Uncle Murda - Rap Up 2024
Uncle Murda - Rap Up 2024
Masta Ace - Sittin' On Chrome (instrumental)
3rd Bass - Pop Goes The Weasel (instrumental)
Rakim - Pendulum Swing (feat. KXNG Crooked, Canibus, Chino XL)
July 26th, Rakim released his first album in 15 years. in less than 48 hours we learned this would be one of the last times we hear another original vs from Chino XL. 🙏
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May 5: Drake denied Lamar’s latest claims about his history and flat-out stated “I never been with no one under age” in a Sunday night release called “The Heart Part 6," in which he says he and his team purposefully fed his adversary false information (including about a secret daughter) in the hopes he'd use it in a song: "We plotted for a week and then we fed you the information/A daughter that’s 11 years old, I bet he takes it.”
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May 5: Producer Metro Boomin jumped into the beef by releasing a beat called “BBL Drizzy,” and inviting fans to rap over it, offering a free beat to the best song; Drake previously dissed Boomin on “Push Ups” by telling him to “shut up and make some drums.”
"best verse over this gets a free beat
just upload your song and hashtag
#bbldrizzybeatgiveaway "
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May 4: Lamar then hit back at Drake with his release of “Meet the Grahams,” a reference to Drake’s legal name, Aubrey Drake Graham.
In that song, the 17-time Grammy Award winner name-dropped Drake’s son Adonis, addressing him in the beginning of the song, saying, “Dear Adonis, I’m sorry that that man is your father” and adding: “It takes a man to be a man, your dad is not responsive.”
Lamar also calls out Drake’s parents, saying “your son got some habits” and that they “raised a horrible f**king person,” before suggesting Drake fathered a daughter he has never publicly addressed, saying: “Should be teachin’ you timetables or watchin’ ‘Frozen’ with you … instead, he be in Turks, paying for sex and poppin’ Percs.”
Lamar went on to slam Drake as a “narcissist, misogynist, livin’ inside his songs,” addressing Drake’s alleged secret daughter in a line of “Meet the Grahams,” saying he’s “sorry that your father not active inside your world,” and that Drake does not “commit to much but his music.” ...read more
May 4: Drake, a five-time Grammy Award winning Canadian hip hop artist, released a new single “Family Matters” Friday night in response to Lamar’s recent diss tracks “Euphoria” and “6:16 in LA.”
In “Family Matters,” Drake slams Lamar’s engagement to longtime partner Whitney Alford, and their son, rapping: “Why you never hold your son and tell him, ‘say cheese’” (Lamar had previously attacked Drake as a father in “Euphoria”).
Drake also targeted Lamar’s lyrics, rapping that Lamar is “just acting like an activist it’s make believe, but you won’t go back to your hood and plant no money trees,” referencing Lamar’s 2012 hit “Money Trees” off “Good Kid, m.A.A.d. City.” ...read more
May 3: Lamar dropped a second Drake diss track, “6:16 in LA”—likely a play on a format Drake has often used for song titles, including his “8am in Charlotte” and “5am in Toronto”—in which Lamar alleges Drake’s own team is against him, rapping that “everyone inside your team is whispering that you deserve it,” and stating Drake “can't ‘Toosie Slide’ up out of this one,” a reference to his 2020 song.
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April 30: Lamar dropped “Euphoria,” a six-minute long diss track in which he lambasts Drake’s biracial identity (suggesting he shouldn’t be able to say the n-word), slams the rapper’s ability as a father and calls Drake a “scam artist,” questioning his authenticity as a rapper. ...read more
April 21: Kanye West jumped into the beef on a remix of “Like That,” taking shots at Drake’s music and his deal with Universal Music Group, stating he and his collaborators are “energized” for the “elimination of Drake.”
April 19: Drake released another diss track, “Taylor Made Freestyle,” using AI-generated voices of Snoop Dogg and the late Tupac Shakur to diss Lamar, daring him to respond: “We waitin' on you,” Drake rapped.