that didn't make the final cut of the song, but Lamar had him in mind from the very start.

    "'Peekaboo' was a lot longer than what you hear now, but I think he just recorded more to have extra material to work with," AzChike explained. "When he played it for me, his parts were already done, and for the sections I was supposed to be on, he was mumbling in my style of rapping. He said, 'That's you right there.'"

    AzChike added, "He told me straight up, 'Rap, bro. Just rap... When people hear this, they're gonna ask, who the f--k is this?'"
  • Musically, the track opens with a sample of R&B artist Little Beaver's "Give Me a Helping Hand," a soulful plea for community that feels almost like a bait-and-switch. It lulls you into a false sense of comfort before the skeletal, bouncy beat kicks in, courtesy of Sounwave, Scott Bridgeway, and Sean Momberger.
  • Lamar's career arc, like the song, is a study in controlled appearances. The title "Peekaboo" could just as easily describe his approach to fame: he emerges on his own terms, shakes up the industry, then disappears into the ether.
  • "Peekaboo" was one of the songs Kendrick performed when he headlined the 2025 Super Bowl halftime show, which was done on a stage designed to look like a video game controller.

Comments

Be the first to comment...

Editor's Picks

"Stairway To Heaven" Lawsuit: A Timeline

"Stairway To Heaven" Lawsuit: A TimelineSong Writing

Untangling the events that led to the "Stairway To Heaven" lawsuit.

Janet Jackson

Janet JacksonFact or Fiction

Was Janet secretly married at 18? Did she gain 60 pounds for a movie role that went to Mariah Carey? See what you know about Ms. Jackson.

Howard Jones

Howard JonesSongwriter Interviews

Howard explains his positive songwriting method and how uplifting songs can carry a deeper message.

Paul Williams

Paul WilliamsSongwriter Interviews

He's a singer and an actor, but as a songwriter Paul helped make Kermit a cultured frog, turned a bank commercial into a huge hit and made love both "exciting and new" and "soft as an easy chair."

Songs Discussed in Movies

Songs Discussed in MoviesSong Writing

Bridesmaids, Reservoir Dogs, Willy Wonka - just a few of the flicks where characters discuss specific songs, sometimes as a prelude to murder.

Rick Astley

Rick AstleySongwriter Interviews

Rick Astley on "Never Gonna Give You Up," "Cry For Help," and his remarkable resurgence that gave him another #1 UK album.