Jay-Z has voiced concerns about whether battling remains essential to hip-hop, pointing to the Drake and Kendrick Lamar feud as an example that has gone too far. In a GQ interview, he criticized how such rivalries now involve personal attacks and children amid social media amplification. He suggested collaborations could replace destructive battles.
Jay-Z spoke out in an extensive GQ interview about the evolution of hip-hop's four pillars—breakdancing, graffiti, DJing, and battling—arguing that the first three have faded from prominence. 'Breakdancing is not at the forefront of rap anymore,' he said, adding that graffiti is no longer tied to hip-hop and many artists' DJs go unrecognized. Turning to battling, Jay-Z expressed mixed feelings: 'We love the excitement and I love the sparring, but in this day and age there’s so much negative stuff that comes with it that you almost wish it didn’t happen.' He specifically referenced the prolonged Drake-Kendrick Lamar feud, which escalated from diss tracks in 2024 and 2025 into a defamation lawsuit affecting their personal lives. His Roc Nation firm selected Lamar for the 2025 Super Bowl halftime show, where the rapper led a singalong of the contentious track 'Not Like Us.' Jay-Z lamented the feud's intensity: 'It’s too far. It’s bringing people’s kids in it. I don’t like that.' He noted how social media turns battles into lasting character attacks, dividing fans permanently—'people that like Kendrick hate Drake, no matter what he makes.' Preferring unity, he advocated for musical collaborations over division: 'I think we can achieve the same thing... with collaborations more so than breaking the whole thing apart.' Jay-Z wondered aloud, 'I don’t know if battling needs to be part of the culture anymore,' while acknowledging his view might sound outdated. He also highlighted broader cultural tensions: 'There is clearly an agenda to silence voices in our community, a heavy right-wing agenda.' In October, Drake appealed a federal judge's dismissal of his defamation suit against Universal Music Group over 'Not Like Us,' which labeled him a 'certified paedophile'—a claim he denies. The ruling boosted the track's streams, hitting over 1 million on Spotify that day and re-entering charts. Jay-Z has upcoming performances, including Yankee Stadium shows on July 10 and 11 celebrating the 30th and 25th anniversaries of 'Reasonable Doubt' and 'The Blueprint,' plus co-headlining Roots Picnic in Philadelphia on May 30.