Yeah it might be over
He even lied about melting Pharrell's chains, how can anyone take everything he says at face value is beyond me
Drake fans asking niggas to dissect The Heart Pt. 6, I promise you don't want nigga picking apart that track.
Alfie should stay in the safe space Drake thread. Maybe block some Kendrick fans like the rest of those folk. Mans has issues.
Damn I guess it really is over
@slurpjuicepapi U a fan u a fan u a fan
Kendrick sneak dissing our boy smh
Oh s*** lupe wrote an article
@insertcoolnamehere
Will read later
"Whoever feed you that info is a clown"
... 4 bars later ...
"We planted false intel"
Drake fans asking niggas to dissect The Heart Pt. 6, I promise you don't want nigga picking apart that track.
Song full of holes lmao only s*** to dissect is Ls
Niggas act like this s*** shifted some.
It might have ended Drake but Gunna, Yeat and Carti are coming.
Bars are dead unfortunately.
Lupe with a wild take as always
"In 2024, we find ourselves at an inflection point. Hip-hop is now as mainstream a form of music as any. Today, narratives live and die on digital timelines, and not in project hallways. The stages are no longer sweatbox nightclubs occupied by dozens (like the ones depicted in 2002’s 8 Mile), but rather online spaces with an audience in the billions. The veracity of claims matters less. And more than ever, the size of the narrative is more important than the quality of the product. “Winning” and “losing” mean everything and nothing, depending on what we care about (e.g., even if Drake is “losing” this beef, it will likely cost him little). This all makes conflict so much more intriguing, and drives a distinct flavor of techno-rap beef—one neither better nor worse than the past, just different.
The manner that technology has already changed rap beef begs the question of where it will go next. One day, the taboo around AI in hip-hop will disappear, and entire battles will be orchestrated by LLM-rappers trained on the raps of individual artists. Quants will develop metrics for who the winners are. If we are offended by a lyric about a member of our family, we’ll blame the machines. It may sound like the stuff of science-fiction, but the gap between this future reality and 2024 might be smaller (in time and manner) than the gap between Canibus vs. LL Cool J (1998) and Kendrick vs. Drake.
The state of things highlights another example of the late MF DOOM’s clairvoyance. The sarcastic lyrics on “Beef Rapp” (the lead song from the acclaimed 2004 album Mm..Food) were not only about the past, but also about a present and future of hip-hop where conflict has life-and-death consequences. Early in the song, DOOM scolds our addiction to rap bloodlust, using beef consumption as a metaphor: “I suggest you change your diet; beef can lead to high blood pressure if you fry it.”
The world might agree. Soon, rap beef will cease to exist as we once learned to love it. And that may not be a bad thing."