Kendrick Lamar opened his The Pop Out — Ken & Friends Juneteenth concert at LA’s Kia Forum by delivering the live debut of “Euphoria,” one of his Drake diss tracks from this spring, and adding another ruthless bar to it.
Somehow, The Pop Out got better from there.
Lamar staged a long-awaited Black Hippy reunion. One by one, he was joined on stage by Jay Rock, Ab-Soul, and Schoolboy Q. They performed a medley of songs, including “Money Trees,” “Win,” “King’s Dead,” “6:16 In LA,” “Collard Greens,” “That Part,” and “King Kunta.”
BLACK HIPPY REUNITES AT THE POP OUT pic.twitter.com/0BKMjR1vLB
— Complex Music (@ComplexMusic) June 20, 2024
Kendrick Lamar and ScHoolBoy Q perform “That Part” at the Pop Outpic.twitter.com/xM217sW9D3
— Complex Music (@ComplexMusic) June 20, 2024
Kendrick Lamar performing “6:16 IN LA”pic.twitter.com/VEWTz53H7b
— Complex Music (@ComplexMusic) June 20, 2024
Kendrick Lamar and Jay Rock perform “Money Trees” at The Pop Out
pic.twitter.com/dHgoMndNRm— Complex Music (@ComplexMusic) June 20, 2024
Kendrick, ScHoolboy Q, Jay Rock and Ab Soul on stage together pic.twitter.com/V7Ct4Z1qJH
— Moh (@LessIsMoh) June 20, 2024
Kendrick brought out Jay Rock for Money Trees bruh. I’m in 2012 again.
TEARS IN MY EYES. pic.twitter.com/NN790s3oi7
— Big Boss (@LordBalvin) June 20, 2024
KENDRICK LAMAR x JAY ROCK
MONEY TREESKENDRICK LAMAR’S
POP OUT CONCERTLIVE AT THE FORUMpic.twitter.com/SE6aQ8OVmD
— NFR Podcast (@nfr_podcast) June 20, 2024
(with Ab-Soul on stage)
— Kurrco (@Kurrco) June 20, 2024
Black Hippy, a Top Dawg Entertainment (TDE) supergroup formed in the late 2000s, never released a full group LP, though it remained a vague possibility as of March 2023.
In February 2022, Terrance Louis “Punch” Henderson discussed Black Hippy never releasing an album during an interview with Mic.
“We definitely wanted to do a Black Hippy album,” Punch said. “But it was such a learning experience for us, everything was new. The timing never really panned out. When one guy would be recording his album, another guy would be on tour. Everybody was never in the same timeframe. So we didn’t want to hold back; we wanted to keep going and just push further into their individual careers. In hindsight, I wish I would’ve pushed the Black Hippy album more. That was always my goal, personally. You would have to ask everybody individually to see if that’s what their goal was.”