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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.
Family Matters (song) Fancy (Drake song) Father Stretch My Hands; Fear of Heights (song) Fed Up (DJ Khaled song) Feel Love; Feel No Ways; Final Fantasy (Drake song) Find Your Love; Finesse (Drake song) Fire & Desire; Fireworks (Drake song) First Person Shooter (song) Flip the Switch; For Free; Forever (Drake, Kanye West, Lil Wayne, and Eminem ...
Produced by the Alchemist, "Meet the Grahams", unlike Lamar's previous responses, takes on an unsettling, haunting atmosphere, with an eerie piano-driven beat, sampled from Timothy Carpenter & Triunity's "I Want To Make It", accompanying critical lyrics accusing Drake of a number of wrongdoings including parental negligence, sexual exploitation, sexual grooming, sex trafficking, and another ...
Drake wrote, also liking a comment by a fan who suggested he, Lamar and J Cole collaborate on a track. ... On Saturday (4 May), the Canadian artist released “Family Matters”, made up of three ...
Drake released “Family Matters” at around 11 p.m. EST on May 3. Lamar released “Meet the Grahams” less than 45 minutes later. ... One of these is Gillie Da Kid, who wrote on his Instagram ...
On “Family Matters,” Drake states that Lamar was the one who encouraged the estate to fire back at Drake, who removed the song from social media shortly after they threatened to sue him.
That same day, Drake released "Family Matters" exclusively on YouTube in response. Lamar released "Meet the Grahams" 20 minutes later, and would go onto release "Not Like Us" the following day. [242] On May 5, Drake released "The Heart Part 6", a reference to Lamar's 2022 track "The Heart Part 5". [243]
On May 3, Drake released "Family Matters," a seven-and-a-half-minute response to Lamar's back-to-back diss tracks, which appears to respond to some of "Euphoria," firstly Lamar's decision to ...