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The official music video for "Falling Back", directed by Director X, premiered alongside the release of the song and album on June 17, 2022. [9] It sees Drake marrying 23 different women. Canadian-American professional basketball player Tristan Thompson makes an appearance as his best man and Drake's mother, Sandi Graham, also makes an ...
Drake also revealed during the show that he was working on Scary Hours 3. [8] The album is dedicated to American fashion designer Virgil Abloh, who died in 2021. [9] [10] A music video for "Falling Back" was released alongside the album. [11] [12] Directed by Director X, the official music
"One Dance" is a dancehall, [24] [25] afrobeats, [26] pop [27] and UK funky song [28] with a length of two minutes and fifty-four seconds. The song is Drake's first dancehall single as the lead artist, having previously explored the genre in his 2015 mixtape, If You're Reading This It's Too Late and in the January 2016 single "Work" with Rihanna.
Drake fans are making mashups of the rapper dancing to every type of tunes
According to Charles Holmes at Rolling Stone, the song "sounds like Drake featuring Drake", further explaining that the song "is the embodiment of what happens when you surround real Drake with a room full of past Drakes, like a tortured Canadian reboot of Being John Malkovich". [7]
Drake seemingly responded after an alleged NSFW video of himself made waves online. During his concert in Nashville, Tennessee, on Thursday, February 9, Drake, 37, appeared to poke fun at the ...
The sound of the song was described as "Memphis-flavored" and was noted for its "rare" rap elements on an album full of dance songs. [ 4 ] [ 5 ] References include NBA duo Shaquille O'Neal and the late Kobe Bryant , as well as the slapping incident of Will Smith and Chris Rock at the 94th Academy Awards . [ 5 ]
HipHopDX said "Massive" was the album's "clearest radio smash". [4] Evening Standard said the song is "the cheesiest moment" on the album. [5] Variety noted the song's funeral theme and "concluded that the song’s mood casts it as a wry aside, rather than, well, sociopathic".