Drake has shared the tracklist for his upcoming album, ‘For All The Canine’, forward of its launch.
Right now (October 6), Drake revealed the tracklist for his upcoming album on social media. Within the put up, by way of OVO Sound, Drake additionally confirms the album’s launch date for October 6, at 6AM US time.
The album will characteristic a complete of 23 songs, although no characteristic credit have been shared. The album additionally contains beforehand launched single ‘Slime You Out’ with SZA and the just-released ‘8AM In Charlotte’.
See the album’s full tracklist beneath.
FOR ALL THE DOGS
OCTOBER 6
6AM@Drake pic.twitter.com/4kywfmIHDk— OVO Sound (@OVOSound) October 6, 2023
The tracklist for Drake’s ‘For All The Canine’ is:
‘Virginia Seaside’
‘Amen’
‘Calling For You’
‘Concern Of Heights’
‘Daylight’
‘First Individual Shooter’
‘7969 Santa’
‘Slime You Out’
‘Bahamas Guarantees’
‘Tried Our Greatest’
‘Screw The World Interlude’
‘Members Solely’
‘Drew A Picasso’
‘What Would Pluto Do’
‘All The Events’
‘8AM In Charlotte’
‘BBL Love Interlude’
‘Gently’
‘Wealthy Child Daddy’
‘One other Late Evening’
‘Away From Dwelling’
‘Polar Opposites’
On Wednesday (October 4), the rapper took to social media to shock drop ‘8AM In Charlotte’, sharing its music video onto his Instagram web page. The video begins with the rapper’s son Adonis speaking about his paintings, which seems on the duvet of ‘For All The Canine’.
Within the video, Adonis writes “daddy” subsequent to a drawing of a goat. When Drake asks if meaning Adonis thinks his father is the goat – right here referencing the time period Best Of All Time – his son says sure. “It’s Daddy Goat,” Adonis replies. “That makes good sense to me,” Drake says.
Watch the music video for ‘8AM In Charlotte’ beneath.
The rapper’s new album was initially set for launch on September 22, however was pushed again in order that he might have extra time to complete the file whereas nonetheless on tour.
Drake’s most up-to-date solo album was final 12 months’s ‘Actually, Nevermind’. That album scored a three-star evaluate from NME, with Kyann-Sian Williams writing: “‘Actually, Nevermind’ is an surprising elevation from the tasteless lure, R&B remakes and Drake’s melancholic angle to like we heard final time round. He doesn’t fairly shift the latter as a lot as one would hope – the album is as tiresomely woe-is-me as something he’s ever achieved – however the home sound has at the least given him the inventive increase that his recording profession has been crying out for lately.”