Feb 18, 2016 On the Friday before Valentine’s Day, as Drake was getting ready to coach Canada’s team to a victory over the United States in the N.B.A.’s celebrity All-Star Game in Toronto, his longtime musical partner Noah Shebib, known as 40, was in his studio not far away, prepping for another night of work on “Views From the 6,” the forthcoming Drake album scheduled to be released in April. “I just make 50 ideas in one day,” Mr. Shebib said over the phone before the session. “As soon as one of those ideas gets his attention, we start heading that way.” In a hip-hop world with fewer and fewer superstars, a new Drake album is a rare seismic event, and “Views” has been teased and anticipated for months. It will arrive after a year in which Drake became the genre’s most powerful artist, because of his persistence on the charts even without releasing a traditional album, and his skillful handling of his beef with Meek Mill, the first real assault on his dominance. “Views” will arrive in a world overpoweringly influenced by Drake: His softening of the lines between genres is ever-present, from the Weeknd to Bryson Tiller to even Sam Hunt. “For the first time you find yourself not being the young kid doing something different that no one understands,” Mr. Shebib said. Though it’s been two and a half years since Drake released his last album proper, “Nothing Was the Same,” he has been anything but quiet. Last year he put out what were easily his two most pugnacious projects to date: the commercially released mixtape “If You’re Reading This It’s Too Late,” and “What a Time to Be Alive,” the full-length album collaboration with the Atlanta rapper Future. On the Friday before Valentine’s Day, as Drake was getting ready to coach Canada’s team to a victory over the United States in the N.B.A.’s celebrity All-Star Game in Toronto, his longtime musical partner Noah Shebib, known as 40, was in his studio not far away, prepping for another night of work on “Views From the 6,” the forthcoming Drake album scheduled to be released in April. “I just make 50 ideas in one day,” Mr. Shebib said over the phone before the session. “As soon as one of those ideas gets his attention, we start heading that way.” In a hip-hop world with fewer and fewer superstars, a new Drake album is a rare seismic event, and “Views” has been teased and anticipated for months. It will arrive after a year in which Drake became the genre’s most powerful artist, because of his persistence on the charts even without releasing a traditional album, and his skillful handling of his beef with Meek Mill, the first real assault on his dominance. http://www.nytimes.com/2016/02/21/a...album-prepared-by-moody-sensualists.html?_r=0
Feb 18, 2016 Nah fam, MT edited my post and added the entire thing, I only put 40's quotes in my post
Feb 18, 2016 Oh ok. Some of those paragraphs repeating a few times. Anyway, this is the part that has me excited. “It’s going to be what everybody expects and wants from Drake and from us,” Mr. Shebib said. “A lot of introspection, very vivid. He’s discovering new flows, new cadences, new patterns.” As for the music, “I’m trying to find ways to pull more untraditional sounds in, to push the boundaries a little further.” The overall approach may be the same as the one that the duo has finely honed, but still, Mr. Shebib said, “Something about it should be special.”