Drake is scrapping traditional album rollouts for his "Iceman" live stream series.
The Grammy-winning rapper ditched the usual album cycle, no teasers, no cover art countdowns, no lead singles, instead opting for cinematic live streams on YouTube that blend unreleased tracks with surreal storytelling.
The first episode, which aired July 4 from an ice warehouse in Toronto, ran nearly an hour and featured Drake dancing through the facility and measuring ice blocks before premiering "What Did I Miss?"
Drake told Complex that the idea for the live-stream format came from his dissatisfaction with the repetitive nature of modern album releases.
"I was asked by a creative partner what I love and hate about rolling out an album," he said. "I expressed that I love the opportunity for a clean slate of thoughts and excitement and messaging when it comes to the music. What I hate is the redundancy of this formulaic approach that's engrained in our brains from early label days. Single, video, single, video, album cover post, etc."
His desire to stretch his creative limits played a significant role in the decision.
"I have been dying to act and have been dying for a challenge," he said. "The game is extremely calm seas right now. Nobody is rocking any boat on the water and so once we discussed a live stream rollout, it just sounded like the perfect mix of risk and reward for me."
The streams are ambitious in both scope and production. According to Matte Babel, chief brand officer at DreamCrew and part of Drake's management team, Episode 3 in Milan required "20 cameras, over 100 crew, over 10 locations."
Babel also revealed that tight timelines and international travel made it difficult to secure permits, leading to issues mid-shoot.
"We lost a couple cameras mid-shoot because the police were like you can't shoot here," he said.
Each episode weaves together narrative threads, including mysterious characters like a Pinocchio-inspired figure, and features cameos from artists like Central Cee and Yeat. The format also allows for real-time audience feedback on unreleased songs.
"It wasn't something we spoke about, but it's inherently a byproduct of this idea," Drake said. "Being outside and getting a chance to interact with fans, and initiate audience participation as well as feedback has been amazing."
Drake confirmed more episodes are on the way and teased a major finale.
"The finale will be our best work," he said.
via: https://allhiphop.com/news/drake-promises-epic-finale-for-iceman-live-stream-series/












