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Can Drake’s ‘Iceman’ Chart Success Mend His Reputation?


Drake is looking to chart dominance to turn the page on one of the most infamous rap battles in music history. Or at least, that’s how it appears as the superstar elected to release three albums at once on Friday for his his first new solo records since Kendrick Lamar’s “Not Like Us” took over the world in 2024.

Indeed, the rapper seems poised to overwhelm the charts in the days ahead with Iceman, Maid of Honour and Habibti, as the albums are taking over the streaming services and the conversation across social media. Already, some onlookers are speculating where the new records will debut on the Billboard charts next week, and if he can achieve the rare feat of taking the top three slots on Billboard’s album chart, an achievement only Michael Jackson had pulled of after his death in 2009. 

But does flexing your commercial output pave over one of the most polarizing moments a rapper has faced in recent memory? That’s a much more complicated question.

In some ways, one can argue the strategy is playing to Drake’s strengths. He’s received mixed-to-poor reviews on most of his albums over the past decade since 2016’s Views, well before the Lamar beef boiled over two years ago. He’s never been the sort of Grammy darling other legends like Lamar or Jay-Z have been, winning five to Kendrick’s 27 and Jay’s 25.  

But If there’s one thing Drake can reliably do, it’s churn out hits at an unparalleled rate. In any debate surrounding the greatest rappers of that generation, Drake’s argument often goes down to his pure commercial dominance.

He’s the third most-streamed artist of all time on Spotify, trailing only Taylor Swift and Bad Bunny, and even as Lamar was on a victory lap the past year and a half with two Grammy wins and a Super Bowl-headlining slot, Drake was Spotify’s most-streamed hip-hop act on the planet in 2025. As of Friday, he’s got the most RIAA certifications in the organization’s history, with 333 million certified units overall, along with 98 gold records, 96 platinum, 53 multi-platinum and 11 diamond.

But who will the streaming gymnastics of his latest releases impress? Drake’s hardcore fans don’t need any converting, and while stream counts don’t hurt, there’s far more to dominating culture than sales. As Sowmya Krishnamurthy, music journalist and author of The Blueprint: Inside the Business of Roc-A-Fella Records, tweeted on release night: “One nice, edited, and well-sequenced classic album is what was asked for. Three Drake albums (?!) screams of manipulating the algorithm and streaming stats.”

As she further wrote: “It’s feasible Drake will have three albums on the Billboard 200. His fanboys will see that as a win/ He’s bigger than Michael Jackson. He beat DMX and Pac’s record. Sadly, it won’t earn him the legacy or respect he really wants. Chasing algorithms and streams is a losing game.”

Drake certainly has ground to make up if he wants to win back the broader hip-hop culture. His move to sue his and Lamar’s record company over “Not Like Us” was widely criticized as an anti hip-hop move that stood in the face of creative expression. The fallout went further than losing a rap battle to one of the biggest rappers of all time.

Speaking of the lawsuit, that could be a part of the calculus here too. Fans have speculated that the releases are a play to fulfill his record deal requirement and free him from Republic, a reasonable hypothesis as he clearly isn’t on the best of terms with the company. Still, it’s unclear if that played any part; reps for Drake and UMG declined to comment on his record deal.

There are other possible motivations for the deluge of new material. Releasing mass amounts of music and seeing what sticks has become all but synonymous in the modern streaming age, giving way to many bloated albums that have garnered billions of streams in the process. Releasing 150 minutes worth of music in one day is certainly a way to dominate the cycle when you’re one of the biggest acts in the world.

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