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Was Kanye West the One Who Leaked Drake’s Secrets to Pusha T?


Pusha dissed Drake on The Story of Adidon where he made lyrical jabs about Drake’s son with former pornstar Sophie Brussaux, claiming that Drake had refused to acknowledge his son.


Many people expected Drake to respond to dis, but Toronto's rapper kept his mother, until his Scorpion album fell, where he talked about the son and his babymama on the track on March 14. Fans felt that on March 14 was the defensive response to the dissolution of Pusha, but Rolling Stone obtained information that was really the opposite: Drake had recorded the song for a long time and played a sample with the partner of Pusha Kanye, and possibly it was through Kanye West that Pusha learned from the true story of Drake.




Here’s what Rolling Stone reported:
“Chronologically, “March 14” seems like a defensive response to “The Story of Adidon” – damage control, even if Drake did it on his own terms. However, according to interviews with several people involved in the making of “March 14,” the song may not have been a response to Pusha-T’s track at all. Quite the opposite: Pusha-T may have found out about the contents of an early version of “March 14,” which provided him with lyrical ammunition he would later use against Drake. A source close to Drake confirms that “March 14” was recorded “way, way before” “The Story of Adidon.”
“I’m assuming [Drake] called the record ‘March 14′ ’cause that’s when he did the record,” T-Minus, who co-produced the track, tells Rolling Stone. (Drake has a history of songs named for the times he recorded them.) “I never even heard the content of the song until the album dropped,” the producer continues. “It was something private; it was supposed to be kept secure. The information got out and I’m assuming that’s how Push knew [about the child].”
The information may have gotten out in Wyoming, where Drake reportedly visited Kanye West. (Drake is credited on the Ye track “Yikes.”) “I was not there, but I do know that story: [Drake] played early versions of those songs and so on and so forth,” says Malik Yusef, a longtime West collaborator who also worked on Ye in Wyoming. “You gotta be careful how you move, I think. Not I think, I know: You gotta be careful how you move, what you say to people, what gets out, and the whole nine [yards].”
Yusef adds, “was it Confucius that said, ‘Often the thing whispered in the ear of your closest friend is heard 100 miles away by your greatest enemy’?”
Neither Kanye nor Pusha had refuted this claim as at press time.




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