Kanye West admits he has many mouths when jumping into the issue of Drake and Kendrick Lamar in search of f a m e

Lamar has retaliated since Cole referred to the group as “the big three” last year.

Dissident rapper West has offered his opinion on a remix of the song “Like That” by Kendrick Lamar, Future, and Metro Boomin.

He criticized Drake’s songs, saying, “I can’t even think of a Drake line.”

In addition, West charged that Drake had sold Universal song his song rights in exchange for a “little bag” of cash.

“Lifetime agreement? I feel the pain you’ve expressed.

West’s remix started off with “Yo Dot, I got you” on Justin Laboy’s radio show The Download, alluding to Kendrick Lamar’s stage name, K-Dot.

After he finished playing a few bars, the entire song appeared online, however it wasn’t obvious if it was fan-made or original.

The animosity between West and Drake started in 2018 over a brat dispute and reached a head with Pusha T’s contentious song that revealed Drake’s son Adonis.

First Person Shooter, a duet by Drake and J Cole from the previous year, ignited the latest fad and the “big three” theory.

The ostensibly innocuous comments remained unspoken for several months. In a furious stanza on Like That in the middle of March, Kendrick Lamar said that there was no “big three”—rather, it was simply big me.

He claimed to be Michael Jackson’s Prince and that “a light pack” was one of Drake and Cole’s best verses.

Two weeks later, J Cole addressed Kendrick’s rap in 7 Minute Drill. He called Mr. Morale and The Big Steppers, the Pulitzer Prize winner’s previous album, “tragic” and claimed he had “fallen off” his game.

Drake answered with Push Ups (Drop And Give Me 50), although he apologized and seemed to put an end to the rivalry.

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.