
Drake just upped the heat in his feud with Kendrick Lamar on the next Iceman single “Who Was It?” The track launches a cutting lyrical jab. Drake flips Kendrick’s A minor diss into a B sharp clap, clever wordplay turned verbal assault. He even fires off a bone-chilling line “You thought you left D flat, D major, I’ll slit your throat” as he turns a music theory pun into full-blown personal strike.

The lyrics don’t pause there. Drake throws shade at Kendrick for alleged fake metrics and bots, bragging he’s a hitmaker, not a peacekeeper. He calls out inflated streaming stats and the cheap angles that he claims resurrect artists more than their talent does. It’s harsh, it’s wild, but in rap battles this stacked, heavy turns standard.
This comes after a long chapter of back-and-forth. Kendrick accused Drake of being a culture vulture and attacked his character on diss tracks like “Not Like Us.” Drake fired back with disses in response, and now he’s closing this chapter with what might be the most cutting verse yet. Their rivalry has always gone beyond lyrics—one track sent fans chasing definitions, the next one stokes commentary on legacy and loyalty.


