Maid of Honour (album)
| Maid of Honour | |
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| Studio album by | |
| Released | May 15, 2026 (2026年05月15日) |
| Genre | |
| Length | 45:09 |
| Language |
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| Label | |
| Producer |
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| Drake chronology | |
| Singles from Maid of Honour | |
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Maid of Honour (stylized in all caps) is one of three studio albums[a] released by Canadian rapper Drake on May 15, 2026, through OVO Sound and Republic Records. Production was handled by Drake's frequent collaborators, including Gordo, O Lil Angel, and Oz, among others, and features guest appearances from Stunna Sandy, Sexyy Red, Central Cee, Popcaan, and Iconic Savvy.[1]
Maid of Honour was a surprise release alongside Habibti and Iceman —they collectively serve as Drake's ninth, tenth, and eleventh studio albums.[2] [3] The three albums are a follow-up to Drake's collaborative album Some Sexy Songs 4 U (2025) and mark his first solo studio albums since For All the Dogs (2023). Maid of Honour was preceded by the lead single "Which One", which was released on July 25, 2025.[4] [5]
Maid of Honour is characterized by a fluid, club-oriented aesthetic, primarily drawing from dance, house and electro music; critics and journalists noted its broad soundscape as incorporating various racial and social cultural influences. Similar to Drake's previous releases, lyrical themes include tainted romances, financial excess, and sexual relationships, and the album also discusses drug and alcohol use.
Maid of Honour was met with generally positive reviews from music critics, most of whom named it the best album of the trilogy. It opened with first-week sales of 110,000 album-equivalent units in the United States and debuted at number three on the Billboard 200; with Iceman and Habibti debuting at number one and two, respectively, Drake became the first artist ever to hold the top three spots on the Billboard 200 concurrently. Internationally, Maid of Honour peaked in the top ten in several countries, including Australia, Canada, Portugal, New Zealand, and the United Kingdom.
Background and promotion
[edit ]Maid of Honour's lead single, "Which One", was released on July 25, 2025. A snippet of the track was first previewed during Drake's "Iceman: Episode 1" livestream on July 5, and was previewed again on July 12, during the second day of his three-day Wireless Festival performance.[6] On July 24, three weeks after releasing the single "What Did I Miss?" for Iceman, Drake premiered "Which One" in full during the "Iceman: Episode 2" livestream.[7] [8] [9]
The album was surprise released on May 15, 2026, alongside Habibti , following the "Iceman: Episode 4" livestream a day prior; the CN Tower was fully illuminated ice-blue and visual projections were used to make it appear completely frozen to promote the releases.[10] [11] Speaking on the surprise release of all three albums, Peter A. Berry of Bloomberg called them "a total rejection of the critical and commercial systems that often define the music business" and said Drake's "unconventional" album release strategies has resulted in him "drift[ing] further from the traditional [music] canon".[12]
The cover art for Maid of Honour shows a photograph of Drake's family, with his mother Sandi Sher-Graham centered holding a bridal bouquet, with a photo of a young Drake and his father Dennis Graham imposed over.[13] The cover art was shared via Drake's Instagram on May 14, just prior to the album's release.[14] Speaking on the style of the album's artwork, Chris Murphy of Vanity Fair remarked that it "adds an unexpected element of camp to the [album]".[15]
Composition and themes
[edit ]Composition
[edit ]Maid of Honour has been compared to Drake's albums More Life (2017) and Honestly, Nevermind (2022), which notably incorporated club, dancehall, and house music.[16]
The album's opening track, "Hoe Phase", features a "moody" atmosphere that Pitchfork's Alphonse Pierre compared to Drake's So Far Gone mixtape,[16] with its latter half incorporating Afrobeats and amapiano rhythms.[17] Jeff Ihaza of Rolling Stone praised it as "a dazzling display of how dance music, unlike traditional hip-hop, thrives on fluidity".[18] "Outside Tweaking" is a "bouncy" footwork track with elements of Jersey club;[19] [16] [18] Stunna Sandy's guest appearance was praised by Pierre as "sound[ing] like a star".[16] Awarded Pitchfork's "Best New Track",[20] "Cheetah Print" is a hip house and electro song that samples Peggy Gou's "(It Goes Like) Nanana". Drake raps with robotic vocal effects;[16] his flirts throughout the track were described by Walden Green of Pitchfork as "half-hearted [...] but in a charming way",[20] and Craig Jenkins of Vulture argued his lyricism in the latter half was contradictory to Drake's claim that "'innocent Drake' [was] never coming back" from "Make Them Know" on Iceman.[21] Sexyy Red appears halfway through the song for a "real freak" verse interpolating "Cha Cha Slide" into a "thottier version of the dance".[16] [22] [18] [23] "Which One" features an "island-tinged" Afrobeat and dancehall inspired instrumental.[24] Narratively, it depicts Drake and Central Cee addressing respective love interests, with Drake noting how she stands out from her friends and enemies and Central Cee noting her physical appearance and sexuality.[25] The Popcaan-featuring "Amazing Shape" is a "smooth" dancehall track, with Drake primarily singing in Jamaican Patois.[16] Ihaza considered it an "upgrade" to Drake's 2016 song "Controlla", which was originally a collaboration between the two artists.[18] "BBW" (a shortened form of the term "big beautiful woman") features elements of Mantronix-esque electro and techno,[16] with a beat switch to "marauding" baile funk [26] and an "explosion" of distorted synths in the second half.[27] Pierre compared it to music at the Berlin nightclub Berghain;[16] Kiana Fitzgerald of Consequence described the track as a "knockoff" of Drake's 2018 song "Nice for What" but for plus-size women,[28] and singled out the lyric "So much ass [ash], you should be cremated" for criticism, a sentiment echoed by August Brown of the Los Angeles Times .[29]
"True Bestie" features a Jersey club instrumental with influences of footwork[16] and drill music, a fusion that Aron A. of HotNewHipHop commended as "feel[ing] surprisingly natural rather than trend-conscious".[30] Chicago-based rapper Iconic Savvy is credited as a featured artist on the track due to a prominent sample of her 2025 song "PSA".[31] Following the interlude "Where's Your Stuff", performed by TikTok creator youfoundivyy,[‡ 1] "New Bestie" is a "classic Drake breakup anthem",[16] with his "patois-inflected" vocal delivery in the song's Jersey club-inspired second half being called a homage to dancehall artist Vybz Kartel and "a callback to [Drake's] More Life era" by The Fader 's Hajin Yoo.[23] "Q&A" blends baile funk and sexy drill;[16] [32] Canadian producer APMelodies, who helped work on the track, said that Drake intended the instrumental to channel "summer ratchet vibes" and privately called it "a smash hit".[32] A new jack swing song with elements of bounce music,[16] [21] "Stuck" features lyrics about being caught in a relationship limbo. Pierre and Jenkins compared the song to 1990s R&B acts Mint Condition and Keith Sweat, respectively,[16] [21] while Roisin O'Connor of The Independent considered it derived inspiration from (and served as a "blatant" musical tribute to) Michael Jackson.[33] "Goose and the Juice" combines "gated reverb and Auto-Tuned pillow talk", according to Jenkins;[21] Mikael Wood of the Los Angeles Times compared it to the work of rock band MGMT.[29] Ludovic Hunter-Tilney of the Financial Times argued that the album's closing track, "Princess", which features emo-inspired singing and instrumentation, is Drake "trolling humourless rap purists. The last laugh [after the Lamar feud] is his".[34] Pierre compared his performance to "a 16 year old with an XXXTentacion poster on his wall",[16] while Robert Moran of the Sydney Morning Herald noted the track's similarities to the Pixies' song "Where Is My Mind?", describing it as "oddly endearing".[26] Ihaza hailed it as Drake's "most divisive left turn yet".[18]
Themes
[edit ]Ihaza argued Maid of Honour's varied sound, which includes electro, dance and house alongside dancehall, Afrobeat, hip-hop, UK rap, and grunge,[15] explores increasing cultural literacy and rising multiculturalism in Western societies, writing: "The album's underlying argument is not that identity no longer matters, but that culture itself has become too unstable, interconnected, and diasporic to survive [any] authenticity politics". He also wrote that by Drake being "strangely honest" about rising multiculturalism on Maid of Honour, it recasts Lamar's critiques of Drake as "inauthentic" during their feud to actually demonstrate "[Drake's] prudent understanding of [culturally changing] times".[18] This was echoed by Moran, who said that Maid of Honour "is determinedly global" and hinted its diverse content as denoting cultural pluralism, writing that "Maid of Honour might be the ultimate expression of Drake as cross-cultural agitator".[26] Tom Breihan of Stereogum likened the use of interjections across the album to drag-ball culture, writing it "suggests a level of comfort with queerness that [an artist like] Drake has never approached before".[35] Speaking of the albums broadly, Jenkins also commented on their multicultural influences, saying each of them "dabble in Arabic phrases" and "nod to [Drake's] Muslim associates", concluding the albums "[acknowledge] Toronto as home to countless faiths and races, to Black and Arab experiences" and ensure "appeal to all the proverbial political aisles".[21] Murphy also noted the album's blend of multicultural experiences, highlighting "Cheetah Print"'s use of "Cha Cha Slide" (which is commonly played at bar mitzvahs) being interpolated "as an instruction" on how to perform the West and Central African-derived twerking dance.[15]
Critical reception
[edit ]| Aggregate scores | |
|---|---|
| Source | Rating |
| Metacritic | 68/100[36] |
| Review scores | |
| Source | Rating |
| The Arts Desk | StarStar[37] [b] |
| Consequence | C+[28] |
| The Guardian | StarStar[27] [b] |
| NME | StarStarStarHalf star[38] [b] |
| Pitchfork | 8.0/10[16] |
| Rolling Stone | StarStarStarStar[18] |
| The Sydney Morning Herald | StarStarStarStar[26] |
According to the review aggregator Metacritic, Maid of Honour received "generally favorable reviews" based on a weighted average score of 68 out of 100 from 8 critic scores.[36]
Jeff Ihaza for Rolling Stone called Maid of Honour the "crown jewel" of the three-album release, and Drake's best work since his mixtape More Life. He praised its varied production, saying there "isn't another rapper operating at Drake's scale engaging this deeply with niche Black regional sounds", and specifically highlighted "Cheetah Print", "Amazing Shape", "Hoe Phase" and "Outside Tweaking". He concluded by saying "[the] album draws from Black musical traditions that are often maligned in the mainstream... Queer nightlife, dancehall, and house music [all] braid seamlessly across the album".[18] Writing for The Arts Desk , Thomas H. Green wrote that Maid of Honour "is musically more fun" than Iceman or Habibti, highlighting "Cheetah Print" and "BBW", but criticized the album for "drip[ping] with sweaty tumescent male lust".[37]
Writing for Pitchfork , Alphonse Pierre called Maid of Honour "the best album in Drake's comeback trilogy", praising its varied production for being "completely unpredictable" (highlighting "Hoe Phase", "New Bestie" and "BBW", in particular) and Drake's performance on "Cheetah Print", "Stuck", "Amazing Shape" and "Princess", concluding that Drake can "pick up the pieces and reclaim his title as hip-hop’s ultimate hitmaker".[16] NME 's Kyann-Sian Williams praised "Amazing Shape" as "a warm ode to Drake’s long-standing connection to Jamaican music" and labelled "Cheetah Print" as "ridiculous" but "dumb enough to become accidentally addictive".[22] In a review for the Financial Times , Ludovic Hunter-Tilney wrote Drake's "talents shine" on Maid of Honour and said that its "ribald" content is handled in "a much livelier, more comical fashion [than Habibti], abetted by cameos from Sexyy Red and Central Cee".[34] UK publication Stereoboard praised "Which One" as the highlight of the album.[39]
In a mixed review of the three albums, Roisin O'Connor of The Independent called Maid of Honour "a breath of fresh air" for Drake, commending the album for "its playful skits, catchy melodies, smart samples and guest features". O'Connor singled out "Amazing Shape" with Popcaan, the "infectious" "Which One" with Central Cee, and Drake's "low [and] sexy" performance on "BBW" for praise.[33] Robert Moran of the Sydney Morning Herald said that "Maid of Honour [shows] Drake [is a] cosmopolitan pop innovator", praising the production on "New Bestie" and "Hoe Phase" and also commended "Road Trips", "Stuck" and "Cheetah Print". He also wrote that the album "[is] sprawling, experimental, weird, fun and brimming with hooks. It feels like a template for tomorrow’s pop charts".[40] Craig Jenkins of Vulture called Maid of Honour the "highlight of the [three-album] package", praised it for its inclusion and performances of its female artists, and praised the production on "Stuck" and "Goose and the Juice", concluding by writing, "[the album] lounges almost entirely in a spirit of moonlit longing, yielding some of the most left-field moves of Drake's [career]".[21]
Commercial performance
[edit ]Within 24 hours of the triple-album release, Drake broke the record for being most-streamed artist in a single day in 2026 on Spotify and registered a 1,100% increase in simultaneous listeners on Apple Music,[41] causing each streaming service to crash and suffer glitches due to the high listener demand; over 5,000 users reported issues with Spotify on the day of the triple-album release.[42]
In the United States, Maid of Honour debuted at number three on the Billboard 200 chart, selling 110,000 album-equivalent units. This consisted of 104,000 streaming-equivalent units (equaling 105.48 million on-demand official streams of the album's 14 tracks) and 6,000 pure album sales; cumulatively, Drake amassed 687,000 album-equivalent units sold in the US for the three albums in their first week. With Iceman and Habibti debuting at number one and two, respectively, Drake became the first artist ever to hold the top three spots on the Billboard 200 concurrently.[43] In its second week, Maid of Honour sold 43,000 album-equivalent units, dropping to number eight on the Billboard 200,[44] and in its third week, it sold 31,000 album-equivalent units, dropping ten spots to number eighteen on the Billboard 200.[45]
In the United Kingdom, Maid of Honour opened at number six on the UK Albums Chart, while Iceman reached number one and Habibti opened at number seven. This made Drake the first artist to debut three studio albums inside the UK top 10 simultaneously,[46] and marked his fifteenth, sixteenth and seventeenth albums to debut in the UK top 10.[47] [48] In Australia, Maid of Honour debuted at number five on the ARIA Charts, while Iceman reached number one and Habibti opened at number six. The releases marked Drake's fourteenth, fifteenth and sixteenth Australian top 10 albums and made him the first artist to debut three new albums in the same week in the top 10.[49] In New Zealand, Maid of Honour debuted at number six on the New Zealand Albums Chart, while Iceman reached number one and Habibti opened at number five.[50]
Track listing
[edit ]All tracks are principally written by Aubrey Graham. Full writing credits are not available at this time.[51] [17] [32] [52] [better source needed ]
| No. | Title | Writer(s) | Producer(s) | Length |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | "Hoe Phase" |
| 3:23 | |
| 2. | "Road Trips" |
| 4:03 | |
| 3. | "Outside Tweaking" (featuring Stunna Sandy) |
| 3:10 | |
| 4. | "Cheetah Print" (featuring Sexyy Red) |
| 3:22 | |
| 5. | "Which One" (featuring Central Cee) |
|
| 2:49 |
| 6. | "Amazing Shape" (featuring Popcaan) |
| 2:56 | |
| 7. | "BBW" |
| 3:31 | |
| 8. | "True Bestie" (featuring Iconic Savvy) |
| 2:28 | |
| 9. | "Where's Your Stuff Interlude" |
| 0:52 | |
| 10. | "New Bestie" |
| 4:19 | |
| 11. | "Q&A" |
| 3:43 | |
| 12. | "Stuck" |
| 2:57 | |
| 13. | "Goose and the Juice" |
| 4:23 | |
| 14. | "Princess" |
| 3:13 | |
| Total length: | 45:09 | |||
Track notes
[edit ]- "Road Trips" features additional vocals from Teezo Touchdown.[citation needed ]
- "Stuck" features additional vocals from Qendresa.[53] [self-published source ]
Sample and interpolation credits
[edit ]- "Hoe Phase" contains a sample of "Give It All You've Got", written by Derrick Rahming, as performed by Afro-Rican.[16]
- "Road Trips" contains a sample of "Swangin' and Bangin'", written by Cedric Hill, as performed by E.S.G. [28]
- "Cheetah Print" contains samples of "(It Goes Like) Nanana", written by Kim Min-ji, as performed by Peggy Gou; "Popular", written by Demiko Wilson and John Earl Julian, as performed by Born Bad!;[52] and interpolations of "Cha Cha Slide", written by Willie Perry, Jr., as performed by DJ Casper; "It's My Party", written by Walter Gold, John Gluck, Jr., Herb Weiner, and Seymour Gottlieb, as performed by Lesley Gore; and uncredited interpolations of "Rich Baby Daddy", written by Aubrey Graham, Janae Wherry, Solána Rowe, Diamanté Blackmon, Richard Zastenker, Johannes Klahr, Benjamin Saint Fort, Douglas Ford, Shivam Barot, Yuval Chain, Florence Welch, Isabella Summers, and Thomas Schaeferdieck, as performed by Drake featuring Sexyy Red and SZA.[20] [52] [better source needed ]
- "Which One" contains uncredited interpolations of "Work", written by Robyn Fenty, Graham, Jahron Braithwaite, Rupert Thomas, Matthew Samuels, Allen Ritter, and Monte Moir, as performed by Rihanna featuring Drake; and "Wannabe", written by Melanie Brown, Melanie Chisholm, Emma Bunton, Geraldine Halliwell, Victoria Adams, Matt Rowe, and Richard Stannard, as performed by the Spice Girls.[33]
- "Amazing Shape" contains elements of "Who Am I (Sim Simma)", written by Anthony Davis and Jeremy Harding, as performed by Beenie Man.[33]
- "BBW" contains a sample of "Work", written and performed by Denise Belfon.[52] [better source needed ]
- "True Bestie" contains a sample of "PSA", written by Alzoria Sanders, as performed by Iconic Savvy.[31]
- "Where's Your Stuff Interlude" contains a sample of a TikTok video by youfoundivyy.[‡ 1]
- "New Bestie" contains an uncredited sample of "One Dance", written by Graham, Paul Jefferies, Ayodeji Balogun, Noah Shebib, Errol Reid, Luke Reid, Kyla Smith, Corey Johnson, and Logan Sama, as performed by Drake featuring Wizkid and Kyla.[52] [better source needed ]
Charts
[edit ]| Chart (2026) | Peak position |
|---|---|
| Australian Albums (ARIA)[54] | 6 |
| Australian Hip Hop/R&B Albums (ARIA)[55] | 2 |
| Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[56] | 7 |
| Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[57] | 19 |
| Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[58] | 30 |
| Canadian Albums (Billboard )[59] | 2 |
| Danish Albums (Hitlisten)[60] | 10 |
| Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[61] | 14 |
| Finnish Albums (Suomen virallinen lista)[62] | 43 |
| French Albums (SNEP)[63] | 31 |
| German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[64] | 38 |
| Hungarian Albums (MAHASZ)[65] | 30 |
| Irish Albums (OCC)[66] | 11 |
| Italian Albums (FIMI)[67] | 53 |
| Japanese Download Albums (Billboard Japan )[68] | 77 |
| Lithuanian Albums (AGATA)[69] | 10 |
| New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[70] | 6 |
| Nigerian Albums (TurnTable)[71] | 22 |
| Norwegian Albums (IFPI Norge)[72] | 18 |
| Portuguese Albums (AFP)[73] | 7 |
| Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[74] | 10 |
| Swedish Hip-Hop Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[75] | 3 |
| Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[76] | 4 |
| UK Albums (OCC)[77] | 6 |
| UK R&B Albums (OCC)[78] | 9 |
| US Billboard 200 [79] | 3 |
| US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard )[80] | 3 |
Notes
[edit ]- ^ Each album was released simultaneously and thus cannot be sequentially ordered. These articles use alphabetical ordering for consistency.
Release history
[edit ]| Region | Date | Label(s) | Format(s) | Edition(s) | Ref. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Various | May 15, 2026 | Standard | [3] |
References
[edit ]- ^ a b "youfoundivyy on TikTok". Tiktok . January 15, 2026. Retrieved May 26, 2026.
- ^ Haye, Wade (May 15, 2026). ".@PopcaanMusic Featured On @Drake's "Maid Of Honour" Album". 13th Street Promotions. Retrieved May 15, 2026.
- ^ Horowitz, Steven J. (May 15, 2026). "Drake Releases New Album 'Iceman' — Plus Two More Surprise Albums, 'Habibti' and 'Maid of Honour'". Variety. Retrieved May 15, 2026.
- ^ a b Ihaza, Jeff (May 15, 2026). "Drake Finally Unveils 'Iceman' -- and Surprise Drops 2 More Albums". Rolling Stone. Retrieved May 15, 2026.
- ^ Saponara, Michael (May 15, 2026). "Drake Returns With Three New Albums as 'Iceman', 'Maid of Honour' & 'Habibti' Arrive: Stream Them Now". Billboard. Retrieved May 15, 2026.
- ^ Abrams, Jonathan (May 15, 2026). "Drake Releases 'Iceman' and Two Surprise Albums: What to Know". The New York Times. The New York Times. Retrieved May 15, 2026.
- ^ Saponara, Michael (July 25, 2025). "Drake Reunites With Central Cee for 'Which One' Single: Stream It Now". Billboard. Retrieved July 26, 2025.
- ^ Akaash (July 25, 2025). "Drake Releases New Song 'Which One' Feat. Central Cee — Stream". HipHop‐N‐More. Retrieved July 25, 2025.
- ^ Spanos, Brittany (July 25, 2025). "Drake Reunites With Central Cee on New Song 'Which One'". Rolling Stone . Retrieved July 25, 2025.
- ^ Green, Walden (July 25, 2025). "Drake Taps Central Cee for New Song "Which One": Listen". Pitchfork . Retrieved July 25, 2025.
- ^ Bernstein, Elaina (May 14, 2026). "Did Drake Redefine the Album Rollout? 'ICEMAN's Gradual Defrost". Hypebeast . Retrieved May 15, 2026.
- ^ Horowitz, Steven J. (May 14, 2026). "Drake Releases New Album 'Iceman' — Plus Two More Surprise Albums, 'Habibti' and 'Maid of Honour'". Variety . Retrieved May 15, 2026.
- ^ Berry, Peter A. (May 14, 2026). "Drake Releases New Album 'Iceman' — Plus Two More Surprise Albums, 'Habibti' and 'Maid of Honour'". Variety . Retrieved May 15, 2026.
- ^ "Drake Rounds Out a Triple Album Drop With 'MAID OF HONOUR,' Which Features a Family Tribute". Hypebeast. May 14, 2026. Retrieved May 15, 2026.
- ^ Caraan, Sophie (May 15, 2026). "Drake Rounds Out a Triple Album Drop With 'MAID OF HONOUR,' Which Features a Family Tribute". Hypebeast . Retrieved May 15, 2026.
- ^ a b c Murphy, Chris (May 27, 2026). "Thanks to Maid of Honour, Drake Might Actually Survive Losing the Kendrick Lamar Beef". Vanity Fair . Retrieved May 30, 2026.
- ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r Pierre, Alphonse (May 18, 2026). "Drake: MAID OF HONOUR Album Review". Pitchfork . Retrieved May 18, 2026.
- ^ a b Lopez, Julyssa (May 19, 2026). "Gordo Says He Had No Idea Drake Was Dropping Three Albums". Rolling Stone. Retrieved May 20, 2026.
- ^ a b c d e f g h Ihaza, Jeff (May 18, 2026). "Drake's 'Iceman' Trilogy Turns 'Not Like Us' Inside Out". Rolling Stone . Retrieved May 18, 2026.
- ^ Nevares, Gabriel Bras (May 17, 2026). "Who Is Stunna Sandy? Drake's "Outside Tweaking" Guest On "MAID OF HONOUR"". HotNewHipHop. Retrieved May 26, 2026.
- ^ a b c Green, Walden. "Drake / Sexyy Red: "Cheetah Print"". Pitchfork. Retrieved May 15, 2026.
- ^ a b c d e f Jenkins, Craig (May 15, 2026). "Review: Drake's Triple Album Can Be Annoyingly Interesting". Vulture. Retrieved May 23, 2026.
- ^ a b Williams, Kyann-Sian. "Drake – 'Iceman'/'Habibti'/'Maid Of Honor' review: a stumbling rap king's valiant attempt to keep his crown". NME. Retrieved May 22, 2026.
- ^ a b "5 Drake songs you should actually listen to from his new albums". The Fader. May 15, 2026. Retrieved May 24, 2026.
- ^ "Drake and Central Cee Unite: the Release of 'Which One' Sparks Excitement Among Fans". Vinyl Me, Please. July 24, 2025. Retrieved July 25, 2025.
- ^ Saponara, Michael (July 25, 2025). "Drake Reunites With Central Cee for New Single 'Which One'". Billboard . Retrieved July 25, 2025.
- ^ a b c d Moran, Robert (May 18, 2026). "Review of Drake albums Iceman, Habibti, Maid of Honour". The Sydney Morning Herald . ISSN 0312-6315 . Retrieved May 20, 2026.
- ^ a b Petridis, Alex (May 15, 2026). "Drake: Iceman / Maid of Honour / Habibti review – triple-album comeback is a boring, bloated disaster". The Guardian . ISSN 1756-3224 . Retrieved May 18, 2026.
- ^ a b c Fitzgerald, Kiana (May 16, 2026). "Drake Is Still Chasing Ghosts on His Three-Album Megadrop". Consequence . Retrieved May 16, 2026.
- ^ a b "Breaking down Drake's Temu haul of an album drop". Los Angeles Times. May 15, 2026. Retrieved May 24, 2026.
- ^ A, Aron (May 20, 2026). "Drake "HABIBTI" & "MAID OF HONOUR" Review". HotNewHipHop. Retrieved May 26, 2026.
- ^ a b Nevares, Gabriel Bras (May 17, 2026). "Who Is Iconic Savvy? Drake's "True Bestie" Featured On "MAID OF HONOUR"". HotNewHipHop. Retrieved May 22, 2026.
- ^ a b c Staff (May 23, 2026). "'My principal asked, 'Are you on the Drake album?'': Toronto teen producer lands on rapper's new trilogy". CityNews Toronto. Retrieved May 25, 2026.
- ^ a b c d O’Connor, Roisin (May 15, 2026). "Drake can still produce gold. So why does he insist on being such a loser?". The Independent. Retrieved May 15, 2026.
- ^ a b Hunter-Tilney, Ludovic (May 18, 2026). "Drake releases three new albums — and his most engaging work in ages". Financial Times . Retrieved May 23, 2026.
- ^ Breihan, Tom (May 19, 2026). "Premature Evaluation: Drake Iceman, Maid Of Honour, & Habibti". Stereogum . Retrieved May 20, 2026.
- ^ a b "Maid of Honour by Drake". Metacritic . Retrieved May 31, 2026.
- ^ a b Green, Thomas H. (May 15, 2026). "Drake serves up 'Iceman', plus two surprise albums, 'Maid of Honour' and 'Habibti'". The Arts Desk . Retrieved May 18, 2026.
- ^ "Drake, 'Iceman'/'Habibti'/'Maid of Honour' review: a bold but overstuffed comeback". NME . May 20, 2026. Retrieved May 24, 2026.
- ^ Brookman, Jacob (May 26, 2026). "Drake - ICEMAN / MAID OF HONOUR / HABIBTI (Album Review)". Stereoboard. Retrieved May 26, 2026.
- ^ Moren, Robert (May 15, 2026). "Drake floods the zone, to mixed results, with an audacious three-album drop". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved May 15, 2026.
- ^ "Drake's chart-topping new albums prove he's music's most cynical businessman". Business Insider . May 26, 2026. Retrieved May 30, 2026.
- ^ "Spotify, Apple Music face outage after Drake drops three albums". MSN . May 26, 2026. Retrieved June 8, 2026.
- ^ Caufield, Keith (May 24, 2026). "Drake Makes History at Nos. 1, 2 & 3 on Billboard 200 With 'ICEMAN,' 'HABIBTI' & 'MAID OF HONOUR'". Billboard . Retrieved May 24, 2026.
- ^ "Chart Final: This Ice Ain't Melting". HitsDailyDouble. May 29, 2026. Retrieved May 30, 2026.
- ^ "ICEMAN Keeps Cool; Macca Makes His Move". HitsDailyDouble. June 2, 2026. Retrieved June 5, 2026.
- ^ Smith, Carl (May 22, 2026). "Drake becomes first artist ever to debut three studio albums inside Top 10". Sydney Morning Herald. Retrieved May 22, 2026.
- ^ "Drake becomes first artist ever to debut three studio albums inside Top 10". Official Charts Company . May 22, 2026. Retrieved May 24, 2026.
- ^ Smith, Thomas (May 22, 2026). "Drake Sets U.K. Chart Record as 'Iceman' Glides Straight to No. 1". Billboard. Retrieved May 24, 2026.
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