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Home Kendrick Lamar

Where Did Kendrick Lamar Grow Up?

by Lisa Ellis
2020/10/06

Kendrick Lamar is a Grammy-winning American rapper, songwriter and producer who is known for his critically acclaimed albums like ‘Good Kid, M.A.A.D City’ and ‘Damn.’ While Lamar has achieved unparalleled success in the music industry as an adult, not much is known about his upbringing. This leads to the question: Where did Kendrick Lamar grow up? 

Kendrick Lamar was born and raised in Compton, a city in southern Los Angeles county, California. Lamar grew up around gang activity and has drawn on his upbringing throughout his musical career, which he began in Compton. As a successful rapper, Lamar left Compton for Los Angeles, California. 

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What’s your favourite brand?

A post shared by Kendrick Lamar (@kendricksworld) on Jul 25, 2020 at 3:19pm PDT

Read more about Kendrick Lamar’s childhood and teenage years in Compton, how his upbringing surrounded by gang culture impacted his musical career, and where Lamar lives now. 

A Compton Child 

Kendrick Lamar Duckworth was born in the city of Compton, California, on June 17th 1987. 

In Compton, Lamar grew up on welfare and section 8 housing together with his parents, who had moved to Compton from Chicago before Lamar was born. 

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Lamar’s upbringing in Compton was marked by the fact that he was always surrounded by precarious street activity. 

Lamar grew up around gang members, as his friends and father, Kenny Duckworth, were members of the notorious Gangster Disciples. 

And yet, Lamar was never in a gang himself, and instead focussed on his education. 

He was known to teachers as being a good student, who was quiet, shy and well-behaved at school. 

He attended McNair Elementary and Vanguard Learning Center in the Compton Unified School District, and later Centennial Middle School in Compton, where he was a straight-A student. 

As a young boy, Lamar became interested in writing stories and poems about his upbringing in Compton. 

Later on, Lamar discovered the socially-critical music of Tupac and Dr.Dre, which motivated him to move into songwriting. This is why he started writing and subsequently performing his own rap music under the moniker ‘K-Dot’ around Compton as a teenager. 

In drawing on Compton and the gang culture he grew up surrounded by, Lamar’s music steadily started gaining popularity in the local music scene in Compton. 

A Rapper from Compton

In the following years, Lamar kept on working on his music: For example, when Lamar was 16, he released his first mixtape called ‘Youngest Head N**** in Charge’, which reflected on his experiences growing up in Compton.

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I got, I got, I got, I got— Loyalty, got royalty inside my DNA Cocaine quarter piece, got war and peace inside my DNA I got power, poison, pain and joy inside my DNA I got hustle though, ambition flow inside my DNA I was born like this, since one like this, immaculate conception I transform like this, perform like this, was Yeshua new weapon I don't contemplate, I meditate, then off your fucking head This that put-the-kids-to-bed This that I got, I got, I got, I got— Realness, I just kill shit ’cause it's in my DNA I got millions, I got riches buildin' in my DNA I got dark, I got evil, that rot inside my DNA I got off, I got troublesome heart inside my DNA I just win again, then win again like Wimbledon, I serve Yeah, that’s him again, the sound that engine in is like a bird You see fireworks and Corvette tire skrrt the boulevard I know how you work, I know just who you are See, you's a, you's a, you's a— Bitch, your hormones prolly switch inside your DNA Problem is, all that sucker shit inside your DNA Daddy prolly snitched, heritage inside your DNA Backbone don't exist, born outside a jellyfish, I gauge See, my pedigree most definitely don't tolerate the front Shit I've been through prolly offend you, this is Paula's oldest son I know murder, conviction Burners, boosters, burglars, ballers, dead, redemption Scholars, fathers dead with kids and I wish I was fed forgiveness Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, soldier’s DNA (I’m a soldier's DNA) Born inside the beast, my expertise checked out in second grade When I was 9, on cell, motel, we didn’t have nowhere to stay At 29, I've done so well, hit cartwheel in my estate And I'm gon' shine like I’m supposed to, antisocial extrovert And excellent mean the extra work And absentness what the fuck you heard And pessimists never struck my nerve And Nazareth gonna plead his case The reason my power's here on earth Salute the truth, when the prophet say

A post shared by Kendrick Lamar (@kendricksworld) on Jun 30, 2020 at 2:49pm PDT

Gaining further and increased recognition, Lamar kept drawing on his childhood in Compton with further mixtapes entitled ‘Training Day’ (2005) and ‘C4’ (2009), which ultimately led to Dr. Dre signing him under his own label. 

Lamar published his first album ‘Good Kid, M.A.A.D. City’ 2012, which became an instant success. This album was also met with critical acclaim, and begun Lamar’s astronomical career in music. 

In this album in particular, Lamar heavily meditated on the city of Compton. 

Lamar then went on to release further albums like ‘To Pimp a Butterfly’ (2015) and ‘DAMN’ (2017), both of which won him the Grammy for Best Rap Album and solidified his status  as a rap star. 

‘DAMN’ even historically won Lamar the Pulitzer Prize in 2018, on the grounds that it  uniquely captured the complexities of African-American life. 

While Lamar has since moved to Los Angeles, where he can better follow his musical career, he has remained loyal to Compton. To recognize that as well as his exceptional talent, Lamar received the California State Senate’s Generational Icon Award in 2015. 

This shows that throughout his career, Lamar has continued to be inspired by his upbringing in Compton. This only leaves us to wonder what issues and personal topics Lamar’s music will tackle next. 

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