Drake Slams Lil Kim Again
Drake Slams Lil Kim Again – Drake who is getting ready to drop his first CD Thank Me Later has been all over promoting the album , blasting Lil Kim and voicing his support for Lil Wayne.
Here is what he said.
On selling two millions the first week:
“To him, there’s a whole world moving out there that he hasn’t seen for so long. He was just like, he told me something I never thought I’d hear him say, which was, ‘You’re the ultimate artist. You’re better than me. You don’t have the tattoos, you don’t cause any trouble. People like you.’ He was like, basically, ‘Look at me and look at you.’ He was like, ‘Man, listen. You know what I think you’re about to do? You’re about to do two million.You’re about to do two million the first week. Whatever, man, whatever you do, do not get no tattoos never in your life. They gonna think you got it because you came around me.’ He said the same thing to me [during the Rikers visit]: ‘Don’t change yourself, please. You got it. I’ve never met a young dude that has it figured out, but you got it. Don’t mess it up. Just be you. Sing! Rap! Be you. Don’t stop smiling.’ That’s what he said.”
On Lil Kim being irrelevant:
“I really don’t care,” Drake said about Kim’s backlash toward him name-dropping her at a concert earlier this month. “My biggest thing is, sometimes I get a little impulsive when people start talking about people I love. I really don’t care what you say about me, you can say whatever you want. I’ll never respond to it, I’ll never react to it. But when you start talking about the people I love, I do get a little bit more reactive and that’s all that happened right there, but like I said, Nicki’s got records climbing the charts and today, Thank Me Later is out, so, it’s just about relevant people today, that’s all.”
On being light skin in the rap game and and his thoughts on the urban community:
“All too often, we tend to celebrate and glorify our culture’s less than glorious features. We need to realize that even if we have had to learn to endure the worst of our culture, this merely makes that endurance a necessity, not an aspiration. Also, by branding ourselves with the image and attitude that are often associated with our worst, we diminish our self-worth and give those we meet the unfair opportunity to limit and narrow their view of who we are (not that some wouldn’t do it anyway).”
Category: Music






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