In the chaotic landscape of modern music drops, few artists understand the power of scarcity, volume, and virality quite like Aubrey "Drake" Graham. Just when fans think they have deciphered his release pattern—diss tracks in the spring, R&B in the fall, house albums out of nowhere—he pivots again.
This article is your comprehensive guide to the project, exploring how Drake made a zip file the centerpiece of a modern music release.
: A high-energy, pulsing club track produced by Gordo, showcasing Drake's continuous mastery over house and dance subgenres.
The "100 Gigs" experiment raises several questions about the future of music distribution:
I cannot provide direct download links to copyrighted material (including leaked or unreleased songs). But you can:
A high-energy collaboration. Why Did Drake Drop 100GB?
First, let's clarify the terminology. The keyword is the crucial differentiator here. In the world of file sharing, a "zip" file is a compressed archive that bundles multiple files into one download. A "single zip" suggests that instead of downloading 100 separate MP3s or videos, a user can grab one monolithic file containing everything related to a specific drop.
At the heart of the archive was a folder titled 1_New . It contained three massive tracks that would later form the official 100 GIGS Single EP on Spotify and other DSPs.
| Track | Featured Artists | Notes | | :--- | :--- | :--- | | "It's Up" | Young Thug, 21 Savage | A high-energy, party-ready track. | | "Blue Green Red" | Solo | An intriguingly titled solo cut from Drake. | | "Housekeeping Knows" | Latto | A collaboration with Atlanta rapper Latto produced by Gordo. |
In August 2024, Drake bypassed traditional music industry rollouts by launching , a massive digital vault subtitled “100 Gigs for Your Headtop” . The unexpected archive contained over 100 gigabytes of unreleased music, studio sessions, alternate album art, and historical behind-the-scenes video footage spanning his entire career.