The 100 Best Drake Songs

It’s not hard to find 100 Drake songs worth compiling into a list of his best work. In an era when rappers drop multiple albums/mixtapes/”projects”/whatever in a calendar year, the Toronto artist also known as Aubrey Drake Graham has been as prolific as anyone. On Nov. 4, he’ll release Her Loss, a full-length collaboration with Atlanta-via-London rapper 21 Savage. It’s his third project in just over 12 months, following Certified Lover Boy from September 2021, and Honestly, Nevermind last June. There’s a surplus of material, and more than a few standouts to appreciate.
Yet some rap fans sick of hearing about the 6 God will complain: Why does Drake need more shine? Since scoring his first Billboard top-two hit with “Best I Ever Had” in 2009, he’s been omnipresent, as unavoidable as the weather. Just as his incredible chart success has brought him pop ubiquity, so has it fueled a chorus of naysayers who won’t accept him as one of the greats, whether that’s among past heroes such as Jay-Z and Lil Wayne, or current icons like Kendrick Lamar, Future, and Young Thug. His tabloid romances with women both famous and relatively unknown, his meme-able videos, and his very public and ostentatious display of wealth all seem to distract from serious discussion and, yes, appreciation of his music.
If a list like this can accomplish anything, then it’s to refocus attention on his art. His catalog may be thematically narrow, circling around familiar stories of growing up in Canada, grinding away in home studios in search of a distinctive sound, and achieving instant global fame along with all the problems that brings. But it’s a rich sonic tapestry. There are clear differences between “Find Your Love” and “Passionfruit,” two songs on which he memorably exploded the concept of the rapper as crooner. His verbal techniques and vocal cadences on “Energy” are more sophisticated than early cuts such as “Headlines.” And while his portraits of women remain a work in progress, there’s clear growth from the paternalism of “Houstatlantavegas” to the exuberant celebration of female persistence that is “Nice for What.”
Even the most hardened rap nerd will concede that “Crew Love” was a moment, and “Jumpman” sounds great when cranked up to 11 in an arena; a few might even admit that they retweeted a meme inspired by “Hotline Bling.” Maybe Drake has had so many hits, whether they’re the Billboard kind or simply songs that impacted the culture, that it’s easy to blur them all together. After all, he’s arguably the unofficial king of streaming who seemingly reigns all year round from June to June, as GZA once rapped. But it’s worth sifting through the wheat of Drake’s career, and figuring out which songs are flawed gems, bright diamonds, or rough drafts that led to better pieces. Nearly 20 years after the release of his debut mixtape, Room for Improvement, it’s time to dig deeper.
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‘6PM in New York’
Image Credit: Ross Gilmore/Getty Images “I want to prove that I’m number one over all these niggas,” raps Drake. He’s strictly in attack mode here, barely adding an “Oh, you gotta love it” aside to break up his flow. He claims “Lil Wayne could have not found him a better successor,” only to dis former Young Money compatriot Tyga: “I heard the little homie talkin’ reckless in Vibe … You need to act your age and not your girl’s age.” He calls his career a “how-to manual,” makes a veiled reference to Jay-Z and Kanye West’s arena-conquering Watch the Throne tour exploits, and demands to be taken as a king of rap. “They scream out my failures and whisper my accomplishments,” he notes.
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‘Right Above It,’ Lil Wayne feat. Drake
Image Credit: Tim Mosenfelder/Getty Images It makes sense that “Right Above It” was the theme song for Dwayne Johnson’s HBO football series, Ballers. With Kane Beatz’s big trap keyboard sounds, the track bleeds sporting attitude, and Weezy even boasts, “I can hand it to Drake or do a quarterback draw” while referencing 2Pac’s Makaveli line “I’m not a killer but don’t push me.” Meanwhile, Drake pays homage to Outkast (“Who else really trying to fuck with Hollywood Cold?”) and claims he has a “Slumdog Millionaire Bollywood flow.”
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‘Worst Behavior’
Image Credit: Andrew Chin/Getty Images This is Drake in full-on turnup mode, drunk off whatever’s in his red cup and as loud and obnoxious as he wants to be. “Motherfuckers never loved us!” he chants over and over amid DJ Dahi’s glitchy trap masher. “Bitch, you betta have my money when I come for the shit like ODB!” But eventually, he yields to deeper feelings of being underappreciated, a frequent theme of his Nothing Was the Same era. “Who else making rap albums, doing numbers like it’s pop?” he asks while appropriating Mase’s flow from the Notorious B.I.G.’s “Mo Money, Mo Problems.”
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‘Think Good Thoughts,’ Drake feat. Phonte and Elzhi
Image Credit: Tim Mosenfelder/Getty Images Thanks to a 9th Wonder loop of Anita Baker’s “Sweet Love” as well as verses from Phonte of Little Brother and Elzhi of Slum Village, “Think Good Thoughts” helped a generation of blog-rap fans take notice of Drake for the first time. It finds him dismantling false impressions: “But I hate it when they judge me on how I sound/I spit that influential shit from my town.” LB fans often grouse about how Drake subsequently found bigger fame with the humblebrag style Phonte pioneered. However, he’s acknowledged the Raleigh, North Carolina, rapper’s influence throughout his career.
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‘10 Bands’
Image Credit: Matt Jelonek/WireImage/Getty Images This is one of those tracks that arguably makes 2015’s If You’re Reading This It’s Too Late his high point as a technically proficient bar-for-bar rapper. He sounds fluid and completely at ease as he rattles off lines about safe houses in Calabasas and getting boxes of free Jordans from Nike. “In the 6 cookin’ with the wrist motion,” he boasts confidently.
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‘She Will,’ Lil Wayne feat. Drake
Image Credit: Tim Mosenfelder/Getty Images With producer T-Minus’ slurry, slow-windin’ rhythm, “She Will” approximates the late-night vibe of a strip club, with too many ballers lusting to touch the merchandise. It’s a seamy tone that Drake enhances with his chorus about women tempted to spend the night with a wealthy celebrity like himself. “She bad, so maybe she won’t, uh/But shit, then again, maybe she will/Yeah, do it for the realest fuckin’ niggas in the game right now.”
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‘For Free,’ DJ Khaled feat. Drake
Image Credit: Kris Connor/Getty Images Opening with a reference from Too Short’s “Blow the Whistle,” “For Free” is Drake in funky horndog mode, lusting over women with “stomach on flat-flat/Booty like, “What’s that?” However, he’s careful to add that the sexcapades emerge from mutual consent, as well as a warning that it’s probably just an episode for him. “You knew what it was when you sign up,” he harmonizes. Sound inviting? Near the track’s end, DJ Khaled makes sure to stamp the affair with a signature boast: “We the best/OVO! The summer’s ours! It always has been.”
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‘Blessings,’ Big Sean feat. Drake & Kanye West
Image Credit: Big Sean/YouTube On “Blessings,” Big Sean, Drake and Kanye West preach the prosperity gospel, equating their bountiful money and finery as the equivalent of God’s grace. Still, Drake isn’t above a little pettiness. “I could give two fucks where the Grammys go,” he growls, nurturing a longstanding antipathy of the awards ceremony for not properly recognizing his achievements. Then he caps his appearance on this Vinylz and Allen Ritter-produced hit with a memorable chorus: “Waaaay up, I feel blessed!”
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‘In My Feelings’
Image Credit: Drake/YouTube On “In My Feelings,” Drake sings and raps about past girlfriends, shouting them out by name over a bounce track made by TrapMoneyBenny and Blaqnmild. But this song really belongs to an uncredited appearance by Miami scam-rap queens City Girls, who show up midway through and dominate with sharp lines like “I need that black card and the code to the safe.”
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‘5AM in Toronto’
Image Credit: Drake/YouTube Released in 2013 on the internet with a grungy, home-video-styled clip to boot, “5AM in Toronto” sounds like a synthwave track, thanks to keyboards by Nikhil Seetharam. The Allen Ritter, Seetharam, Vinylz, and Boi-1da-produced song finds Drake in a tempestuous mood, spitting a verse full of bars that have been interpreted as shots at the Weeknd, Chris Brown, and others. “’Cause I show love, never get the same outta niggas/Guess it’s funny how money can make change outta niggas,” he charges. Incidentally, he made up with the Weeknd and Brown, and scored a hit single with the latter, “No Guidance,” in 2019.
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‘Wait for U,’ Future feat. Tems and Drake
Image Credit: Future/YouTube “Wait for U” may be a too-easy romantic ode to the ladies from two rap lotharios, but it works. Amid a sample of Tems’ “Higher” and a guitar-flecked beat from FnZ and ATL Jacob, the men unloose their feelings and emotions, albeit under intoxicated circumstances. “Every time I sip on codeine, I get vulnerable,” says Future. “I sit on my balcony and wonder how you’re feeling,” adds Drake. As Morris Day once sang, gigolos get lonely, too.
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‘The Calm’
Image Credit: Dana Edelson/NBCU Photo Bank/ Getty Images “It’s only been three years, look at how I’ve grown,” raps Drake on this deep cut from his third mixtape and commercial breakthrough. It finds him reflecting on growing fame as well as a sense of alienation from his fan base, and you can hear the distinctly Canadian accent in his voice. In 2020, longtime producer 40 told Kevin Durant’s The ETCs podcast that it’s one of his favorite Drake tracks. “Seeing the way people react to that song — how heart-wrenching that was, how much you felt what he was saying, that was so real,” he explained.
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‘Look What You’ve Done’
Image Credit: Jeff Kravitz/AMA2011/FilmMagic Thank Drake and producers Chase N Cashe and 40 for introducing a new generation of fans to Static Major, the R&B singer-songwriter who wrote hits for Aaliyah and others before passing away in 2008. They sampled a YouTube clip of Static Major riffing on the piano into this appealingly autobiographical track where Drake pays tribute to his mother and grandmother. “Just another kid going through life, worrying I won’t be accepted,” he remembers of his years before Lil Wayne discovered and signed him.
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‘Money in the Grave,’ feat. Rick Ross
Image Credit: Drake/YouTube Released as part of a two-song EP, The Best in the World, celebrating the Toronto Raptors’ 2019 NBA championship, “Money in the Grave” finds Drake and Rozay at their most boastful, no more, no less. “I was on top when that shit meant a lot/Still on top like I’m scared of the drop,” raps Drake, referring to how he blew up when compact-disc sales were still a thing.
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‘Weston Road Flows’
Image Credit: Frank Hoensch/Redferns/Getty Images Named after the Toronto street on which Drake grew up, the Swto and 40-produced “Weston Road Flows” is one of his densest raps. He begins with memories of youth and a shout-out to childhood friend Renny, then segues to how he took his rivals’ spot on the charts (“You number one and I’m Eddie Murphy, we tradin’ places”), while dropping references to Canadian heroes like former Toronto Raptors star Vince Carter and R&B singer Glenn Lewis — all without a chorus.
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‘Take Care’ feat. Rihanna
Image Credit: Drake/YouTube Co-produced by Jamie xx and 40, “Take Care” sounds like an uptempo song by the former’s alt-pop group the xx, and Jamie relies heavily on a remix he made for Gil Scott-Heron’s “I’ll Take Care of You.” Meanwhile, Drake sings in a voice that sounds more strident and emphatic than his usual crooner delivery, while Rihanna sings the chorus in a low whisper, allowing herself to memorably crack off-rhythm at one point. The net effect is of tempering expectations and dealing with love realistically — a sleight of hand that fueled the song’s nightclub dominance through much of 2012.
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‘Jimmy Cooks,’ feat. 21 Savage
Image Credit: Michael Campanella/Getty Images “Rest in peace to Lil Keed,” says Drake on “Jimmy Cooks.” His pairing with 21 Savage hearkens back to their successful “Knife Talk” collaboration, thanks to a Playa Fly sample that transitions into a soulful, melodic beat centered on Brooke Benton’s “You Were Gone.” Each sound is animated by the other’s presence, with Drake boasting about how he’s “Cooking up ambition on the kitchen stove/Pot’s start to bubble, see the suds, that shit’s good to go.”
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‘Who Do You Love?’ YG feat. Drake
Image Credit: YG/YouTube “We turned up in the studio, late night/That’s why the songs that you hear coming real tight,” raps Drake on “Who Do You Love?”; his unlicensed use of a line from Rappin’ 4-Tay’s Bay Area classic “Playaz Club” nearly led to a lawsuit. Nevertheless, it’s a sign that Drake’s a student of the genre, and he fits comfortably into the hard bass wallops of this Mustard-produced banger. “I’m big on the West, like I’m big in the South/So we gon’ pay some people off, we gon’ figure it out,” he raps.
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‘Find Your Love’
Image Credit: C Brandon/Redferns/Getty Images “Find Your Love” finds Drake in full-on R&B mode, singing over a track produced by Kanye West, Jeff Bhasker, and No I.D. that replicates the sun-dappled island rhythms of Jamaican lover men like Gyptian and Jah Cure. He adds patois inflections to his delivery, and croons with sincerity, a marked shift in a genre more associated with hardcore sex come-ons than adult contemporary romance. “Find Your Love” underlines how Drake isn’t afraid to be viewed as soft, even as he shores up his rap bona fides elsewhere.
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‘Sicko Mode,’ Travis Scott
Image Credit: Travis Scott/YouTube “Sicko Mode” is a citadel to Scott’s maximalist creativity. It includes over two dozen songwriters, six producers, three beat changes, and an uncredited vocal from Swae Lee, as well the sampled voices of the Notorious B.I.G., Big Hawk, and Luke Campbell. Still, Drake stands out amid the sensory overload. He gets two verses, and the opportunity to brag about taking half of a Xanax that leaves him “out like a light” on a private jet. “When I shoot my shot, that shit wetty like I’m Sheck,” he adds, shouting out Scott affiliate Sheck Wes in the process.
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‘Poetic Justice,’ Kendrick Lamar feat. Drake
Image Credit: Christie Goodwin/Redferns/Getty Images Built around a sample of Janet Jackson’s “Any Time, Any Place” and named after her 1994 movie, “Poetic Justice” takes the form of open letters to the opposite sex. Drake raps about how “sometimes I wish we would fight less and talk more,” while Lamar raps, “If you’re in the mood for empathy, there’s blood in my pen.” Both are in a contemplative mood and embrace romantic introspection, but Drake can’t help but get turned on when he imagines his girl in a sundress: “Wooh! Good god! What you doin’ that walk for?”
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‘Knife Talk,’ feat. Project Pat and 21 Savage
Image Credit: Drake/YouTube This Three 6 Mafia-styled hit piece features an ominous, DJ Paul-like piano melody and plenty of grizzled threats from Project Pat and 21 Savage. “To stay ahead in this bitch-ah/I drank syrup like it’s liq-ah,” raps Pat in his immediately recognizable extra-syllable cadence. Wisely, Drake doesn’t try to keep up with the hardcore knife talk, though he can’t resist but issue a few threats. “Type of nigga that can’t look me in the eyes/I despise,” he raps.
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‘Nonstop’
Image Credit: Drake/YouTube “Nonstop” finds Drake appropriating the ski-mask menace of classic Memphis rap with surprising success. The track’s elements work better in practice than on paper, from a grimy loop of Mack Daddy Ju’s “My Head Is Spinnin’” to fanciful claims that he’s a “wig splitter,” as well as the notorious and somewhat colorist line “Yeah, I’m light-skinned, but I’m still a dark nigga.” The tone is of a rap monarch with a “palace look like Buckingham” who’s willing to do anything to maintain his perch, and has unlimited amounts of money to do it.
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‘Jumpman,’ Drake and Future
Image Credit: Neil H Kitson/Redferns/Getty Images Inspired by Michael Jordan’s famed Nike logo, “Jumpman” finds Drake and Future all the way turned up and flexing in the studio. Metro Boomin’s beat is bouncy enough, but it’s the energy the two bring that drives this hallmark to the sporting life forward. “Trapping is the life that’s the way for me-e!” raps Future, emphasis on the “me” as if he were whistling. Then he simply chants, “Nobu, Nobu, Nobu, Nobu, Nobu, Nobu.” Meanwhile, Drakes brags, “They just smell like two or three weeks out the country,” and gives shout outs to Manu Ginóbili and Dikembe Mutombo.
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‘Come and See Me,’ PartyNextDoor feat. Drake
Image Credit: Dana Edelson/NBCU Photo Bank/Getty Image It’s unclear why Drake hasn’t had more success with his OVO imprint. He’s one of the biggest rap stars of the past decade-plus, but unlike J Cole’s Dreamville, he has yet to introduce an artist that has achieved significant success. The closest may be PartyNextDoor, a Canadian songwriter who scored a Grammy-nominated hit with “Come and See Me.” The track is redolent of the mid-2010s “trap-soul” era, with 40’s blurry production matching his deep, sonorous voice. Drake assists with a melodic verse, casting shade at another guy dating his woman: “Just ’cause he got a heart don’t mean he got heart.”
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‘Laugh Now Cry Later,’ feat. Lil Durk
Image Credit: Lagerhaus/WireImage/Getty Images “Laugh Now Cry Later” exemplifies Drake’s songwriting talent and knack for melodic choruses. “Sometimes we laugh, and sometimes we cry, I guess you know now,” he sings, before taking a subliminal shot at Kanye West with a reference to the latter’s track “Ghost Town.” There are other impressive effects, including his repeat of the chorus several times as if it’s a mantra; and the way he concludes the Lil Durk line “Even though I got a case, I’ma do what it takes” by adding, “And I’ve never been embraced,” creating a sense of continuity between the two voices.
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‘Work,’ Rihanna feat. Drake
Image Credit: Rihanna/YouTube As the musical personification of Rihanna and Drake’s star-crossed romance, “Work” frames the latter as an object of desire, with Rihanna eager to give him more “work.” The Boi-1da production is a light and blissful reggae-pop affair, with Rihanna’s exuberant, patois-tinged vocal driving the sound forward. With all this love coming from the Barbadian star, Drake doesn’t have to do much else but sit there and be appreciated. “If you had a twin, I would still choose you,” he harmonizes. “We just need a face-to-face/You can pick the time and the place.”
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‘Where Ya At,’ Future feat. Drake
Image Credit: Future/YouTube Produced by Metro Boomin, “Where Ya At” is a marvel of trap drums, piano keyboards, and Future and Drake’s uncanny vocal chemistry. Future snaps with impressive rhythm, and Drake adds on with the verse “Where were you, when all the dogs needed help?/Lawyers and commissary ain’t gon’ pay itself.” The latter’s golden touch ensured it became Future’s first Billboard top 30 hit.
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‘Walk It Talk It,’ Migos feat. Drake
Image Credit: Migos/YouTube “Walk It Talk It” is a loving homage to Atlanta’s mid-aughts snap music era and groups like D4L and Dem Franchize Boyz. As with most things Migos, the play’s the thing, and the lyrics are less important than the cadence and hilarious ad-libs they adorn them with. Drake, who helped boost their breakout hit “Versace” in 2013, fits in well among the antics. “First night, she gon’ let me fuck ’cause we grown/I hit her, gave her back to the city, she home,” he raps, while Takeoff punctuates the stanza by ad-libbing “She at home now!”
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‘Best I Ever Had’
Image Credit: Tim Mosenfelder/Getty Images With all that has happened to Drake, it’s easy to overlook the hit single that made him a star. Nestled amid So Far Gone, his 2009 mixtape that marked a peak in so-called “blog rap,” “Best I Ever Had” finds Drake perfecting the art of the humblebrag over a sprightly Boi-1da beat. “Sex, love, pain, baby I be on that Tank shit,” he raps in reference to the R&B singer’s album Sex, Love & Pain. It was difficult for rap heads to take him seriously at first — some refuseniks still don’t — and he’s only matured as an artist in the years since. But “Best I Ever Had” still resonates as a portrait of how far he’s come.
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‘Lemon Pepper Freestyle’ feat. Rick Ross
Image Credit: Prince Williams/Wireimage/Getty Images The six-minute “Lemon Pepper Freestyle” is built on a distorted sample of Quadron’s “Pressure,” and finds Drake full of conflicting thoughts. After dropping the usual humblebrag lines, he pays homage to mentor Lil Wayne, and foretells his future as a single-dad. “And I sent her the child support, she sent the heart emoji/They all say they love me, but they hardly know me,” he raps before imagining dropping off his “little man” at school and how mothers will “get googly-eyed” during future parent-teacher meetings. Then he dismisses the whole idea of bragging anyway: “And being honest, I don’t even want to talk about it.”
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‘Hold On, We’re Going Home’ feat. Majid Jordan
Image Credit: Drake/YouTube Drake’s “Hold On, We’re Going Home” finds him collaborating with synth-pop duo Majid Jordan to dazzling results. It evokes the late Eighties, when bands inspired by Depeche Mode and New Order roamed the airwaves, and he adopts a pop-crooner mode he’s deployed many times before, but with more confidence and effectiveness than in the past. Drake has said that it’s his attempt at a making a timeless wedding song, with Majid Al Maskati singing on the chorus “You’re the girl, you’re the one.” To be sure, it’s a sentiment that won’t be found in much of Drake’s catalog, but it feels real here.
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‘Crew Love’ feat. the Weeknd
Image Credit: C Brandon/Redferns/Getty Images “Crew Love” mostly belongs to the Weeknd. He sings on more than half of the track, and he unfurls a glorious display of alternative-R&B angst over an airy, plush track from Illangelo and 40, making for one of his best early performances. “There’s a room full of niggas/What you followin’ me for?” he sings. The Weeknd’s vocals set the scene for Drake’s vision of a newly ascendant pop star enjoying the fruits of his labor. “Really, I like who I’m becoming,” brags Drake. “I told my story/And made history.”
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‘Stay Schemin’,’ Rick Ross feat. Drake and French Montana
Image Credit: Neil H Kitson/Redfern/Getty Images “It bothers me when the gods get to actin’ like the broads,” raps Drake, taking aim at Common for dissing him in interviews (and being a little sexist in the process). He spits some of his most pointed lyrics on this track from Rick Ross’ Rich Forever mixtape as he reminisces about a time when rap music was “rugged” and claims that he rolls “heavy” with his friends. Drake’s verse also got him in real-life trouble. When he rapped, “Kobe ‘bout to lose 150Ms/Kobe my nigga, I hate it had to be him/Bitch, you wasn’t with me shootin’ in the gym,” Bryant’s wife Vanessa forced him to apologize.
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‘One Dance’ feat. Wizkid and Kyla
Image Credit: Prince Williams/Wireimage/Getty Images Drake’s “One Dance” is arguably the song that introduced Afrobeats to the American pop mainstream — before then, pioneers like Wizkid had become a favorite of internet diggers but had yet to break through to a wider audience. However, the track also incorporates U.K. funky, courtesy of a pivotal sample of Kyla’s “Do You Mind,” as well as Jamaican dancehall flavors. It all makes for a defining moment in pop’s problematically titled “tropical” era, with Drake gamely abandoning his rap pose for a smooth, rhythmic croon that resonated worldwide.
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‘0 to 100/The Catch Up’
Image Credit: Paul Bergen/Redferns via Getty Images Most radio stations that played this Drake loosie throughout the second half of 2014 focused on the “0 to 100” half. It’s a fusillade of memorable punchlines — “Chef Curry with the shot, boy,” “I be on my Lil Mouse drill shit,” “Run Forrest, run Forrest, go Forrest” — and memories about his days as a member of the Degrassi: The Next Generation ensemble. Meanwhile, “The Catch Up” is a much quieter conversation with a friend that finds him mulling, “Maybe I didn’t lose them at all/Maybe I keep moving forward and they’re stagnant/They ain’t moving at all.”
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‘God’s Plan’
Image Credit: Drake/YouTube On “God’s Plan,” Drake struggles with feelings of alienation. “Trying to keep it peaceful is a struggle for me,” he admits. Memorably, he harmonizes at one point, “She said, ‘Do you love me,’ I tell her, ‘Only partly/I only love my bed and my momma, I’m sorry.’” Yet he eventually dispenses of his self-centeredness and says, “I can’t do this on my own,” all while toying with a newfangled Playboi Carti-inspired flow. The popular, award-winning video for “God’s Plan” found him doing charitable giving around the city of Miami, underlining the song’s theme of learning to embrace community.
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‘Passionfruit’
Image Credit: Ross Gilmore/Getty Images “Passionfruit” displays Drake’s musical inspirations with aplomb. It’s a blurry mélange of alternative R&B, synth-pop, and deep house: early in the track, there’s a sampled snippet of house icon Moodymann exhorting his audience to get more drinks. At the center is Drake in crooner mode, but his romantic yearnings are less important than the sound he creates with British producer Nana Rogues. Amid it all, there’s the voice of Zoë Kravitz, who seems as bedazzled as the rest of us: “Trying to think of the right thing to say.”
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‘30 for 30 Freestyle’
Image Credit: Paul Charbit/Gamma-Rapho/Getty Images While Drake’s album with Future, What a Time to Believe, is a largely drama-less celebration of the self, he set aside its closing track to ruminate on his life. Despite its ESPN-inspired title, “30 for 30 Freestyle” is a vintage single-verse, confessional-style rap that balances braggadocio with doubts and reflections. A key moment arrives when he comments on how pundits wondered why he didn’t seem more engaged in the Black Lives Matter movement and the Ferguson, Missouri, protests over the death of Michael Brown. “Kids are losing lives, got me scared of losing mine/And if I hold my tongue about it, I get crucified,” he raps.
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‘Back to Back’
Image Credit: Ross Gilmore/Getty Images When onetime friend Meek Mill challenged Drake in 2015 with a diss track, the 6 God responded in days with a pair of singles, “Charged Up” and “Back to Back.” But his line on the latter — “I waited for four days, nigga, where y’all out?” — may be the biggest punch he landed, and it turned into a meme that haunted Meek for months. (Of course, this being Drake, it also landed on the Billboard Hot 100 as well.) The two eventually hashed out their differences and teamed up for “Going Bad” in 2018.
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‘Hotline Bling’
Image Credit: Drake/YouTube It’s difficult to separate “Hotline Bling” from the noise its success generated. There’s the music video and his dance moves, which generated memes that bounce around the internet to this day. And there’s the Grammy it received for Best Rap Song, prompting Drake to criticize the organization for citing a song on which he doesn’t even rap. All the controversy seems like a bit much for a heartbreak bop that finds him crooning over a loop of Timmy Thomas’ “Why Can’t We Live Together?” “You used to call me on my cellphone late night when you need my love,” he sings. “Ever since I left the city, you and I just don’t get along.”
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‘Pound Cake / Paris Morton Music 2’ feat. Jay-Z
Image Credit: Kevin Winter/Getty Images The intro to “Pound Cake / Paris Morton Music 2” is one of Drake’s best, thanks to a beat that sounds like cloud skating, a blend of a high-pitched Ellie Goulding sample and Timbaland’s recital of Wu-Tang Clan’s “C.R.E.A.M.” chorus. “Overly focused, it’s far from the time to rest now/Debates growin’ ‘bout who they think is the best now,” raps Drake before ceding the spotlight to Jay-Z. (“Pound Cake” originated as an outtake from Jay’s Magna Carta, Holy Grail.) The “Paris Morton Music 2” half belongs to Drake alone, as he says his time is now: “Fuck all that happy-to-be-here shit that you want me on/I’m the big homie, they still try to little-bro me, dog.”
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‘Fuckin’ Problems,’ A$AP Rocky feat. 2 Chainz, Drake & Kendrick Lamar
Image Credit: A$AP Rocky/YouTube A$AP Rocky’s “Fuckin’ Problems” captures a brief, heady moment between a new generation of rap superstars before ego and competitiveness drove them apart. Amid 2 Chainz’ chorus and a beat from producer 40 stuffed with bass and booty handclaps, each rapper delivers a dirty rap burner. “Drop down and get your eagle on/Or we can stare up at the stars and put the Beatles on,” raps Drake, who calls himself a “long dick nigga” that “ain’t for talkin’.” It’s the equivalent of Jay-Z, DMX, and Ja Rule’s Murder Inc., a star-crossed moment that couldn’t last.
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‘Energy’
Image Credit: Kris Connor/Getty Images “I’ve got enemies, got a lot of enemies/Got a lot of people tryna drain me of my energy,” begins Drake on this memorable three-minute rant. “Trying to take a-way from a nigga!” The objects of his frustration are everyone around him: current girlfriends and exes, family members, real and fake friends, and his peers in the world of rap. It’s both paranoid and humorous, and you can occasionally hear him crack a smile in his voice. Drake may have problems, but he never lacks for confidence. “I hear fairy tales ‘bout how they gon’ run up on me,” he ends. “Well, run up when you see me and we gonna see.”
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‘From Time’ feat. Jhené Aiko
Image Credit: Suzi Pratt/FilmMagic/Getty Images “From Time” finds Drake in communion with Aiko, and she serves as his conscience. “I know you’ve been through more than most of us,” she sings, sympathetically. In turn, the rapper offers a brutally honest assessment of his masculine flaws, even as he controversially cites by name a few women he’s been involved with. (His tendency for name-dropping past dalliances without their consent has drawn criticism.) Importantly, he discusses resolving his differences with his father, whom he has described in past songs as exhibiting similar traits as him. It feels as if he’s searching for redemption, even if he’s not quite sure how to get there yet. “Landmark to the muses that inspired the music,” he raps. “Guess I fucked up the vision.”
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‘The Motto,’ feat. Lil Wayne
Image Credit: Drake/YouTube Produced by T-Minus and famed for popularizing the phrase “YOLO,” “The Motto” is Drake’s homage to Bay Area hyphy. He shouts out Mac Dre’s “I’m Feeling Myself,” and hangs with local legends like E-40 in the music video. (The video version also includes a verse from then-Young Money artist Tyga.) Meanwhile, Lil Wayne uses the occasion to unfurl a few of his patented puns. “Wish a nigga would, like a tree in this bitch/And if a leaf falls, put some weed in that bitch/That’s my M.O., put a B in that bitch,” he raps.
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‘Controlla’
Image Credit: Allen Berezovsky/WireImage/Getty Images This is Drake at his most sensuous. He works a slow-wind rhythm over Boi-1da’s keyboard-laden groove, cooing sweet nothings and referencing Nineties R&B titans Jodeci’s “Cry for You.” “Thank God you came, how many more days could I wait?” he sings in his now-familiar melodic croon. At the center of this appealing baby-maker track is a sample of Beenie Man’s digital dancehall cut “Tear Off Mi Garment”; an early prerelease version includes a cameo from onetime OVO artist Popcaan.
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‘Marvins Room’
Image Credit: Daniel Boczarski/Redferns/Getty Images Upon its release in 2011, “Marvins Room” felt like a real creative breakthrough. Drake’s past excursions into R&B carried a precocious, hesitant tone to them, but here he sounds fully engaged to his performance, the result of adopting a slightly deeper voice than on earlier hits like “Find Your Love.” The track takes the form of a drunken late-night booty call to a past girlfriend, and as with many of Drake’s songs about women, there’s the issue of whether he’s a sensitive soul or a horny creep. It’s an ambiguity he embraces. “I’ve had sex four times this week, I’ll explain/Having a hard time adjusting to fame,” he harmonizes.
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‘Nice For What’
Image Credit: Burak Cingi/Redferns/Getty Image “Louisiana shit,” announces Drake on “Nice for What.” The track pays homage to Nineties bass anthems with plenty of keyboard stabs, a snippet of Big Freedia exhorting a crowd, and a sped-up loop of Lauryn Hill’s “Ex-Factor.” It’s a loud, rollicking, and gleefully fun party song produced by Murda Beatz, meant for cutting up. “I know shorty and she doesn’t want no slow song,” he harmonizes while dropping a reference to Big Tymers’ “Get Your Roll On” and Fabo from D4L. And unlike other songs where he seemingly praises women in order to sleep with them, he simply honors female persistence here, resulting in one of his most uncomplicated and celebratory jams.
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‘Started From the Bottom’
Image Credit: Drake/YouTube If Drake is at heart a boaster, a rapper who both predicts and actualizes his wealth in life, then “Started From the Bottom” is one of his finest moments. It’s where he crystallizes his ever-present shopping lists and memories of striving in his hometown Toronto into a handful of unforgettable hooks. “Started from the bottom, now my whole team fuckin’ here!” he chants. “No new niggas, we don’t feel that/Fuck a fake friend, where your real friends at?” A Mike Zombie trap beat shuffles underneath him, pushing his voice forward. In a memorable music video, he earns a spot as a night manager at a department store — just a hip-hop shitworker on the come-up.