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This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 27 December 2024. Ongoing hip-hop feud Drake–Kendrick Lamar feud Drake in 2016 Lamar in 2018 Date March 22, 2024 – present (9 months and 6 days) Medium Diss tracks Status Ongoing; several publications have labeled Lamar as the victor but the details are debated. Parties Drake J. Cole (until April 7 ...
A more braggadocious piece within her discography, "30 for 30" allows SZA to "bask in her accomplishments" accentuated with "soaring strings and booming 808's". [2] The song starts off with a spoken-word sample, taken from the R&B/funk band Switch song "I Call Your Name", with lead singer Bobby DeBarge admitting to indulging in "immature things" as well as "painful doubts and insecurities ...
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.
"6:16 in LA" is a diss track written and recorded by American rapper Kendrick Lamar. As part of the Kendrick-Drake feud, it is the second response track to Canadian rapper Drake's single "Push Ups" and his independently released song "Taylor Made Freestyle".
In the nearly 5 1/2-minute song, Drake denied Lamar's previous allegations of pedophilia and also alleged he made up information about having a secret 11-year-old daughter for Lamar to use in a song.
He used the song to debunk allegations of having a secret daughter and once again suggested that Lamar’s fiancée had a child with Dave Free. Unfortunately, Drake’s latest diss track didn’t ...
Drake hits back with a music video and a nearly eight-minute response, in which he alleges abuse and infidelity in Lamar’s relationship with his fiancee. May 4: Lamar responds with “Meet the ...
It includes a sample of "PDLIF" by Bon Iver, and an interpolation of "Sticky" by Drake. An accompanying music video, directed and edited by Neal Farmer, was released alongside the song. The video was filmed on a VHS camcorder, and features outtakes of Keem and Kendrick from their time together on the latter's Big Steppers Tour, while also ...