
The surprise release of Drakeās If Youāre Reading This Itās Too LateĀ came, a couple of weeks ago, precisely on the eve of the sixth anniversary of 2009ās So Far Gone,Ā the mixtape that established his credentials as one of this generationās preeminent rappers. So Far Gone led to Drake signing with Young Money Entertainment, an imprint of Cash Money headedĀ by Lil Wayne, with whom Drake was already a frequent collaborator.
Two contextual issues have marked the response to If Youāre Reading This Itās Too Late. The first involves the ongoing lawsuit between Lil Wayne and Cash Money ā and Cash Moneyās founder, Birdman ā relating to issues of copyright and the delayed release of Wayneās Tha Carter V. In January Lil Wayne filed a suit seeking the termination of his contract with Cash Money; $51 million in damages, citing money owed; and joint copyright over everything Young Money Entertainment has hitherto released. Wayneās lawsuit thereby implicates Drake and Nicki Minaj, Young Moneyās two biggest stars; and there are suggestions that bothĀ have fallen out with Birdman and Cash Money over personal differences and unpaid royalties. The sudden appearance of Drakeās record has been interpretedĀ as a cursory attempt to fulfil contractual obligations; with its title read as a scarcely coded message directed at Birdman.
The second context revolves around the surprise nature of the release and its uncertain form: ostensibly put out as a mixtape, it has been embraced in essence as Drakeās fourth album proper, and the follow-up to 2013ās Nothing Was the Same. Discussing this debate on Twitter, the music writer Craig Jenkins suggested:
āThe distinction between albums, mixtapes and EPs is 100% a matter of marketing intent, ie. how badly the artist wants you to buy the product.
You drop a āmixtapeā when youāre spitballing ideas out of sight of the charts or trying to regain some lost industry cachet.
You drop an āEPā when you think youāve got your sound down and wanna float a more prestigious project to retail w/o the critics harshing you.
You drop the āalbumā when you are ready to rest your reputation on a single body of work.ā
To some extent, this sudden manner of release is an inevitable result of albums leaking over the internet. In December, Madonna was compelled to make available the first six songs from her upcoming Rebel Heart owing to the leak in spates of assorted demos. Then in January, just one week after announcing a March release date, leaks encouraged Björk to immediately release the magnificent Vulnicura.
A case likeĀ Bjƶrkās may well have occurred regardless; but BeyoncĆ© undoubtedly signalled a decisive shift in the way major label stars conceive the release of their works. The old mode of setting a release date and advertising towards it has dissolved: a sudden release now serves as a means of promotion in its own right, as news spreads organically and from the ground up via the word of mouth of social media. Already this year new singles by Kanye West and Rihanna have emerged in a similar fashion, suddenly, with fragments first heard at fashion shows or performed live on television, videos teased on talk shows, and behind-the-scenes film footage put out via YouTube. The release of music today is increasingly a surreptitious and continuous affair, a multimedia and multispace endeavour revelling in the ceaseless (if short-spanning) attention of listeners.
Nevertheless, charging for what is professedly a mixtape is an interesting move. With DatPiff.com and competitors making so much rap and R&B available for free, serving to level the playing field while allowing aspiring talent ā including Chance The Rapper, Rich Homie Quan, Young Thug, and Tink ā to thrive, going the iTunes route was something of a risk. The tendency has been for mixtapes to appear for free ā with artists using them as a means to establish themselves, to offer personal or unorthodox material, or for a credibility boost following a fallow period or critical or popular disdain ā with some works receiving major label releases at a later date, provided they have received sufficient acclaim. This is a path taken previously by Terius Nash: 1977, for instance; and it was at one point the plan for ASAP Rockyās Live.Love.ASAP, upon his signing with RCA and Polo Grounds Music. TheĀ So Far Gone mixtape was itself reformulated and reissued by Young Money as a shortened seven-track EP in September 2009.
In fact, DatPiff.comās founder Kyle āKPā Reilly has suggested that there were early negotiations towards making If Youāre Reading This Itās Too Late a free release. Cash Money apparently intervened, and came to a compromise with the artist. The success of the approach taken has been immediately clear. In the first week of its release, Drakeās mixtape sold 495,000 copies and topped the Billboard 200. And this week all seventeen of the mixtapeās tracks have charted onĀ Billboardās Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs. With Drake featuring on four more hits, he has twenty-one songs on the chart in total: obliterating the chartās previous record of fourteen.
Musically,Ā If Youāre Reading This Itās Too Late stands up toĀ all this scrutiny. This is a late night album, with darkly looped synths, scattered samples, and beats which alternately stutter and hesitate then burst forward in brief spurts of momentum before again coming to a pause. In the space which the restrained production allows, Drake eschews the woozy atmospherics characteristic of his compatriot The Weeknd for a more focused outlook: with a present and thematically consistent set of lyrics; concentrated upon modulating and refining his verbal flow.
āLegendā opens on a slowly reverberating rhythm and Drakeās spectral voice, which cohabits the song with samples from Ginuwineās āSo Anxiousā. The mixtapeās opener does serve as a sort of manifesto for what follows, in so far as it begins on a note of confrontation, with Drake rhyming āWhen I pull up on a nigga tell that nigga back, back / Iām too good with these words watch a nigga backtrackā; sees Drake with bold confidence declaring āI got this shit mapped out strongā; but also has him admitting āItās so hard for me to let new people inā.
Beyond the occasional reference to missing cheques, If Youāre Reading This Itās Too Late is marked, not by anger, but by distance. Drake adopts a covetous persona, fiercely proud of his accomplishments and just as eager to ensure that nobody muscles in on his position at the pinnacle of popular music. There have already been numerous attempts to decipher all of the disses on the record: towards Tyga and Diddy, and perhaps also towards Kendrick Lamar, who has directed several lyrics at Drake amid a half-playful attempt to reignite the hip-hop feud as a micro-genre. Further than this there seems among some commentators the inclination to scan every reference to a fellow rapper as a slight. Broadly, over piano keys, the hook to āEnergyāĀ sees Drake affirming āI got enemies, got a lot of enemies / Got a lot of people tryna drain me of my energyā.
But more than keeping his distance from otherĀ artists, there is Drakeās distance from the wider world. On āEnergyā he states āFuck going online, that aināt part of my dayā ā a cutting throwaway, considering how pivotal the online community has been to his career, a key facet of his art always subsisting in its interplay with online trends, and the release of his first three mixtapesĀ gaining him a significant audience via the internet. More, DrakeĀ can rap about running through Toronto with his āWOEsā, but at the same time depicts himself locked up in his studio, isolated and accepting no calls. Toronto is at the forefront of If Youāre Reading This Itās Too Late, its various locales repeatedly referenced and portrayed in relation to Drakeās life and upbringing; but as on āUptownā from So Far Gone, he offers his representing on Torontoās behalf in place of his regular physical presence in the city.
Throughout Drakeās flow is casual and loosely experimental while his tone remains resolute.Ā ā10 Bandsā is one of the tapeās most driving and hypnotic cuts, with breaking percussion and a climax of sorts as Drake revels in his city having him āfeelinā like the one againā. His vocal stylings on āKnow Yourselfā clearly echo thoseĀ ofĀ Young Thug ā Birdmanās latest protĆ©gĆ©,Ā along with Rich Homie Quan. āNo Tellinā really comes alive in its final third, with Drakeās robotically rhythmic lines, delivered over mechanised soul, including the demand āPlease do not speak to me like Iām that Drake from four years ago Iām at a higher placeā.
After such a strongĀ firstĀ five tracks, āMadonnaā and ā6 Godā merely keep the tape ticking over. āStar67ā begins in the same vein, but then opensĀ out with a change in tempo and Drakeās lingering voice transferring into song.Ā Then on āPreachā, with its wobbly bass, industrial clanging, and rapidfire beats, PARTYNEXTDOOR arrives with a vocoder to give If Youāre Reading This Itās Too Late new impetus. While this and the follow up, āWednesday Night Interludeā, comprise two of the chillest pieces on the record, still Drake offers paranoid sentiments like āI am convinced that my calls are being recordedā; and he continues to navigate a relationship with women that veers from distrust and disinterest to their being on his mind ā24/7ā².
āUsed Toā features Lil Wayne; āNow & Foreverā has Drake labouring over an interesting instrumental ā which includes industrial sounds, ethereal spliced vocals, and a looped sample from Nas and Ginuwineās āYou Owe Meā ā conceivably in relation to his split with Cash Money; and āCompanyā has Travis Scott on the microphone and contributing to the production.
As the mixtape comes to a close ā before the melancholy soul of āJungleā and the triumphant finale of ā6PM In New Yorkā ā āYou & The 6ā has Drake open up through a sustained address to his mother. Mother songs in the realm of rap are destined always to be compared to Tupacās āDear Mamaā ā and Tupac, always occupying a central position, has recently returned to the forefront of the form courtesy of Kendrick Lamarās āKeep Ya Head Upā-referencing āThe Blacker the Berryā ā but the intimacy of Drakeās address makes the comparison apt in this case. In a manner that quickly becomes conversational, in the first verse of the song Drake attempts to reassure his mother, doing his best to deflect her concerns and come to a mutual understanding regarding his romantic life. The beat shuffles, and Drakeās voice is replete with sighs and hesitations before he thanks his mother for raising him well.
In the second verse, Drake brings his father into the discussion. He notes that his father āmade mistakes throughout his lifeā, but realises āhe just want our forgiveness, and fuck it look how we living / Iām content with this story, who are we not to forgive him?ā. Recalling his father spending time in prison, and his younger self rapping over the phone to his fatherās fellow inmates, Drake considers ānow I got me a Grammy, that could be part of the reason / Letās just call this shit even, we got some things to believe inā. Utterly eschewing simpler concepts of being wrought through struggle, and overcoming the perpetual strife and bragging of rap, Drake momentarily offers a calm, submissive graciousness which rarely finds expression in any art.