Kendrick Lamar and SZA didn’t need to drop a music video for “Luther.” The song has already spent seven weeks at No. 1, anchored Lamar’s Super Bowl set, and become the kind of duet that feels both massive and intimate. But the video, which arrived just ahead of their Grand National Tour, adds something unexpected: quiet.
Directed by Karena Evans — best known for her work with Drake — the “Luther” visual trades spectacle for stillness. Lamar and SZA appear in minimal, almost liminal spaces, paired with love interests but rarely sharing the frame. There’s no big storyline or twist. Instead, the camera lingers. There are long silences, soft colors, and one perfect slow dance, set to the full version of the song’s original sample: Luther Vandross and Cheryl Lynn’s “If This World Were Mine.”
The result is understated but carefully crafted. For Lamar, it’s a subtle shift after months of headline-making highs — from Grammys to diss tracks. For SZA, it’s a quiet exercise in control—anchored more by presence than performance. And for both, “Luther” is a reminder that sometimes the most compelling move is to hold still and let the music speak for itself.
Their tour kicks off next week. The timing couldn’t be better.