Drake’s 100 Gigs is a Middle Finger to Spotify

Chris Harihar
7 min readSep 1, 2024

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A few weeks ago, Drake unexpectedly released a library of content, “100 Gigs for Your Headtop,” through a burner Instagram account (@plottttwistttttt) and dedicated website, 100gigs.org. The collection of content included behind-the-scenes videos recorded throughout Drake’s career, and “new” (or at least unreleased) tracks, like It’s Up, Blue Green Red, and Housekeeping Knows. Moreover, all of the material was entirely free.

But… why?

The “why” has been a major point of discussion ever since, especially after Drake added a new batch of content to the 100 Gigs library last week, highlighted by songs, No Face, Circadian Rhythm, and (an updated, Lil Yachty-less) SOD.

The rationale behind 100 Gigs is also being debated, because it immediately follows Drake’s historic beef with Kendrick Lamar. Lamar’s anti-Drake anthem, Not Like Us, became the most-streamed rap song of the summer — complete with a West Coast solidarity-themed performance live-streamed on Amazon and a music video that drove over 122 million views. By any measure, it was meant to be a knockout blow. With Drake seemingly on the ropes, many are analyzing 100 Gigs as a response to that. And reactions have not always been kind.

One journalist tweeted, “The timing just screams that he’s trying to change the narrative. He’s throwing everything he has at fans, hoping something will stick.” Rapper-turned podcast mogul Joe Budden commented that the release worked to “humanize” Drake post-beef but criticized him for releasing any content for free. “Drake should never do this,” said Budden. A Rolling Stone write-up of 100 Gigs titled “Can Drake Bounce Back” even questioned the authenticity of Drake’s entire career, citing Lamar’s “cogent argument” against it.

The media and online discourse have largely interpreted 100 Gigs as a vague and not very strategic reaction to the beef. At best, it’s seen as humanizing but desperate. At worst, with Atlanta-infused songs like It’s Up, it confirms everything Lamar accused Drake of. However, are the critiques missing the juicier implications of the 100 Gigs release?

Make no mistake — 100 Gigs is a response to Lamar, but it is not just a lyrical one. It is not so much a kill shot as it is a moonshot, aiming to potentially change the music industry. Here’s how.

Challenging the Streaming Status Quo

For years, music streaming platforms have paid artists only fractions of a penny. It is remarkable that such a system is even permitted to exist, given how bad the outcomes are for the very creators who make it all possible. This, of course, is the main way record companies now make money, with everything from record “sales” to album drops catering to DSPs.

In response to streaming’s indentured servitude, some superstars have pulled their music entirely, only to return later. Few have succeeded in truly challenging this system. Even Taylor Swift returned to Spotify after a three-year hiatus from 2014–2017.

Drake, however, appears to have established a new model by essentially creating his own streaming service. Because, at the end of the day, that is what 100 Gigs is, especially as Drake continues to add content to it. This is a superstar artist who is openly bypassing intermediary DSPs entirely because he can.

Imagine if, once his UMG contract ends, Drake were to replace the “Download” button on 100 Gigs with a “Buy” button, allowing him to profit fully, free from the constraints of traditional models and streamers. With 100 Gigs, he’s basically seeding this change, training fans to access his music independently of DSPs, like Spotify or Apple. This is also why he is doing it for free (for now), removing any friction to that process. “Drake really is the GOAT,” tweeted one Drake fan. “I’m cancelling my Spotify subscription ✌🏽.”

As far as I can tell, no artists of Drake’s standing have truly attempted anything like this before. Even Kanye West, now as an independent artist, relies on legacy streaming as the primary distribution point for his music and pays partner Label Engine roughly 20% (maybe less) to manage that process. Disintermediation is hard. Jay-Z, of course, made TIDAL, however, that is not what 100 Gigs is.

Drake now has his own Drake-dedicated DSP, where his content appears first and only later on legacy DSPs — if at all. What would prevent Drake, the most streamed rapper on any DSP, from eventually choosing to bypass them entirely? Additionally, none of the video content is on these platforms, making 100 Gigs the exclusive, easiest source for the full library.

The Power of Data Ownership

The benefits here go beyond a better revenue split. A self-managed DSP also gives you complete control over, and full visibility into, user and audience data.

In traditional streaming, artists receive limited insights into their listeners’ behaviors. The streamer really has no incentive to share more because they own the platform. The data is theirs to use as they see fit to keep users within their walled garden. DSPs also want to keep artists dependent by disclosing only the agreed-upon minimum or less.

A few years ago, Flavie Halais wrote about exactly this problem. While conducting an audience audit for an award-winning artist, he says he was “stunned by the lack of data made available” by DSPs. He noted that Spotify offered no way to even “disaggregate data by age, location, or gender… when looking at each song individually.”

Drake disrupts that completely with 100 Gigs. With it, he gets access to a firehose of “first-party” data — information collected directly from his audience. This allows him to crunch and analyze what resonates the most with his fans across the globe. From these aggregate patterns, Drake can then fine-tune and optimize future drop times, experiment with new content formats and merchandising, and tailor basically any offering to match audience engagement in real-time. (100 Gigs does not require users to log in —Drake could add logins and user profiles in the future just to juice data access, or integrate more sophisticated tracking.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​)

Drake’s ownership of his platform’s data isn’t just about insights either. With a scaled, direct dataset, which is rare, he can create his own recommendation algorithm or engine for the 100 Gigs service. This gives Drake true transparency and control over how his music is presented and discovered. With an algorithmic layer, at some point, he could even add his entire back catalog, or expand 100 Gigs to support other artists from his label, OVO Sound.

Compare this to the opaque “black box” algorithms that govern today’s legacy DSPs. These enigmatic AIs drive most daily music listening, yet no artist has real insight into how they surface or curate content. Their mechanics are deliberately obscured for the same reasons their data is obscured. Drake, through 100 Gigs, can alter this status quo by taking back distribution, along with the data and tech that powers it.

How This Ties Back to Kendrick

100 Gigs, as I have described it, represents Drake’s definitive counter to Kendrick Lamar. In fact, 100 Gigs builds on the narrative Drake established in his “Push Ups” diss track. In that song, Drake challenged Lamar not just lyrically, but also on industry influence and business success. Drake snarked, “Pull your contract ‘cause we gotta see the split.” Now, with 100 Gigs, Drake is moving beyond merely bragging about favorable contract terms. Instead, he is aiming for complete independence — answering to no one but himself.​​​​​​​​​​​​​​​ (Lamar is newly independent but still DSP-driven.)

Drake’s conflict with streamers is also connected to his feud with Lamar. Conspiracies have circulated that Kendrick’s team used bots to boost his diss tracks on DSPs, like Spotify. Additionally, Drake fans have claimed Lamar’s disses have been popping up in their playlists against their wishes, suggesting algorithmic manipulation.

Are these claims true? Sour grapes from angry fans? Maybe, maybe not. However, as someone who is very much online, Drake certainly saw them. We know this because he posted about the bot rumor multiple times on Instagram. He even called out Spotify by name, saying the streamer had allowed Lamar to “backdoor” (fake) streams for Not Like Us. Whether these rumors are true or not, clearly, Drake believes they are. In response, he is positioning himself to take control of distribution to ensure his work’s success and amplification are managed directly and transparently. As Drake said on The Heart Part 6, “I’m petty with dedication” — but, this time, DSPs, not Lamar, are on the receiving end.

A Paradigm Shift in the Music Industry

It is easy to question what 100 Gigs is and we should as fans. But it has been strange to see so few consider what this could ultimately be. Drake’s 100 Gigs is more than a reaction to rivalries or a simple content dump. It is Drake trying to win the war (long term), not necessarily the battle (short term). It represents a potential paradigm shift, setting a blueprint for how leading artists might sever ties with traditional platforms to take charge of their fates more directly. Now, the ball is in Drake’s court to deliver on that promise in full.

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Chris Harihar

I write about technology, PR, and marketing. Views are my own.