Drake Albums !link! Here

“Feel No Ways” Scorpion (2018) Verdict: The double-album that should’ve been a single. Side A (rap): Strong. “Nonstop,” “Emotionless,” “8 Out of 10.” Drake is sharp, petty, and defensive (the Pusha-T diss aftermath). Side B (R&B): Interminable. The “March 14” reveal of his son is moving, but you have to wade through “In My Feelings” (the “Kiki” song) and too many forgettable croons. At 25 tracks, it’s the definition of streaming-bloat.

“Emotionless” Certified Lover Boy (2021) Verdict: Exhausting. A parody of himself. The album cover (emoji pregnant ladies) was a meme. The music? More of the same, but worse. Songs blend together: same languid 40 production, same complaints about women and fame. “Way 2 Sexy” (feat. Future & Young Thug) is intentionally silly but grating. There are moments—“Champagne Poetry,” “Fair Trade” (feat. Travis Scott)—but at 21 tracks, it feels like Drake on autopilot, padding runtime for streams. drake albums

“Marvins Room” Nothing Was the Same (2013) Verdict: Confident, cinematic, and leaner. Drake sheds the lush, reverb-heavy cloak of Take Care for sharper, more percussive beats (40, Boi-1da). He raps with newfound arrogance: “Started from the bottom” (never true, but catchy). The album flows like a memoir—from the piano-led “Tuscan Leather” (one of his best intros) to the desperate “Hold On, We’re Going Home” to the icy “Pound Cake” (feat. Jay-Z). A tighter, more cohesive statement than Take Care . “Feel No Ways” Scorpion (2018) Verdict: The double-album