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For singles released by Drake, see Drake singles discography. For videos by Drake, see Drake videography. Drake albums discography Drake performing at his Summer Sixteen Tour in Toronto ; 2016 Studio albums 8 EPs 5 Collaborative albums 2 Compilation albums 3 Mixtapes 7 Reissues 2 Canadian rapper Drake has released eight studio albums, two collaborative albums, three compilation albums, four ...
In the album's opening song, "CN Tower", the two artists refer to the CN Tower, an observation tower in Toronto; it famously appears on the cover of Drake's fourth album Views (2016). They refer to the tower's lighting schedule at night. [53] In "Spider-Man Superman", Drake and PartyNextDoor sample "The Real Her" by Drake, Lil Wayne, and André ...
The album's title was first announced as Views from the 6, as it first appeared from a report in a July 2014 article from Billboard. [6] According to Drake on Twitter, "the 6" is a reference to his hometown of Toronto, Ontario.
The new album art only includes the word Views, not Views From the 6, as the album has been billed previously.
For albums released by Drake, see Drake albums discography. For videos by Drake, see Drake videography. Drake singles discography Drake performing at his Summer Sixteen Tour in Toronto ; 2016 Singles 143 Promotional singles 6 Canadian rapper Drake has released 143 singles (including 82 as a featured artist) and six promotional singles. His music has been released on record labels Universal ...
"Hotline Bling" is a song recorded by Canadian rapper Drake, which serves as the lead single from his fourth studio album Views (2016). The song is credited as a bonus track on the album. [1] [2] It was made available for digital download on July 31, 2015, through Cash Money, Young Money, and Republic.
Just before the weekend hit, Drake surprise-released three songs including “Circadian Rhythm,” “SOD” and “No Face” featuring Playboi Carti via his Instagram burner account ...
"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.