For a stretch of hours that felt much longer to the people watching, Kendrick Lamar’s 2024 album GNX was nowhere to be found on Apple Music. The disappearance did not stop there. Music videos for tracks including Luther and Not Like Us were also pulled from the platform, and the album went dark on Tidal as well, though it remained accessible on Spotify throughout. By the time fans started comparing notes online, the theories were already running wild.
The timing made everything feel intentional. Drake’s upcoming album Iceman is set to drop at the end of the week, and the hip-hop internet did not need much more than that to start connecting dots that may not have actually been there. Within hours, speculation ranged from a strategic re-release designed to steal momentum from Drake’s rollout to the idea that Lamar was preparing to drop new music entirely. Neither turned out to be the case.
The real reason was considerably less dramatic
What actually happened appears to be a licensing transfer. The catalog shifted from sitting under Universal Music Group to operating under an exclusive arrangement with Interscope Records, a procedural change that can cause temporary gaps in availability across streaming platforms during the transition. It is the kind of backend administrative move that happens regularly in the music industry and almost never makes headlines unless the artist involved is someone the internet is constantly watching.
By the time the day was over, everything had returned. GNX was back on Apple Music, the music videos for Luther and Not Like Us were re-uploaded to YouTube, and the 2024 diss track Euphoria resurfaced alongside them. The window of absence lasted only a matter of hours, but that was more than enough time for it to become a full-blown conversation.
Why the Drake connection refuses to go away
The fact that fans immediately leaped to conclusions involving Drake says something about where things stand between the two rappers in the public imagination. The beef itself effectively ended two years ago, but it has been kept alive through Lamar’s Super Bowl halftime performance, the ongoing success of his GNX tour and Drake’s continued legal action surrounding Not Like Us. Every move either artist makes gets filtered through the lens of that rivalry, whether or not the move has anything to do with it.
Both rappers have entire careers built on work that has nothing to do with each other, but the internet has largely decided the feud is the most interesting chapter of both stories, and it treats nearly any development as potential evidence that the next round is coming.
What Kendrick has actually been up to
Outside of the streaming drama, Lamar has been having a remarkably full year by any measure. He swept through the Grammy Awards in February, taking home five trophies including Record of the Year and Best Rap Album for GNX. His Grand National Tour has been setting records and drawing some of the largest crowds of his career.
Last week brought a quieter but genuinely meaningful moment. Lamar returned to Centennial High School in Compton, California, joining fellow alumni Dr. Dre and will.i.am for the dedication of a newly redesigned campus. He reunited with a seventh-grade science teacher during the visit, a moment that cut through the noise of streaming disappearances and rap beef speculation with something a little more grounded and real.

