entertainment / Sunday, 02-Mar-2025

Every Drake Solo Studio Album Ranked Worst To Best

Love him or not, Drake is one of his generation's most influential and versatile artists, who revolutionized hip-hop and generated some of the most iconic moments in rap history. The Canadian star has continuously pushed the boundaries of genre fusion and evolved as a commercial juggernaut, always maintaining cultural relevance and keeping his next plot twist close to the vest.

Drake unequivocally has a few all-time great mixtapes and multiple iconic collaborative efforts not to be overlooked, like What a Time to Be Alive with Future, Her Loss with 21 Savage and even his recent $$$4U release with PARTYNEXTDOOR, but it's his eight solo studio albums that truly show him in his most authentic light.

8 Honestly, Nevermind

OVO, 2022

Honestly, Nevermind continues to serve as an incredibly divisive topic among Drake’s core audience, so we’ll leave it here and up for debate. The artist's Dance/Electronic music should be separated into its own category altogether, not to discredit the surprise genre shift. Beats on this project, stemming from various producers like Black Coffee, Gordo and 40, were crafted with a smooth, laid-back club theme that received praise from many, but also undoubtedly left much to desire for those expecting a more rap-heavy dynamic.

Its main hip-hop offering was, of course, “Jimmy Cooks” also featuring the work’s lone guest, 21 Savage. Drake’s unexpected experimentation led to this being one of the most criticized releases of his career, with many viewing it as an uninspiring and unwanted stylistic curveball.

7 For All The Dogs

OVO, 2023

Drake brought out J. Cole (“First Person Shooter”), SZA (“Slime You Out”), and 21 Savage (“Calling for You”) for memorable moments on For All The Dogs, and threw in a handful of nostalgia throughout with his dynamic and introspective lyricism. “Rich Baby Daddy” featuring Sexyy Red and SZA is a perfect example of how For All the Dogs often paired classic Drake with modern trends, though other attempts throughout the somewhat inflated 23-track release fell flat and left little replay value. PartyNextDoor, Teezo Touchdown, Yeat, Chief Keef, Lil Yachty, and Bad Bunny also appeared on For All the Dogs.

6 Certified Lover Boy

OVO, 2021

CLB was an astronomic commercial success, debuting at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 and winning Top Rap Album at the 2022 Billboard Music Awards, but that doesn’t mean it breaks into Drake’s top-five solo albums. The Drake album received relatively average reviews across the board, while most cited exhaustion with the “Drake formula” and criticized a perceived resistance to change (until Honestly, Nevermind made them want that signature Drizzy back again). Features from 21 Savage, Project Pat, Tems, Yebba, Future, Young Thug, Travis Scott, Lil Baby and others helped bring this piece over the finish line.

5 Scorpion

Young Money/Cash Money Records, 2018

The Canadian rapper’s fifth studio release Scorpion was a wildly popular double album with the first disc mostly featuring hip-hop spins and the other more R&B and melodic tracks, providing a diverse collection that caters to numerous audiences. “God’s Plan,” “Nice for What” and “In My Feelings” all reached No. 1 on the US Billboard Hot 100, with four other songs — “I’m Upset,” “Don’t Matter to Me,” “Nonstop” and “Mob Ties” — reaching top-twenty status.

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Scorpion, which included unparalleled posthumous appearances from Static Major and Michael Jackson, broke both Spotify and Apple Music single-day global records for album streams with 132.45 million and 170 million streams, respectively.

4 Thank Me Later

Young Money/Cash Money Records, 2010

Thank Me Later is the debut album that solidified Drake as a mainstream superstar following the massive success of his So Far Gone (2009) mixtape. Still to this day, these first two entries are among his most revered displays of artistry. Drake's ability to blend rap, R&B and vulnerable self-reflection shines brilliantly through songs like “Over,” “Miss Me,” “Fancy” and “Find Your Love,” which all went on to become both fan and radio favorites. All four singles reached the Billboard Hot 100 top 40, as the album debuted at No. 1 overall on the Billboard 200. Drake came through with star-studded contributions from Nicki Minaj, Swizz Beatz, T.I., Young Jeezy, No I.D., Alicia Keys, Lil Wayne, Kanye West and Timbaland, among others, to help him showcase his total command of a genre-altering style that would soon dominate the rap industry.

3 Views

Young Money/Cash Money Records, 2016

Drake proved that he had become an immovable force in music with “One Dance” (his first Billboard Hot 100 No. 1 hit) and pop-culture mainstay “Hotline Bling,” two of his biggest songs of all time. Views delicately embraces his Toronto roots — from its CN Tower cover artdown to its overall sound — along with dance, Caribbean and Afrobeat influences to create an immersive listening experience that deeply resonates with his fanbase. “Pop Style,” “Controlla” and “Too Good” were the other three supporting singles, as Views claimed the No. 1 spot for 13 non-consecutive weeks on the Billboard 200 and all 20 tracks landed on the Billboard Hot 100.

2 Nothing Was The Same

Cash Money Records, 2013

Sixteen deluxe-edition tracks, no skips: Nothing Was The Same gave us a long list of well-curated hits. Pairing the versatile “Hold On, We’re Going Home” Drake and the rap anthem “Started from the Bottom” Drake throughout, the album beautifully balances the emotional depth, self-indulgence and commercial appeal that made the artist a superstar. Carefully placed features from 2 Chainz, Big Sean, Jhene Aiko, Sampha, Jay-Z and Majid Jordan, as well as the highly regarded production of Noah “40” Shebib, sent Nothing Was The Same skyrocketing toward massive critical acclaim. The album debuted at No. 1 on the US Billboard 200, sold 658,000 copies in its first week and earned a nomination for Best Rap Album at the 2014 Grammy Awards (inexplicably losing out to The Heist – Macklemore & Ryan Lewis).

1 Take Care

Cash Money Records, 2011

Drake took his time with this one. Romance, struggle, fame, heartbreak, success, ego: Take Care has it all. Songs like “Marvin’s Room," “Over My Dead Body” and “Shot for Me” unveiled an emotional honesty and relatability that only the 2011 6 God could provide. It’s not just a classic Drake album, it’s one of the best albums of the decade. Take Care will be remembered as an unmatched display of storytelling that redefined hip-hop as we know it, creating a path for some of the most well-known artists of today. Modern masterpieces like “Headlines,” “Crew Love,” “Take Care,” “Under Ground Kings,” “The Motto,” “Look What You’ve Done” and “HYFT” ensure Take Care will be entrenched into the depths of classic hip-hop and R&B culture forever.

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