Drake is not backing down in the war against his own label, in fact he’s now upped the ante by suing Universal Music Group for spreading the “false and malicious narrative” he’s a pedophile … TMZ Hip Hop has learned.
Drake filed the defamation case Wednesday morning in federal court in NYC … ripping UMG for releasing and promoting Kendrick Lamar‘s vicious diss track, “Not Like Us.” In the docs, obtained by TMZ Hip Hop, Drake says UMG knew full well Kendrick’s lyrics, and images in the music video, referring to Drake as a pedophile were false and dangerous.
In the suit he calls Kendrick’s hit — filled with “inflammatory and shocking allegations”– was a “gold mine” for UMG … and he says they had an ulterior financial motive in promoting it.
Drake claims his label was doing everything it could to pump up “Not Like Us” because it knew it would devalue Drake’s music and brand … and therefore give UMG leverage in future contract negotiations with Drake.
Drake says he’s got bot receipts to show just how far the label went to turn Kendrick’s song into an anthem. According to the suit, UMG paid a third party to use bots to increase the song’s streams by at least 30 million — and engaged in a “pay for play” scheme with at least one radio promoter.
He’s also claiming UMG was in on getting Kendrick the Super Bowl Halftime gig … so, that the song could be performed on that massive stage.
Interestingly, Drake isn’t going directly after Kendrick in the suit — in fact, he says, “This lawsuit is not about the artist who created ‘Not Like Us.’ It is, instead, entirely about UMG, the music company that decided to publish, promote, exploit, and monetize” the song which it knew contained false claims.
As for how the song put Drake in danger … he points out that since Kendrick dropped the megahit there have been multiple shootings at or near his Toronto mansion, one of which ended with one of his security guards getting shot.
The music industry thought Drake was retreating in this legal battle, because on Tuesday he’d filed a motion to drop a legal action he’d filed against UMG and Spotify in New York state court. Our sources tell us that was merely done to clear the way for this new federal case.