![]() “It was our real life, just captured the right way,” he added. The album, said Kennedy, “was just things that we liked.” Whether it’s a drive down Fairfax Avenue or a block party in Leimert Park, the tone is of an artist welcoming fans to his hometown. ![]() ![]() He invites us into the studio with “Don’t Call Me,” and then takes listeners on a ride on “Gold Alpinas,” a sort of not-so-touristy tour of L.A. Kennedy on the work allows listeners to spend the day with him, in turn seeing L.A. Many of the twenty-something fans at the concert spoke lovingly before the show of how the album captures the essence of Los Angeles. feels like or you’ve never been here, the ‘Yellow Album’ is what you should listen to,” said Niko G4, a longtime Kennedy supporter and OPM signee. The “Yellow Album,” Kennedy said, “put me in the conversation with all the great rappers.” The response to the album further solidified Kennedy’s independent mind-set, and today, a few years removed from it, Kennedy continues to operate as a beloved cult artist on the local scene.Įarlier this summer, Kennedy celebrated its six-year anniversary with a sold-out show at the 2,300-plus capacity Novo downtown. Yet despite Kennedy’s doubts about the album, which features guest appearances from Rick Ross and Freddie Gibbs, along with fellow West Coast rappers Too Short and Kendrick Lamar, the “Yellow Album” turned out to be one of his most celebrated projects.
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