Dissect - Drake Drops ICEMAN...and Habibti...and Maid of Honour. Why?
Episode Date: May 19, 2026Cole is joined by The Ringer’s Charles Holmes and Justin Sayles to discuss Drake’s three-album release stunt. They speculate on the strategy behind the 43-song drop before diving into ICEMAN’s m...usic and lyrics. Finally, they discuss Habibti and Maid of Honour, ending the conversation by wondering where Drake will go next. Host: Cole Cuchna Guests: Charles Holmes, Justin Sayles Editor: Kevin Pooler Engineer: Sarah Reddy Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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Welcome everyone to a special episode of Dissect.
I'm your host, Cole Kushna.
We are still on a brief intermission from our daft punk season.
We will be resuming it next week.
But today we are here to talk about not one, not two,
but three new Drake albums that somehow all dropped this past Friday.
And joining me for the occasion is self-proclaimed or once self-proclaimed Aubrey's Angel, OVO Charles.
don't do me like that. Don't do me like that.
Are you still a member of the Aubrey's Angels?
What's the status of your membership?
Oh, my membership has been revoked.
Like, I've revoked it.
Toronto has revoked it.
I no longer feel like I'm welcomed.
But there were moments, I would say, where I'm just like,
damn, new Drake sounds good.
And then there were moments where I was just like,
I wish I could get three hours of my life back.
Or like, honestly, my whole weekend back.
Justin,
Justin Sales producers here.
Justin, what up, man?
My social battery drain, for real, for real.
Yeah.
For real.
Yeah.
Yeah.
I think that's my favorite.
We'll talk about it.
I think that might be my favorite song in the album now.
Okay, but let's set the stage a little bit.
We're going to talk about all three albums.
I think we're going to talk mostly about Iceman.
That is the album that I listen to the most.
I think it's the one that we all listen to the most this weekend.
I did try to give the other two.
albums, their fair share of listens.
That was a little harder to stomach, but we will talk about all three.
I wanted to table set the conversation by kind of rehashing just a little bit of Drake
post the battle with Kendrick, because I think obviously this was Drake's first solo album
since the battle.
It's the longest break between solo albums in his career.
I think four of all the dogs came out in October of 2023.
So that's almost a thousand days.
That's a long time for Drake.
And I think at one point the narrative behind this album,
I mean, it's been a kind of a two-year thing,
a formal one-year rollout.
Actually, he started teasing this almost a year ago.
But it seemed like the narrative used to be this would be
Drake's kind of comeback album post-battle.
It seemed like there was like some make or break stakes to it.
I don't know.
I didn't really feel that way recently,
but that was once the narrative, Charles,
I don't know.
Did you feel that there was any stakes to this album for Drake in his career?
Did it feel like a make or break moment to you?
I don't know if it felt like a make or break moment, but the stakes did feel high.
And to me, this is actually the cycle of Drake across his discography.
When you look at a lot of his albums, think about views.
It took a while for him to get to views because when he went into the battle with Meek Mill,
people actually thought he was going to lose.
Meek is a battle rapper.
he came out on top, he has all these hits.
And almost him creating the album became such a big thing
that it became the like,
what is Drake gonna do post meek after winning?
And he arguably releases one of his most popular albums,
if not his best.
I think Scorpio followed a similar thing post push a T,
where it's like people,
when he lost that battle,
it was a revealty had a kid,
he drops an overstuffed album
that is addressing everything from,
Kanye to push a tea to the kid reveal. And I think, I don't think I know, Iceman has that weight
that's bogging it down as well, which is Drake backed into a corner again, having lost the
beef with Kendrick. And you can feel it, especially in Iceman, that he is struggling to steer
the narrative back into a place where he's the number one guy on top. Yeah, Justin.
I think this is the first time that a Drake album has been narratively important since maybe Scorpion, maybe views.
I do have to say, you mentioned Scorpion being a very bloated response to the Pusha Tea album, and this is obviously like a very bloated drop.
It is worth noting that this album is, I believe, an hour and nine minutes, which would make it the shortest Drake record since,
maybe if you're reading this is too late?
I mean, but obviously he dropped three records
where he floods the zone to such a degree
that even having to talk about these albums after a weekend,
it's even hard for me to parse what are the different songs?
He's sending so many shots.
He's trying to, honestly, and this has been a lot of Drake's trajectory
in the latter stage of his career,
It used to feel like it was so effortless.
He would just make a song and it would become a hit.
And on Iceman especially, but on all three of them,
it seems like he's fishing to find not only a hit,
but what people like about him.
Yeah, the three really,
I mean, we can just talk about the three release strategy since we're already here.
I mean, I was, obviously, I was very baffled when I heard on Friday
that it was coming three albums on the same day.
You start to hear pretty shortly after that,
speculation that this was a way for him to get out of his contract with UMG,
a fulfillment of a contract that we don't know the full details of,
but essentially he signed a renewal with UMG in 2022.
That was alleged $400 million deal that he did brag about after he signed it.
And so I wonder how much of this is, to your point,
this is something me and Justin talked about right after the announcement was like
this idea of flooding the zone with so much attention around you and you know there's going to be
placed under the microscope and so much scrutiny around what you say and the narrative behind it,
is this a is this deflection by way of, you know, overwhelming us with content so that it's a little
hard to focus in on one thing that he says because he is, he is quote unquote saying so much,
which is, you know, a political strategy that Trump and Bannon kind of made famous,
this idea of flooding the zone.
As sympathetic as I want to be to the UMG contract stuff,
I still just feel like this was a,
what will amount to a stat padding stunt,
a kind of an attempt at creating a viral moment.
And that quickly kind of became what I think most,
the consensus that I'm hearing is that two of these albums are throwaway albums
and that Ice Man is the real album.
And I just wonder,
Charles, do you think this was an effective strategy? What do you think was the point of this?
So, to me, when he dropped the three albums, almost a UMG of it all, to me wasn't important.
Because if I'm thinking historically of what Drake does, Drake loves to brag. So much of his brand is,
I'm the number one artist. I'm the most streamed artist. If you release three albums,
the likelihood that he is going to have the number one, number two, number three album in the country
in a week is very, very high.
So no matter if this album produces a hit, like, not like us, or becomes something like
GNX became, which is kind of like a classic overnight, it doesn't matter because he can
point to the charts and say, well, look, I have three, I have the three spots on the
billboard.
Hey, Spotify is already saying I broke this, these amount of records.
I'm still just as big, if not bigger, than Kendrick.
So instead of focusing on the music, we end up, his fans can now say, well, look, see,
Kendrick did all of this, all these people tried to tear him down, but he's still as big and as popular as he always was.
And I do think that we can all, listeners of music are so smart now, just of culture all so smart.
and I do feel like there is this sense from everyone
where we're like, hey man, we kind of know what you're doing.
We've seen this before.
And it does seem like a cynical move.
But am I being too negative?
Justin, what do you think?
I'm thinking about the flooding the zone comment
and I'll come back to the...
I do think what you're saying is actually really interesting
because I hadn't considered what it's going to look like
when the billboard charts come out in a week
and it's going to say one, two, three, right?
Same thing with the top ten.
I mean, the top ten, we've seen that before.
We've seen him do that before.
We've seen Taylor Swift do that.
We've seen artists do that.
But like the one, two, three on the billboard, that's never happened.
You know, you have artists like way back, like Bruce Springsteen, Guns and Roses,
releasing albums on the same day.
DMX.
DMX.
Well, that was in one year, but I'm talking about releasing the album on the same release day.
So you see like Guns and Roses, I don't know if this actually happened, but I assume it did,
but like one, two on the charts.
right there. Never seen a one, two, three.
It's going to be really rough if he gets beat out by like Morgan Wallen on one of these for like
number three. But to the flooding the zone, it does seem to me that he had a narrative that he
wanted to push forth with Iceman in particular. The rest of it, it's really hard.
It took me about like a day and a half to really wrap my head around everything that he was doing, right?
Like what these three albums were.
Like obviously like at first you listen like, okay, this one's a dance record.
This one's an R&B record.
This one's a rap record.
It's, I wonder how much like the casual listener, someone that doesn't have to listen to all this stuff to make a podcast episode about it,
someone who is like just, I don't know, I somebody who just puts Drake on their playlist and goes about
their day. Do you think they've even fully wrapped their head around this volume of music?
I, I, not only have they not probably wrapped their head around it, I don't even know if most
Drake fans or fans of Drake that are not waiting for the drops, they're probably not sifting
through this record. They're probably waiting for one or two of these records to blow up and then
put it on their playlist. And the genius to me of Drake in the past was, on so far,
and then what he ended up perfecting on Take Care later,
is that there had been rappers who sang before.
He is not 50 Cent was very melodic.
Nelly, very melodic.
You can go, like, you could go, little brother, all these artists.
To me, the genius of Drake was how effortless it was.
One moment he was rapping, one moment he was singing.
On the same record, he could have a dance record,
but then he could have a half rap, half, arm,
or an Afropop record, and it was all seamless. As he's continued on in his career, he segmented
his art. So you do get the rap record from Drake, and then you'll get the R&B, and then you'll get
the dance record. But all of them, to me, are kind of flimsy, because he's not a good enough
singer to carry a full R&B record. He is not a good enough performer, even vocally, to carry a lot of
these dance records. So when he just has to do it in a silo, you notice more of the edges being cut
and like the roughness of it. Yeah, I mean, that's my main gripe with it. I mean, I think in theory
a three-album drop could potentially be interesting if there was some kind of artistic
reasoning before, you know, you can justify it artistically. To me, what a lot of these
songs, especially on the other two albums,
sound like
he's just checking a box.
It's like, I need to make three records to get out of my contract.
Let me do a single session tonight and knock out this song.
It doesn't have a hook or like,
so many of these songs.
I like,
let me say out front,
I like Ice Man.
It's my favorite Drake project in a long time.
The other two albums to me feel like he's checking boxes,
feel like he didn't give any effort to develop them like structurally.
it's a weird experience to listen to 43 Drake songs and not and you only remember like one or two or three choruses.
Yeah.
Like you sing me a chorus from any of these records.
It'll probably be the Janice song, which I think is one of my favorites.
But it's a lack of melody.
I mean, he's singing a lot, but the lack of hook and melody and song structure and bridge are just, it's lacking across a lot of the projects.
I would even say
if we're being real
not only do I agree with you
like I really
Habibti is probably
the record where I'm like
I like this version of Drake
but I would say this is about
made of honor too
this man cannot
hit a note where
he's always used
auto tune he's always manipulated his voice
but on so many of these records
it feels like hey
this is an intent
This doesn't feel intentional.
This feels like your voice as instrument has waned,
or at least you have not honed in on it.
So to your point, if the pop structure is wonky,
and then your pen from a lyrical standpoint,
but also from a chorus standpoint, has waned,
and then just singing-wise, you don't sound good,
the things that differentiated you from everyone is no longer there.
And I do think that what this suffers from is something that something like GNX really worked,
which is GNX was a very honed project.
Kendrick did not make you sift through almost three hours of music to find the standout tracks.
He was secure enough in the project to be like, hey, I forget how many songs is GNX?
Like 12, 13.
Yeah, 13, 14.
Yeah, it's like, it's very tight.
It's very structured.
you know what, you know what this record is about.
Let me ask you this, Cole or even Justin, what is Iceman about?
It's about victimhood.
Yes.
And I, it's about being a cry bully.
Yeah.
It's, I do have to say that there is, there have been few artists in the history of recorded music
who have been so well situated to play the victim as Drake.
And yet here we are with him.
him very, like, very infamously now in a position where he's the underdog.
And he just makes it really hard to root for him.
I, Cole, you said that Iceman is one of your favorite Drake records in a while.
I agree.
I actually think that this Iceman might be the best Drake project since more life, maybe, 2017.
But that doesn't mean much when his last project.
were so forgettable.
I forgot, you guys mentioned for all the dogs,
I'm like, oh yeah, that was a solo project.
Certified lover boy.
Yeah.
These records mean nothing.
Like, nobody brings up certified lover boy
or for all the dogs.
I don't even know if there's a song off
for all the dogs that is still being played.
But to your point, if we kind of get into the music,
on the intro, this was so, the intro to me was really, really good.
I loved the beat.
I loved how he was rapping.
His pen was sharper than ever.
And what stood out to me was when he said, quote,
I feel like 40 won't even listen to my words
when he knows I'm in a load of trouble.
I'm in the cut, just load in rebuttals.
And then he goes on to say,
40 says, prove to me that you're still as strong
when it's only us to.
They know you thorough with the bread,
but there's some shit you got a pony up to.
Basically he's saying, I got growing up to do.
I got to dig deep.
Feel like 40 won't even listen to my words
when he knows I'm in a load of trouble.
I'm in the cut just loading rebuttals.
That is the most lucid.
that we have heard Drake in a while.
I was like, I heard that song, and I'm like,
okay, you know what the problem is.
And then for the rest of the record,
he undermines that at every single point.
He does not dig deep.
He is the victim.
Woe is me.
He rewrites the beef in real time
where I'm like, hey, yo,
you were begging for Kendrick to respond.
You were begging for these people to respond.
It just did not work out in your favor.
and now you want to throw a stone and hide your hand.
And even though,
even in Iceman's greatest moments,
like on Janice,
shut the fuck up.
I think it's the best song.
It's one of my favorite Drake songs in a while.
But even some of the lines on that,
I'm like,
Tric,
we all saw how the beef unfolded.
This is untrue.
Yeah, I mean, yeah, to your point,
like I was so hopeful
when I heard this first track for the first time.
Like when he said,
what died back in 2024 was a big piece.
So it's like,
this shit is me,
but it isn't me.
y'all keep asking me what it did to me that's what it did to me when i when i dig deep they say
dig deeper tell us how it felt to meet the grim reaper this better at bad bad so he's very
self-aware of this moment like it feels like he's being truly introspective and i don't think
anyone expected him to make a mr morale with this album but i think a lot of us were hoping for
some kind of introspection exactly like this where it's like we see the human being behind this facade
behind the walls of his castle.
What is his head castle called?
The compound?
What does he call it?
Yeah, what is it?
Anyways.
But, you know, we wanted to see the human being.
I thought this was a really unique opportunity to do that.
And then I don't know.
So what I'm trying to figure out is like,
does this justify the rest of the album?
Because he says, you know, I don't want to dig deep.
I'm scared to take ayahuasca Kendrick
because I don't want to look that deep into my.
myself. And so here's the rest of the album of me doing exactly not that, right? Is that the
setup here? Or is this just Drake understanding there are people like the, I guess, that want to
hear this kind of introspection? So he does his best, you know, one, he gives us the one song
and puts it first so that, you know, appeases people like us. And then he spends the rest of
the time pandering to, you know, the Aidan Rosses of the world. That's what I can't figure out.
is this genuine?
Does this actually set up the rest of the album
in an interesting way?
Or is it just like inauthentic
and just kind of like he's just checking another box?
Justin, I don't know what you think.
I found the introspection to be pretty lacking, right?
Like there seems to be, you know, Charles,
you highlighted that line, but those lines about 40.
But outside of that, there doesn't really seem to be grappling
with how we arrived at the moment that,
Drake was in in 2024. He lost that beef not just because he got his ass kicked. He lost that beef
because people wanted him to lose that beef. People were sick of this guy and his whole stick.
And there's no grappling with what this meant for him, how he got there. You know, we've been mostly
complimentary, well, in parts about Iceman to this point. I think the rapping at points is like
really pretty like exemplary. Yeah. He's a great writer. He is a great rapper. He's everything just
feels so heavy and so serious these days without any real weight behind it. And look,
to shift gears slightly, I think that this record might have landed.
it a little bit better if everything wasn't so goddamn serious in every like you know the image of
drake in my mind is always like the cover of take care you know the guy and his in his mansion
you know looking looking sad and like that is where he's at on this entire record um my favorite
lines on the entire record also come on make them cry because they are the funniest lines on the
entire record. And I, as a Sopranos fan, I think people know where I'm going to go with this one.
But sometimes I only see myself in my therapist glasses, but I'm not taking it serious because
she's very attractive. That is funny. That's funny and actually like really interesting.
Yes. That whole thing is funny, is interesting, but we don't get a lot of that. Instead,
we get lines like, compare, you know, Mugsy Bokes dunked once. It's like, okay, Kendrick's short.
I get it. Like, we're doing this again.
You know, Coles, I sent you the meme the other day of the guy from World War II,
the soldier who didn't surrender for 30 years. I can't remember his name, but like the famous
meme about the, and that's what he sounds like on this record. Yeah, I mean, I would have loved
if he just put it, like, I didn't need a single bar about the battle. It's been two years.
Does anyone care anymore? Jake, you lost? Could you just come back and make some hits?
I think that's all anyone wants from him.
We don't need to hear about the battle anymore.
Charles, am I wrong?
Not only are you not wrong, I think he can't even get out of his own way when he's
striving to make the hits.
I think two standout tracks for the wrong reason to me are ran to Atlanta and too hard for
the radio.
On Ran to Atlanta, you have him appearing with Future.
it's supposed to be this club record.
Molly Santana's on it.
And in the title, in the actual song,
he is referencing something that Kendrick said and not like us.
So even when he's trying to make a hit,
he is trying to say, actually let me defend myself.
And too hard for the radio,
you have this Bay Area-type beat.
And there are lyrics about like,
oh, you think Mr. West Coast can make a reason
record, let me show you I can make a regional record better, but he doesn't. It's like when
Drake used to make a hit, it used to seem effortless. People did call him a culture vulture,
but when you listen to an album like More Life, when he's going to the UK, when it's Afro beats,
when it's him over the motto, over something Bay Area infused, we used to be like, oh,
we have almost never seen a rapper or a pop.
top star be this much of a chameleon and it seemed effortless, so many of the regional records
the ad, like the ran to Atlanta, um, too hard for the radio, feel sweaty. They feel
labored over. And that's Drake for the last couple of years, it's felt labored over.
And they also feel like empty provocations too, right? Like he's directly referencing the line
from not like us, but doesn't, you know, he's just referencing it for the sake of reference.
or he's trying to get ahead of it right because people are going to say oh look him and future are back
he ran to atlanta again guys that record's bad there's a there's a small there's a small piece of me
that's like did he just have this future feature lying around or how much did he have to pay future
to get him on this record because it like you know between the beat switch and everything it just
it feels like so disconnect they've made great music together where they have been like totally locked in
and this did not feel like that.
Well, also the thing where it's like,
we don't, we're not really, like,
we don't, he doesn't owe us explanation of how they amended that relationship if they ever did.
But on an album so concerned with the narrative and the back,
the backstabbing to just out of the blue come back with a future record that doesn't
address what happened or how they amended their relationship,
feels really weird to me.
It feels really transactional to me.
And I just, I just, I don't know, it doesn't really sit well to me.
It doesn't feel authentic anymore.
It just feels really contrived and forced.
And to Charles's point, I don't think the song actually works.
I like Molly Santana the most on that song.
But the end of that song might be Drake's worst moments on the entire album.
But if we're being positive, Janis shut the fuck up.
Yeah.
It's so electric because it is Drake doing.
what he does best, which is like, make really catchy hooks. And when I'm listening to Janis
shut the fuck up, I think that has become the standout record so far, besides the future record,
because people are just curious about him and future being back together. When I listen to Janis
shut the fuck up, I'm like, the real win of this project would you being, like, what you doing
what some of the greatest rappers have done at their lowest, which is just like, actually the
beef is below me now, I'm just going to make some hit records and make y'all forget. Because I do think
Drake is actually that talented that if he came back with 12 songs that were undeniable, most people
would be like, huh, fine. Like, yeah, we're having fun again. Drake is back. I do think he has
enough goodwill that if he picked the best 12 songs out of these 50 song chunks, most of us
would have been like, man, that's so mature if you turn in the page and just make hits.
This is, story of Adidon, you know, that would have been a lethal blow for any other rapper,
but he came back that summer with Nice for What?
And God's Plan.
And God, I mean, yes.
And it's just two of the biggest records of his career, two undeniable hit records that I can
recall in my head, you say Nice for What and all of a sudden I got the whole song in my head.
That's not happening for any of these records.
Maybe Janice shut the fuck
Because three days after this release
That's the one that I find
Getting stuck in my head
That's the stickiest one
Yeah
Swear my label got to free me
baby
Blow on me just like some green tea
Maybe
And by the way
It's the most structured song
On the entire album
Aside for maybe
What Did I Miss
Which is the other single
Which has a well-defined chorus
There's a, you know
Janice has a very defined hook
As a very memorable flow
In the verses
there's a bridge section where he kind of alters the chorus
and it takes the vocal melody a different place
and it's like song development, song structure,
the things that Drake used to be so good at are all in this.
And then like the hook is like,
it's kind of classic Drake melody,
but it's very interesting in the way that he pitches his voice
in a way that we,
I don't feel like we've heard all that much from him, you know?
And there's like a quality, like,
this is something I really always admired in Drake and in Kanye
where you're like one or two degrees from it,
just being so corny and not working at all,
which is what I think the hook of Janice is like,
especially with the pitch modulation of the voice,
where you're just like, the first time I heard,
I was like, what?
It kind of startled me, like, what is this?
Is this actually good?
And then second, third time, I'm singing along
and I'm loving it.
That is classic Drake to me.
Just a few degrees away from corny,
and all of a sudden you're singing along and having fun.
No, I was gonna say one of my favorite songs
out of this batch was Rusty
the intro off Habitti, because to me, it is right on the edge of corny.
And sometimes when I listen to it, I'm like, this is awful.
But it's doing what I think Drake does best, where I'm just like, he's going out on a limb.
It's a very simple beat.
It's an acoustic guitar strumming.
It's awkward and it's corny, but it's vulnerable.
And he's kind of nailing it.
And I'm like, this is interesting because most rappers would run away from this.
And you're taking a swing.
And even if you miss, I go back to it.
And I'm just like, fuck, yeah, sometimes you would just take swings and you were, it used to feel like Drake was in on the joke and he could laugh at himself.
And when a lot of people talk about what is Drake's connection to the manosphere?
What is Drake's connection has the lyrics that we once thought he was in on the joke when he was cry, like almost crying on the cover of Take Care, like begging women to stay with him.
all of that stuff sounds very different when you're 40
versus when you're in your 30s and 20s.
And even on the record, I think he says it on the intro,
he's like, yo, I'm almost 40.
I'm aging.
And I'm like, wait, so you know it.
You know the fact that you're too old for this.
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To your point, like the last track on Made of Honor is super interesting too,
where he has like guitar riff and he's like singing about the girl he found in the bathroom.
Like, I've never heard this, I've never heard Drake over production like this.
Even if it's not the strongest song, it was at least my ears tuned up because it didn't sound like everything else we've heard from Drake for the last.
10 years and I think that's as much as I like this album for a Drake album my biggest
gripe with it is that musically we've heard versions of the every song on this record before
there's not one new so yeah there's not one new production style on all three records aside from
the little moments that we just kind of pointed out that is that stands out from anything he's
done for the last 10 years and so while technically some of these are good songs it's also not
the most exciting thing in the world because we've had 10 of them we've had 10 of them we've had 10
and like it before, you know, it's like having an in-and-out burger again.
It's like, yeah, it's good, but it's like I've had it before.
It's predictable.
There's a certain, I think, and I think what he does on this album a lot,
especially if you're going to make 40-something songs,
he's banking so much on the fact that his seal or his floor is so high
that he can get away with kind of doing a single session in one night,
kind of like half-ass his way through a verse and maybe, you know, half of a chorus.
and it's going to be passable, right?
His voice is good enough.
He's a veteran of making music to the point where he knows, you know, he has his comfort zones
and he knows how to hit those things.
And so you're left with, you know, 80% of these songs just being kind of good enough.
And even the ones that are very strong, we've heard before.
So it's just like, I don't know, it's the same place that I've been with Drake for the last
eight years where it's like, can we just try something new?
Can we evolve a little bit artistically?
and if not artistically, emotionally,
like, tell me how being a dad is.
How's that going?
Like, that's super interesting to me.
I think a lot of people our age would like to hear what that's like for him.
I guess one of the questions that I was kind of trying to think about, though,
when it comes to this,
like, do you think his core fan base now?
Like, let's use Aidan Ross as maybe a proxy for a certain segment of Drake's fan base.
Do you think he can make vulnerable music still,
or would that fan base turn on him if you were to go too far in the direction of make him cry?
I mean, to me, it's the cliche that they say about celebrities, which is you get stuck in amber the moment you become famous.
And there's moments on this record, like, he brags about, like, flying out porn stars like Cherokee to ass.
And then I believe Cherokee got on Twitter and was just like, yo, why are you bringing up shit from 20 years ago?
And to me, that was indicative of the problem where I don't know if Drake can really be that vulnerable again because he has too much to lose now.
And to me, this is the, every rapper, especially as they get into their 40s or they've been famous for this long, have two choices to make.
I think there's the Drake and the M&M choice where you end up becoming a parody of yourself,
where your records were so massive, you became such a pop star that it's almost impossible
for you not to fall back on bad habits, but those habits used to be the things that made you
special.
And I think the best rappers and the best musicians take a Jay-Z, for example, at one point Jay-Z
was just like, I can't keep chasing hits.
Like, I mean, 4-4-4 is not my favorite record, but I think it is important in terms of Jay-Z's discography, because it buys him so much goodwill because you're like, okay, he's showing us something, he's showing us a level of vulnerability that he hadn't.
I think conge with my beautiful dark twisted fantasy is very similar where it's like to me the Taylor Swift incident is just like the is just like the Kendrick and Drake incident where it's like at your lowest that's really where you prove to us what type of artist you want to be.
And to answer your question, if your target demographic are streamers now and you're 40 and you're trying to keep up with them, it's always going to be hollow and it's always going to be like, how do you do kids?
What are y'all, what's y'all doing over here?
Justin, you got everything?
Well, you brought up Aden Ross, which makes me think of the make them cry, which is, I think, a song that we all really like the production on that record.
I think the rapping on that song.
Wait, you're talking about make them pay?
Make them pay.
Sorry.
There's make them cry.
There's make them pay.
There's five of them.
There's make them remember.
And then there's make them.
They all sound the same, by the way.
Make them take their headphones out.
Make them pay, right?
Is that the one?
Make them pay?
Make them pay.
Yeah.
And there no passes for you,
quip walking all of that dish talking kiddo beat it.
I'm supposed to be my brother's...
So he references Aiden Ross on that song.
And at first I was like, oh, he did a stream with Aiden Ross.
And at first I was like, okay, the Rick Ross diss on that line.
that was clever enough, you know, though Rick Ross answering back on Instagram immediately was just, you know, much better.
Then he, I think the best way to sum up Drake in the context of this world is what happens a few bars after that, where he goes at DJ Khalid and he says, we can't even get a free Palestine, or they're waiting on a free Palestine.
Then he rhymes it with like red, black, green.
And then later, big booty ebony or something.
Yeah, then he rhymes with big booty.
And that's the thing.
When he rhymes it with big booty ebony's,
which is not a set of words.
I think I should be saying on this podcast,
but Drake said it first.
This is a man that really doesn't stand for anything beyond his ego.
So even when he's saying free Palestine on this record,
he is saying it simply to get some shots off at DJ Khalid
who he's upset with for what like for not being public enough about like his support for
I don't even know what he's upset about um Drake
almost is just an empty avatar for anything except for the Drake experience
this man actually stands for nothing I mean there was there were lines on this where
he sends a shot at Kendrick where he's just like, oh, white, white fan, he says something to the effect of like white fans only listen to you because they feel guilty. Or you'll say something like, y'all tried to tear me down because you can't, you can't handle like a Jewish man being on top or this or that. And to Justin's point, I'm like, you're saying all of these naughty things. But I'm like, if you really believed in any of this, why are you only
bringing this up in the in the terms of this beef where it's like it like yeah free
Palestine yes why aren't you just saying that in a song that does not have to do with how
mad you are at with another grown man because he didn't take your side if you really
think that the whole industry either turned against you because you were Jewish or
Kendrick fans uh only some white kendrick fans support him and the naughtiness of that
I was like, hey, you weren't complaining
when those same white fans made you
one of the most successful pop stars of all times.
Charles, he only brings up his Jewish roots
so we can get off a cheap punchline
so they cannot see me on the top,
like on the mountain top, like I do the do.
Right?
The do the do line is brutal.
The mountain dew punchline,
that's a perfect example.
That's a big Sean shit that we do not let side.
But it's, it's, it's,
Specifically, he brings up the Jewish roots so he can make the Nazi.
I'm saying all types of stuff I should not be saying on a podcast,
so he can make the Nazi punchline.
Like, he's not making a statement.
He's trying to get off, like, some cheap punchlines.
Right.
And the Kendrick stuff, I just got to say, like, leave it alone.
He should not have talked.
I get maybe having some resentment for people you thought were friends
and taking some shots at them if you're going to take shots.
When you don't reference what is it the braids on this album.
I'm sorry.
But what is that doing?
What is it the braids?
Even when I cut him, I could never fade.
I mean, it's drizzie Drake.
What are we doing?
It's been two years.
And the Kendrick stuff, I just, you got your ass kicked.
Move on.
It's fine.
You know, he's sending shots at like ASAP Rocky questioning why Rihanna won't post his single.
He's like, there's DJ Caled bars and Ross bars.
And it's like he's going through a checklist of everybody who wronged him.
And you do get to the end of the album.
And you wonder for the future of Drake, is there a future for him as rapper and pop star where the central spine of his narrative is not rooted and him being the underdog?
Because I'm like, you're not the underdog.
like Kendrick didn't destroy you.
Like technically he destroyed you in terms of like
lyrically and who had the most hits
and you're getting embarrassed at the Super Bowl
and all of this.
But I'm like, you're fine.
You're still a millionaire.
You're going to sign another lucrative deal.
Everything will be fine with you.
So there is a level of like first world's problems
where I'm like, yeah, I agree with you.
Where I would like to see Drake,
it was interesting to me on this record
when he's talking about his father having cancer.
Because a few bars later,
He's talking about feeling like he has to raise his father.
Like his father is more like his brother.
I'm like,
that's super fascinating.
That string is just like,
I want to hear that across this album.
That's something that makes you special.
There's another line in that same song where he says,
I put the man in manipulation when I pay your rent and that's an obligation to our attachment.
And I sprinkle in a little Mercedes in fashion.
So it's like he's admitting to like using his wealth to essentially buy a
relationship with a woman saying I put the man in manipulation.
To me, it's super interesting.
That's much more interesting than you saying,
girls from Atlanta call me Santa on the very fucking next song, by the way.
I'm just like, and so there's so many of these songs where to Justin's point about the production
of like making pay and that sample, the I Want to be free sample, that beat is so sick.
There's so many good beats like that on this record.
What's the one produced by conductor near the end?
Firm friends, firm friends.
And they get just wasted on all of these make them pay, make them whatever.
I think the vast majority of them except for the first track on the album,
they're all in the same vein of just taking shots at the same people.
I'm just like, these could have been really great songs.
You're rapping, like there's moments where you're rapping great,
and there's great ward plays on Tondres.
But what you say does matter, you know, to a certain extent.
Not always, but when you're going to be this lyrical,
you can't be so redundant on the same beat
talking about the same people talking about the same shots you took
two years ago.
It's just kind of like, yeah, I would have loved to love these songs.
I would have loved to love this album.
And I think I would have loved it a lot more
and returned to it a lot more than I probably planned to.
Had the content, the lyrical content be interesting
or doesn't even have to be introspective,
just like say something, something.
I don't know.
It's just...
Even if they're not saying anything, perform it well.
Like, we haven't talked that much about made of honor.
I'm like, made of honor is interesting for the production.
And then every single time you approach one of these records,
it's like, like, I think we've been saying this, the whole podcast,
they do sound like sketches.
They do sound like first attempts that you didn't go back.
Instead of like re-singing a hook,
instead of like structuring a hook and making it tight.
Like there's a reason why like Controla or one dance
for these international smashes,
because the structure, the lyrics, everything about them are perfect pop songs.
And on so many points in this, I'm like, damn, you're getting close.
Yeah, exactly.
But you are not, like, you are not taking another swing at this.
Yeah.
I got to talk about made of honor because I spent probably way too much time with made of honor
because I find it to be incredibly baffling as an experience.
because I think that there is some legitimately
interesting, catchy production on there.
Yeah, all over it.
Vocally, and I think like he tried a dance record before
with Honestly Nevermind.
I actually think the production on this record
might be better than the production
and honestly, never mind.
Vocally, this is one of the worst experiences
I've ever had this in something.
Charles, you brought up the fact that he can't hit
that he's like struggling to find like the melody
and can't hit the right notes
and he's like over-reliant on autotune
in a way that's like
doesn't even feel stylistic these days
feels more like a crutch.
Lyrically this more than anything
more than all the whining on Ice Man
more than anything
any of the crooning,
any of like the teenage emotions
that he's feeling on Habibit
there are songs on this record that are so unbecoming for a 40-year-old band
um
cheetah print which I think a lot of people are singling out as a potential hit on this record
no really yes yes that song is a I get that some part sound good it is a wreck
like structurally it is a mess no there's a there's a peggy there's a peggy
goe I can't remember how to pronounce it but sample on that on the record that sounds very
like the production is very good um it is i find to be one of the most embarrassing songs
that i had heard in a while uh it cuts to the cha cha-cha slide i hate that part with sexy red
doing the cha-cha slide except you know a little more explicit and that would have been like
one of the worst songs that i had heard in a long time except like three songs later
he's doing a song called BBW.
Oh, I forgot.
I forgot about this.
And I really liked the production on BBW.
Again, another word that I should not be saying,
that I'm only saying because of Drake.
But it is absolutely insane.
He's saying things like, if you're going to bounce up on me,
I might need a new bed.
And it's like, it's absolutely crazy that this is,
40-year-old man with like at this point a
nine-year-old kid, eight-year-old kid.
Come on.
What is he doing?
With his mom on the record cover.
With his mom on the record cover.
This is insanity.
This is hookah lounge, only fans, fucking 40-year-olds in the club.
Why don't you go home to your family ass singing and rap in a way that to Justice
weight. I find not just embarrassing, but there is a level of, I think, if I'm going to be real,
love GNX, love not like us. I could get, I could get behind why Drake is upset, where Kendrick
made one of the biggest hits of his career, calling a man a pedophile. And do we know if Drake's a
pedophile or not? No. Has anything come out about that? No. Basically, people are running with
maybe you shouldn't have been texting
Millie Bobby Brown like this
or are you grooming women
because we see you with women that are in there
are 19, 20, 21, 22.
Not illegal, but there are moments where we're like,
hey, as a society, we have had conversations
about what does it mean in a power dynamic
for a man that is that old, that wealthy
to be seen with younger women?
To me, you do have to start wondering, I'm like, hey, I get if you feel like everybody tap dance on your grave for stuff that wasn't true.
But there's a lot of stuff that people are bringing up.
There's a lot of women who have come forward who are saying like, yeah, fuck Drake.
And I was just like, you have a platform, use it.
You keep throwing stones and hiding your hand.
How much sympathy can I like have for you?
I don't want to keep bringing up Kendrick, but because Drake brings them up so much on the record, I think I can.
I think Mr. Morale is not a record that I enjoy, but is a record that I find interesting because I'm like,
Kendrick is talking about his sex addiction. He's talking about what his father has meant to me,
what meant to him, what fatherhood means to have a son. He is talking about all of these naughty issues.
And I'm like, at no point on this record do I feel like Drake goes out of his way to do the same thing,
which is just like, here's actually the ugly parts of me,
the manipulation line that you said.
And I'm like, all right, we'll impact that.
Because that to me is at least interesting.
The thing about it, too, you have 43 songs to do it.
And he did it in literally one song.
Like, how does it at that point, it's like,
I mean, even that's so interesting.
Like, you would think it would just have to come out with that much content.
I mean, how long can you say nothing, you know?
At some point, you would think that it would just come.
out because obviously he's feeling real human emotions and you would think that would just come
out in the lyrics naturally but and then that makes me just kind of it just undermines the one time
that he did do it that he just never not even for a moment did it again uh which just again you got
43 tracks to to at least give us another song that's kind of like that or just maybe a verse
but there's just nothing um where do you think drako's that's yeah that's what i'm thinking because i've
already seen people online being like, well, he didn't give in, you know, there's no hits on this
album. He's saving that for his independent release because he's going to pull a, uh, a Frank Ocean.
And so he's, so, you know, there's that cope kind of already coming from some, well, actually,
before we go, I got to, I, Justin told me he was perusing the, uh, the Reddit subreddit for,
for Drake. I was, I was, I was, I'm very interested to see, hear what the narrative there is
there. I don't want to quote because I feel like these are very misguided people. I feel like these
are people that are in a cult and I don't want to pick on victims of a cult, but that cult is
Drake fandom. Let me tell you, these people are eating off crumbs and they are obsessed with, you know,
who they focus in on this beef is a thing that I've learned because there's no way that they can
spin that he beat Kendrick.
They can always be like, well, UMG helped Kendry.
There's like, you know, there's no way that they can really say anything about Rick
Ross at this point because it's kind of like, you know, who cares?
Like, Rick Veras is kind of Teflon in this whole situation.
They have really zeroed in on the Asoap Rocky part, and there were a lot of comments
to the, ha ha, look how we got them.
And they've made like a meme out of, have you guys watched any of the videos yet of any
of these.
No.
No.
It's very funny.
You know, you mentioned when we were talking about like this glut of content and finding
someone, like just people, like the average person waiting for some hits to pop off.
I was with somebody last night who was like, I was just going to wait and see if he dropped
a video.
And I was like, well, buddy, let me tell you.
There's 15.
It was 15 now.
I thought it was 14.
I told him 14.
But the people on the Drake subreddit are really, they've, they've, they've,
made a meme out of the
your baby mom ain't even post
a single hey where's she
at
where's and that they
they're just posting that
a lot and they
so they like the shots
they like the they like it
they find introspection
here and I think like maybe
if what you've been primed for
is the type of introspection
that Drake's been giving since take care
um
then this
actually rises to that level, I suppose.
But it's really like a dark place.
And Cole, I thought about just like reading through some of the quotes on there.
But like, we got to get, we got to pull these people out of the cult.
We can't be, we can't be throwing dirt on them.
Yeah, I mean, but yeah, Justin to your question, I do wonder where he goes because he
does seem to be serving that audience as we talked about.
there is, I don't know, it would be interesting to see what hits surface from this album.
I think we talked about Janice being a potential one.
Is there any other songs from the album you guys feel like are going to be contention
for a song of the summer or anything like that?
Shabang.
You think so?
I like Shibang.
I liked it more on the first day or so.
It kind of falls flat after like a minute and a half, unfortunately, and it sounds
clearly like Cuevo wrote it, but I like that song.
I don't know if it's going to go off.
Like that, though.
I don't know if there's a song of the summer on any of these projects.
There will obviously be hits.
To me, what I hope for is I'm like, if I'm as a fan of Drake and what he's done,
I think you can't take away the classic records he has, he has what he's done for music,
how he's changed music, his influence, you cannot take that away.
And I do get that like, yeah, you were backed into a corner where there's a reason Iceman
kept getting pushed back and the rollout was so wonky and the narrative is so just all over the
place because I do feel like how do you address what you went through? You got embarrassed in a way
that most celebrities just do not get embarrassed anymore because there's not really celebrities
anymore. So I do have a little bit of grace in terms of just like, yeah, this was the strategy
you went with. But now that this is all out of the way, now that you've gotten it all out of your
system, whatever comes next.
It can't be this again.
It can't. It can't. It can't.
Which is interesting.
We'll see what happens next. I mean, history would seem to point to him just keep doing the
same thing, but I hope that's not the case.
But it will be interesting, and I do, I hope he's independent.
I think that would be really cool. I do wonder if he's going to pull the Taylor Swift thing
and re-record some of his old albums. Do you think that's a possibility?
Oh, my God. Oh, don't even put that.
Oh, my God. Oh, my.
God. Can you, can you imagine Drake where he is at vocally trying to like redo like a controller?
Can you imagine him rewrapping Hotline Bling? It's just, just nightmare shit. Nightmare fuel.
All right. Well, this is great. Thanks you guys for coming on. I'm very happy to get this episode recorded so I can never listen to these albums again.
I will probably, I will probably listen to Janice. I will. Janice is in my, is in my, is in
my yearly playlist already. I'm like, hey, credit wears credit stew. You did get one, Drake.
Like, this is, hey, it's a, it's a, it's a, I love it. Question for you guys. What are you guys
going to do for a psychic cleanse after this? What are you, what are you listening to after spending
72 hours listening to two and a half hours of Drake? Longer than the movie Goodfellas.
Honestly, I'm, I'm, let's get to myahuasca. Let's go on the walk. No music. Let me listen to
the birds and the trees. Because as someone who also
feels like they're getting old.
I'm just like, yeah, I can't be driving around
in my whip to Drake.
Yeah, we can't do that.
That's too much light skin emo-ness for
to endure.
I'm going back to Daft Punk.
Hell yeah.
I'm going to finish the season strong.
I'm going to finish it by celebrating a duo
that put a lot of thought and intention
to every aspect of the career who only made four
solo albums and every one of them is perfect.
So that season is going to resume next week with an episode on Human After All.
And then we're going to do three episodes on Random Access Memories.
Oh, yeah.
And then Charles, you will be back on the pod to do part two of our Daft Punk last long
standing.
And then we're not going to reveal it yet, but then last long season, last long standing season.
What are we on now?
Five?
Is this six?
We've done Kendrick, Frank Ocean.
Outcast.
Season five.
Yeah, season five.
Season five of last long standing
in the summer.
All right, guys.
Appreciate it.
Appreciate you.
