"Humble" was the first song to be recorded for Damn.[10] The beat for "Humble" was developed by Mike Will Made It, with the intention of recording the song with
Gucci Mane. However, the song was later shown to Lamar. After recording, it was initially agreed upon that it would be released on Mike Will Made's debut album Ransom 2, but others convinced Lamar to keep it for his upcoming album.[10]
Critical reception
On the day of its release Pitchfork named it Best New Track, noting that, "[Humble] is a hard-nosed G check of his lessers, that pivots into imperfect critiques of beauty standards".[11]NPR's Andrew Flanagan thought, "the song, less exploration of contrition on the part of Lamar than an instruction to his peers, picks up a thread NPR Music first examined following that album teaser: how the 'best rapper alive' might explore the theme of God, religion and personal growth."[12] For Alex Young of Consequence of Sound, "it's got all the ingredients of a proper lead single: a
Mike WiLL Made It-produced beat built on piano and 808 bass, a chorus you can spit along to ('Sit down/ Be humble'), and shoutouts to Grey Poupon and the
former president."[13] Writing for The Guardian, Harriet Gibson explained how the song is, "sparse and rigid, beginning with the crunching swipes of an electric guitar, and is led by beats and sinister stabs of piano. It is a showcase for his authoritative lyricism and preacher-like message, while the instrumentation is far from the complex jazz and funk sounds of To Pimp a Butterfly... In fact, Humble has more in common with
grime's
minimalism than it does the vintage stylings of his recent output."[14]
Entertainment Weekly labelled it the best song of the year.[15]Rolling Stone considered it the third-best,[16] and Billboard the sixth.[17] In 2018, Billboard ranked the song number one on their list of the 20 greatest Kendrick Lamar songs,[18] and in 2021, Rolling Stone ranked the song number eight on their list of the 50 greatest Kendrick Lamar songs.[19]
Chart performance
"Humble" debuted at number two and later peaked at number one on the US
Billboard Hot 100, becoming Lamar's first number one and highest-charting single as a lead artist, surpassing "
Swimming Pools (Drank)", which peaked at number 17 in 2012.[20][21] It became his second number one single overall after "
Bad Blood", by
Taylor Swift featuring Lamar. It was also his fourth top 10 single, and marked the highest debut for a hip hop song since "
Love the Way You Lie" by
Eminem featuring
Rihanna. Selling well over 111,000 copies in its first week, "Humble" became Kendrick Lamar's second number one on the
Digital Songs chart, following "Bad Blood".[20] The song was at number 1 on the Hot 100 for one week but was replaced by
Bruno Mars's "
That's What I Like" on May 1, 2017. The song spent its first 15 weeks in the top 10 of the Hot 100, before dropping to number 11 on the week dated August 5, 2017.[22] "Humble" is the only rap song in 2017 to sell over 1,000,000 digital copies and its certified 14× platinum in the United States.[23]
The song also peaked at number one in New Zealand, number two in Australia (where it was later voted into first place in the
Triple J Hottest 100, 2017) and Canada, and reached the top 10 in Ireland and the UK.
Music video
Directed by
Dave Meyers and The Little Homies and released on March 30, 2017, on Kendrick Lamar's
Vevo account,[24] the song's accompanying
music video starts with Lamar dressed like the
pope in a
cope, before then showing Lamar in all black lying on a table of money, "ignorantly" shooting loads of bills from a cash cannon. It also features a reenactment of
Leonardo da Vinci's 15th-century painting, The Last Supper, with Lamar sitting in Jesus' chair as his disciples "unappreciatively" gorge on wine and bread.[25] He is also seen teeing off on top of a car, passing mustard between cars mimicking a
Grey Poupon commercial and at one point the top of his head is in flames.[26] Fellow
TDE rapper
Jay Rock and producer
Sounwave appear in the video alongside other TDE members.
Reviewing the music video, Billboard editor Brad Wete thought it "is a poignant exercise in irony and is also filled with messaging that could be perceived as anti-conformist." He concluded saying "His raps are filterless; he tells it like it is. So it's no surprise that this dynamic video is essentially what Lamar is as an artist: balanced with a clear message."[25] Althea Legaspi of Rolling Stone described it as "richly symbolic."[26] For Harriet Gibson of The Guardian, "the brilliantly cinematic video, with its fish-eye lens and cartoonish stylising, recalls classic
Hype Williams, and leads the viewer through these passages of assignation, fleshing out Lamar's ideas. It breathes life into a song that would hardly be considered his greatest creation, but neatly lays out a mood of intent."[14] Matt Miller of Esquire opined about the rapper's videography: "in recent years, Kendrick Lamar has revived the music video as a powerful form of social commentary."[27] The music video has ammased over 900 million views on
YouTube as of April 2023, becoming Lamar's most viewed video on his channel.[28]
A remix of the song is also featured in the teaser trailer for Shazam!.[citation needed]
The song was featured in the
Super Bowl LVI halftime show trailer, but was not performed during its halftime show.
Remixes
Many remixes have been made, including by singer
Ne-Yo, released on May 3, 2017,[36] and by electronic dance music producer
Skrillex, released on September 22, 2017.[37]
^"
ČNS IFPI" (in Czech). Hitparáda – Digital Top 100 Oficiální. IFPI Czech Republic. Note: Change the chart to CZ – SINGLES DIGITAL – TOP 100 and insert 201716 into search. Retrieved April 25, 2017.
^"
ČNS IFPI" (in Slovak). Hitparáda – Singles Digital Top 100 Oficiálna. IFPI Czech Republic. Note: Select SINGLES DIGITAL - TOP 100 and insert 201716 into search. Retrieved April 25, 2017.