Drake Drops New Kendrick Lamar Diss Track “Family Matters”

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The boy is back.

Drake answers Kendrick Lamar’s “Euphoria” and “6:16 In LA” with the new 7-minute diss track “Family Matters.” 

Drake hits the studio, conversates with the goons, spends time with his son, and eating with business partners in the visual while, he compacts a vintage Astro van, which relate to the cover on Kendrick’s debut album, Good Kid M.A.A.D. City. The track alleged that Kendrick’s children, abuses his wife, do whatever Top Dawg says, allows Baby Keem to write his verses, and authenticity in the streets and activistism. 

On Kendrick’s authenticity in LA, Drake raps: “I was really, really tryna keep it PG / If you had a set then get your ass a DP /You know who really bang a set, my nigga YG / You know who even bang out a set out there is CB.”

“I heard that one of them little kids might be Dave Free / Don’t make it dave freeze / Cause if your GM is your BM secret BD / Then this is all making plenty fuckin’ sense to me / Ayy, let that shorty breathe,” Drake raps about Kendrick’s children. 

Even Metro Boomin’, Future, and Rick Ross caught a shot. The new diss transitions into three different beats. Drake originally previewed the song at the end of his original diss track, “Push Ups.” 

As he waits for a response from his enemies, Drake said he will go on vacation at the end of the track.

Before “Family Matters” dropped, 50 Cent shared on Instagram that Drake had a bomb on the way. Drake paid respect to the mogul in the beginning of the video with a spinning G-Unit chain. 

After suggesting his frienemy was being extorted and “fake woke” on “Push Ups,” and questioning his credibility as the “West Coast Savior” on “Taylor Made Freestyle,” Drake makes good on his promise and takes it deeper on the new diss. This time, the record-breaking artist 

In “Euphoria,” Kendrick uses double, triple, and quadruple listens to express his hatred for his rival, attack his fatherhood decisions, extortion, and more. Hip-hop received mixed reactions to Lamar’s diss, while Drake trotted across social media. 

Drake and Kendrick Lamar had a clash last month, which began with the hit “Like That.” This was followed by several diss tracks from other artists like Future, Metro Boomin’, Rick Ross, The Weeknd, and ASAP Rocky. After Lamar’s “Euphoria” release, Ross advised Drake not to respond.

The artists’ previous diss tracks are charting and available across all streaming platforms. “Push Ups” debuted at No. 2 this week. “Euphoria” skyrocketed to the top of streaming charts on Wednesday. 

Looks like Kendrick is back on the clock.