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"IDGAF" is a song by Canadian rapper Drake featuring American rapper Yeat. It was released through OVO and Republic as the seventh track from Drake's eighth studio album, For All the Dogs, on October 6, 2023. The song was written alongside Play Boy Nick, Norma Winstone, John Taylor, and producers Bnyx and Sebastian Shah, .
"Massive" is a house song by Canadian rapper Drake. [1] It was sent to contemporary hit radio through Republic Records and OVO Sound as the dual lead single from his seventh studio album, Honestly, Nevermind, on June 21, 2022, alongside the single "Sticky".
Some are already suggesting that Drake was inspired to name his most recent song after a line from “6:16 in LA” where Lamar raps, “Often, I know this type of power is gon’ cost / But I ...
"What's Next" is a song by Canadian rapper Drake. It was released on March 5, 2021, as a single from Drake's fourth EP Scary Hours 2, through Republic Records and OVO Sound. [1] With the song's debut at the top of the US Billboard Hot 100, it became Drake's eighth US number-one single in the country. Additionally, it became his fourth song to ...
On the song, Drake references love, acting in Degrassi: The Next Generation (2001), and fellow Canadian singer Justin Bieber and his hometown of Stratford in Ontario, Canada as he raps: "If I take flicks with the guys, I gotta put emojis over like three faces / 'Cause the feds can’t see those eyes / People I shouldn't be beside / When I was an actor, they would go to Stratford just to sell ...
Drake achieved his 13th No. 1 song on the Billboard Hot 100 while helping featured artist J. Cole earn the […] The post Drake’s ‘First Person Shooter’ No. 1 on Billboard charts, ties ...
Drake is giving Taylor Swift her flowers via a surprising namedrop on his new album. “Taylor Swift the only n—ga that I ever rated,” Drake, 37, raps on his new song “Red Button ...
Popcaan teased a snippet of "We Caa Done" two days before its release and confirmed all the details about it. [1] The song received a positive review from Alphonse Pierre of Pitchfork, who felt that Popcaan's "two verses are filled with hypnotic moments, like the echo catching off his croons in the first or his impassioned, Auto-Tuned bellowing in the second" and Drake "doesn't have to do too ...