Taylor Swift - Bad Blood -feat. Kendrick Lamar-... Direct
However, the irony is thick. The song is about refusing to forgive, yet time has softened the original conflict. Swift and Katy Perry eventually reconciled, appearing in each other’s music videos and sending each other literal olive branches. The "bad blood" evaporated. Yet the song remains.
The remix’s impact was cemented by its accompanying music video, directed by Swift herself. If the audio was a clash of genres, the video was a clash of aesthetics. The "Bad Blood" video is a cyberpunk fever dream—a dystopian Los Angeles where Swift plays a leather-clad assassin named "Catastrophe" leading a team of supermodels (Selena Gomez, Zendaya, Lily Aldridge, etc.) against a rival gang led by a boxer-braided, katana-wielding antagonist played by Mariska Hargitay.
Suddenly, the song is no longer about a catfight over choreography. It becomes a treatise on authenticity. Lamar accuses the antagonist of being a mirage, a hologram. He flips the script: Swift may feel like a victim, but Lamar suggests she walked into a trap because she ignored the signs. His delivery is manic, breathless, and percussive—a stark contrast to Swift’s measured, robotic chorus. He introduces imagery Swift would never touch: "Gunshots and rewind / Turntables and my time." Taylor Swift - Bad Blood -feat. Kendrick Lamar-...
Notably, Kendrick Lamar does not appear in the video. This absence is telling. The video belongs to Swift’s cinematic universe of vengeance, where the resolution is a slow-motion explosion. Lamar’s voice is the conscience the visuals ignore. While Swift blows up a truck, Lamar is back in the recording booth asking, "If you're about to do damage, then you need a manager."
Musically, the remix is a masterclass in tension. Producer Max Martin and Shellback kept the core synth riff intact but stripped back the verses to give Lamar room to breathe. The bass becomes deeper, more ominous. When Lamar spits "Remember when you tried to write a different story for the paparazzi?" , the beat stutters and contracts, mimicking a heart skipping a beat or a gun jamming. However, the irony is thick
In retrospect, "Bad Blood (feat. Kendrick Lamar)" is a fascinating artifact of the 2010s. It represents a moment before the "Taylor Swift vs. the world" narrative curdled. Here, she was still the victor, celebrating her grudge with a party. It also represents a rare moment where a pop star ceded narrative control to a rapper and saw the song improve dramatically.
This is not a "feature" in the modern sense—where a rapper shows up for 16 bars to collect a check. This is a duet of adversaries. Swift handles the chorus, which in the remix sounds less like a pop hook and more like a distress signal. Lamar handles the verses, acting as the cynical, battle-hardened general who has seen this betrayal a hundred times before. They never sing together, but they speak at each other across the divide of the drum machine. The "bad blood" evaporated
It is also, frankly, a little bloodless. The original "Bad Blood" is a victim narrative—Swift is the wronged party, staring from a skyscraper window as her adversary drives away. It lacks grit. Enter Kendrick Lamar.