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When it was his turn to take the stage, the 37-year-old rapper powered through a set with Black Hippy collaborators Schoolboy Q, Ab-Soul and Jay Rock, performed his Drake diss songs “Euphoria ...
This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 21 December 2024. Ongoing hip-hop feud Drake–Kendrick Lamar feud Drake in 2016 Lamar in 2018 Date March 22, 2024 – present (8 months, 4 weeks and 1 day) Medium Diss tracks Status Ongoing; several publications have labeled Lamar as the victor but the details are debated. Parties Drake J. Cole (until ...
Drake also dropped a music video alongside the song, which shows a red minivan, similar to that on the cover of Lamar's "good kid, m.A.A.d city" being driven across the border to Canada and destroyed.
Kendrick Lamar marked his debut live performance of his viral Drake diss tracks with a star-studded one-off concert titled "The Pop Out -- Ken and Friends." The Juneteenth concert, presented by ...
"Fuckin' Problems" is a song by American rapper ASAP Rocky, featuring Canadian rapper Drake and fellow American rappers 2 Chainz and Kendrick Lamar. It was released on October 24, 2012, as the second single from Rocky's debut studio album Long. Live. ASAP (2013), and was later released to radio on November 27, 2012.
"The Heart" is the title of a series of songs by Kendrick Lamar, starting with "The Heart Part 1" in 2010. "The Heart Part 5" was released in 2022.In May 2024, during the public feud between Lamar and Canadian rapper Drake, Drake released a diss track against Lamar titled "The Heart Part 6"; Billboard magazine wrote this was Drake using Lamar's own song titles against him.
The title is once again pointed as it nods to a favoured theme in Drake’s work, seen in songs such as “9am in Dallas”, “8am in Charlotte” and “4pm in Calabas”.
On July 4, 2024, Lamar released the music video of his diss track aimed at Canadian rapper Drake, titled "Not Like Us". He started out the video by adding a 15-second snippet of a then-untitled song, [2] as he makes his way down a dark hallway. [3] Due to the usage of the word, the song became subsequently known as "Broccoli" or "Broccoli ...