Drake has removed his diss track âTaylor Made Freestyle‘ after Tupac’s estate threatened a lawsuit over AI-generated vocals.
The ‘Headlines’ rapper was hit with a cease-and-desist letter (per Billboard) and was told by litigator Howard King that his diss track must be taken down in less than 24 hours. If not, Tupacâs estate would go ahead and  âpursue all of its legal remediesâ against him.
The letter â penned by King â read: âThe Estate is deeply dismayed and disappointed by your unauthorized use of Tupacâs voice and personality. Not only is the record a flagrant violation of Tupacâs publicity and the estateâs legal rights, it is also a blatant abuse of the legacy of one of the greatest hip-hop artists of all time. The Estate would never have given its approval for this use.â
It continued, taking issue with the rappers use of Tupacâs vocals to diss Kendrick Lamar: âThe unauthorized, equally dismaying use of Tupacâs voice against Kendrick Lamar, a good friend to the Estate who has given nothing but respect to Tupac and his legacy publicly and privately, compounds the insult.â

Now, ‘Taylor Made Freestyle’ has been taken down from all streaming platforms as well as all of Drake’s social media accounts following lawsuit threat from the estate of the late West Coast rapper.
âTaylor Made Freestyleâ was the latest in a string of shots back and forth between Drake and Lamar.
The first verse on the track has been manipulated to sound like 2Pac, with lines including: âKendrick, we need ya, the West Coast savior / Engraving your name in some hip-hop history / Fuck this Canadian light-skin, Dot / We need a no-debated West Coast victory, manâ.
The issue between the two artists began on the 2023 single âFirst Person Shooterâ, when Drake compared himself to Michael Jackson, after tying him for the most Number One singles on the Billboard charts.
In response last month, Lamar took jabs at Drake on âLike Thatâ, a track from Metro Boomin and Futureâs joint project âWe Donât Trust Youâ, by likening himself to Prince â Jacksonâs longtime rival. âPrince outlived Mike Jackâ / N****, bum, âfore all your dogs gettinâ buried / Thatâs a K with all these nines, he gonâ see Pet Sematary,â he rapped.

On April 13, Drake seemingly replied on the diss track, âPush Ups (Drop And Give Me 50)â. âThis the bark with the bite, nigga, whatâs up? / How the fuck you been steppinâ with a size seven mens on?â he rapped, alluding to Lamarâs fifth studio album âMr Morale & The Big Steppersâ. The Californian has yet to drop a rebuttal to âPush Upsâ.
Fans thought Lamar had responded to Drake when a song called âOne Shotâ leaked online. The track turned out to be fake, though, as TikTok rapper-producer SyTheRapper revealed he created it using AI. âI shocked myself,â he said. âI thought people were going to be able to tell it was fake, but people did actually think it was real.â
However, Rick Ross legitimately replied to âPush Upsâ with the equally venomous âChampagne Momentsâ. On the song, he accused Drake of getting a nose job and sending a cease-and-desist to French Montana. The latter was later confirmed by their label owner, Gamma CEO Larry Jackson.
The post Drake removes diss track using AI-generated Tupac vocals after estate threatens lawsuit appeared first on NME.