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Drake’s Family Tree Extends From Childhood Pals To Kanye West

Lil Wayne, Jay-Z, Bun B and many others are also influential in Drizzy’s hip-hop journey. By MTV News staff Hip-hop phenom Drake might only be 23 years old, but his roots in the rap world run quite deep. His debut album, Thank Me Later (which dropped this week) is the result of years of studying with a handful of masters, toiling in the mixtape circuit and traveling across North America in an effort to synthesize his unique style and build his credibility. But who is connected to the man born Aubrey Graham? As you can see in his hip-hop family tree , there are quite a few branches in Drake’s musical story. October’s Very Own (Drake’s personal crew) Noah “40” Shebib : Drake’s musical partner produced the bulk of Thank Me Later , and in the past, he served as the rapper’s road manager, engineer and lifeline as he ran up thousands of dollars on his credit card for the two to follow Lil Wayne on tour while they worked on So Far Gone. Oliver El-Khatib : Oliver functions as Drizzy’s creative director, weighing in on the majority of decisions in the lyricist’s career outside the recording booth. He posts to the OVO blog frequently, highlighting the tastes of the collective, from fashion to music. Oliver introduced Drake to the music of now tourmate Francis and the Lights. Niko : One of Drake’s longtime friends from Toronto, Niko introduced the rapper to his own barber when the former “Degrassi” star needed a fresh look. The two are often together, and in his Thank Me Later album credits, Drizzy tells his friend he thought he was an only child until he met Niko, whom he calls “my closest confidant.” Instrumental Allies (Kick-started Drake’s career) Jas Prince : The son of legendary Houston hip-hop pioneer J. Prince, the younger Jas found Drake on MySpace and urged Lil Wayne to listen to the upstart artist. Lil Wayne : The Cash Money Records superstar took Drake under his wing and offered the then-unknown rapper recording advice, telling his prot

How Did Drake Blow Up So Fast?

‘He’s doing things that we don’t expect one person to do,’ one expert says of his rapid rise to hip-hop superstardom. By Jayson Rodriguez Drake Photo: Getty Images Seemingly overnight, Drake has joined the ranks of Jay-Z, Kanye West, Eminem and Lil Wayne as the major players in hip-hop’s landscape. But how exactly did a former child actor from Canada become rap’s new big thing? Yes, he raps and sings, offering a new artistic wrinkle compared to MCs who only rhyme. But beyond being able to carry a tune and his lyrical agility, it’s the candor and introspection that underlines Drake’s words that enables him to connect with fans on a deeper level. “I think he’s a true artist, honestly, to the purest definition,” XXL magazine’s Bonsu Thompson told MTV News. “But he’s also young. I think his biggest strength, to me, is with his pen, I think he rhymes like someone 10 years his senior. Not only does he have an interesting perspective on life and where he’s at in life, he also has an interesting perspective on women, and he’s able to cater to them. “It’s all a learning process. This guy is young. He’s still learning his way,” Thompson continued, emphasizing the Toronto rapper’s youth contrasted with his maturity level. “[On Thank Me Later ] he’s exorcising these demons with these women from his past but also apologizing for women in the future. And I think that’s a very mature stance, like, ‘I’ve done some bad things, I’ve done my loves wrong, and I’m actually probably gonna do these groupies a little wrong too tomorrow, so let me apologize for now.’ Call it foul, call it life, but it’s also a very mature place to be that aware of where you are at in life.” Drake’s ability to articulate these experiences powered his breakout mixtape, 2009’s So Far Gone, a moody collection of songs that reveals the story of a young man’s ascent into adulthood. Growing pains, women trouble and uncertainty are the emotions captured on the set. It was a rare piece of art, as he and producer Noah “40” Shebib sampled from familiar rap tracks and obscure hipster sounds to create a pop sheen that was digestible for the masses. It was clearly inspired by Kanye West’s 808s & Heartbreak, but rather than use Auto-Tune, Drake kept it personal with his unmasked singing voice. The combination of his abilities — rapper, singer, songwriter, composer — left many questioning how to classify the young upstart. “He’s doing things that we don’t expect one person to do,” New York Times music critic Jon Caramanica explained. “So we start looking for reasons, like, ‘What does that mean, exactly? Are we projecting things on him? Is he actually not embodying any of those things because he’s embodying all of those things?’ But I think he’s actually representing a new generation of people who don’t see the boundaries that older generations do. It’s not weird for him to do all those things. And I think given his experiences in his childhood, he’s used to doing a bunch of different things at the same time and basically playing a lot of roles at the same time. So given that, I don’t think it’s unusual that he’s been able to pull it off.” With the arrival of his debut, Thank Me Later, Drake is continuing the narrative he introduced on his mixtape. Only now, his experiences are amplified by fame and maintaining his sense of self in a world of excess that’s largely new to him. Drake has cunningly straddled multiple fences — between rapper and singer, underground rapper and pop star — but for all his earnestness, it’s primarily his raw talent and gift for catchy vocal rifts that has helped him ascend from “on the come-up” to “next to blow up.” “I don’t see how you could not see him as special,” Vibe editor Jermaine Hall said. “I’m gonna put the rapping aside. I don’t think anyone is gonna argue that the kid can rhyme. He has great punch lines. But taking the rhymes aside, the dude sings for real. He’s not play-singing. He’s taking singing lessons. He sings incredible melodies. “He has that down pat, to a science,” Hall continued. “That’s a hell of a talent.” What do you think makes Drake special? Let us know in the comments below! Don’t miss the “Drake: Better Than Good Enough” documentary , airing Wednesday, June 23, at 10 p.m. ET/PT on MTV! Related Videos We’re Thankful For Drake This Week! MTV News Extended Play: Drake Related Photos Drake’s Style: From A To Drizzy

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How Did Drake Blow Up So Fast?

Drake ‘So Excited, So Exhausted’ On Thank Me Later’s Release Day

‘I was so excited that I was so exhausted, too,’ MC says of long-awaited album’s release on Tuesday. By Jayson Rodriguez, with reporting by Sway Calloway Drake Photo: MTV News The eager anticipation for Drake’s album wasn’t just coming from fans. It turns out the Toronto lyricist was on edge himself. “I couldn’t believe what time it was, first of all,” he told MTV News on Tuesday (June 15) about waking up on the day his Thank Me Later LP finally hit stores and online retail outlets. “I actually was surprised that I even got to sleep. I was so excited that I was so exhausted, too. I had a long day yesterday. I got right on the phone and started doing radio [interviews], I did about 15 radio stations this morning. “My mom texted me, she was just like, ‘I can’t believe this, because people are saying you sold this [many copies] already,’ ” he continued. “I was like, ‘Ma, don’t listen to that,’ she had some crazy numbers. She was like, ‘Oh, I heard you sold 200,000 albums by 10’o’clock.’ I was like, ‘I doubt that!’ ” There’s no question, however, that the album has generated a lot of excitement . Fans began lining up around the Best Buy in New York’s Union Square on Monday night for Drake’s in-store appearance on Tuesday, just for the opportunity to meet the rapper and get their albums signed. Drake also said friends sent him pictures of the same scene in his hometown of Toronto, where kids camped out for hours to be among the first to pick up Thank Me Later . While this may be Drizzy’s crowning moment, the star said for himself, he was happy for the greater cause: a young artist being able to ascend the heights of hip-hop’s landscape, which long has been dominated by veteran MCs. “I just took a deep breath for hip-hop,” he explained. “To me, it’s not even about me today, it’s [really] about the culture.” Don’t miss the “Drake: Better Than Good Enough” documentary, airing Wednesday, June 23, at 10 p.m. ET/PT on MTV! Related Videos MTV News Extended Play: Drake Related Artists Drake

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Drake ‘So Excited, So Exhausted’ On Thank Me Later’s Release Day

Drake Fans Wait Overnight For NYC In-Store Appearance

‘I told him I look up to him a lot for going for his dream,’ one fan says after meeting Drake. By Mawuse Ziegbe Drake Photo: Frank Micelotta/ Getty Images NEW YORK — Drake’s highly anticipated debut, Thank Me Later, is finally available for his legions of fans. And those fans showed their intense support for Drizzy at a Best Buy in-store signing Tuesday (June 15), his first in-store in NYC. Lines snaked around the block, as fans waited hours for a chance to catch the Young Money MC in person, some rocking homemade Drake T-shirts. Inside, the crowd swelled, as everyone from bubbly toddlers to weeping girls waited for Drizzy to make his 2 p.m. appearance. Light screams broke out when the store began to pump the first strains of his Alicia Keys-assisted collabo and Later opener, “Fireworks.” When Drake finally took his place at the signing table, the crowd erupted into hysterical shrieks, thrusting camera phones in the air and falling over one another to snap pics. Drizzy flashed his million-dollar grin, mugged for the cameras and began greeting the hundreds of fans who enveloped Union Square. About 20 minutes into the signing, pandemonium nearly broke out as members of Drake’s team handed out swag to some fans who weren’t able to get in line. Security then moved the eager Drizzy-heads to another part of the store. Many fans waited for hours to cop the album the night before and came back the following day to get their Later copies signed. “He’s pretty unique. He’s like a big mix between R&B and hip-hop” said Nathaniel Lawrence, who lined up with friends Andy Garcia and Xavior Vittoro at 8:30 p.m. Monday evening and had to wait until 1 a.m. to purchase an album. “He’s just something new. It’s different,” said Lawrence who came back at 10 a.m. Tuesday to meet Drizzy. Tynique Nixon got in line to buy an album at 10 p.m. Monday night and also had to wait until 1 a.m. to plunk down some cash. “But it was good, because Drake drove by to see us, so we got a chance to see him early.” “I got here at 3 in the morning,” said Natalia Morales, a fan of Drizzy’s since he was on “Degrassi: The Next Generation” who was the first girl to meet Drake. “I’m ecstatic right now. I’m still shaking!” “It’s a lifetime experience being … one of the first guys to get my CD signed by him,” said Kevin Benejam, who arrived at 7 a.m. “I told him I look up to him a lot for going for his dream, because a lot of people don’t have the courage to go for their dream.” “He’s the man,” 6-year-old Khamani Hamilton said. Drizzy had some nice words for him too: “He said I’m the man!” “I told him he was great.” Steven Santos said. “My heart is a little pumping.” “I can’t stay focused right now, I’m shaking right now,” said an emotional Joshua Colon, who called out of work for two days just to see him. “This man’s a miracle right now.” According to Best Buy manager April Rivera, around 600 people came out to greet Drizzy, and fans began lining up the day before at 2 p.m. to cop the album at midnight. Rivera said she has witnessed fan mania on that scale for established artists such as Rihanna and Bon Jovi, but not for a star fresh out the gate. “For a brand-new artist, I’ve never seen this before.” Rivera added that the store beefed up security for Drake’s visit as well. “About 20 guards are here,” Rivera said. “An average is maybe, like, eight or 10.” Would you wait overnight to meet Drake? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists Drake

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Drake Fans Wait Overnight For NYC In-Store Appearance

‘Drake: Better Than Good Enough’ Takes Fans Backstage — Watch A Preview!

Drake documentary airs Wednesday, June 23, at 10 p.m. ET/PT on MTV. By Shaheem Reid Drake Photo: MTV News On Wednesday, June 23, at 10 p.m. ET/PT, MTV will air “Drake: Better Than Good Enough.” The documentary not only shows Drizzy exciting crowds and recording his just-released Thank Me Later album , it also allows the 23-year-old to give insight into his career and personal life in his own words. In an exclusive preview of the documentary, we see Drake’s preparation for a show on his Away From Home Tour. “I rarely do the prayer,” says Drake, surrounded by members of his inner circle and road crew. “But I figure tonight is a special night. A night of family. I swear that my stars have aligned in the most magnificent way. More than the success and more than for the money, I’m grateful for my family tonight. Y’all are my family. I love you all so much. God, please bless us. Touch us from the crown of our heads to the sole of our feet. Let us all have an amazing show. God, in your name, we pray. Amen.” From there, we see Drake start his concert, leading off with “Forever” as the crowd praises him with glass-shattering screams. “I just want people to walk away… just feeling a little bit more confident about Drake,” he says in a later interview. “In no way do I want people to be like, ‘He’s the best. He’s the man.’ ‘Cause I really do have a desire to grow and get better. I do want people to walk away and be like, ‘OK. OK.’ “My biggest goal when I set out on this tour was to prove a very important facet of an MC’s career,” he continues, “which is commanding a crowd and carrying a performance. I think that’s what takes you from being a rapper to being an artist.” Don’t miss “Drake: Better Than Good Enough,” airing Wednesday, June 23, at 10 p.m. ET/PT on MTV! Drake is MTV’s Push artist of the week. For more about the making of his new album go to Buzzworthy.MTV.com . Related Videos Drake’s MTV Special “Better Than Enough” Related Artists Drake

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Drake Opens Up About Rihanna: ‘I Was A Pawn’

He also talks about other women who influenced his music in an upcoming New York Times profile. By Jayson Rodriguez Drake Photo: Jason Merritt/ Getty Images A profile of Drake is set to run in Sunday’s New York Times. In the story, the rapper opens up about his childhood, the making of his breakout mixtape So Far Gone and his fling with Rihanna . “I was a pawn,” Drake told the newspaper about his time with Rihanna, which began with an invite to pen a track for the singer . “You know what she was doing to me? She was doing exactly what I’ve done to so many women throughout my life, which is show them quality time, then disappear. I was like, ‘Wow, this feels terrible.’ ” Drake channeled the experience into song, penning a verse on “Fireworks” dedicated to Rihanna, though he never mentions her by name. “I could tell it wasn’t love/ I just thought you’d f—ed with me/ Who could have predicted/ Lucky Strike would have you stuck with me,” Drake raps on the song, referring to the Manhattan bowling alley where the two reportedly made out. “Damn, I kept my wits about me, luckily/ What happened between us that night, it always seems to trouble me/ Now all of a sudden, these gossip rags want to cover me/ And you making it seem like it happened that way because of me.” Later in the story, Drake talks about the moody and melodic tracks that populate So Far Gone. The songs were inspired by a breakup with a woman he was dating who was involved with a far more famous rapper before Drake. His music was so intertwined with his relationship, he tried to push off material on Trey Songz. “I don’t even know if I wrote a rap song in that whole nine months,” Drake said. “Because I wasn’t a rapper anymore. I didn’t believe in myself. I was someone else’s property.” The rapper eventually rebounded, and his next pursuit served as the driving force behind his breakout hit “Best I Ever Had.” “A lot of So Far Gone was predictions,” he said of the collection. “I was rapping about things I’m only going through now.” What do you think about Drake’s thoughts on Rihanna? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists Drake Rihanna

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Drake Opens Up About Rihanna: ‘I Was A Pawn’

Lil Wayne’s Verse On Drake’s – Light Up – From Jail? Watch Now!

Weezy and Mack Maine come up with the idea during a phone call, in new footage from DJ Scoob Doo. By Jayson Rodriguez Scoob Doo, Baby and Mack Maine Photo: MTV News Lil Wayne unleashed a lyrical tirade on Drake’s “Light Up,” with the incarcerated rapper contributing a remix verse to the Jay-Z-featured track from behind bars. But how exactly did the collaboration come about? According to footage provided to MTV News by DJ Scoob Doo, Young Money cohort Mack Maine challenged his boss to drop some rhymes to the Tone Mason and Noah “40” Shebib banger. The scene will be featured on Scoob Doo’s forthcoming DVD project featuring Lil Wayne, “The Nino Brown Story, Pt. 3.” “You was supposed to have that third [verse],” Mack tells Wayne after the rapper called him. “Write something to that.” Wayne and Mack were talking about Jay-Z’s opening lines to the second verse, which Weezy admired. “Yeah, man, ain’t nobody talking about what your boy talking about,” he said of Jay. “That n—a is stupid [with his rhymes]. I said, ‘Oooh, look at that.’ ” Mack and Wayne go back and forth, bantering about what the Cash Money Records superstar would sound like on the song. Then, Wayne finally responds. “Come up with a [verse]? Don’t play with me, man,” Weezy tells Mack over the phone. “Just drop that beat to a breakdown to where you can really hear what I’m saying. I’ll write 100 bars to that. Don’t play with me. Let me know when it’s set up, and I’ll do it. “It’s over,” he adds. “I got it already.” The two then coordinate a time for Wayne to call an engineer to help clean up the rapper’s vocals, which were slightly distorted, since he had to rap over the phone. The result was classic Wayne, chock-full of punch lines and illuminating lyrics. “I’m feeling like Elvis, ‘Jailhouse Rock,’ ” Wayne raps via telephone. “I’m not Tupac, I’m the new ‘Pac/ Behind bars, but the bars don’t stop/ Recording over the phone, I hope the call don’t drop/ Drizzy got the ball, I know the ball won’t drop/ And I pray none of my kids ever wanna be Pop.” As of press time, it’s unknown if the “Light Up” remix will be included on the official Thank Me Later release or possibly a later deluxe version. Who had the best verse on “Light Up”: Drake, Jay-Z or Lil Wayne? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists Drake Lil Wayne

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How Did Lil Wayne’s Verse On Drake’s ‘Light Up’ Happen? Watch Now!

President Obama’s Appearance At Kalamazoo Central Was ‘Electrifying,’ Students Say

‘Everybody was screaming. Nobody was forming sentences,’ Xavier Bolden says of surprise meeting before graduation. By James Montgomery Kalamazoo Central High School student Simon Boehme Photo: MTV News A salutatorian. A future lawyer. And an actor. Up until Monday, all three were students at Kalamazoo Central High School in western Michigan, and all three were responsible for “We Are the Giants,” the winning entry in the White House’s “Race to the Top High School Commencement Challenge.” So all three were responsible for the prize: President Barack Obama , who came to town to deliver the : commencement address at Central’s graduation ceremony. MTV News and Get Schooled — a national program aimed at increasing high school and college graduation rates — gave all three students video cameras to document their graduation and, of course, all the excitement that came with having the Commander in Chief in town to help them celebrate. “I woke up on Monday, had two early morning interviews at 6 a.m. with local TV news stations, and then after that, I relaxed a bit,” Central’s salutatorian Simon Boehme told MTV News. “After that, I read over my speech, and then, well, I got a new tie, met my family, went out to lunch with the mayor of Kalamazoo, and then got ready. It was a pretty hectic day.” Nicole Allen, who will head to Western Michigan University in the fall and law school after that, had a busy day too. “This morning at 6:30, I had an interview with a local CBS news affiliate, and then I came home and tried to take a nap, but that didn’t work out so well,” she recounted. “Then, I had [graduation] rehearsal from about 8:30 to 10, and after that, I went home and finally managed to take that nap … around 2 p.m., I started getting ready, only we had serious car problems. So I was rushing around, hoping I’d make it there on time!” Due to Obama’s appearance, Central’s graduation ceremony was moved to nearby Western Michigan University, where the soon-to-be grads milled about anxiously until principal Von Washington Jr. gathered them in adjoining room, where they got the surprise of their lives: a meeting with Obama himself. “I had no idea. I was actually filming some of it [for MTV], and I looked underneath the curtain, and I was like, ‘Wait … that’s got to be Obama. Look at the shoes! From the ankles down, that’s him,’ ” laughed Xavier Bolden, who stars in the “Giants” video and will study theater at WMU in the fall. “Still, though, when he came out, I was shocked! It was electrifying. Amazing. Everybody was screaming. Nobody was forming sentences.” “We were sitting in the room, and then all of a sudden, out walks the president!” Allen said. “It was completely a surprise! When he came in, I cried, but then I cried when I found out we won. People say I’m emotional, but it was so unexpected. I burst out crying. I was shaking. My whole body was.” And as for Obama’s actual speech, well, all three students found his message of hard work, selflessness and service inspiring. Even Boehme, who used his salutatory speech as a platform to ask Obama to form a youth advisory council (“I always knew I wanted to ask him about it,” he said). As they head out into the world, they’ll always remember their graduation day and who they got to speak at it. “I mean, the president is standing right in front of us! That doesn’t happen every day,” Allen said. “And to be in high school and have the president give your commencement speech, I won’t ever forget that.” Get Schooled is a national program aimed at increasing high school and college graduation rates and promoting the importance of education, developed by Viacom in partnership with the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. Related Videos Race To The Top: President Obama Inspires At Kalamazoo Central High School

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President Obama’s Appearance At Kalamazoo Central Was ‘Electrifying,’ Students Say

Drake Says He And Lil Wayne Are Planning A Joint Album

‘I went up to Rikers, and me and Wayne agreed that there will be a Lil Wayne/ Drake album,’ he tells MTV’s ‘Sucker Free.’ By Jayson Rodriguez Drake and Lil Wayne Photo: the305.com A Young Angel and Young Lion LP? It’s finally in the works, according to Drake. The Toronto MC said he and Lil Wayne spoke about a joint album when he visited the incarcerated star last week in prison. “I went up to Rikers, and me and Wayne agreed that there will be a Lil Wayne/ Drake album,” Drake told DJ Envy on MTV’s “Sucker Free.” ” … There’s some things I’m excited for in my life — I’m excited to go perform certain places — but [this project] will probably be one of the most exciting things in my life, because we make music on a different level. It’s just so fun, so comfortable. A whole album? To think about all the things we can do, especially if we’re gonna do 15 songs. Me and him don’t like to do 12, 13 [songs]. We want to do 15, 16. Yeah, Lil Wayne and Drake album.” Wayne is only featured once on Drake’s debut album, Thank Me Later, which drops June 15. The Cash Money superstar and Drizzy collaborated on a number of projects in the past, including Drake’s mixtapes Comeback Season and So Far Gone, in addition to the Young Money compilation released last year. But this will be the first time the two MCs pair up for their own project. Last year, while on the verge of inking his deal, Drake told MTV News about his career ambitions and said Lil Wayne would be a part of them for a long time. “I plan to work with Wayne for the rest of my career, so I think it’s a smart career move,” he said. “You know, everybody else [on Young Money] will hopefully work out the situations, get the right people on the album. I think it was important for me to show him that I believed in him as much as he believed in me. Because a lot of months, he stuck his neck out there for me, you know with the VMAs [where Lil Wayne rapped Drake’s verse from ‘Money to Blow’ at the beginning of his performance of ‘Misunderstood’] and then ‘Ransom,’ and all the songs that we put out. And the things he would say in interviews, he really put himself out there for me. So I think it was only just and fair to show him that I feel the same way.” For more Drake, check him out with DJ Envy on the road for Sucker Free Summer at Hartford, Connecticut’s Hot Jam 9 this Sunday at noon on MTV2. Related Artists Drake Lil Wayne

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Drake Says He And Lil Wayne Are Planning A Joint Album

Drake’s Thank Me Later Leak: Why Bloggers Aren’t Posting New Songs

‘Enough is enough,’ one blogger tells MTV News about the proliferation of leaked hip-hop albums. By Shaheem Reid Drake Photo: Rahman Dukes/MTV News Drake might be a budding superstar, but he’s gotta eat. That seems to be the consensus on the major hip-hop blogs, many of which have decided not to post more songs — many of them unfinished — from the Toronto MC’s forthcoming Thank Me Later LP, which leaked early Wednesday (June 2). Many times in the past — with Jay-Z’s Blueprint 3, Lil Wayne’s Tha Carter III and Kanye West’s 808s and Heartbreak — we’ve seen blogs post a myriad of songs immediately after the album leaks. While they might not post the entire album, you’d get at least three new joints from it. With Drake, however, most blogs have decided to ignore Thank Me Later ‘s early, unplanned release. “Enough is enough,” Andrew Barber of FakeShoreDrive.com told MTV News on Wednesday. “I know, for my credibility, we kinda already take enough from the artists. I know it’s a give-and-take relationship, but we already take enough from the artists. At a certain point, you have to take a stand. Most ethical blogs won’t post the album or keep posting [individual songs]. At a certain point, you’re cutting into their sales. Its one thing to post a few songs, but to post every single song, that’s basically pirating. That’s where I draw the line.” “To be fair,” RapRadar.com founder Elliot Wilson said, “I think a lot of the sites, when the album fully leaks, they don’t put up the full album leaks. They kinda slowed down on the leaks and they’ll make the bold statement, they’ll decide, ‘This is the last leak we’re gonna put up from the project.’ ” Sure enough, on Wednesday morning, NahRight.com posted a CD-quality version of the Drake/Jay-Z lyrical throwdown “Light Up.” At the end of the post a message read: “Last Thank Me Later leak we’re posting here. June 15th.” “You’ve gotta credit Drake, especially with NahRight and other sites,” Wilson added. “He was well-connected to those guys. You do form relationships, and again, as a rap fan, you sort of think a lot of these bloggers are fans at the end of the day. They don’t want to hurt his sales. You start looking in the mirror — we got excited by [Jay Electronica’s] ‘Exhibit C.’ When it went to iTunes, we was rallying people to go buy it legally just to support the movement of this new energy in hip-hop. I think those people are taking stock and they want Drake to do well also. He comes from them. He has a line in the new album about the backpack guy who’s getting to this level. He did his due diligence. He went through the blogs. So much of So Far Gone ‘s initial ascent was from the blogs. In terms of good will, they don’t wanna come back now and do anything they feel could possibly hurt him.” NahRight is part of a conglomerate of blogs known as the New Music Cartel: YouHeardThatNew.com , 2DopeBoyz.com , DaJaz1.com , OnSmash.com , and XclusiveZones.net are also affiliated. The NMC has become known as the leading source of new hip-hop music to hit the Internet, even getting tracks before some top DJs. “I think many of the top blogs posted the memorable or anticipated tracks from the album for their readers but refused to post more,” XclusiveZone’s Mr. X said. “It’s not only because of Drake — I can speak for myself and possibly the NMC, we don’t post full albums. We give the readers a sample of what they want to hear but tell them to support [artists], and always plug in the release date. But with Drake, because the anticipation was so high, everyone expected us to post the full album. We want to see him go gold or platinum the first week. We aren’t trying to take from someone’s plate — we’re all trying to eat together. We never condone unauthorized leaks but if something does leak, it’s best to take it and move on. Look at Drake’s response to his album leaking : ‘I gave away free music for years so we’re good over here.’ That made me respect him even more. It’s better than crying about it. The track is already out. Enjoy the free promotion, I guess.” So the question is, will Drake’s leak hurt his album sales? Perhaps not — there hasn’t been a single hip-hop LP in recent memory that didn’t doesn’t get leaked. In Drake’s case, he may be one of the lucky ones: Some artists’ albums get leaked as far as a month out (in the case of Lil Wayne’s Rebirth , four months ). Thank Me Later hit the black market less than two weeks from its June 15 release date. “I don’t think it’s gonna hurt him,” Wilson said. “I think it’s close enough to the release date. There’s a lot of people that want to support him. This is a moment that we’ve been waiting for. I’ve been trying to figure out what this feels like and what makes this different. Even though this is a debut album, it’s not like 50 Cent’s Get Rich or Die Tryin’ or Kanye’s College Dropout, in the sense of ‘this person really heated up the game.’ We all kind of like wanted to be a part of this guy celebrating and reaching that level. I feel like with this Drake situation, it’s kinda similar to Wayne where he’s already killed it on a lot of levels. He’s on so many hits, this is kind of like his ascension. If this record does get embraced the way people think it will be, it will [definitely make him] the next star — which reminds me of the way Tha Carter III went down, where Wayne set the table of him being the next dude but you needed the album to really prove it. Even though Drake is unproven as far as putting out a debut album, he’s been part of so much success already.” What do you think about Drake’s album leaking? Has this gone on long enough? Let us know in the comments below! Related Artists Drake

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Drake’s Thank Me Later Leak: Why Bloggers Aren’t Posting New Songs