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       Drake-Kendrick rap beef: what you need to know
        
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       A long-simmering feud between hip-hop superstars Drake and Kendrick
       Lamar reached a boiling point in recent days as the pair traded
       increasingly personal insults on a succession of diss tracks.
        
       After a security guard standing outside Drake's Toronto home was
       seriously injured in an overnight shooting Tuesday, local police
       fielded questions about any potential links between the feud and the
       violent incident. However, investigators say it's too early to speak
       to a motive.
        
       **IN PHOTOS: Scenes outside Drake's mansion after security guard
       shot**
        
       Here's a quick overview of what's behind the ongoing beef.
        
       **The key players:** At its centre are Toronto rapper Drake, 37, and
       Compton, Calif.-raised Lamar, 36, who were once friends and
       collaborators. Lamar appeared on a track from Drake's 2011 album "Take
       Care," while Drake returned the favour a little over a year later by
       showing up on Lamar's debut "Good Kid, M.A.A.D City."
        
       Lamar first poked at Drake in an appearance on Big Sean's 2013 single
       "Control," rapping a verse that suggested he was prepared to eclipse
       his career, along with other respected stars Pusha T, Meek Mill and
       A$AP Rocky.
        
       **The escalation:** Last October, Drake released the track "First
       Person Shooter" from his album "For All the Dogs." On it, guest rapper
       J. Cole refers to himself, Lamar and Drake as "the big three" of rap.
        
       By March, it's clear Lamar didn't appreciate being lumped in with the
       other two. When rappers Future and Metro Boomin released their album
       "We Don't Trust You" that month, it featured several veiled Drake
       insults and at least one overt one in a guest appearance by Lamar. The
       track "Like That" culminates with the Pulitzer winner refuting any
       notion of a "big three," saying matter of factly: "It's just big me."
        
       "We Don't Trust You" also confirmed a rumoured rift between Drake and
       his former friends and collaborators. Future and Drake released and
       toured their 2015 album "What a Time to Be Alive," which was executive
       produced by Metro Boomin.
        
       In April, a mere three weeks after their first album got the rap
       community fired up, Future and Metro Boomin returned with a searing
       followup, "We Still Don't Trust You." The album leaned into Drake's
       frayed relationships, with one hook sung by the Weeknd, a Toronto
       singer who first befriended Drake when they were both rising stars.
       Another track features A$AP Rocky, the longtime partner of Rihanna,
       whom Drake once romantically pursued.
        
       **The battle begins:** Within days, Drake issues "Push Ups," a diss
       track with jabs at Metro Boomin, Future and particularly Lamar, who he
       implies is soft and lagging behind his contemporaries. He pokes fun at
       his shoe size and his decision to appear on pop hits by Maroon 5 and
       Taylor Swift.
        
       A short time later, Drake posts "Taylor Made Freestyle" on his
       Instagram, which features AI-generated voices of Tupac Shakur and
       Snoop Dogg to goad Lamar. The fake Shakur suggests Lamar defend West
       Coast hip-hop in his name, while the fake Snoop urges Lamar to release
       a response faster. Drake yanks the song off his socials after Shakur's
       estate threatens legal action.
        
       Little more than a week passes before Lamar fires back with
       "Euphoria," an allusion to Drake's executive producer role on the hit
       HBO series. The track carries notable disdain as he accuses Drake of
       getting plastic surgery and calls him a bad father.
        
       **The personal insults:** Three days after "Euphoria," Lamar surprise
       drops "6:16 in LA" on his Instagram. The track is co-produced by
       longtime Swift collaborator Jack Antonoff, seen as a reaction to Drake
       dragging the pop superstar into the conflict. Lamar mocks Drake's
       habit of titling songs with times and locations.
        
       Late Friday, Drake went nuclear on Lamar with the seven-minute track
       "Family Matters," which alleges infidelity and accuses Lamar of
       abusing his fiancée, Whitney Alford. An accompanying music video
       features a minivan being sent to a crusher, an allusion to the van
       featured on the cover of Lamar's debut album.
        
       Less than an hour later, Lamar unleashes "Meet The Grahams," which
       targets the family of the Toronto rapper — born Aubrey Graham — and
       suggests he has a secret daughter. "Not Like Us," another diss track,
       is released overnight with Lamar rapping a series of specific personal
       insults, many of them surrounding his accusation that Drake is
       attracted to underage girls. The single cover features a Google Maps
       image of Drake's Bridle Path mansion.
        
       Drake resurfaces Sunday night with "The Heart Part 6," named after a
       deeply personal multi-part series of rap songs released by Lamar over
       the years. This time, Drake claims he fed rumours of a secret daughter
       through his channels as bait, adding: "I'd never look twice at no
       teenager."
        
       _This report by The Canadian Press was first published May 7, 2024._
        
        
        
        
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