Kanye West admitted that he was a talkative person when he jumped into the matter of Drake and Kendrick Lamar

Since Cole called the group “the big three” last year, Lamar has fought back.

Drake’s longtime rival West has weighed in on a remix of Lamar, Future, and Metro Boomin’s Like That.

“I can’t even think of a Drake line,” he stated, criticizing Drake’s songs.

West also accused Drake of selling his music rights to Universal Music for a “little bag” (money).

“Lifetime deal? I feel your pаin “stated.

On Justin Laboy’s radio show The Download, West’s remix began with “Yo Dot, I got you,” a reference to Lamar’s moniker, K-Dot.

He played a fragment of the song, and a whole version leaked online, although it was unclear if it was authentic or fan-made.

West and Drake’s hatred began in 2018 following a beаt issue and culminated in Pusha T’s controversial song, which exposed Drake’s son Adonis.

Last year’s Drake and J Cole duet First Person Shooter sparked the “big three” claim and the newest wаr of words.

The seemingly harmless remarks went unmentioned for months. Mid-March, Lamar delivered an angry verse on Like That, declaring that there was no “big three – it’s just big me”.

He said Drake and Cole’s strongest verses were “a light pack” and that he was Michael Jackson’s Prince.

J Cole responded to Kendrick’s rap in 7 Minute Drill two weeks later. He dubbed the Pulitzer Prize winner’s last album, Mr Morale and The Big Steppers, “tragic” and said he had “fallen off” his game.

He apologized and appeared to end the rivalry, but Drake responded with Push Ups (Drop And Give Me 50).

In addition to criticizing Lamar’s height, he implied the star was a record label puppet cоmpelled to add lines to Maroon 5 and Taylor Swift songs.

“Pipsqueak, pipe down, you ain’t in no Big Three,” he said.

Lamar seems uninterested in replying, while Drake seems ready to prоvоke one.

The Canadian artist released a new song, Taylor Made Freestyle, on Friday, suggesting Lamar was unwilling to engage in the feud because he was working with Swift and didn’t want to overshadow her album release.

“If you ’bout to drop, she gotta approve/This girl really ’bout to make you act like you not in a feud,” said: “Yeah, shoutout to Taylor Swift/Biggest gangster in the music game right now.”

Snoop Dogg and Tupac Shakur’s AI vocals were also heard in the tune. Their verses aimed to elicit a stellar response.

“Kendrick we need ya, the West Coast saviour/Engraving your nаme in some hip-hop history,” said Shakur.

The AI Snoop Dogg asked, “World is watching this chess game, but are you out of moves?”

All of this is beneficial for business. Like That and Push Ups are Spotify Top 40 hits.