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HiiiPoWeR

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(Redirected fromHiiiPower)
2011 single by Kendrick Lamar

"HiiiPoWeR"
Single byKendrick Lamar
from the albumSection.80
ReleasedApril 12, 2011 (2011-4-12)
Recorded2010
Genre
Length4:41
LabelTop Dawg Entertainment
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)J. Cole
Kendrick Lamar singles chronology
"HiiiPoWeR"
(2011)
"Hood Gone Love It"
(2011)

"HiiiPower" (also stylised as "HiiiPoWeR") is the debut single by American rapperKendrick Lamar which released on April 12, 2011. Theconscious hip-hop song also serves as thelead single from hisindependently released debut album,Section.80 (2011). The song was written by Lamar alongside label cohortAb-Soul, and featuresproduction from rapperJ. Cole and backing vocals from the late singer Alori Joh.

While the album itself garnered positive reviews (achieving aMetacritic score of 80[1] and an XL rating fromXXL[2]), "HiiiPoWeR" also drew significant acclaim for its lyricism and depth.HipHopDX gave it the Verse of the Year award[3] andXXL called it "one of the finest tracks of the year".[2]

Conception

[edit]

The song's production was handled by American rapperJ. Cole. The song containssamples andinterpolations fromPharoahe Monch's "Simon Says" andKanye West's "So Appalled", respectively. Kendrick Lamar had mentioned that when he and J. Cole were creating "HiiiPoWeR" (which marks their first collaboration), he sat in for about 25mixes of the song. When speaking on J. Cole's work on the song, Lamar said, "His production is crazy, man. The first time we locked in, he played about 10 beats. I wanted 11 of 'em."[4] The song includes vocals from American singer-songwriter Alori Joh, who at the time had been working extensively with members of theTop Dawg Entertainment roster.

Movement

[edit]
Lamar performing at theBonnaroo Music Festival, 2012.

Kendrick Lamar and hisBlack Hippy cohortAb-Soul, describe "HiiiPoWeR" as a movement, adding that they treat it as if it were a religion.[5] In an interview, Lamar claims that although it originated in Los Angeles, "HiiiPoWeR" is now "spreading like wildfire." It is a response to the ever-increasing destructive nature of the culture in the US, both the mainstream culture and more importantly thehip-hop culture, which some would say is wallowing at an all-time low since its birth in the 1970s. Lamar continues, to explain that the three 'i's in the word "HiiiPoWeR" stand for heart, honor and respect—the three main things that people should have and live by.[4] In "Ab-Souls Outro", the penultimate track onSection.80, Ab-Soul explains that the purpose of the HiiiPoWeR movement is to help lift a generation in a society that they view as destructive.[6]

Lamar often connects the HiiiPoWeR movement back toTupac Shakur, one of his biggest influences. He claims to have had a dream or hallucination in which Shakur came to him one night and said, "Keep doing what you're doing, don't let my music die." Lamar cites this experience as what inspired him to write the song partly to continue the messages that Shakur tried to carry.[7] The opening of the music video for "HiiiPoWeR" contains a typed paragraph mentioning this encounter. Additionally, towards the end of the song Kendrick Lamar shouts "Thug Life", which is both the name of the hip hop group that Shakur led, and the title of the aforementioned group's debut album, but more importantly it was Shakur's own respective movement.[8]Jay Rock,Schoolboy Q, and Ab-Soul (the other three members of Black Hippy Crew) all support the movement as well, and often shout "HiiiPoWeR" on their own respective songs, such as on Schoolboy Q's "There He Go"[9] and Ab-Soul's "Black Lip Bastard Remix".[10]

Content

[edit]

The song was created to further explain the HiiiPoWeR platform or the ideas driving it. While carrying a strong racial theme, the lyrics contain a mix ofconspiracy theories about the government's involvement in famous murders, criticism of society, and encouragement to build the future.[11]

Kendrick Lamar makes multiple references to high-profile black activists of the 20th century, includingMartin Luther King Jr.,Malcolm X,Marcus Garvey, andFred Hampton. He claims that many of these activists, specifically notingBlack Panther Party's leadersHuey Newton andBobby Seale, lived by the ideals of HiiiPoWeR. His lyrics also connect to the militancy of the Black Panthers by referencingcop-killing ("I got my finger on the mothafuckin' pistol/ Aiming it at a pig, Charlotte's web is gonna miss you"). UsingKurt Cobain's suicide andLauryn Hill's recent troubles as examples, he repeatedly states in the lyrics of the song that society pushes people to act in crazy or evil ways.[11]

Ab-Soul has stated in interviews that he highly influenced the song. He explains that although he didn't write the lyrics or encourage Lamar to write "HiiiPoWeR", the content resulted from "years and years of me talking that shit that nobody wanna to hear, to him".[12]

Music video

[edit]

The music video for "HiiiPoWeR", is composed of a series of short clips and images and is heavily themed around riots. It includes clips of Lamar rapping to the song, news clips of riots andrebellions all over the world, and images of notable figures from history and the media. The opening seconds of the music video contain a glimpse ofMalcolm X holding up three fingers as he speaks.[12] Holding up three fingers is often used as a symbol for the song and HiiiPower movement (when performing the song live, Lamar sometimes has the audience put three fingers in the air).[13] An image in the second half of the music video shows a crowd of people holding up three fingers in the air. Also notable in the video is the common use of images ofpolice brutality. At the two uses of the word "racist" in the song, the video first shows an image ofSean Hannity and then an image ofBill O'Reilly. The video ends with Kendrick Lamar dousing himself in gasoline, and is cut off ashe drops a match on himself.[11] The music video also includes an alleged picture of late hip hop legendTupac Shakur'sautopsy picture, and a picture of the car he was last seen in after he got shot.[11]

Recordings referencing "HiiiPoWeR"

[edit]
FromOverly Dedicated (2010)

On theOverly Dedicated album cut titled "Cut You Off (to Grow Closer)", Lamar delves more deeply into his philosophical views, and how the behavior of those around him affects him. He mentionsNapoleon Hill (author ofThink and Grow Rich) and decried the tearing-down of others that he observes keeping his acquaintances stuck in a negative mind state. At the end of the track, there is a short soliloquy:

HiiiPower is the way we think. The way we live. See it's known today that thehuman race is nothing. Nomorals, nostandards. What we're about to do is raise the level of expectations. No, you don't have to have a lot of money. You don't have to be rich. But you will be rich in mind and spirit. Some say it's big as a crew, some say its big as a gang. We stand for it as if it's a religion.[14]

Quite poignantly, this statement is followed by a song entitled "Heaven & Hell", which is more of a poetic picture than a traditional rap song. It describes two views of black life, and further develops the overall aesthetic of the HiiiPower mission. The track briefly features singer Alori Joh and (uncredited) Ab-Soul shouting in the background.

FromGood Kid, M.A.A.D City (2012)

On the track "Bitch, Don't Kill My Vibe" it is mentioned just briefly in the lyric "Threes in the air, I can see you are in sync".

Release history

[edit]
CountryDateFormatLabel
United StatesApril 12, 2011[15]Top Dawg Entertainment

References

[edit]
  1. ^"Section.80 by Kendrick Lamar".Metacritic. RetrievedApril 16, 2018.
  2. ^ab"Kendrick Lamar, Section.80 – XXL".XXL Mag. July 5, 2011. RetrievedApril 16, 2018.
  3. ^"The 2011 HipHopDX Year End Awards".Hiphopdx.com. Archived fromthe original on January 22, 2014. RetrievedApril 16, 2018.
  4. ^ab"Kendrick Lamar Speaks On The Meaning Behind "HiiiPoWeR," Working With J. Cole".Hiphopdx.com. July 2011. RetrievedApril 16, 2018.
  5. ^Video onYouTube Retrieved September 24, 2012
  6. ^Video onYouTube Retrieved September 24, 2012
  7. ^"Kendrick Lamar Recalls Having A Vision Of Tupac Shakur In His Sleep".Hiphopdx.com. July 13, 2011. RetrievedApril 16, 2018.
  8. ^Video onYouTube Retrieved September 24, 2012
  9. ^ScHoolboy Q – THere He Go onYouTube
  10. ^Video onYouTube Retrieved September 24, 2012
  11. ^abcdKendrick Lamar 'HiiiPOWER' OFFICIAL MUSIC VIDEO onYouTube
  12. ^ab"Ab-Soul Speaks On How He Inspired "HiiiPoWeR," Explains Black Lip Bastard Nickname".Hiphopdx.com. March 13, 2012. RetrievedApril 16, 2018.
  13. ^Video onYouTube Retrieved September 25, 2012
  14. ^Kendrick Lamar – Cut You Off (To Grow Closer) (Overly Dedicated) onYouTube
  15. ^"HiiiPoWer – Single by Kendrick Lamar".iTunes Store.Apple. April 12, 2011. RetrievedSeptember 25, 2012.
Section.80
Good Kid, M.A.A.D City
Deluxe
To Pimp a Butterfly
Untitled Unmastered
Damn
Black Panther
Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers
Drake–Kendrick Lamar feud
GNX
Collaborations withBaby Keem
Featured songs
Other songs
Authority control databasesEdit this at Wikidata
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