But do not be disappointed. The absence of the track is the point.
But beneath the SEO noise lies a profound literary truth: The Theme: Lyricism of the Fractured Self Gotye’s original song is a duet about a romantic breakup where blame is a boomerang. You cut me off, I felt used, but wait—you say I left you with nothing. It is a perfect loop of resentment.
And yet, the search persists.
The track doesn't exist because two record labels couldn't clear the sample. But emotionally? It exists every time Kendrick Lamar turns a mirror on his audience and asks, "Do you love me? Are you playing a role? Or are you just somebody that I used to know?" So, the next time you open Spotify or YouTube Music and type in "Kendrick Lamar - Somebody That I Used to Know," you will likely find nothing official. You will be met with silence, a few reaction videos, and a fan-edit that sounds like it was recorded in a drainpipe.
If you’ve spent any time on the lyrical side of the internet—specifically the murky waters of YouTube comments, Reddit forums, or Spotify’s "Song Radio"—you have likely stumbled upon a phantom track. It sits in the uncanny valley of music discovery. The title is tantalizingly familiar: Kendrick Lamar - Somebody That I Used to Know .
Why? Because in the collective imagination of hip-hop fans, this song should exist. The phantom "Kendrick Lamar - Somebody That I Used to Know" is not a real track; it is a Rorschach test for thematic obsession. It is the sound of two disparate artistic universes colliding to describe a uniquely modern condition: the haunting realization that the person you have become is a stranger to the person you were.