Drake alleges Universal falsely inflated popularity of Kendrick Lamar
diss track 'Not Like Us'
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[November 26, 2024]
By ANDREW DALTON
Drake alleged in a court filing Monday that Universal Music Group
falsely pumped up the popularity on Spotify and other streaming services
of Kendrick Lamar's “Not Like Us," a song that viciously attacked Drake
amid a bitter feud between the two hip-hop superstars.
The petition in a New York court by the rapper's company Frozen Moments
LLC demands the preservation and divulgence of information that might be
evidence in a potential lawsuit against UMG, which is the distributor
for the record labels of both Drake and Lamar.
In allegations that UMG calls “offensive and untrue,” the filing says
the record company “launched a campaign to manipulate and saturate the
streaming services and airwaves with a song, ‘Not Like Us,’ in order to
make that song go viral, including by using ‘bots’ and pay-to-play
agreements.” It said the company and Spotify “have a long-standing,
symbiotic business relationship” and alleges that UMG offered special
licensing rates to Spotify for the song.
The petition also says UMG has fired employees seen as loyal to Drake
"in an apparent effort to conceal its schemes."
Universal Music Group said in a statement in response that the
"suggestion that UMG would do anything to undermine any of its artists
is offensive and untrue. We employ the highest ethical practices in our
marketing and promotional campaigns. No amount of contrived and absurd
legal arguments in this pre-action submission can mask the fact that
fans choose the music they want to hear.”
“Not Like Us,” the wildly popular Lamar single released in May as part
of a flurry of dueling tracks by the two artists, includes the lyrics,
“Say, Drake, I hear you like ’em young, You better not ever go to cell
block one.” It has gotten more than 900 million plays, according to
figures listed on Spotify.
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Rapper Kendrick Lamar appears at the MTV Video Music Awards, on Aug.
27, 2017, in Inglewood, Calif., left, and Canadian rapper Drake
appears at the premiere of the series "Euphoria," in Los Angeles on
June 4, 2019. (AP Photo, File)
Spotify representatives declined
immediate comment, but in a statement on a previous case, the
company said it “invests heavily in automated and manual reviews to
prevent, detect, and mitigate the impact of artificial streaming on
our platform,” and in broader public statements has said it has gone
to great lengths to mitigate the effects of bad actors on streaming
numbers and royalties.
The feud between Drake, a 38-year-old Canadian rapper and singer and
five-time Grammy winner, and Lamar, a 37-year-old Pulitzer Prize
winner who is set to headline the next Super Bowl halftime, is among
the biggest in hip-hop in recent years, with two of the genre's
biggest stars at its center.
The two were occasional collaborators more than a decade ago, but
Lamar began taking public jabs at Drake starting in 2013. The fight
escalated steeply earlier this year. The move to court, while not
yet a lawsuit, still represents a major escalation of the feud and
involves some of the biggest business partners of both men.
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