Port Antonio

Album: single release only (2024)
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Songfacts®:

  • When J. Cole jumped on Drake's October 2023 track "First Person Shooter" from For All The Dogs, he made a bold claim: that he, Drake, and Kendrick Lamar were the undisputed rulers of the rap game. Fast-forward six months, and Kendrick wasn't having it. On Future and Metro Boomin's joint track "Like That" from their album We Don't Trust You, Lamar fired back hard at Cole's so-called "Big Three" assertion. Though most of Lamar's disses were aimed squarely at Drake, he dismissed Cole's proclamation and declared himself the sole king of rap.

    Lamar's verse didn't just raise the temperature; it ignited a full-blown feud that had been simmering for years between him and Drake. Soon, the conflict pulled in other high-profile artists, with the likes of A$AP Rocky and The Weeknd jumping into the mix. As for Cole, he clapped back with his own response, dropping a track called "7 Minute Drill," where he set the record straight on the whole situation. But just a couple of days later, during his Dreamville Fest in North Carolina, the LaFayette native expressed regret over releasing the Lamar diss track, telling the crowd that he wished he hadn't added fuel to the fire.

    On "Port Antonio" Cole addresses his reasons for stepping away from the Drake and Kendrick Lamar feud, which was probably a good call.
  • Cole lays out his reasoning, explaining that he saw the conflict escalating into a circus of drama and profit, with artists crossing lines that shouldn't have been crossed. He raps:

    I understand the thirst of being first that made them both swing
    Protecting legacies, so lines got crossed, perhaps regrettably
    My friends went to war, I walked away with all their blood on me


    The rapper also addresses speculation about taking sides, specifically mentioning Drake and affirming their continued friendship. Rather than getting dragged into the chaos, Cole urges a return to what really matters: artistry and pushing creative boundaries, not beefing for the sake of headlines.
  • The title "Port Antonio" doesn't appear in the lyrics, but it likely refers to the peaceful coastal town in Jamaica. Symbolically, the title reflects Cole's retreat from the heated rap beef, seeking a calm "port" far away from the storm of conflict. Maybe Cole found clarity and inspiration for his lyrics in Port Antonio, away from the noise of the industry.
  • Cole's production of "Port Antonio" with DZL and Omen incorporates two notable samples. The first is a mournful, minor-key piano lick from Lonnie Liston Smith's 1983 track "A Garden of Peace" - a sample famously used by Jay-Z for "Dead Presidents." The second is a sped-up vocal sample from Cleo Sol's 2021 track "Know That You Are Loved," adding a soulful layer to Cole's reflective message.

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