
Kendrick Lamar’s GNX removed from streaming was the last thing fans expected to wake up to on May 11. The Grammy-winning album disappeared without warning from several major platforms, triggering widespread confusion across social media and music communities. As of the morning of May 11, the album was unavailable on Apple Music, Tidal, Amazon Music, and YouTube Music. At the same time, multiple related videos vanished from YouTube, deepening the mystery further. Neither Lamar, his creative company pgLang, nor Interscope Records has offered a public explanation.
What exactly disappeared and when
The removals hit more than just the album itself. Among the affected content were the official music videos for “Not Like Us” and “luther,” Lamar’s collaboration with SZA. Both clips briefly displayed a notice indicating they had been removed by the uploader. However, the “luther” visual quietly returned to YouTube within a few hours. Later, “Not Like Us” also came back online. By the time those updates landed, GNX had also returned to Apple Music. Still, the window during which one of the most talked-about rap albums of recent years simply ceased to exist on major platforms left fans and industry observers unsettled.
Why the simultaneous removal matters
The fact that the content vanished across multiple platforms at once is the detail that has fueled the most speculation. A single platform outage or a localized technical glitch would not explain removals on Apple Music, Tidal, Amazon Music, and YouTube Music happening at the same time. That kind of simultaneous disappearance typically points toward a distributor-level change or a temporary rights-management conflict rather than any isolated error. Nevertheless, without a statement from any of the parties involved, the exact cause remains unknown. The pattern raises more questions than it answers.
Why GNX disappearing is such a big deal
To understand why this story moved so fast, it helps to remember what GNX meant when it arrived. Lamar dropped the album as a surprise release on November 22, 2024, through pgLang and Interscope his first project since departing from Top Dawg Entertainment and Aftermath. It debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 and immediately established itself as one of the defining rap releases of the year.
Commercially, the album delivered some of Lamar’s biggest moments since Mr. Morale and the Big Steppers. Both “Squabble Up” and “luther” reached No. 1 on the Billboard Hot 100. “TV Off” peaked at No. 2. “Peekaboo” became a sustained streaming favorite and helped the project maintain momentum well into 2025.
The Grammy wins that sealed GNX’s legacy
Awards season only added to the album’s stature. At the 68th Grammy Awards, GNX earned eight nominations and walked away with four wins. The victories included Best Rap Album for the project itself. “luther” took home Record of the Year and Best Melodic Rap Performance. “TV Off” won Best Rap Song. Together, those wins pushed Lamar’s total Grammy count to 27, officially making him the most awarded rapper in Grammy history.
Given that weight, the idea of GNX simply disappearing from the internet even briefly felt jarring to the fans and critics who have spent months revisiting the album.
What happens next
Both the album and the affected videos have returned to their respective platforms as of the latest updates. However, the episode has left a lingering sense of unease among fans who want to understand what actually happened. A rights-management dispute, a distributor error, or a deliberate but unexplained removal are all still on the table as possibilities. Until pgLang, Interscope, or Lamar himself addresses the situation directly, the full picture remains incomplete.
For now, GNX is back where it belongs streaming freely on the platforms that made it one of the most played albums of the past year. The mystery of why it left, however, is still very much open.
Source: InMusic




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