Unleashing Fire: Kendrick Lamar’s Most Savage Drake Diss Lyrics Revealed in ‘Euphoria’
17 days after Drakeâs âPush Upsâ diss track leaked, Kendrick Lamar rose from the ashes to unleash âEuphoria.â
âEuphoriaâ â also the title, of course, of the hit HBO show where Drake serves as an executive producer â hit K. Dotâs YouTube channel early Tuesday (April 30) to send the rap world into a frenzy.
Lamar pulled no punches as he attempted to shred the 6 God. He kicks off the track with more of a spoken-word flow before turning the heat up over Cardo production to flame Drake throughout the six-minute-plus marathon.
The Drake and Kendrick war has been years-in-the-making. Their feud dates back to Lamarâs nuclear âControlâ verse in 2013 and subliminally dissing Drake at the BET Hip-Hop Awards during his cypher later that same year.
Drake and J. Coleâs âFirst Person Shooterâ inspired Kendrick Lamar to take aim at the Big As the What? Tour running mates in March when he dropped an atomic bomb with his assist on Future and Metro Boominâs âLike That.â The We Donât Trust You anthem topped the Hot 100 for three consecutive weeks.
J. Cole jabbed at Kendrick on his Might Delete Later diss â7 Minute Drill,â but ended up apologizing and bowing out of the battle days later while speaking to the crowd at his Dreamville Fest.
Coleâs decision cleared the way for Kendrick Lamar and Drake to finally face off. In the days between âPush Upsâ and âEuphoria,â Drizzy has continued to taunt K. Dot with the release of his 2Pac and Snoop Dogg âTaylor Madeâ freestyle and rocking Compton Community College merch. However, Drake ended up removing the AI-assisted freestyle from social media last week, after Shakurâs estate issued a cease-and-desist letter demanding Drizzy take the song down within 24 hours.
The ball now bounces back to Drakeâs court inside his Toronto mansion. Check out the best bars from âEuphoriaâ knocking Drake about his biracial identity, his record deal, the Pusha T feud, fatherhood and more.
What’s Real Rap?
âHow I make music that electrify âem, you make music that pacify âem.â
Kendrick comes at Drakeâs artistry and dismisses the 6 Godâs pop hits as fodder.
Looking Funny in the Light
âThe famous actor we once knew is looking paranoid, and now spiraling/ You moving just like a degenerate, heavy antic, itâs feeling distasteful.â
Kendrick is ashamed at how Drake has moved in the days since dropping âPush Upsâ in the feud. This could be a reference to the AI-assisted âTaylor Madeâ freestyle, which Drake removed from social media following a cease-and-desist.
Attacking Drake’s Biracial Identity
âHow many more fairytale stories âbout your life âtil we had enough/ How many more Black features âtil you finally feel that you Black enough/ I like Drake with the melodies, I donât like Drake when he act tough.â
Lamar continues to jab at Drakeâs biracial identity and even voices his disgust with him saying ânâaâ while interpolating Kanye Westâs âGet Em Highâ to close out âEuphoria.â
Heavy Is the Head
âYeah, Cole and Aubrey know Iâm a selfish, nâa/ The crown is heavy, Iâll pray they my real friends, if not, Iâm YNW Melly.â
Kendrick doubles down on his âLike Thatâ claim that itâs âmotherfâk the big three, nâa, itâs just big meâ while name-dropping Cole and Drake. He references YNW Melly, who is facing double murder charges in the 2018 deaths of his friends.
What Does Drake’s Young Money/Cash Money Record Deal Look Like?
âYou was signed to a nâa thatâs signed to a nâa that said he was signed to that nâa/ Try cease and desist on the âLike Thatâ record/ Oh, what? You ainât like that record?â
After Drake built âPush Upsâ around allegations about a 50/50 split in Kendrickâs deal with TDE, Lamar wonders about Drizzyâs deal that had him signed to Lil Wayneâs Young Money, which is under Birdmanâs Cash Money Records.
Ghostwriting Allegations Never Die
âAinât 20 v. 1, itâs 1 vs. 20 if I gotta smack nâas that write with you.â
Kendrick uses Drakeâs âis this a 20-v-1, nâa?â lyric from âPush Upsâ by reviving ghostwriting allegations against the OVO boss.
Hating Drake
âI hate the way that you walk, the way that you talk/ I hate the way that you dress/ I hate the way that you sneak-dissing/ If I flight itâs gonna be direct.â
Make no mistake about it: no subliminal here as Kendrick voices his pure disdain for Drakeâs existence.
When Fatherhood Calls
âYâall think all of my life is rap/ Thatâs hâ sât, I got a son to raise, but I can see you know nothing âbout that.â
Kendrick disses Drake for how heâs raising his son, Adonis. This is also a callback to Pusha Tâs scathing âThe Story of Adidon,â which exposed that Drake had a kid in the first place.
First-Person Shooter Mode
âDementia must run in his family, but let it get shaky/ I park your son/ The very first time I shot me a dracâ, the homie had told me that âAim it this wayâ/ I didnât point down enough, today/ I show you I learn from those mistakes.â
Kendrick misfired in the past but heâs ready to snipe Drake with a headshot in this round.
Defending Pharrell & Bringing Up Drake’s Pusha T Loss
âI donât like you poppinâ sât at Pharrell/ For him, I inherit the beef/ Yeah, fâk all that pushinâ P, let me see you Pusha T/ You better off spinninâ again on him, you think about pushinâ me?â
Kendrick to the rescue: He defends Pharrell from Drakeâs jabs (See his verse on Travis Scottâs âMeltdownâ) and reminds Drizzy about his loss in battle with Pusha T.
Jabbing Drake for Having No Classic Albums & Fake Abs
âYeah, my first one like my last one, itâs a classic, you donât have one/ Let your core audience stomach that/ Didnât tell âem where you get your abs from.â
Lamar defends his discography after being needled about exactly that by Drake and J. Cole. In doing so, K. Dot also claims Drake has zero classic albums to his name.
Comparing Drake to Sexyy Red
âWhen I see you stand by Sexyy Red, I believe you see two bad bââs/ I believe you donât like women, thatâs real competition, you might pop aâ with âem.â
A funnier line in the feud comes with K. Dot comparing Drake to acting like Sexyy Red, collaborator on his For All the Dogs hit âRich Baby Daddy.â