5 Drake Songs You Should Actually Listen To From His New Albums

5 Drake Songs You Should Actually Listen To From His New Albums

Drake’s three new albums, Iceman, Habibti, and Maid of Honour, have set the internet aflame. As an engagement strategy, the surprise trilogy drop is supremely effective. But it’s also successful as a tangible manifestation of Drake’s public persona and psyche. Thematically and sonically, each project represents a different facet of the man: Iceman, his tough rapper shell; Habibti his wounded lover boy heart; and Maid of Honour, his queen out club diva.

Some of the albums are more successful than others, and we’re still digesting our thoughts on each. But for now, see our top five songs that we think are absolutely worth hearing if you aren’t interested in slogging through the 43 tracks. (Spoiler alert: Maid of Honour is our favorite of the three.)

“National Treasures” from Iceman

“National Treasures,” Drake’s most passionate track on ICEMAN, is a three-minute attempt at self-preservation. Two years since his very public feud with Kendrick Lamar, there’s clearly been a lot weighing on his mind. Despite the noise, he’s doing what he does best: showing out for his city and flexing his ice and racks.

“Cheetah Print” from Maid of Honour

Forget about the insecure victim-complex of Iceman; Maid of Honour is where it’s at, specifically “Cheetah Print.” Hearing the “Cha Cha Slide” interpolation—with Sexyy Red as the emcee—is the kind of club-ready energy we’ve been waiting for.

“New Bestie” from Maid of Honour

Sometimes a good hook can do more than a hundred punchlines, and “New Bestie” proves it. Midway through the track, it shifts into a Jersey club beat, with Drake’s patois-inflected delivery paying homage to Vybz Kartel in a callback to his More Life era.

“True Bestie” featuring Iconic Savvy from Maid of Honour

“True Bestie” absolutely bumps. Drake taps Iconic Savvy for a Chicago-style juke track that serves as a perfect summer anthem.

“White Bone” from Habibti

At nearly five minutes, the longest track on Habibti is a long, rambling 2 a.m. phone call. It recalls the Take Care-era Drake, but with a somberness that suggests a hollow-feeling tragedy beneath the surface.