Noel Gallagher did not like Kendrick Lamar at the Super Bowl
Last Sunday Kendrick Lamar He made history becoming the first solo rapper to perform in the prestigious Halftime Show.
In his show he was joined by Sza and saw the participation of Samuel L. Jackson and Serena Williams.
The Rapper from Compton performed a series of songs taken from his latest “Gnx” work, some pieces of “Damn.” And two Drake’s Navies “Euphoria” and the acclaimed and winner of a grammy “Not like us”.
Lamar’s performance at the Super Bowl has also become the most viewed Halftime Show of the super Bowl, with 133.5 million spectators during the 15 minutes of show.
During the online transmission Talksport, a Noel Gallagher of the Oasis was asked for his opinion on the rapper’s performance. Speaking with the conductors Andy Goldstein and Darren Bent, Gallagher said: “I had to turn off. It was absolute absurdity”.
When he was asked what he didn’t like Lamar’s performance, the English artist replied: “I didn’t look at it everything, I just turned off. There were like 300 people who went down from a car in the first two minutes “. And he continued: “But no, I don’t like the nonsense of the interval, they are usually the artists I don’t like.” When he was asked what his favorite performances were in the Super Bowl interval, Gallagher admitted: “I never look at him, I don’t care”.
Gallagher also spoke of his concerns about the future of the situation of sport, football in particular: “The Americans are taking over our sport, they are taking over the Premier League, they will take over the Champions League, trust me, in 20 years it will be everything meaningless “.
Lamar’s performance (which in July will arrive in Italy for a concert with Sza) received conflicting reactions from fans and spectators. Some called it a “masterpiece”, while others have considered it the “worst performance at the super bowl of the last decade”.
Unlike Gallagher, Kanye West He revealed that he liked Kendrick Lamar’s Super Bowl Halftime Show, even calling him his “favorite” after the historic performance of Michael Jackson of 1993.