Yasiin Bey Joins Kendrick Lamar for a High Energy Performance of "Alright" at Osheaga Festival

Yasiin Bey, watching sidestage during Kendrick's Osheaga set, was pulled into "Alright" and the results are wild.

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Complex Original

Image via Complex Original

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Since its proper unveiling on this year's To Pimp a Butterfly, Kendrick Lamar's "Alright" has slowly but surely grown into the people's anthem — a song with legs stretching months, years, and decades ahead of Kendrick and all those impacted by its message of resilience. The track's fittingly black-and-white video — directed by certified auteur Colin Tilley — is visual poetry at its finest, elevating the already floating track to untold heights. In July, students from Cleveland State University turned the track's empowering hook into a chant of profound protest during a Black Lives Matter event in which local authorities reportedly forced a teenager to the ground before pepper-spraying the surrounding crowd.

Proving those aforementioned decades-long legs, "Alright" added another facet to its legacy this weekend during Kendrick's headlining set at Osheaga Festival. Upon noticing Yasiin Bey (Mos Def) watching sidestage, Kendrick convinced the legend to join him for a contagiously energetic performance of "Alright" — during which Kendrick told the very-into-it audience that Mos Def was the reason he initially wanted to start rapping.

Earlier this year, Yasiin Bey made a point to rebuke rumors he was "banned" from entering the U.S. — revealing he left the country very much on his own accord, and for highly commendable reasons. "As an artist and as a human being, working in the way that I work in the world today,” Yasiin explained during a Beats by Dre interview in May, "it’s really America’s a very challenging place for me. Sure, there’s great business opportunities, familiarity, and all that. But — given the current social, political, economic climate — it’s very difficult. Unnecessarily difficult. To create to the degree of fullness the type of robust creativity that I like to have, it’s very difficult for me to produce that here.”

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