It’s becoming that the Drake-Kendrick Lamar beef ought to find yourself on the Tremendous Bowl area: “My intent from day one was to maintain the character of it as a sport,” Lamar mentioned in an interview previous to his half-time present on Sunday. As the 2 rappers’ enmity constructed right into a collection of back-and-forth diss tracks in spring 2024, writers reached for boxing metaphors, describing “sparring”, “buying and selling blows” or delivering “haymakers”. It was harking back to Pusha T’s phrases to the Guardian after his personal spat with Drake: “What has been extra energetic than this?” And of Drake’s personal phrases on one among his earliest hits: “Sports activities and music are so synonymous / Trigger we need to be them, they usually need to be us.”
Drake followers may grumble that Lamar is now being lower than sporting: having clearly gained the meat due to the massive US No 1 success of Not Like Us – which framed Drake as a paedophile, a declare Drake outright rejected – he’s now gleeful in victory. Final month he went to gather 5 Grammy awards for Not Like Us wearing a “Canadian tuxedo”: Drake is from Toronto. On the Tremendous Bowl, he introduced out Serena Williams to bop throughout Not Like Us: Drake and Williams had been as soon as rumoured to be relationship, and Drake later wrote damage lyrics about her. Lamar’s particular visitor SZA was one among Drake’s personal beloved inventive foils. Lamar himself grinned down the digicam as he rapped: “Say Drake, I hear you want ‘em younger”. At each occasions, thousands-strong crowds chanted “tryna ring a bell and it’s in all probability A minor”, a line about paedophilia, at full quantity – it was, Billboard said, “much more deafening within the Superdome than the telecast instructed”. Kendrick wore a lower-case “a” pendant to underline the reference. The “cease, he’s already useless” Simpsons quote is being a lot shared, and has by no means been so applicable.
“Kendrick Lamar didn’t simply carry out on the Tremendous Bowl – he set a cultural agenda,” says Lauren Beeching, a UK-based skilled in disaster PR for celebrities. “He’s put so many clever Easter eggs all through the efficiency; the extent of thought and element in his efficiency implies that that is going to be talked about for days, not hours.” Worse nonetheless for Drake, it was at the most well-liked sporting occasion within the US calendar. “Common persons are going to study it,” Beeching says. “They’ll be Googling: why is that this information? In case you open TikTok it’s in every single place. So that is being launched to so many new folks.”
The meat has clearly energised Lamar: his self-reflexive 2022 album Mr Morale & the Large Steppers was a contact underrated, however there’s little question the extra playful, oxygenated circulation he’s now utilizing is thrilling. Audiences in the meantime love this gossipy, reference-rich sport. However what of Drake? He was as soon as the world’s most-streamed artist, who seemingly had a simple command of each fashion he turned his hand to: lure, R&B, pop, dancehall, home and extra. Now, he’s humiliated and flailing for credibility.
A failing was maybe in attempting to enchantment to all of these audiences without delay. There might properly have been real ardour in forming his collaborations with UK artists comparable to Part Boyz and Headie One, however – worsened with how he would generally mould his accent to south London, Jamaica and extra – he turned seen as a vacationer who was extracting extra cultural capital than he was giving again. It meant that when Lamar wrote one other devastating part of Not Like Us, the place he frames Drake as a leech absorbing cred from Atlanta artists like Future and Lil Child, many listeners nodded alongside.
Extra prosaically, Drake has had backlash from suing his personal label, UMG, over the allegations made in Not Like Us. “As a rapper it’s not the correct look – it’s sort of disrespecting your individual commerce, and appears hypocritical,” Beeching says.
She says that “silence is essential for somebody like that proper now,” and that when one among her shoppers will get drawn right into a spat, “the primary day is usually me begging them to not do something publicly. His smartest transfer is to only wait, and are available again with one thing that reframes the dialog totally; a defensive response can be a mistake for him. If Drake tries to reclaim credibility in rap it might really feel pressured, what with him attempting to sue. However perhaps he might lean into one other facet of his model” – a kind of different types, comparable to pop or R&B. “Fortunately he’s commercially profitable sufficient to have the ability to try this fairly simply.”
But Drake appears unwilling to try this. After the diss tracks ended, he wrote on a picture of a samurai going through a military: “Good instances. Summer time vibes up subsequent.” Had he adopted by on that promise, and gifted summer season 2024 a extra carefree pop-leaning monitor within the fashion of One Dance, Hotline Bling or Wealthy Child Daddy, he would have reminded the world that right here was a method which Lamar, for all his Pulitzer-winning acclaim, has by no means mastered. After which, maybe, Drake might have labored his approach again to rap credibility. Beeching offers an instance of somebody who dealt with a tough second properly: Taylor Swift, after she was drawn right into a feud with Kanye West and Kim Kardashian, and initially painted as a villain. “As a substitute of combating again instantly, she disappeared: no statements, no interviews, no social media. Then she returned with Popularity, which acknowledged the backlash however on her phrases, with out partaking in messy public feuds. She didn’t take the bait, principally.”
However as an alternative of pivoting to pop, Drake launched three pure rap tracks – one among them with two Atlanta stars, Younger Thug and 21 Savage, as if to reclaim his relevance within the metropolis. Later, in January, got here a freestyle through which he complained in regards to the mates misplaced to the Lamar beef. After the Grammys, he went on stage in Australia carrying a vest with smoke pouring out of simulated bullet holes, to say: I’m nonetheless standing. Whether or not that is dignified or corny is dependent upon how a lot of a Drake stan you’re, nevertheless it’s plain how a lot the meat continues to have an effect on him – and the way his ego, which helped to make him such a giant star, gained’t let him transfer on.
Will the world let him, both? “Kendrick didn’t simply problem Drake musically, he’s broken his character in a approach that can linger,” Beeching concludes, and but on the similar time, the general public are likely to “overlook actually quick and simply – there’s so many public figures proper now who had been as soon as cancelled or humiliated, who’ve come again after being quiet for a bit”.
Not like so a lot of these figures, Drake has by no means been charged with against the law; he’s been gossiped about and has had some doubtful moments, however has by no means severely crossed a line in public, within the method of Will Smith. His streaming numbers have dropped considerably, however on Spotify there are nonetheless 74m folks listening to him every month. And whereas Lamar will keep on performing Not Like Us on his stadium tour with SZA this spring – and everybody will sing alongside once more with the “A minor” line – his victory lap for the meat will now come to an in depth, and he’ll in all probability transfer on from it.
Drake is now 38. That’s outdated in pop phrases – like so many earlier than him, he’ll nearly actually not stay related to every successive era – nevertheless it’s younger for an artist, and he stays versatile. He can be unwise to revisit it but, however the encounter with Lamar, and the best way Drake involves dwell with it, might nonetheless apparently form his artistry. And as any sports activities fan will inform you, everybody loves an underdog – and a second-half comeback.