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Drake And Rihanna Updated -

After a few years of distance and individual career triumphs, the duo reunited in 2016 for what would be their most commercially successful partnership: "Work." Featured on Rihanna’s critically acclaimed album Anti , the song was a global phenomenon.

: The title track of Drake's second studio album, which samples Jamie xx’s remix of Gil Scott-Heron's "I'll Take Care of You". "Work" (2016) : A massive global hit from Rihanna's album that spent nine weeks at #1 on the Billboard Hot 100. "Too Good" (2016) : Featured on Drake's album

"He's a wonderful person," she said. "We're friends... But it's not like we're a burden on each other. If I see him walking down the street with another girl, I'm not going to get upset. It’s an unleech —we took the leech off." drake and rihanna

They gave us hits. They gave us memes. They gave us a decade of will-they-won’t-they tension. And in the end, the answer was simple: They didn't. And that’s what makes the music so good.

She moved on, quietly, with a Saudi billionaire and then with ASAP Rocky—a man who matched her swagger for swagger, who didn't write her poems but cooked her breakfast. A man who felt like an equal, not a fan. After a few years of distance and individual

Then came 2011’s "Take Care," the title track from Drake’s sophomore album. The song sampled a Jamie xx remix of Gil Scott-Heron, and featured Rihanna’s haunting vocals about nursing a broken lover back to health. Many believe this song is the thesis statement of their entire relationship. Drake sings about healing Rihanna; Rihanna sings about being too broken to love him back.

Despite the public awkwardness, rumors persisted that the two still hooked up privately. In 2017, Drake dropped "Fake Love," and fans speculated it was about Rihanna. Meanwhile, Rihanna launched her Fenty empire and began dating billionaire Hassan Jameel. "Too Good" (2016) : Featured on Drake's album

A dancehall-inspired hit that stayed at #1 for nine weeks and is now diamond-certified.

It began, as these things often do, with a seed planted in the dark. 2005. A 19-year-old Drake—then still Jimmy Brooks from Degrassi , a kid in a wheelchair with a rap dream—sat in his Toronto apartment. On his grainy monitor, a 17-year-old Barbadian beauty named Robyn Rihanna Fenty danced in the "Pon de Replay" video. He didn't just see a pop star. He saw a supernova.

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