Bangkok Post

Drake releases new LP dedicated to designer Virgil Abloh

- BEN SISARIO

For his last album, Drake kept his fans in anticipati­on for nearly a year. For his newest one, the wait was about six hours.

Honestly, Nevermind, Drake’s seventh proper studio LP, was released to streaming services last week, having been officially announced only hours earlier on Drake’s social media accounts. With 14 tracks, it is a relatively short collection for the superstar rapper. (Certified Lover Boy, which came out in September, had 21 songs.)

The new album’s producers include longtime collaborat­ors such as Noah Shebib (known as 40), Oliver El-Khatib (who is also one of Drake’s managers) and Noel Cadastre, as well as Black Coffee, a South African DJ who came up through the undergroun­d and in recent years has worked with stars such as David Guetta and Usher.

In a note attached to the album on Apple Music, Drake said Honestly, Nevermind was dedicated to Virgil Abloh, the influentia­l fashion designer who had a long associatio­n with Kanye West and who died last year at age 41 from cardiac angiosarco­ma, a rare kind of cancer.

Fans had been expecting something new from Drake since at least March, when he posted a picture of himself in a recording studio. On the contrary, Certified Lover Boy had been bruited about for nearly a year. Drake’s announceme­nt for Honestly, Nevermind came just hours after Beyoncé — the undisputed champion of surprise album releases — made her own statement, uncharacte­ristically giving a six-week heads-up for her next release, Renaissanc­e, which will be her first solo studio album since Lemonade in 2016.

Honestly, Nevermind comes as the rapper has taken greater control over his career. Last month, the Universal Music Group announced it had signed a wide-ranging deal with Drake covering recordings, music publishing and other businesses such as merchandis­e and visual projects. Terms have not been disclosed, but its value has been estimated in the hundreds of millions of dollars. Drake dominates the streaming market. Even though Spotify lists him as its eighth-most-popular artist around the world — Puerto Rican star Bad Bunny is the top — his catalogue, with hits such as One Dance, God’s Plan and Hotline Bling, represents some of the most popular music on the format. According to an analysis by Billboard, last year, Drake’s catalogue outstreame­d all music released before 1980.

For years, Drake released music through a complex contractua­l structure that gave ownership of his work to other labels affiliated with Universal. Since Certified Lover Boy, his albums have come with a copyright notice stating that the recordings are owned by his company, October’s Very Own, and licensed to Universal, which releases them through its Republic label. That arrangemen­t typically gives far greater control — and a much larger share of income — to the artist, and is also used by major acts such as Adele, Taylor Swift and Beyoncé.

 ?? ?? Canadian rapper Drake.
Canadian rapper Drake.

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