Kendrick's Billion-Stream Blitz: Luther, Leaked Collabs, and Ivy League Lessons Podcast By  cover art

Kendrick's Billion-Stream Blitz: Luther, Leaked Collabs, and Ivy League Lessons

Kendrick's Billion-Stream Blitz: Luther, Leaked Collabs, and Ivy League Lessons

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Kendrick Lamar BioSnap a weekly updated Biography.

Kendrick Lamar continues his reign as one of hip-hop’s defining forces, making headlines this week as his blockbuster collaboration with SZA, Luther, shattered records by becoming his fastest song ever to reach a billion streams on Spotify, according to HipHopDX. Having only dropped in November, Luther not only surpassed his previous streaming record set by Not Like Us, but it also marked Kendrick’s eleventh track to enter Spotify’s billion-stream club. This milestone caps off a banner year for the Compton native, who watched Luther spend thirteen straight weeks at number one on the Billboard Hot 100 and dominate the Hip Hop chart for twenty-five weeks.

The celebrations didn’t end there. Kendrick recently swept the BET Awards in Los Angeles, picking up five trophies, including Album of the Year, Best Hip Hop Artist, Best Collaboration, Video of the Year, and Video Director of the Year alongside Dave Free. Lamar used his brief speech at the ceremony to shout out BET for “representing the culture right,” and made a point of rallying his LA crowd and giving props to SZA and his pgLang team, inviting fans to catch them on their ongoing Grand National tour. As reported by Rebel Music and HipHopDX, that tour, launched in April, features Kendrick and SZA playing massive North American stadiums through June before heading to Europe.

Lamar’s influence is also expanding into academia, with Temple University announcing a fall course titled Kendrick Lamar and the Morale of M.A.A.D City, which will dissect both his cultural impact and lyrical prowess. TheGrio highlighted this as a significant recognition, placing Kendrick among artists like Jay-Z and Beyoncé who have had their work studied in major university curricula.

On the music front, Lamar’s collaboration with Clipse has stirred up industry chatter. According to AllHipHop and iHeartRadio, a snippet of their unreleased track Chains & Whips briefly leaked online before being quickly scrubbed—only to reappear across social media and music forums. The track, previewed at a rooftop session with Pharrell, features Kendrick delivering a raw verse on the state of hip hop. Pusha T revealed to GQ that the Clipse were dropped by Def Jam over disputes surrounding Lamar’s uncensored feature, signaling just how potent the collaboration is, both musically and in terms of industry drama.

Kendrick has kept personal social media to a minimum, but his every move is tracked and amplified by fans, with speculation about a new album gaining traction after a surprise appearance at a J. Cole concert earlier this year, as covered on the BioSnap podcast. Rumors of new creative ventures from his collective pgLang, possibly in film or multimedia, persist, hinting at ambitions beyond music.

In summary, this has been a career-defining month for Kendrick Lamar. Whether it’s breaking streaming records, sweeping award shows, making news with unreleased industry-shaking collaborations, or being immortalized in university classrooms, Lamar remains at the center of the culture—his every step watched, critiqued, and celebrated.

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