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In a review of So Far Gone, Billboard's Scott Glaysher ranked "November 18th" as the third-best song off the mixtape, behind Best I Ever Had. He calls the song a "perfect example of Drake being able to seamlessly rap and sing on the turn of a dime; one moment he’s hitting a dark croon and another he rhymes with perfect wordplay". [ 2 ]
"Falling Back" is a song by Canadian rapper and singer Drake. It was released through Republic Records and OVO Sound as the second track from his seventh studio album, Honestly, Nevermind , on June 17, 2022, along with the album.
Drake felt like the song was a throwaway so he wanted to give the song to "somebody who was poppin" and gave it to Kendrick Lamar. Lamar recorded his verse on the song but decided not to use the song for his album Good Kid, M.A.A.D City , as he thought the song would not fit into the album, so he returned the song back to Drake again.
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 ...
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]
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.
Drake is speaking out for the first time since Kendrick Lamar took home several Grammys for his diss track "Not Like Us," which he wrote about the Canadian rapper.. On Tuesday, Feb. 4, the "Push ...
The first song, "0 to 100", is a stripped-back hip hop song that sonically and thematically resembles Drake's "Started from the Bottom" from his third studio album, Nothing Was the Same (2013). [4] Instead of "starting from the bottom", "0 to 100" speaks of the rapper going from zero to one-hundred in order to gain ground on all of his competition.