The Toronto rapper returns with 43 new tracks across three full-length projects, adding another chapter to a complicated 2025 and 2026.
The three albums landed at midnight on May 15th. Iceman carries 18 tracks with Future, Molly Santana, and 21 Savage attached. Habibti runs 11 songs deep and features Sexyy Red, PartyNextDoor, and Loe Shimmy. Maid of Honour clocks 14 tracks with Popcaan, Central Cee, Sexyy Red, Stunna Sandy, and Iconic Savvy across its runtime. All three are now available on major streaming platforms.
The release arrives after a period where Drake’s music became almost secondary to everything surrounding him. The legal moves, the court filings, the public back and forth with Universal Music Group. UMG’s own statement that he “lost a rap battle that he provoked” still hangs in the air. The Kendrick Lamar feud from 2024 set a new baseline for how these things get measured, and “Not Like Us” becoming the centerpiece of a Super Bowl performance closed that chapter with a clarity the industry rarely sees.
Drake kept releasing music through all of it. $ome $exy $ongs 4 U hit number one in February 2025. The singles kept coming too. “What Did I Miss” previewed Iceman back in July 2025. “Which One,” “Somebody Loves Me Pt. 2,” “Dog House.” The volume never dropped. Now three full projects at once, 43 songs total, all arriving without the traditional rollout machinery.
The context makes the quantity feel like a statement. Two class action lawsuits linked to online gambling platforms, allegations about streaming manipulation, reports of $8 million lost in bets in a single month. The Toronto rapper’s appointment as host for the city’s 2026 World Cup matches adds another layer to the public image.
Drake’s output has always been about flooding the market, but this feels different. Three albums at once, no buildup, no singles campaign. Just the music dropped cold. Whether that’s artistic impulse or something else entirely depends on how you read the last two years.
Join the Club
Like this story? You’ll love our monthly newsletter.
Thank you for subscribing to the newsletter.
Oops. Something went wrong. Please try again later.






