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Prince Williams / Contributor through Getty Pictures, Stefanie Keenan / Contributor through Getty Pictures, and Cole Burston / Contributor through Getty Pictures
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Future, Kendrick Lamar and Drake
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Future lastly weighed in on the rap beef between Kendrick Lamar and Drake from earlier within the yr. His “Like That” contained a visitor characteristic from the Compton MC, which rapidly spiraled into an enormous back-and-forth and left followers debating who gained months afterward.
Throughout a sit-down with GQ on Wednesday (Nov. 20), Future joked that he was “presupposed to be the one who will get mad” over Lamar’s verse. “I’m nonetheless confused about that,” the HNDRXX artist defined. “No person cares what I feel? That’s what was so f**ked up in regards to the s**t. To the purpose the place I’m so participant that I ain’t even stated something about how I really feel about it.”
“Like, why is everyone mad when he was speaking about me on my track? So, y’all simply forgot about me. I ain’t a part of this ‘Large Three’? I’m no one on my track, man,” Future stated in reference to the Pulitzer Prize winner’s “Motherf**okay the large three, n**ga, it is simply large me” line.
In relation to lyrical heavyweights like Lamar, J. Cole and even Drake, Future may not be the primary particular person to come back to thoughts, however he actually is aware of how one can put up numbers. In October, the Atlanta rapper clinched his third No. 1 of the yr on the Billboard 200 chart with MIXTAPE PLUTO. The LP moved a formidable 129,000 album-equivalent models with no options.
The Freebandz founder’s earlier No. 1 LPs for the yr embrace WE DON’T TRUST YOU and WE STILL DON’T TRUST YOU, each of which arrived in collaboration with frequent collaborator Metro Boomin.
Reflecting on Lamar and Drake’s beef, Future advised GQ that he has no points with anybody concerned. “I ain’t acquired nothing to be mad about,” he stated. Followers initially speculated that rigidity stemmed from a lady or delicate “jabs” through the years, although that seems to not be the case.
“For those who take all of the rap leisure out of it, it’s like, have you ever ever been actual cool with someone, and y’all fell out over one thing? It occurs on daily basis. It’s simply common s**t,” Metro defined to the publication.