The track doesn't exist because two record labels couldn't clear the sample. But emotionally? It exists every time Kendrick Lamar turns a mirror on his audience and asks, "Do you love me? Are you playing a role? Or are you just somebody that I used to know?" So, the next time you open Spotify or YouTube Music and type in "Kendrick Lamar - Somebody That I Used to Know," you will likely find nothing official. You will be met with silence, a few reaction videos, and a fan-edit that sounds like it was recorded in a drainpipe.
For the uninitiated, a frantic search yields confusion. You find the Gotye track featuring Kimbra—the 2011 indie pop anthem about a bitter, dissolved relationship. You find the three-part rap epic Sing About Me, I'm Dying of Thirst from Lamar’s good kid, m.A.A.d city , which famously samples the phrase. But you do not find a studio recording of Kendrick Lamar rapping over the xylophone plucks of Gotye’s hit. Kendrick Lamar - Somebody That I Used To Know -...
Kendrick Lamar’s greatest trick is making you search for a version of himself that no longer exists. He killed K. Dot. He buried the good kid in a m.A.A.d city . The man holding the Pulitzer is not the boy who wrote Section.80 . The track doesn't exist because two record labels
This article dissects why this mashup exists only in our heads, how Kendrick Lamar has actually addressed the theme of fractured identity, and why Gotye’s 2011 anthem is the perfect, albeit accidental, skeleton key to unlocking the Compton rapper’s darkest lyrical corridors. Let’s address the algorithm first. For several years, a popular bootleg audio file circulated on YouTube titled "Kendrick Lamar - Somebody That I Used To Know (Gotye Cover)." It garnered millions of views before being repeatedly taken down for copyright infringement. The audio, however, was not Kendrick. It was usually a fan-made mashup, layering an acapella of Kendrick’s verse from The City (with The Game) or Rigamortus over an off-key remix of the Gotye instrumental. Are you playing a role
But beneath the SEO noise lies a profound literary truth: The Theme: Lyricism of the Fractured Self Gotye’s original song is a duet about a romantic breakup where blame is a boomerang. You cut me off, I felt used, but wait—you say I left you with nothing. It is a perfect loop of resentment.