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"Worst Behavior" was produced by Los Angeles–based producer DJ Dahi, best known at the time for producing Schoolboy Q's "Sexting" and Kendrick Lamar "Money Trees". [1] DJ Dahi spoke to MTV about the collaboration saying his manager sent the beat to Drake in mid-August 2013 before Drake announced the album's pushed back release date.
Dark Lane Demo Tapes is the sixth mixtape by Canadian rapper Drake.The mixtape is a compilation of songs that were released on SoundCloud or leaked on the internet, as well as new songs, and is considered a "warm-up" to Drake's sixth studio album Certified Lover Boy (2021). [2]
Regarding the general view that Drake introduced singing in mainstream hip-hop, the publication said that at the height of Auto-Tune in hip-hop during the late 2000s, "there were virtually no artists who were both a legit rapper and a legit crooner who delivered velvety smooth pop/R&B hybrid vocals that could exist separately from his hip-hop ...
In the United Kingdom, the album debuted at number one on the UK Albums Chart, with 78,000 sales, becoming Drake's first number-one on that chart. [85] With Views , Drake also joined Adele, Michael Bublé , and Taylor Swift as the only artists in the 2010s decade to have an album remain at number one on the Billboard 200 for six consecutive ...
Honestly, Nevermind is the seventh studio album by Canadian rapper Drake, which was surprise-released on June 17, 2022, through OVO Sound and Republic Records.The album includes a sole guest feature from 21 Savage, and production from a variety of producers, including Gordo, Black Coffee, and frequent collaborator 40.
"Too Much" is a song by Canadian hip hop recording artist Drake from his third studio album Nothing Was the Same (2013). "Too Much" features vocals from English singer Sampha and contains samples from his track of the same name.
In a review of Her Loss, Vernon Ayiku of Exclaim! regarded it as one of the "unnecessary and actively damaging" tracks "that could have been left on the cutting room floor." [ 2 ] Paul A. Thompson of Pitchfork wrote, "Still, tucked between the sameness are pockets of strangeness—like the drawn-out instrumental ending to 'Jumbotron Shit Poppin ...
The song received generally negative reviews. Nadine Smith of The Independent wrote "Almost as if his bars were engineered in a laboratory to incite online discourse, Drake constantly reminds you of his age by directing his fragilities at women significantly younger than himself", mentioning the woman in question on "Calling for You" as an ...