Future and Metro Boomin Release Video for “Drink N Dance”

Future and Metro Boomin Release Video for "Drink N Dance"

With a run of dates announced for North America, Future and Metro Boomin keep the momentum going with the release of the video for “Drink N Dance.”

Today, three-time GRAMMY® Award-winning artist Future and GRAMMY®-nominated record producer Metro Boomin unveiled the highly anticipated We Trust You Tour, sponsored by Cash App and Visa.

Produced by Live Nation, the tour will kick off on Tuesday, July 30, in Kansas City, MO, at T-Mobile Center. It will then make an exciting lineup of stops across North America, including Detroit, Atlanta, Brooklyn, Houston, Toronto, Las Vegas, Inglewood, Seattle, and more. The tour will culminate on Monday, September 9, in Vancouver, BC, at Rogers Arena, following a festival performance at Lollapalooza in Chicago, IL, on Saturday, August 3.

The tour is in support of Future and Metro Boomin’s latest collaborations, WE DON’T TRUST YOU and WE STILL DON’T TRUST YOU, released on March 22, 2024, and April 12, 2024, respectively. WE DON’T TRUST YOU debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200, with the track ‘Like That’ featuring Kendrick Lamar leading Billboard’s Hot 100 for the third consecutive week.

Tickets for the “We Trust You Tour” will be available starting with a Cash App Card presale on Wednesday, April 17, followed by the general on-sale on Friday, April 19, beginning at 10 am local time on livenation.com. Cash App Cardholders can access an exclusive ticket presale and receive a 20% instant discount on official tour merch purchased on-site.

Additionally, fans can purchase VIP Packages, which may include premium tickets, a photo op in front of the stage, access to the VIP Lounge, and specially designed VIP gift items. The contents of the VIP package vary based on the selected offer. For more details, visit vipnation.com.

FUTURE & METRO BOOMIN WE TRUST YOU TOUR DATES:

Tue Jul 30 – Kansas City, MO – T-Mobile Center
Wed Jul 31 – Saint Paul, MN – Xcel Energy Center
Fri Aug 02 – Milwaukee, WI – Fiserv Forum
Sat Aug 03 – Chicago, IL – Lollapalooza *
Sun Aug 04 – Detroit, MI – Little Caesars Arena
Tue Aug 06 – Nashville, TN – Bridgestone Arena
Thu Aug 08 – Atlanta, GA – State Farm Arena
Sat Aug 10 – Columbus, OH – Schottenstein Center
Sun Aug 11 – Toronto, ON – Scotiabank Arena
Tue Aug 13 – Boston, MA – TD Garden
Wed Aug 14 – Philadelphia, PA – Wells Fargo Center
Thu Aug 15 – Brooklyn, NY – Barclays Center
Sat Aug 17 – Washington, DC – Capital One Arena
Tue Aug 20 – New Orleans, LA – Smoothie King Center
Thu Aug 22 – Houston, TX – Toyota Center
Fri Aug 23 – San Antonio, TX – Frost Bank Center
Sat Aug 24 – Dallas, TX – American Airlines Center
Sun Aug 25 – Tulsa, OK – BOK Center
Tue Aug 27 – Denver, CO – Ball Arena
Wed Aug 28 – Salt Lake City, UT – Delta Center
Fri Aug 30 – Las Vegas, NV – T-Mobile Arena
Sat Aug 31 – Inglewood, CA – Intuit Dome
Tue Sep 03 – Sacramento, CA – Golden 1 Center
Wed Sep 04 – Oakland, CA – Oakland Arena
Fri Sep 06 – Seattle, WA – Climate Pledge Arena
Sat Sep 07 – Portland, OR – Moda Center
Mon Sep 09 – Vancouver, BC – Rogers Arena

* Festival Date

The post Future and Metro Boomin Release Video for “Drink N Dance” first appeared on The Source.

The post Future and Metro Boomin Release Video for “Drink N Dance” appeared first on The Source.

Future And Metro Boomin Throw A Rave In A Broadway Theater In Their ‘Drink N Dance’ Video

In the video for “Drink N Dance” from their new album We Still Don’t Trust You, Future and Metro Boomin turn a Broadway theater into a steamy rave. Posted up outside the historic Los Angeles Theatre — I bet you didn’t know LA had a Broadway too — Future performs part of his verse in a T-shirt reading “I Am The Bad Guy.” He continues to sing and rap amid intercuts of the venue being filled with scantily clad women and extreme closeups as he gets intimate with them.

The song is a more peaceful example from the producer-rapper duo’s recent output, which has drawn most of their attention from the war-ready contributions of collaborators ASAP Rocky, Kendrick Lamar, and The Weeknd. On the first installment of the double album, We Don’t Trust You, Kendrick Lamar lit into Drake and J. Cole for “sneak dissin’” him on their song “First Person Future,” while on songs from the more recent release, ASAP Rocky and The Weeknd both had words for their Canadian former collaborator.

Future and Metro are preparing to take this dichotomy on the road with their We Trust You Tour, which begins at the end of July and runs through early September.

Watch the video for “Drink N Dance” above.

When Do Tickets For Future And Metro Boomin’s ‘We Don’t Trust You Tour’ Come Out?

future and metro boomin
Getty Image

Future and Metro Boomin have announced their tour after releasing a pair of fan-pleasing projects, We Don’t Trust You and We Still Don’t Trust You. The We Trust You tour is set to begin in late July and continue until early September, with tickets going on sale on Friday, April 19 at 10 am local time. Before that, a presale for Cash App cardholders will be held on Wednesday, April 17. You can see the full schedule of tour dates below and find more information here.

Future And Metro Boomin’s 2024 Tour Dates: We Trust You Tour

07/30 — Kansas City, MO @ T-Mobile Center
07/31 — Saint Paul, MN @ Xcel Energy Center
08/02 — Milwaukee, WI @ Fiserv Forum
08/03 — Chicago, IL @ Lollapalooza
08/04 — Detroit, MI @ Little Caesars Arena
08/06 — Nashville, TN @ Bridgestone Arena
08/08 — Atlanta, GA @ State Farm Arena
08/10 — Columbus, OH @ Schottenstein Center
08/11 — Toronto, ON @ Scotiabank Arena
08/13 — Boston, MA @ TD Garden
08/14 — Philadelphia, PA @ Wells Fargo Center
08/15 — Brooklyn, NY @ Barclays Center
08/17 — Washington, DC @ Capital One Arena
08/20 — New Orleans, LA @ Smoothie King Center
08/22 — Houston, TX @ Toyota Center
08/23 — San Antonio, TX @ Frost Bank Center
08/24 — Dallas, TX @ American Airlines Center
08/25 — Tulsa, OK @ BOK Center
08/27 — Denver, CO @ Ball Arena
08/28 — Salt Lake City, UT @ Delta Center
08/30 — Las Vegas, NV @ T-Mobile Arena
08/31 — Inglewood, CA @ Intuit Dome
09/03 — Sacramento, CA @ Golden 1 Center
09/04 — Oakland, CA @ Oakland Arena
09/06 — Seattle, WA @ Climate Pledge Arena
09/07 — Portland, OR @ Moda Center
09/09 — Vancouver, BC @ Rogers Arena

Future & Metro Boomin “WE STILL DON’T TRUST YOU” Album Review

History doesn’t just repeat itself, but also repurposes itself for new contexts. Last decade, Future dropped his trap-centric self-titled album and the more R&B-inspired Hndrxx a week apart. With WE STILL DON’T TRUST YOU achieving this pattern three weeks after its predecessor, that seven-year-old novelty now characterizes Metro Boomin. However, the elephant in the room back then was the divisive response, and inconsistent execution, of this sugary approach.

Sadly, while this album boasts hits across all metrics, the sheer tracklist length (and the still-fresh seventeen tracks before them) exposes the cracks in Future and Metro Boomin’s trajectory. If you loved Hndrxx, you’ll probably enjoy this. If you don’t like their R&B stuff at all, you’re just hating. But if you want balance and more fresh ideas than tried-and-true ones, then WE STILL DON’T TRUST YOU might not earn your confidence.

Read More: Future & Metro Boomin “We Still Don’t Trust You”: 5 Best Beats

Metro Boomin: The Bigger They Are…

All that said, Metro Boomin really showcases evolution here, tackling his work with artists like Don Toliver for almost a whole LP. Cuts like “Out Of My Hands” and “Came To The Party” could fit as a cool-down point on WE DON’T TRUST YOU, and we’ll get to Disc 2 later. Where the St. Louis beatsmith’s grandiose direction falters is in reiterating his multi-layered production with hollow structures and so-so Future efforts, dampening the ear candy’s impact. “Drink N Dance,” “Jealous,” and “Overload” lose their luster well before ending.

Yet these issues don’t affect production quality — everything sounds crisp. Entrancing instrumentals remain like “Nights Like This,” despite this example’s melodic similarity to last year’s “Calling.” Instead, the weaknesses concern how melodic leanings don’t lend themselves to less eventful beats. Sometimes, individual elements help, like the ’80s-style drums on “Luv Bad B***hes.” But when you’re trying to build out an epic beat often, whenever you do fall short, you really fall short, unless Future gifts the assist.

Read More: DJ Akademiks, Kai Cenat, And Adin Ross React To Future & Metro Boomin’s New Album

Future Is Ol’ Reliable On WE STILL DON’T TRUST YOU

The Atlanta titan’s performance across the board is what we expected considering his dexterity on WE DON’T TRUST YOU. By comparison, he shows off his dynamism, expressive tone, quirky deliveries, and shifty, smoky flows even more here, such as strained choruses on “Always Be My Fault” and “Right 4 You.” Even though his rapping excelled more on WDTY, he tries his best on STILL to do right by sometimes slightly overproduced beats like the two examples above (although the first is a gold standard here).

Lyrically, it’s a well-worn, more emotional Hendrix you’re likely familiar with, although his pen isn’t always melancholically or toxically relationship-driven. Also, hilariously self-aggrandizing bars here like “You can f**k on him as long as you think about me” are staples in his catalog. But this is all true until it isn’t. For example, Future’s intro/title track performance is meager, and a bare cut that should’ve lasted half its actual runtime. Others like “Gracious” and “One Big Family” are average, but this is Pluto: you’re bound to take away bangers here, as few or numerous as they may be on any given project.

Read More: Charlamagne Tha God Thinks Future Deserves A Spot In The Big Three

What Are The Highlights?

WE STILL DON’T TRUST YOU works best by simply distilling what these artists have built over their careers, not by over-dramatizing established approaches. “This Sunday” has a calming, addictive synth line and Future is intoxicatingly ethereal. Speaking of this possible “Feel No Ways” reference track, a brief Drake mention: despite some subs, the beef feels less prominent here due to moodier energies. Moving on, “All To Myself” is a great duet with The Weeknd that contrasts their performances in empowering ways, and “Beat It” is one of the few exceptions that structurally and execution-wise live up to the larger-than-life presentation that Metro Boomin champions.

In addition, “Mile High Memories” throws it back to earlier Fewtch croons with spotlit vocal melodies and perfectly measured atmosphere, and the same goes for the “Amazing” interlude, but with rap flows. The features mixed the bag, though. Ty Dolla $ign and Chris Brown provide minimal but welcome background singing, and as for designated solo spots, Abel gives multiple standouts, but J. Cole can’t maximize his sleepy surprise appearance on the already languid “Red Leather.” That almost summarizes WE STILL DON’T TRUST YOU. Future and Metro Boomin can no longer avoid a quantity-over-quality predicament. Most importantly, they try to evolve the former’s soulful approaches and the latter’s auditory theatricality while forgetting what makes their creativity special.

Read More: Future, Metro Boomin & Kendrick Lamar’s “Like That” Hits No. 1 On Billboard Again

The Duo’s Current Paradox

Here’s the album’s biggest holistic detriment. If Future and Metro Boomin fixed the bloat and backpedaling, WE STILL DON’T TRUST YOU still would’ve felt redundant. Disc 2 is an OG-sounding mixtape for their styles that is more compelling and goes harder than Disc 1 on average, thanks to more engaging beats, fiery performances, and solid features. If they had cut the filler and diversified the tracklist flow more, then we’d be talking about a much more solid album… that would’ve achieved the exact same as WE DON’T TRUST YOU.

All things considered, this series is nonetheless a dub for Future and Metro Boomin. They fed the fans with their trademark styles and are still dominating charts, music discussion, and the aux. Unfortunately, this also ends the producer’s air-tight studio album run this decade, and the “Solo” MC doesn’t fully capitalize on the moment. Nevertheless, WE STILL DON’T TRUST YOU contains peaks worthy of this legendary duo’s history, which they repurpose here to occasionally perfect effect. While we still trust them, they just surprisingly spend a little too much time repeating or forgetting that history here.

Read More: Future & Metro Boomin “WE DON’T TRUST YOU” Album Review

The post Future & Metro Boomin “WE STILL DON’T TRUST YOU” Album Review appeared first on HotNewHipHop.

How To Buy Tickets For Future And Metro Boomin’s ‘We Trust You Tour’

future metro boomin
Getty Image

Future and Metro Boomin unveiled their new We Trust You Tour, just a few days after releasing the second of their two collaborative albums. This July, the two rappers will kick off their North American run in Kansas City, before heading to Boston, Philly, and more major city stops.

For those hoping to secure tickets to catch them along the way, here’s what to know.

How To Buy Tickets For Future And Metro Boomin’s We Trust You Tour

Tomorrow, April 17, a pre-sale for Future and Metro Boomin’s tour will open for all Cash App cardholders. This will open at 10 a.m. local time and run until Thursday, February 18 at 10 p.m. local. Those interested can enter the first nine digits of their card to participate and must pay using it also. Additionally, those who use their Cash App card to buy tour merch will receive a 20-percent discount.

Tickets will then be made available to the general public on Friday, April 19 at 10 a.m. local, with both general passes and VIP package options to purchase.

Continue scrolling to view a complete list of Future and Metro Boomin’s tour dates. Additional information can be found here.

Future And Metro Boomin’s 2024 Tour Dates: We Trust You Tour

07/30 — Kansas City, MO @ T-Mobile Center
07/31 — Saint Paul, MN @ Xcel Energy Center
08/02 — Milwaukee, WI @ Fiserv Forum
08/03 — Chicago, IL @ Lollapalooza
08/04 — Detroit, MI @ Little Caesars Arena
08/06 — Nashville, TN @ Bridgestone Arena
08/08 — Atlanta, GA @ State Farm Arena
08/10 — Columbus, OH @ Schottenstein Center
08/11 — Toronto, ON @ Scotiabank Arena
08/13 — Boston, MA @ TD Garden
08/14 — Philadelphia, PA @ Wells Fargo Center
08/15 — Brooklyn, NY @ Barclays Center
08/17 — Washington, DC @ Capital One Arena
08/20 — New Orleans, LA @ Smoothie King Center
08/22 — Houston, TX @ Toyota Center
08/23 — San Antonio, TX @ Frost Bank Center
08/24 — Dallas, TX @ American Airlines Center
08/25 — Tulsa, OK @ BOK Center
08/27 — Denver, CO @ Ball Arena
08/28 — Salt Lake City, UT @ Delta Center
08/30 — Las Vegas, NV @ T-Mobile Arena
08/31 — Inglewood, CA @ Intuit Dome
09/03 — Sacramento, CA @ Golden 1 Center
09/04 — Oakland, CA @ Oakland Arena
09/06 — Seattle, WA @ Climate Pledge Arena
09/07 — Portland, OR @ Moda Center
09/09 — Vancouver, BC @ Rogers Arena

Future And Metro Boomin’s ‘We Trust You Tour’ Will Bring Their Chart-Topping Albums To A City Near You

Future Metro Boomin MTV VMAs 2023
Getty Image

Now that Future and Metro Boomin have released both of their collaboration albums, they have another surprise in store for fans.

The two will be hitting the road this summer on the We Trust You Tour. It will kick off in July in Kansas City before heading to other major cities across North America.

A Cash App pre-sale for cardholders will open on Wednesday, April 17 at 10 a.m. local time. Tickets will then be available to the general public on Friday, April 19 at the same time, including the option to purchase a VIP package.

Continue scrolling for the complete list of dates. Additional information can be found here.

Future And Metro Boomin’s 2024 Tour Dates: We Trust You Tour

07/30 — Kansas City, MO @ T-Mobile Center
07/31 — Saint Paul, MN @ Xcel Energy Center
08/02 — Milwaukee, WI @ Fiserv Forum
08/03 — Chicago, IL @ Lollapalooza
08/04 — Detroit, MI @ Little Caesars Arena
08/06 — Nashville, TN @ Bridgestone Arena
08/08 — Atlanta, GA @ State Farm Arena
08/10 — Columbus, OH @ Schottenstein Center
08/11 — Toronto, ON @ Scotiabank Arena
08/13 — Boston, MA @ TD Garden
08/14 — Philadelphia, PA @ Wells Fargo Center
08/15 — Brooklyn, NY @ Barclays Center
08/17 — Washington, DC @ Capital One Arena
08/20 — New Orleans, LA @ Smoothie King Center
08/22 — Houston, TX @ Toyota Center
08/23 — San Antonio, TX @ Frost Bank Center
08/24 — Dallas, TX @ American Airlines Center
08/25 — Tulsa, OK @ BOK Center
08/27 — Denver, CO @ Ball Arena
08/28 — Salt Lake City, UT @ Delta Center
08/30 — Las Vegas, NV @ T-Mobile Arena
08/31 — Inglewood, CA @ Intuit Dome
09/03 — Sacramento, CA @ Golden 1 Center
09/04 — Oakland, CA @ Oakland Arena
09/06 — Seattle, WA @ Climate Pledge Arena
09/07 — Portland, OR @ Moda Center
09/09 — Vancouver, BC @ Rogers Arena

Future and Metro Boomin Announce ‘We Trust You Tour’

Future and Metro Boomin Announce 'We Trust You Tour'

Today, three-time GRAMMY® Award-winning artist Future and GRAMMY®-nominated record producer Metro Boomin unveiled the highly anticipated We Trust You Tour, sponsored by Cash App and Visa.

Produced by Live Nation, the tour will kick off on Tuesday, July 30, in Kansas City, MO, at T-Mobile Center. It will then make an exciting lineup of stops across North America, including Detroit, Atlanta, Brooklyn, Houston, Toronto, Las Vegas, Inglewood, Seattle, and more. The tour will culminate on Monday, September 9, in Vancouver, BC, at Rogers Arena, following a festival performance at Lollapalooza in Chicago, IL, on Saturday, August 3.

The tour is in support of Future and Metro Boomin’s latest collaborations, WE DON’T TRUST YOU and WE STILL DON’T TRUST YOU, released on March 22, 2024, and April 12, 2024, respectively. WE DON’T TRUST YOU debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200, with the track ‘Like That’ featuring Kendrick Lamar leading Billboard’s Hot 100 for the third consecutive week.

Tickets for the “We Trust You Tour” will be available starting with a Cash App Card presale on Wednesday, April 17, followed by the general on-sale on Friday, April 19, beginning at 10 am local time on livenation.com. Cash App Cardholders can access an exclusive ticket presale and receive a 20% instant discount on official tour merch purchased on-site.

Additionally, fans can purchase VIP Packages, which may include premium tickets, a photo op in front of the stage, access to the VIP Lounge, and specially designed VIP gift items. The contents of the VIP package vary based on the selected offer. For more details, visit vipnation.com.

FUTURE & METRO BOOMIN WE TRUST YOU TOUR DATES:

Tue Jul 30 – Kansas City, MO – T-Mobile Center
Wed Jul 31 – Saint Paul, MN – Xcel Energy Center
Fri Aug 02 – Milwaukee, WI – Fiserv Forum
Sat Aug 03 – Chicago, IL – Lollapalooza *
Sun Aug 04 – Detroit, MI – Little Caesars Arena
Tue Aug 06 – Nashville, TN – Bridgestone Arena
Thu Aug 08 – Atlanta, GA – State Farm Arena
Sat Aug 10 – Columbus, OH – Schottenstein Center
Sun Aug 11 – Toronto, ON – Scotiabank Arena
Tue Aug 13 – Boston, MA – TD Garden
Wed Aug 14 – Philadelphia, PA – Wells Fargo Center
Thu Aug 15 – Brooklyn, NY – Barclays Center
Sat Aug 17 – Washington, DC – Capital One Arena
Tue Aug 20 – New Orleans, LA – Smoothie King Center
Thu Aug 22 – Houston, TX – Toyota Center
Fri Aug 23 – San Antonio, TX – Frost Bank Center
Sat Aug 24 – Dallas, TX – American Airlines Center
Sun Aug 25 – Tulsa, OK – BOK Center
Tue Aug 27 – Denver, CO – Ball Arena
Wed Aug 28 – Salt Lake City, UT – Delta Center
Fri Aug 30 – Las Vegas, NV – T-Mobile Arena
Sat Aug 31 – Inglewood, CA – Intuit Dome
Tue Sep 03 – Sacramento, CA – Golden 1 Center
Wed Sep 04 – Oakland, CA – Oakland Arena
Fri Sep 06 – Seattle, WA – Climate Pledge Arena
Sat Sep 07 – Portland, OR – Moda Center
Mon Sep 09 – Vancouver, BC – Rogers Arena

* Festival Date

The post Future and Metro Boomin Announce ‘We Trust You Tour’ first appeared on The Source.

The post Future and Metro Boomin Announce ‘We Trust You Tour’ appeared first on The Source.

Future, Metro Boomin, and Kendrick Lamar Threepeat on Top of Billboard Hot 100 with “Like That”

Future and Metro Boomin Announces Two New Albums in 'We Don't Trust You' Trailer

Future, Metro Boomin, and Kendrick Lamar have claimed the three-peat on top of the Billboard Hot 100 with “Like That.” The single that kicked off the rap Civil War continues to reign supreme.

According to Billboard, another beef record hit the top 10 as J. Cole’s shots to Kendrick Lamar, “7 Minute Drill,” came in at No. 6. It will likely have a sharp plummet after Cole apologized and pulled the single from streaming.

“Like That” saw 40 million streams (down 13%) and 14 million radio impressions (up 39%) and sold 3,000 copies (down 56%) in the week of April 5-11. It’s the first song to hit 40 million streams in its first three weeks since Miley Cyrus’ “Flowers” in Jan-Feb 2023. Among hip-hop hits, it’s the first since Cardi B’s “WAP” in Aug-Sep 2020 to achieve this. J. Cole’s “7 Minute Drill” debuted at No. 6 on the Hot 100, powered by 23.4 million streams, marking his 13th top 10 entry and first since October 2023.

You can see the full top 10 list below.

The post Future, Metro Boomin, and Kendrick Lamar Threepeat on Top of Billboard Hot 100 with “Like That” first appeared on The Source.

The post Future, Metro Boomin, and Kendrick Lamar Threepeat on Top of Billboard Hot 100 with “Like That” appeared first on The Source.

Drake Disses Metro Boomin (Again) With “Drumline” Meme

Drake is ready for war. The 6 God spent weeks taking disses from the likes of Future and Metro Boomin, but he silenced the critics when he dropped “Push Ups” on April 13. He took on Future first, but he saved his most disrespectful bars for the aforementioned producer. “Metro, shut your h*-a*s up and make some drums, n***a,” he exclaimed before the chorus. The bluntness of the line, coupled with Drake’s aggressive delivery, made it one of the song’s high points. Fans were quick to agree that Metro doesn’t really have a leg to stand on lyrically, despite the fact that he used to rap.

Drake is seemingly aware of the impact his “drums bar had, and has decided to double down. The Toronto rapper took to Instagram on April 15 to upload a clip of the 2002 film Drumline starring Nick Cannon. Drumline in a teen drama set amidst the world of competitive band drumline, which perfectly aligns with Drake’s dismissive line about Metro. The rapper didn’t even bother tagging anyone in the post. He knew followers would understand who the clip was making fun of, and he was right.

Read More: DJ Akademiks Thinks Kendrick Lamar Is “On The Clock” To Respond To Drake Diss

Drake References His Diss Track “Push Ups”

 
 
 
 
 
View this post on Instagram
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

 

A post shared by DJ Akademiks (@akademiks)

Drake’s Drumline meme was reposted by the likes of DJ Akademiks and The Shade Room. Akademiks added gas to the fire by including the caption: “Drake posts how metroboomin finna respond to his diss song.” Metro hasn’t responded to the post, nor has he commented on the diss record from which the “drums” line originated. The only social media post the producer made in relation to Drake, and the battle of the so-called Big Three, was April 13.

Metro tweeted a photo of himself next to Future and The Weeknd with the caption “The Biggest Three.” The implication, of course, being that the trio who are firmly against Drake are actually more popular than him. Metro has been busy as of late, dropping a mixtape and two collab albums with Future over the last month. He even tweeted about how excited he was to get some rest. Given the current state of things between him and Drake, however, the Atlanta producer will likely stay busy.

Read More: Styles P Weighs In On How Kendrick Lamar & Drake’s Feud Could Influence Hip-Hop

The post Drake Disses Metro Boomin (Again) With “Drumline” Meme appeared first on HotNewHipHop.