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Drake posted a parody of "Buried Alive Interlude", a song recorded by Lamar for Drake's Take Care (2011), on Instagram on the same day. In the parody, Drake mocks Lamar's performance on the original song and disses him, claiming Lamar is jealous of his success. [5] "Family Matters" was released later that day with an accompanying music video.
[8] [9] In the song "Family Matters", Drake further antagonizes Metro, directly calling him out in the song once again. [10] [11] Rick Ross coined the phrase BBL Drizzy, ironizing about a rumor that Drake received plastic surgery on his abs and on his nose, using the slang term "BBL", which is an acronym to Brazilian butt lift. Drake referred ...
The war of words wages on between Drake and Kendrick Lamar, and this time it’s personal. After the latter released his new diss track entitled “6:16 in LA” earlier this morning, both rappers ...
Produced by the Alchemist, "Meet the Grahams", unlike Lamar's previous responses, takes on an unsettling, haunting atmosphere, with an eerie piano-driven beat, sampled from Timothy Carpenter & Triunity's "I Want To Make It", accompanying critical lyrics accusing Drake of a number of wrongdoings including parental negligence, sexual exploitation, sexual grooming, sex trafficking, and another ...
Around 11:30 p.m. ET that same night, Drake released “Family Matters,” a nearly-eight-minute track. In the song, he alleged that Free — Lamar’s friend, manager and creative partner — was ...
A month later, Drake released two tracks, “Push Ups” and “Taylor Made Freestyle.” Both contained digs at Lamar. In “Push Ups,” Drake digs at Lamar’s short stature — the rapper is 5 ...
Drake mentioned Metro Boomin by his legal name in “Family Matters,” calling him “lame” and also alleging that he influenced disagreements between Drake and Future.
The point of the game is to shoot as many Grammy Award trophies into Kendrick’s mouth as possible. As the levels go up, so does the game’s difficulty with Kendrick’s head moving from side-to-side with a digitized version of the “Family Matters” instrumental playing in the background.}}