Drake's 100 Gigs is less of a traditional EP and more of a massive digital museum of his career, centered around a few new tracks. It arrived via a dedicated website, 100Gigs.org, as a way to "clear out the vault" and re-engage his core fan base after a high-profile rap beef. The Core Tracks
: The dump includes studio footage, tour rehearsals, behind-the-scenes music video clips (such as for " Hotline Bling "), and unreleased demos. Music Content
"Housekeeping Knows": Featuring Latto and produced by Gordo , this track leans into a high-energy house-rap aesthetic. Re-Releases and Bonus Content
Historically, when artists release "lost files" or "leaks," it is usually a sign of a record label clearing the vaults without the artist's permission. Drake flipped this narrative. By releasing 100 gigabytes of data himself—containing behind-the-scenes footage, unreleased tracks, and studio sessions—he attempted to regain control of the narrative following his highly publicized feud with Kendrick Lamar.
Unreleased Tracks: Initially, the site featured three headline singles that were later bundled into an official EP. The "100 Gigs" EP Tracklist
Format: A massive data dump containing over 100 gigabytes of video clips, studio sessions, and unreleased songs.
The CRC-32 hash for the verified archive is: D6A8B3F1 (You can use tools like 7-Zip to check this.)
Drake's 100 Gigs is less of a traditional EP and more of a massive digital museum of his career, centered around a few new tracks. It arrived via a dedicated website, 100Gigs.org, as a way to "clear out the vault" and re-engage his core fan base after a high-profile rap beef. The Core Tracks
: The dump includes studio footage, tour rehearsals, behind-the-scenes music video clips (such as for " Hotline Bling "), and unreleased demos. Music Content
"Housekeeping Knows": Featuring Latto and produced by Gordo , this track leans into a high-energy house-rap aesthetic. Re-Releases and Bonus Content
Historically, when artists release "lost files" or "leaks," it is usually a sign of a record label clearing the vaults without the artist's permission. Drake flipped this narrative. By releasing 100 gigabytes of data himself—containing behind-the-scenes footage, unreleased tracks, and studio sessions—he attempted to regain control of the narrative following his highly publicized feud with Kendrick Lamar.
Unreleased Tracks: Initially, the site featured three headline singles that were later bundled into an official EP. The "100 Gigs" EP Tracklist
Format: A massive data dump containing over 100 gigabytes of video clips, studio sessions, and unreleased songs.
The CRC-32 hash for the verified archive is: D6A8B3F1 (You can use tools like 7-Zip to check this.)