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"Meet the Grahams" is a diss track by American rapper Kendrick Lamar. It was released on May 3, 2024, through Interscope Records , during his ongoing feud with Canadian rapper Drake . [ 1 ] It is Lamar's response to the release of Drake's " Family Matters ," a diss track mainly aimed at Lamar. [ 2 ] "
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 ...
"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".
Twenty minutes later, Lamar released "Meet the Grahams", accusing Drake of sexual predation—including sex trafficking—and fathering a second secret child (rapper Pusha T revealed in a 2018 song that Drake secretly had a son named Adonis). On May 4, on "Not Like Us", Lamar accused Drake of pedophilia.
"Not Like Us" is a "club-friendly" West Coast hip-hop track with strong hyphy stylings. [10]Several elements of its production, including the "stirring" violins, piano and brass instruments, were taken from samples of Monk Higgins's 1968 rendition of "I Believe to My Soul", a cover of Ray Charles's 1961 composition. [11]
"Meet the Grahams" Kendrick Lamar Drake "Family Matters", released less than an hour prior to Meet the Grahams. Lamar, by addressing each member of Drake's family, accuses Drake of sex trafficking and being a sexual predator. He also alleges that Drake has a secret daughter that he has abandoned. [217] [218] [219] May 4, 2024 "Not Like Us"
"Alright" received widespread critical acclaim from music critics. Ranked number one on Pitchfork ' s "The 100 Best Tracks of 2015" and "The 200 Best Songs of the 2010s", an editor praised the chorus "We gon be alright," and described it as "an ebulliently simple five-syllable refrain, a future-tense assertion of delivery to a better, more peaceful place".
The song features songwriting collaborations from American singer Anna Wise who, prior to her work on "Pride", won the Grammy Award for Best Rap/Sung Collaboration in 2016 with Lamar for his song "These Walls", from his third studio album To Pimp a Butterfly.