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Pusha T Not a Fan of Drake's UMG Lawsuit: ‘It Just Kind of Cheapens the Art'

Pusha T Not a Fan of Drake's UMG Lawsuit: ‘It Just Kind of Cheapens the Art'

Yahoo03-06-2025

As you might have predicted, Pusha T isn't the biggest fan of Drake's UMG lawsuit.
While sitting down with GQ alongside his brother Malice to promote their upcoming Clipse reunion album Let God Sort Em Out, Push brought up the lawsuit when discussing a Kendrick Lamar feature that almost didn't make the album.
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'They wanted me to ask Kendrick to censor his verse, which of course I was never doing,' he said of Def Jam's parent company UMG. 'And then they wanted me to take the record off. And so, after a month of not doing it, Steve Gawley, the lawyer over there was like, 'We'll, just drop the Clipse.'' They got their wish, as both the group and Push himself were dropped from the label, according to GQ.
He then added that he went through similar pushback over his unreleased verses on Rick Ross' 'Maybach Music VI' and Pop's Smoke's posthumously released track 'Paranoia' after the release of 'Story of Adidon.'
'If [Drake's] adamant to have a lawsuit,' he said, 'it's only because he knows all the things that they did to suppress everything that was happening around 'Adidon' and the verses and the records and things that were happening back then. I don't rate him no more. The suing thing is bigger than some rap sh–. I just don't rate you. Damn, it's like it just kind of cheapens the art of it once we gotta have real questions about suing and litigation. Like, what? For this?'
However, he feels no need to reignite his beef with Drake anytime soon. 'I think after everything that had been done, I don't think there was ever anything subliminal to be said ever again in life,' he said of his longstanding feud with the Toronto rapper. 'Not only just musically, like bro, I actually was in Canada. I actually had a show and made it home. So, I can't pay attention to none of that. I did the dance for real, not to come back and tiptoe around anything.' Push added that he would only engage again if he felt like it.
Elsewhere in the interview, Push addressed his current standing with Ye (formerly Kanye West), saying he doesn't view his former collaborator as 'a man.'
Ye recently tweeted over the weekend that he misses his friendship with the Virginia rapper.
The Clipse released 'Ace Trumpets,' the lead single from their first album since 2009, last week.
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With their new album ‘I quit,' Haim ushers in their next era of music — and life: ‘Now it's time to party'
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Yahoo

time6 hours ago

  • Yahoo

With their new album ‘I quit,' Haim ushers in their next era of music — and life: ‘Now it's time to party'

Leave it to Este, Danielle and Alana Haim to maintain consistency. In true Haim fashion, the trio of sisters has continued their tradition of serving up an immaculate and aptly timed summer vibe with their latest LP, I quit. Released on Friday, the 15-track album shows a shift in perspective for sisters Este, Danielle and Alana, who exude a sort of declarative self-assuredness that only comes from making mistakes and learning from them. With textured acoustics, throwback-sounding pop and straight up rock 'n' roll, I quit is a breakup album that defies genres and audience expectations, while still maintaining Haim's signature laidback, sun-dazed cool. The album captures women at their most emotional, conflicted and self-indulgent. Navigating life and love can be "unpretty." Haim gets that. 'We never wanted [the title] to be a negative,' Alana told GQ in its July cover story. 'When we say 'I quit,' it's like, 'I quit the things that don't serve me.' And it's really amazing, 'cause quitting is a new beginning.' Keeping to their casting of beloved 'white boys of the month,' as some fans have put it, Will Poulter is the first 'it' boy to be featured in the artwork for one of the album's singles. The 'All over me' cover art depicts Danielle and Poulter in a fitting recreation of a paparazzi photo taken of Gwyneth Paltrow and then-boyfriend Brad Pitt in 1995, in which Paltrow is awkwardly leaning against Pitt on a New York City sidewalk. The Bear actor also plays Danielle's leading man in the accompanying music video, which sees the Haim sisters — and their men — lusting after each other. But Poulter isn't the only male celebrity featured in the three-minute clip — the band also tapped Saltburn actor Archie Madekwe and Station Eleven actor Nabhaan Rizwan as love interests for Este and Alana. Fans were first given a taste of Haim's I quit era in March 2025, when the band teased the release of their breezy, post-breakup single 'Relationships' with a photo that bore an uncanny resemblance to one taken of Nicole Kidman in 2001. The heavily memed photo depicts the actress triumphantly skipping down an L.A. street with her eyes closed, mouth agape and arms in the air. The Haim sisters, in their re-creation, are also seen walking down a nondescript street in Los Angeles with the same looks of elation. When 'Relationships' finally hit streaming platforms on March 12, its accompanying music video was released on YouTube. The video, much like the cover art, did not disappoint. The trio enlisted help from one of the internet's most coveted boyfriends, Drew Starkey, who plays Danielle's love interest. The video begins with Danielle and her sisters loading boxes into a car, presumably following her breakup with Starkey. The footage rewinds as the song continues, and we watch as several moments in their relationship play out. Cut between the sometimes steamy scenes between Danielle and Starkey are vibey shots of the sisters lounging on a bedroom floor or velvet sofa. From there, a formula was established. Shot by photographer Terrence O'Connor, the artwork for Haim's next three singles were also re-creations of niche paparazzi photos from the "noughties": Kate Moss soaking up the sun against an SUV in 2000 ('Everybody's trying to figure me out'), a PDA-fueled moment between Jared Leto and Scarlett Johansson in 2004 ('Down to be wrong'), and Keira Knightley and ex-boyfriend Jamie Dornan strolling arm in arm, also in 2004 ('Take me back'). For the 'Down to be wrong' music video, Haim found their leading man in yet another internet boyfriend: Logan Lerman. The video opens with Danielle in a hotel bed with the Oh Hi! actor, singing to him as he sleeps. When Lerman finally wakes up and wanders out of the hotel room, the sisters, seemingly invisible, go through his belongings and mess up the hotel room. He can't seem to understand why any of this is happening though. Less than two weeks before the album's release, the sisters played a set at Barcelona's Primavera Sound festival, where they debuted their new tour looks designed by Nicolas Ghesquière for Louis Vuitton. Their Barcelona performance came two months after they ushered in the I quit era with two hometown shows in L.A. Next up for Este, Danielle and Alana is the Margate Summer Series in the United Kingdom on June 27 before kicking off the U.S. leg of their tour in September. In ridding themselves of things that don't serve them, the sisters see I quit as a celebration of sorts — the ultimate party. 'All of our songs are about our collective trauma and going through it,' Alana told GQ. 'A lot of our last album [Women in Music Pt. 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With their new album ‘I quit,' Haim ushers in their next era of music — and life: ‘Now it's time to party'
With their new album ‘I quit,' Haim ushers in their next era of music — and life: ‘Now it's time to party'

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

With their new album ‘I quit,' Haim ushers in their next era of music — and life: ‘Now it's time to party'

Leave it to Este, Danielle and Alana Haim to maintain consistency. In true Haim fashion, the trio of sisters has continued their tradition of serving up an immaculate and aptly timed summer vibe with their latest LP, I quit. Released on Friday, the 15-track album shows a shift in perspective for sisters Este, Danielle and Alana, who exude a sort of declarative self-assuredness that only comes from making mistakes and learning from them. With textured acoustics, throwback-sounding pop and straight up rock 'n' roll, I quit is a breakup album that defies genres and audience expectations, while still maintaining Haim's signature laidback, sun-dazed cool. The album captures women at their most emotional, conflicted and self-indulgent. Navigating life and love can be "unpretty." Haim gets that. 'We never wanted [the title] to be a negative,' Alana told GQ in its July cover story. 'When we say 'I quit,' it's like, 'I quit the things that don't serve me.' And it's really amazing, 'cause quitting is a new beginning.' Keeping to their casting of beloved 'white boys of the month,' as some fans have put it, Will Poulter is the first 'it' boy to be featured in the artwork for one of the album's singles. The 'All over me' cover art depicts Danielle and Poulter in a fitting recreation of a paparazzi photo taken of Gwyneth Paltrow and then-boyfriend Brad Pitt in 1995, in which Paltrow is awkwardly leaning against Pitt on a New York City sidewalk. The Bear actor also plays Danielle's leading man in the accompanying music video, which sees the Haim sisters — and their men — lusting after each other. But Poulter isn't the only male celebrity featured in the three-minute clip — the band also tapped Saltburn actor Archie Madekwe and Station Eleven actor Nabhaan Rizwan as love interests for Este and Alana. Fans were first given a taste of Haim's I quit era in March 2025, when the band teased the release of their breezy, post-breakup single 'Relationships' with a photo that bore an uncanny resemblance to one taken of Nicole Kidman in 2001. The heavily memed photo depicts the actress triumphantly skipping down an L.A. street with her eyes closed, mouth agape and arms in the air. The Haim sisters, in their re-creation, are also seen walking down a nondescript street in Los Angeles with the same looks of elation. When 'Relationships' finally hit streaming platforms on March 12, its accompanying music video was released on YouTube. The video, much like the cover art, did not disappoint. The trio enlisted help from one of the internet's most coveted boyfriends, Drew Starkey, who plays Danielle's love interest. The video begins with Danielle and her sisters loading boxes into a car, presumably following her breakup with Starkey. The footage rewinds as the song continues, and we watch as several moments in their relationship play out. Cut between the sometimes steamy scenes between Danielle and Starkey are vibey shots of the sisters lounging on a bedroom floor or velvet sofa. From there, a formula was established. Shot by photographer Terrence O'Connor, the artwork for Haim's next three singles were also re-creations of niche paparazzi photos from the "noughties": Kate Moss soaking up the sun against an SUV in 2000 ('Everybody's trying to figure me out'), a PDA-fueled moment between Jared Leto and Scarlett Johansson in 2004 ('Down to be wrong'), and Keira Knightley and ex-boyfriend Jamie Dornan strolling arm in arm, also in 2004 ('Take me back'). For the 'Down to be wrong' music video, Haim found their leading man in yet another internet boyfriend: Logan Lerman. The video opens with Danielle in a hotel bed with the Oh Hi! actor, singing to him as he sleeps. When Lerman finally wakes up and wanders out of the hotel room, the sisters, seemingly invisible, go through his belongings and mess up the hotel room. He can't seem to understand why any of this is happening though. Less than two weeks before the album's release, the sisters played a set at Barcelona's Primavera Sound festival, where they debuted their new tour looks designed by Nicolas Ghesquière for Louis Vuitton. Their Barcelona performance came two months after they ushered in the I quit era with two hometown shows in L.A. Next up for Este, Danielle and Alana is the Margate Summer Series in the United Kingdom on June 27 before kicking off the U.S. leg of their tour in September. In ridding themselves of things that don't serve them, the sisters see I quit as a celebration of sorts — the ultimate party. 'All of our songs are about our collective trauma and going through it,' Alana told GQ. 'A lot of our last album [Women in Music Pt. III] was us grappling with going to therapy for the first time and these emotions that had been bottled up for so many years, and I think with this album, we've done the work on ourselves, and now it's time to party.' The album's artwork, as with its title, evokes a similar sense of simplicity. The photograph, with its colder, bluish appearance, was shot by acclaimed filmmaker and Haim family friend Paul Thomas Anderson. Alana found the LED sign, Danielle purchased a bunch of dresses from an L.A. thrift store, and Este secured the filming location. With Anderson's busy schedule, they had only one day to pull it all together — and it worked. 'We were so nostalgic making this record,' Este told Kesha on Spotify's Countdown To vodcast. 'Being able to do that together as sisters, and go out together again — it also felt like it was when we were kids.'

Kendrick Lamar Extends Grand National Tour With Australian Headline Dates
Kendrick Lamar Extends Grand National Tour With Australian Headline Dates

Yahoo

time7 hours ago

  • Yahoo

Kendrick Lamar Extends Grand National Tour With Australian Headline Dates

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