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The song was released on July 29, 2015, the same day that the Blue Jays and Phillies played against each other. It also is a reference to the Back-to-Back release of diss tracks. Meek Mill later responded with another diss song about Drake, titled "Wanna Know". [14] Meek Mill later removed his diss to Drake on SoundCloud. [15]
[8] [9] In the song "Family Matters", Drake further antagonizes Metro, directly calling him out in the song once again. [10] [11] Rick Ross coined the phrase BBL Drizzy, ironizing about a rumor that Drake received plastic surgery on his abs and on his nose, using the slang term "BBL", which is an acronym to Brazilian butt lift. Drake referred ...
An attorney with Tupac’s estate, Howard King, sent a cease-and-desist letter on Wednesday threatening legal action if the rapper, whose real name is Aubrey Drake Graham, did not take down the ...
"TSU" is a song by Canadian rapper Drake. Released on September 3, 2021, as the eighth track from Drake's sixth studio album Certified Lover Boy. It samples OG Ron C's chopped and screwed remix to R.Kelly's Half on a Baby. The song's intro and outro has featured vocals from the late DJ Screw.
An earlier version of the song's remix was leaked in 2010, featuring a verse by Drake. [42] On March 14, 2011, an unfinished version of the remix was leaked to the internet, featuring guest verses from Lil Wayne , Big Sean , and Drake , a different verse from the leak. [ 43 ]
"No Lie" is the debut single by American rapper 2 Chainz featuring Canadian rapper Drake, released as the lead single from the former's debut studio album Based on a T.R.U. Story (2012). Produced by Mike Will Made It , the song was released to iTunes on May 8, 2012, and based on digital downloads was able to debut in the top 50 on the Billboard ...
"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".
Drake, 36, appeared to diss Rihanna, 35, and the father of her two children, ASAP Rocky, on “Fear of Heights,” one of the songs on his new album, For All The Dogs (released Friday, October 6).