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Warning: Explicit language And the winner is … That and hastily doctored artwork of Drake as a member of Milli Vanilli (and making everyone wonder about that one time someone urinated on Drake). The most noteworthy thing about it is a sample of a Quentin Miller’s “Know Yourself” reference track (what a writer turns in during the collaborative process), meant, presumably, to prove that Drake uses ghostwriters. Premiered by Funk Master Flex on his Hot 97 show just before 11 p.m., “Wanna Know” didn’t manage to top Drake’s latest volley. The loser that night? The Philadelphia Phillies.Īfter the resounding approval of “Back to Back,” Meek Mill was forced to respond with a diss track of his own, which came Thursday night. Meek Mill was particularly unimpressed by the song and called it “baby lotion soft,” a comment he might have regretted come Wednesday, when Drake dropped his second diss track, “Back to Back Freestyle.” Unlike “Charged Up,” the rap blogosphere was all over “Back to Back,” especially the lyric, “Is that a world tour or your girl’s tour?” Ouch.Įven the artwork was a dig at Meek Mill, featuring a picture of former Toronto Blue Jays great Joe Carter in complete and utter jubilation moments after hitting the walk-off, series-clinching home run in Game 6 of the 1993 World Series. Last Saturday, on his Beats 1 radio show “OVO Sound,” Drake responded with the totally satisfactory, but not particularly rousing, diss track “Charged Up.” It wasn’t bad, but after three straight years of hits from the rapper, it was also kind of forgettable. According to the Philly rapper, he’d been tipped off that Drake’s verse on “R.I.C.O.” had been ( gasp!) ghostwritten by a young Atlanta striver named Quentin Miller, and Meek Mill was not going to stand for it. Here’s where things get tricky: Last Tuesday night, Meek Mill found himself in Miami with nothing to do, and decided to log into Twitter - never a good idea - and go on an hours-long rant accusing his Canadian counterpart of being Drake the Fake. Since the first collaboration went so well, it wasn’t a surprise to see the two emcees hook up for “R.I.C.O.,” the third single off Meek Mill’s second studio album, “Dreams Worth More Than Money.” 57 on the Billboard charts and was his biggest song among non-rap aficionados until this year. In 2011, Drake lent a verse to the lower-profile Meek Mill’s “Amen” - off the rapper’s first album, “Dreams and Nightmares” - which peaked at No. Up until last week, things were fine between the two rappers. Philadelphia rapper, and Nicki Minaj‘s boyfriend, Meek Mill and one of the music world’s biggest stars, Toronto emcee Drake, are the latest celebrity beef. It seems like a week can’t go by without someone taking a shot at a perceived rival in the press or on social media.