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This is an accepted version of this page This is the latest accepted revision, reviewed on 9 December 2024. Ongoing hip-hop feud Drake–Kendrick Lamar feud Drake in 2016 Lamar in 2018 Date March 22, 2024 – present (8 months, 2 weeks and 3 days) Medium Diss tracks Status Ongoing; several publications have labeled Lamar as the victor but the details are debated. Parties Drake J. Cole (until ...
The Drake–Kanye West feud is an ongoing and highly publicized feud, or informally a "beef", between American rapper Kanye West and Canadian rapper Drake. The conflict has unfolded over several years and has involved public statements, social media exchanges, and musical releases.
The feud between Drake and Lamar, although long ongoing since the 2010s, rose to new heights in March 2024, with Lamar attacking Drake's persona and skill with his verse on the song "Like That". Drake followed up to Lamar's verse and other diss tracks by other artists such as Rick Ross, Future, and The Weeknd with his own diss track, "Push Ups".
The title of "The Heart Part 6" is a reference to Lamar's "The Heart" song series, [7] which has lasted for over a decade as of 2024, starting in April 2010. [8]The cover art for the single is a screenshot of a comment by Kendrick Lamar's manager Dave Free under an Instagram post by Lamar's fiancee Whitney Alford.
It was released through OVO Sound and Republic Records on Drake's eighth studio album, For All the Dogs. Drake and Cole wrote the song with producers Boi-1da, Vinylz, Tay Keith, FnZ (Michael Mulé and Isaac De Boni), Oz, and Coleman, alongside Snorre Tidemand. It is notable for reigniting Drake's decade-long feud with fellow rapper Kendrick Lamar.
A timeline explaining Drake and Kendrick Lamar's longstanding feud, starting with "Control" and continuing with diss tracks released in April and May 2024. ... — Selección Argentina in English ...
Drake posted a parody of "Buried Alive Interlude", a song recorded by Lamar for Drake's Take Care (2011), on Instagram on the same day. In the parody, Drake mocks Lamar's performance on the original song and disses him, claiming Lamar is jealous of his success. [5] "Family Matters" was released later that day with an accompanying music video.
Billboard reported that Howard King, the plaintiff, sent Drake a cease-and-desist letter saying that using Shakur's likeness was a violation of Shakur's personality rights and Drake would be sued if "Taylor Made Freestyle" remained on his social media. The estate said that they would have never cleared the AI-generated vocals and said it was an ...