Drake & Jack Harlow Helped Lil Wayne Drop Over 50 Songs In 2020 — Mixtape Weezy May Be Back For Good

    Despite being deemed a sellout who endorsed Donald Trump, Lil Wayne is seemingly on a run. In a year that can be compared to the height of Wayne’s career when he was dropping mixtapes and guest verses in abundance leading up to 2008’s record-breaking The Carter III, the Young Money rapper dropped over 50 songs in 2020 alone.

    In addition to his Funeral album in January, its deluxe edition in May and his No Ceilings 3 mixtape in November, Wayne has also made numerous guest appearances throughout the pandemic-stricken year – from Jack Harlow’s “Whats Poppin (Remix)” with Tory Lanez and DaBaby to YoungBoy Never Broke Again’s “My Window,” The Game’s “A.I. With The Braids,” Benny the Butcher’s “Timeless” with Big Sean, and more.

    Funeral served as Wayne’s thirteenth studio effort, and featured 24 songs with guest appearances ranging from Big Sean to Lil Baby, Jay Rock, Adam Levine, his ColleGrove collaborator 2 Chainz, Migos rapper Takeoff, The-Dream, Lil Twist, O.T. Genasis and the late XXXTentacion. With a debut atop the Billboard 200, the effort marked Wayne’s fifth No. 1 album with album-equivalent units of 139,000 sold.

    He followed up months later with an additional eight songs on the deluxe, though it didn’t make as much noise as the initial release. This time, Weezy called upon Doja Cat, Tory Lanez, Lil Uzi Vert, Benny The Butcher, Conway the Machine and Jessie Reyez to assist.

    November’s No Ceilings 3 followed his glowing Trump endorsement weeks earlier, and even found Wayne rapping about pledging his allegiance to the disgraced former President on the 34-track tape.

    “Working out my demons, that’s beautiful,” he raps on “Life Is Good.” “And bae off of that riesling, she super loose/I smoke it, she say pass it, she doing too much/Haven’t done my taxes, fucking with Trump.”

    His Young Money artist Drake made an appearance on NC3‘s “B.B. King Freestyle,” as well as YM’s Lil Twist, Gudda Gudda, Hoodybaby and Cory Gunz, among others. In a nod to his mixtape era, he premiered the effort exclusively on DatPiff before it was later released to all streaming services. Conversely months earlier, he brought the first and most popular installment of the series to streaming services after years of only being available on the aforementioned mixtape site.

    Jim Jones Says Lil Wayne Re-Vamped His Style After Spending An Entire Summer With Dipset

    On HipHopDX’s new show Hack3d, Jim Jones revisited Wayne’s time with Dipset back in the mid 00s that he says influenced the superstar he went on to become.

    “Well Wayne spent the whole summer with us,” Jim said. “We spent the whole summer with Juelz pretty much. He just adapted all the styles. He pretty much knew what he was doing. He knew what he needed and shit like that to persevere in this game. And that was to be able to get an identity shift and shit like that. That’s what he did and shit like that. You dig.”

    “It was natural,” he continued. “It happens like that. Most people that hang around us end up moving in one accord and shit like that, which is not a bad thing. If I was around some niggas like us, I would try to move like that too. These niggas looking kind of smooth, they fly, they gangsters. So shouts out to Wayne, shouts out to the whole Cash Money and shit like that.”

    In 2021, Wayne kicked the year off with the release of his new single “Ain’t Got Time,” which likely means a new project isn’t too far off. It appears that the onslaught of music will continue – but will it lead up to an album selling a million units its first week like mixtape Weezy did with C3? Time will eventually tell.

    In the meantime, stream the new single below.

    12 thoughts on “Drake & Jack Harlow Helped Lil Wayne Drop Over 50 Songs In 2020 — Mixtape Weezy May Be Back For Good

    1. I read the whole article and still don’t know what Drake and Jack Harlow have to do with Wayne dropping over 50 songs execpt those two features

      1. They helped him, along with all the other artists that helped Wayne drop 50 songs. It didn’t say they were solely responsible for it. You got a brain, use it.

    2. Wayne has basically ruined rap all by himself by inspiring a whole generation of garbage rappers. Now we have a bunch of mumble rappers who all sound like the same robot rapping about the same thing with lyrics that sound like a 12 year old wrote them. Thanks Lil Wayne.

      1. Lil Wayne ruined rap because he is inspirational? Wtf? How does that even make sense? Any inspiring rapper will look up to Lil Wayne simply because he is an icon. He doesn’t promote mumble rap, nor does he himself mumble rap. People who actually listen to and enjoy mumble rap “music” are the ones you should blame along with the mumble rappers themselves. Not Lil Wayne.

    3. The rap community is so trash. That corvette kid snitched when he was a kid, and all hell broke lose on him. Tekashi snitched on those dudes trying to kill him, and he got blackballed. Meek mill works for a fed informant, and everyone is cool with that, and now Wayne endorses a man that is literally responsible for deaths of black men, the arrest of thousands of black men, but it’s cool? He gets called a sellout and then everyone rides him again? This community is full of trash I swear.

      1. lil wayne didnt endorse biden… see the 1994 crime bill. read a book before typing. the dems are the real racists. lets see what your lord and savior does for the black community. im going to guess just as much as obama. also funny how all the murder capital cities are democratically ran.

        1. The dems are the real racists…lol

          The subjugation of black people in America has always been a bipartisan pursuit. Don’t play into any “sides” hands.

    Leave a Reply to Lol Cancel reply

    Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *