Seven years later, Drake now suffers from the same problem he once ridiculed his peers for, because so many new Drake songs feel like they’re haunted by better Drake songs. Drake - Laugh Now Cry Later (EN ESPAOL) (Letra y cancin para escuchar) - I know that they at the crib goin' crazy, down bad what they had didn't last, damn baby / Sometimes we laugh and sometimes we cry, but I guess you know now, baby / I took a half and she took the whole thing, slow down, baby. There’s an entire era of major-label rap that was propped up by Drake agreeing to feature on a song for whoever was the new flavor of the month. ![]() If one Drake line sums up his early 2010s run, it’s featured on 2013’s “5AM in Toronto.” Early in that song’s first and only verse, he raps, “Give these niggas the look, the verse, and even the hook/That’s why every song sound like Drake featuring Drake.” Here’s the thing - he wasn’t wrong. The sheer dominance of his run has a way of silencing most of the hate. It was hilarious to know Drake was laughing at the same Drake jokes as us when Instagram and Twitter still felt new, but now most of those cackles have long died out. Since 2012’s bar-mitzvah-themed “HYFR,” every new Drake video has grown in its self-awareness. There’s a scene of Drake emotionally crying, which fulfills the obligation to make a statement about how the Toronto rapper knows his detractors think he’s soft. 2018’s Instagram influencer of choice, Shiggy, is replaced with 2020’s equivalent Druski2funny. There’s the prerequisite celebrity-embarrassing-Drake scene - instead of Tyra Banks shoving a piece of cake in Drake’s face, we get to see Kevin Durant dunking on him, while Marshawn Lynch tackles him. ![]() The video’s best moments, memes, and gags are telegraphed, following a cycle of familiarity. After months spent launching songs into the atmosphere to diminishing returns, the world’s biggest pop star is ready for a single with a capital “S” that heavily leans on the audience’s past associations with Drake as a cultural entity.Įven the visuals for “Laugh Now Cry Later” feel like an unending déjà vu scenario. ![]() As the first salvo off Drake’s sixth, seventh, or eighth studio album (depending on which projects you do or don’t consider playlists, demos, or mixtapes), it adheres to a familiar playbook. This is the official audio for the official clean version of Laugh Now Cry Later by Drake and Lil Durk from the single Laugh Now Cry Later. The Biddies react to Drake and Lil Durk's music video for Laugh Now Cry Later COMMENT, LIKE, and SUBSCRIBE to our Youtube channel and follow us on all of ou. Sonically, lyrically, and emotionally, “Laugh Now Cry Later” is the embodiment of what happens when you surround real Drake with a room full of past Drakes, like a tortured Canadian reboot of Being John Malkovich. The line functions as a clever play on words, but also works on a deeper and most likely unintentional level. Halfway through Drake’s “ Laugh Now Cry Later” - the first single off the Toronto’s rapper’s upcoming album, Certified Lover Boy - Lil Durk raps, “Bring Drake to the hood, surround Drake around Dracs.” He pronounces “Dracs” like “Drakes,” but he means “dracos,” the firearm du jour featured in so many modern rap songs.
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