Videos by According2HipHop
20. “Buried Alive Interlude” (feat. Kendrick Lamar)
A historically interesting track but largely a spoken-word interlude. While it introduces Kendrick, it’s the least essential musically.
19. “Practice”
A nostalgic nod to Juvenile’s “Back That Azz Up.” Fun conceptually, but not one of Drake’s strongest compositions.
18. “The Real Her” (feat. Lil Wayne & André 3000)
Smooth and star-studded, yet it never quite reaches the emotional or musical peaks of other tracks.
17. “Cameras / Good Ones Go Interlude”
Atmospheric and moody but functions more as a transitional piece than a standalone classic.
16. “We’ll Be Fine” (feat. Birdman)
A confident track, but it lacks the emotional depth or replay value of the album’s top-tier songs.
15. “Make Me Proud” (feat. Nicki Minaj)
An upbeat, celebratory single. Energetic and fun, though not as timeless as the album’s most vulnerable moments.
14. “HYFR (Hell Ya F*ing Right)” (feat. Lil Wayne)**
High-energy and quotable, a fan favorite for live shows, but more hype than emotional substance.
13. “The Motto” (feat. Lil Wayne)
Culturally iconic thanks to “YOLO,” yet its pop-leaning energy places it outside the album’s emotional core.
12. “Shot For Me”
Early Drake at his moody, introspective best. Emotional and melodic, hinting at the vulnerability that defines the album.
11. “Under Ground Kings”
Confident and charismatic, a pure rap standout that showcases Drake’s lyrical swagger.
10. “Lord Knows” (feat. Rick Ross)
A Just Blaze-produced powerhouse. Ross delivers a career-defining feature, and Drake matches it with sharp bars.
9. “Headlines”
Bold, catchy, and confident. A lead single that still stands as a defining anthem in Drake’s catalog.
8. “Over My Dead Body”
A haunting album opener. Cinematic, introspective, and moody — setting the tone for everything that follows.
7. “Hate Sleeping Alone”
Vulnerable and relatable. Drake explores loneliness and the desire for connection, a late-night confessional that fits perfectly into the Take Care mood.
6. “The Ride”
Closing the album, this track is introspective and cinematic. Drake examines fame’s emotional cost, with The Weeknd’s haunting vocals adding depth and tension.
5. “Marvins Room”
One of Drake’s most influential songs. Heartbreak, toxicity, and late-night vulnerability converge into a song that changed modern R&B.
4. “Take Care” (feat. Rihanna)
A masterclass in pop-R&B collaboration. Warm, tender, and cinematic, it exemplifies the emotional core of the album.
3. “Look What You’ve Done”
Drake’s storytelling at its finest. Personal, autobiographical, and heartfelt — the album’s emotional centerpiece.
2. “Doing It Wrong”
Painfully honest and beautifully constructed. Stevie Wonder’s harmonica solo elevates this heartbreak anthem into a timeless classic.
1. “Crew Love” (feat. The Weeknd)
Dark, hypnotic, and atmospheric. The Weeknd’s haunting hook combined with Drake’s introspection captures the mood of Take Care perfectly, making it the defining track of the album.confidence, contradictions, success, and self-awareness. It remains timeless.










