New Music: Pusha T x Jay Z “Drug Dealers Anonymous”

Google Them, Baby.

With the statutes of limitations up, Pusha takes it back to the kitchen with Beyonce’s  ol’ “drug dealing husband” for their first collaboration. Produced by DJ Dahi, stream the track in its entirety on Tidal and look out for Pusha’s King Push later this year.

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  1. ShockWave says:

    Sounds like that real rap shit

  2. tha OG says:

    Both pusha T and Jay-Z went in! And lyricaly spit Fire!! But tha beat is not good at all

    1. Jones says:

      You sound stupid.. Everything 🔥

      1. tha OG says:

        Nah!! Thay spit that Fire! But the beat was bad

    2. beat was dope nice subtle and raw suits pusha perfectly yall niggas these days want some upbeat synthesized 808 drowned shit

    3. THE ALMIGHTY MIKEY ESCO!!! says:

      PLEASE LOG OFF YOU SLIMY LIL MAGGOT!!! BAMAS LIKE YOU SHOULD STAY ON WSHH!!! FK YO FEELINGS!!!

      1. tha OG says:

        Nigga Fuck you! Tha beat was bad but pusha T and Jay -Z went in spit Fire!!!!!!!

        1. YABOI says:

          You don’t what you talking bout lil nigga!

          1. tha OG says:

            Nigga I know what I’m talking about tha beat was boreing!!! But thay both spit lyrical Fire!!!

  3. Sina Mailer Daemon Djavadkhani says:

    Sounds great!

  4. reWHITEhistory_MLK says:

    “And can’t even mention what I sent or what I spent cause my name in 18 wheelers is evidence”-Push. …mEan

  5. bumpy johnson says:

    heard hov came correct ….. know he was warmin up when I heard the all the way up remix …… nobody will ever pass this guy sean . carter .

  6. bumpy johnson says:

    the guy sean can rap on any subject cause hes been everywhere . one of the things that makes him so dope and relevant to this day ….. even @ 46 ..

  7. F*ck Drake says:

    Looks like I have to wait for it on Apple Music

  8. Hov is on that shit here i need more of this for his next album

  9. i had a thought and imagined biggie on this beat…sheeeesh

    1. Anthony says:

      Word! It’s that Brooklyn bounce Hov got on this, from the beginning he snapped. This feels so fresh

  10. Captain Jack says:

    They both went in and the beat was dope.

  11. yorapper says:

    Hov verse is literally perfect. No cringe like his last few verses.

  12. el jim chapo guzman says:

    Vintage jay z at it’s best.

  13. Lyrics says:

    Grown up trap music…..they both went in..salute to real hip hop!

  14. bumpy johnson says:

    best verse since we made it ……

    1. saa says:

      Jay don’t do a lot of guest verses, seen it all was a dope verse as well.

  15. THE ALMIGHTY MIKEY ESCO!!! says:

    CLASSIC BACK TO BACK VERSES AND THE BEAT IS A SMOOTH ASS HEAD BANGER!!! FK YO FEELINGS!!!

  16. THE ALMIGHTY MIKEY ESCO!!! says:

    50 HOLD THIS L!!! FK YO FEELINGS!!!

    1. Topnotchx says:

      What does this have to do with 50? You broke ass dick rider fuck on…

  17. Anthony says:

    If you type anything that goes against this work Pusha and Hov put out, then you must be working with them people. This is for US!!

    1. Brian B.Dot™ Miller says:

      This is Jaÿ-z!

      1. Anthony says:

        The In My Lifetime Nigga, Skinny Nigga on the Boat #oceans

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    2. Public Hairs says:

      At what point do we admit Jay hasn’t been in his prime for quite a while now? @brianbdotmiller:disqus

      1. Anthony says:

        When you and those people reach that point…it won’t have anything to do with US!

        1. Public Hairs says:

          You liked your own comment lol

      2. thetruth says:

        you want dudes to be raping the same shit they whole life

        1. Public Hairs says:

          Idk where you got subject matter out of my statement but Ill make it simpler. I expect dudes to rap at a certain level of skill (even if they aren’t necessarily in their prime any more). Jay-Z wouldn’t sign today’s version of himself.

          1. Anthony says:

            Lol.. Tell me Where did Jay go wrong in this verse? Before everyone turned into “rap philosopher bloggers” we were great listeners we appreciated wordplay flow storytelling double entendres. This is Hov! this verse can fit in anyone of his albums WE consider classic.

          2. marty mcfly says:

            Jay is the master of this chamber of rap so there isn’t nothing wrong with his verse. In the wordplay aspect? I’d say this aint really some of his best work but that still doesn’t mean there’s anything wrong with his verse. The only thing I could say, and its not really a complaint its just an objective observation… Jay has probably a thousand verses like this and by “like this”, I mean from this perspective and with this kinda view point and attitude. Now of course people like that but imo its just way too comfortable and predictable imo. Jay has the ability to go ANYWHERE with his mind (We Made It for example) and even in this chamber of content, when you talk about wordplay, flow, storytelling, double entendres… Jay kept alot of those elements to a bare minimum on this verse. He kept it unusually simplistic and though he had a few slick punches, imo he just gave Pusha the obvious bars about himself. No hate, but Jay is way better then this verse imo even though its not a bad verse.

            This aint a “rap philosopher” opinion, this is just the opinion of somebody who been listening to Jay for years now.

          3. Anthony says:

            Who sent U?

          4. marty mcfly says:

            I’m just a fan of Hip Hop music like everybody else.

          5. Anthony says:

            Yep, that sounds fishy I’m Out✌🏾

          6. marty mcfly says:

            LOL, fishy… I think people feel some kinda way because they actually agree with the point of my comments. They act as if its some deep philosophical shit when its really just common sense but clearly anybody who has read my comments would know I’m a fan of Hip Hop. There is nothing conspiratorial or even that complicated anywhere in my comments. The main issue people have a problem with is for positivity in Hip Hop culture and I’m not supportive of any further destruction of the culture or black people in general. Thats why people have an issue and thats ridiculous.

          7. Public Hairs says:

            I hate to resort to this but I have to question when you started listening to Jay. What made Jay great once upon a time is barely in him these days if ever. You would know this if you knew his catalog properly.

  18. marty mcfly says:

    Earlier I said this shit was DOPE but on 2nd thought, I aint really feeling this song and its because I feel like I already heard it a thousand times already. I understand that this is new to the new era of Hip Hop but for a 90s kid, the mythologizing of the coke rap aesthetic has been going on for 25 years now. From Pusha T and Jay its an authentic perspective of course but Hip Hop in 2016 needs a new kinda “urban legend” type of character to heroize imo. A new archetype for Hip Hop culture to look up to at this point. Even though most Hip Hop heads are gonna feel this, there is a disconnect to a significant degree because even though the bars sound nice, the “black Scarface” perspective is only really a perspective that few people can really “feel”. Like with a personal connection. They think they do because they don’t know about that huge space between nickel and dime hustling and multi million dollar kingpin with 18 wheelers bringing in coke hustling. Those stories are hardly ever told (the space between the two) and that means that even though these songs are cool, most of the time your getting all allure and victory and very little nuances about the hustle in between and this has been the case for years now. Again Pusha and Jay are two of the best at this kinda rap so this isn’t a knock to them but its gonna be a wave of follow up songs from rappers who are not Jayz and Pusha trying to capitalize on “restoring the feeling”.

    At this point I think its time for Hip Hop to develop a whole new “Character” (for lack of a better word) to aspire to. Considering that some of the best rappers have already run through this chamber since the Purple Tape, Reasonable Doubt and Nas on his Escobar shit…. Hip Hop needs another direction to go in and new perspectives to be expressed at this point.

    1. THE ALMIGHTY MIKEY ESCO!!! says:

      ZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ I FELL ASLEEP AFTER THE FIRST 2 CHAPTERS!!! FK YO FEELINGS!!!

      1. marty mcfly says:

        People either gonna respond with anger or some kinda funny shit because thats they only way they can address what was said. I knew that before I even said it.

        1. THE ALMIGHTY MIKEY ESCO!!! says:

          DUDE YOUR TRIPPING ME OUT…YOUR LIKE A FKN PHILOSOPHER OR SOMETHING DUDE!!! YOUR TOTALLY FAR OUT!!!
          FK YO FEELINGS!!!

          1. marty mcfly says:

            Its not that deep, I’d say alot of you have thought the same thing to yourself before but since I’m saying it you wanna act like its some far out shit to say. Its not.

    2. Chronic says:

      There’s a new generation not talking about other stuff than selling drugs. This is what Pusha and jay made their careers on, I don’t get why you’re hating on em for doing what they do.

      1. marty mcfly says:

        That fact you think my comment is “hating” also demonstrates where the game is at but its cool, I’ll take the arrows because I know NOBODY really wants to address what I’m saying. I’m a big Pusha T and Jay Z fan btw.

    3. TUMBLEWEEDS says:

      *CRICKETS*

    4. thetruth says:

      shut the fuck up………….put your mom on the phone

      1. Neighborhood Soup.. says:

        Lmaooooo. Nah b.. lmaooo

    5. thetruth says:

      you so boring i dont even think you kicked when you was in your mothers stomach……..put your mother on the phone

      1. marty mcfly says:

        Thats a problem too. Anything outside of drug dealing rap is seen as boring. Not all the time, but ALOT of the time. That exposes how deep that mentality runs in Hip Hop. Now other people aint gonna keep it real enough to say that but they know its true.

    6. tha OG says:

      Nigga know one gives a Fuck!!! I can listen to drug rap all I want!! It’s interesting! & thay will keep on rapping about it! Also drug rap get people interested in it & it sell records!!!

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    7. eastpointvet says:

      You aint even close to being on base. Hip Hop has plenty of characters to aspire to its only a good 4 or 5 rappers who really spit coke rap that people even respect. but its 350 rappers out now that talk about a variety of topics. Kendrick aint talking about coke or Cole or Drake and they the biggest rappers out in hiphop today. So while you took time to type what you thought was a deep post its not in the realm of being “correct”

      1. marty mcfly says:

        I don’t think so. I think if its alot more what I’m talking about then people will acknowledge. Kendrick, Drake and Cole are always brought up as the counter but thats like 3 vs 350 rappers dropping them coke bars. I think if you take 3 of the most popular and think thats a representation of the whole culture for the most part? I think you need to pay attention to how many coke bars do you really hear PER DAY? Three rappers, even as popular as the ones you named are can not counter that kinda coke wave.

        Just to be clear, I’m not “mad” at rappers simply for rapping about coke. However when its been 20 years of that and THAT aesthetic is alot more respected in the streets then say what Drake is doing, then it gets to be a point to where the lack in variety is an issue imo. You say there’s a variety of topics? Again, I want you to pay attention to how many different rappers drop coke bars per day? Then lets really discuss variety counter to that…

        1. eastpointvet says:

          im really lost at your point if the most popular rappers dont rap about coke then whats your point. The masses are not listening to coke rap. The streets not winning is partly the reason meek took such a L. You know how damaging it should be for you to know a nigga dont write his raps and he sitting on the top of hiphop? That should have killed Drakes career but these new kids dont care and they not gangster. Now if you talking about drug references thats a different thing its a bunch of stoner rap and such but actual coke rap is a very minute piece of hiphop right now.

          1. marty mcfly says:

            If your lost at my point then we not gonna be able to discuss it. Now you don’t think the coke rap coming out of Hip Hop as a whole is as vast and far reaching as I’m describing so therefore you can’t really address what I’m saying if you think what I’m saying doesn’t exist to the degree I’m saying it does. When we talk about the streets and what people are listening to… Its not just about the popular rappers on a street level but “the streets” imo get alot more coke rap on a way more consistent basis then they get a Kendrick or Drake type of rap.

            Now you think coke rap is a very minute piece of Hip Hop right now? I strongly disagree. Its laced in so many songs that even our youth can tell you about coke after just listening to a couple days of it simply being referenced over and over again. It goes beyond just what’s popular but when we talking about “Hip Hop culture” in the streets “we come from”? They gon tell you bout that trap, that bando, that whip game etc etc… They gon tell you alot more about that then whatever J Cole’s last bar was about and thats regardless of his popularity and that coke rap has reached a point of now its not just art imitating life anymore, its gone to life seeking to imitate art…

          2. eastpointvet says:

            guess you could make a point if you could tell me who a few of these so called coke rappers are? mentioning the bando or the trap don’t make you a coke rapper.

          3. marty mcfly says:

            Alright well we have a difference of opinion because laced in songs Cut It from OT Genasis and Young Dolph, Trap Queen by Fetty Wap and Two Phones by Kevin Gates and songs from Future, Young Thug, Pusha T etc… These kids know what these kinda songs are really about and even if you wanna make a separation between what drugs are used, or whether its from the user or seller perspective? It ALL revolves around the same chamber of content.

          4. Ocho says:

            u named all southern artist .. we miss that d boy talk from rappers like Hov, The Lox, Pun, Sigel …etc The Dope rappers used to be the lyrical rappers smh .. now its just Trap rap or Emo rap

          5. marty mcfly says:

            I’d agree with that but current coke wave feels like fuck being lyrical because now not only selling drugs but using them too is what’s poppin. Niggas can’t be lyrical off a bunch of drugs and thats what in now.

          6. marty mcfly says:

            Mentioning the bando don’t make you a coke rapper but its definitely coming from where coke gets sold…

          7. Neighborhood Soup.. says:

            Speak On It…

          8. marty mcfly says:

            Faggot put your cheerleader pom poms down.

          9. Neighborhood Soup.. says:

            Wow Really B… You sound like a straight weirdo measuring the severity of Coke Rap… Like u some kind of Hip Hop Historian or some shit… Get A life B

          10. marty mcfly says:

            The weirdo’s are the ones acting like the implications of what I’m saying isn’t very real in the streets as if the murder rates and the addiction rates aint being fueled and impacted by alot of the music pumping through Hip Hop. People are so defensive over it that they don’t wanna admit to whether or not what I’m saying about this particular form of rap is true or not. This aint coming from a Fox News cracker talking down on Hip Hop culture, this is coming from somebody within the culture and those that wanna deny the severity of what I’m saying in terms of coke rap and its negative impacts on the culture which is also feeding that energy of murder and addiction in the streets? You are the weirdo’s. You don’t have to be a Hip Hop historian to see what I’m saying but those that feel some type of way about it are the weirdo’s.

          11. F*ck Drake says:

            So what you saying is selling drugs and murders is a direct cause from listen to coke raps. LOL STOP IT.

          12. marty mcfly says:

            No. What people will also do is pretend they don’t understand what I’m saying. Or they will paint my comment as if I’m saying Hip Hop is the direct cause of murders and addiction? Thats a weak cop out. What I am saying is rap music has POWER and huge influence on people and anybody who doesn’t think the music in Hip Hop culture effects the minds of the culture itself? Your lying to yourself.

          13. F*ck Drake says:

            I know HipHop has major influence but to say it is influencing bad things more than good is false. Everyone knows selling and killing is bad. My past generations of family grew up in Compton where selling drugs and being in gangs was their only hope for survival. Hip Hop doesn’t make people want to sell drugs and kill.

          14. marty mcfly says:

            Thats not what I said. Again people will take what I said and then make up their own version of my comment and talk about that so they either don’t understand the full scope of what I’m saying or are in denial about what I’m saying. I would say they if you honestly believe that their is a very significant energy coming from songs about shooting people and killing people that doesn’t make people wanna do it? Or at least plant that influence and mentality in people’s mind? You not being honest about the situation. There are people that have downloaded and listened to a thousand songs in the last few years about such violence, if you don’t think that has an effect on people’s mind? You don’t fully understand the power of Hip Hop music.

          15. marty mcfly says:

            I NEVER said Hip Hop influences MORE bad then good so when you try to suggest thats what I said? You expose yourself as a liar. Or someone who shapes the other persons statements in order to give your own self false arguments to counter. Now you from Compton, you don’t think Hip Hop culture in terms of gang violence plays a role there? You trippin. Now if you wanna make the argument that people are killing each other and selling drugs for survival? Ok well if that activity is an open fire, you don’t think the constant praising of that from Hip Hop adds fuel to the flames?

            What do we call a killer in the hood? A real nigga… Just think about how backwards that thinking is….

          16. F*ck Drake says:

            ” as if the murder rates and the addiction rates aint being fueled and impacted by alot of the music pumping through Hip Hop”

            Kinda implied it.

            You seem like a smart dude but a lot of statements aren’t fact based and I don’t think it will ever be proven on what you’re saying.

            I’m not from Compton fyi.

          17. marty mcfly says:

            I mean if in 2016, people still wanna be in denial about what I’m saying? Then imo they crazy. You got babies out here that can tell you the full lyrics to multiple songs about the kinda shit we’re discussing and they know the meaning of it even if the lyrics are coded. They can walk like, talk like, act like and aspire for all the same shit they heard the rapper say and they think all that gun busting and dope selling content is cool too because the frequency and the words of the music tells them it is. The influence is so clear as day its undeniable. So when their caught, living out what they heard at least a thousand times by the time they actually try it, you don’t think the soundtrack to their life, damn near doesn’t play a significant role in the mentality? I’d have to say obviously it does. I’m gone

            As far as “facts” there is alot of information out there about the influence of Hip Hop (good and bad) and about the impact of music on the human brain and its very considerable and that information has been proven.

          18. F*ck Drake says:

            No denying music has an effect on people but to say people listening to(Ex) selling drug raps makes them more likely to engage in selling actual drugs is a stretch. Not to say youre wrong but A lot of influences can persuade a person to act in certain ways.
            Good discussion though.

          19. marty mcfly says:

            Its not a stretch at all. In multiple instances for anybody paying attention, they can see a direct connection between what’s said in song and to the streets. Now yes the music comes from the streets but once something become popularized in music? It goes from small groups of people engaging in particular aspects of the streets to the expansion of the masses of people doing it.

            Specifically in drug culture, it can be seen that once a particular drug becomes popular in music (molly, lean, hustling itself in different ways etc…) its numbers go through the roof with people doing it afterwards from people that were not really involved in “that life” until they heard it in song.

            At this moment in the opinions of select music historians, Hip Hop culture is the MOST influential culture and form of music that has ever existed period. This means it don’t just influence peace, love and happiness. The flip side of that coin as it relates to hustler/gangsterism is also playing a major role in that content playing itself out in the streets.

            I came up in the era 2Pac was still alive and when he started yelling THUG LIFE… That shit had a ripple effect through the culture like a Tidal wave and almost immediately niggas started using the word thug too and living up to the word as well.

            From rappers getting tattoos all over their body, to popularizing Crips and Bloods (in areas where there were none before) to rapping about choppers, and other automatic weapons to different slangs used for ecstasy and even different forms of alcohol brands… Just like fashion and different styles of beats and rhymes, all these elements expanded and went from just small groups of people doing them to whole sections of cities doing them. Anybody going to a club, house party or rap concert during the rise of a new element in the streets and listens to the music can make a direct connection between multiple people who were not engaging in these things until after it became popular in Hip Hop.

          20. marty mcfly says:

            I think in some aspects Hip Hop culture is kinda cowardly to not admit to its own influence in the streets in terms of the destructive aspects of it. I say that respectfully which is why I gotta keep it real. Another element that Hip Hop prides itself on being “real”.

          21. marty mcfly says:

            Next time you hear some loud gangsta music playing and you see a child listening to it, even if its damn near a baby and their mouthing the lyrics… You think that child isn’t taking in that content and picking up on the vibe suggesting that what he’s hearing is what’s being cosigned as cool? Of course he is.

          22. marty mcfly says:

            For 20 years I’ve heard the question asked, does the violence in rap culture significantly influence violence in the streets? As someone who’s grew up in Hip Hop culture, I would have to say YES. Even if I was denial about it, its no way that Hip Hop culture doesn’t. Especially in terms of gangsta/hustler shit where “keeping it G” is praised as “real”. Again, I’m not looking for Hip Hop to be a scapegoat here, I say this outta love but real talk is just real talk.

      2. marty mcfly says:

        You say rap as plenty of “characters”? Ok, how many different “characters” would you say Hip Hop has? and would you say their idolized to the same degree the hustler/gangsta is? Honestly?

    8. Ocho says:

      There is a new wave… its the conscious / emo wave. The “new kinda urban legends” are the Kendricks, and Coles of the world. The emo guys like Drake, and Wale .. lyrical but they aint selling no drugs on records.. I think we (when I say we, I mean the late 90s – 2000 rap fans) just miss some of this dope boy talk but with real lyrics and feeling. We used to get it so much ..smh .. now its just nostalgic

      OH I missed all the previous post.. I think this point was made already lol

      1. marty mcfly says:

        I don’t think the conscious wave is having the same degree of influence in the streets as the coke wave is. I think popularity and commercial sells can make people think that but once the perspective of the streets is seen from the street level, they can see how much drug rap is dominating the culture over conscious rap. Especially with the youth. Alot of them think Drake and Cole make soft shit and they may listen to Kendrick once every blue moon but other then that they on that bando, stick talk, look at the flick of my wrist shit…

    9. Epul says:

      Either you like or don’t.. Shut the fuck up no one cares about your detailed opinion lol

      1. marty mcfly says:

        I didn’t ask people to care about the comment so you emo niggas certainly don’t need to reply to what you claim to not care about. Fix your face bitch nigga, if you don’t care then don’t read it.

        1. Epul says:

          Trust me I didn’t read it I stopped after the second sentence like everyone else. Shit reminds of those weird customers with no lives that write those pointless reviews.

          1. marty mcfly says:

            But yet you still commenting about it. Like I said, if you don’t care then keep it moving. I never asked you to read or care about the comment in the first place. You say its “pointless”? Well what further displays your stupidity is that you talking about a comment you didn’t even read. Next time stfu and keep it movin since you don’t care.

      2. Neighborhood Soup.. says:

        LMAO…. I’m In Here Rollin’

  19. #ShaBoogie730 says:

    🔥🔥

  20. 476231 says:

    it’s ok.

    hov made the song. pusha t is boring to me

  21. Kevin Banks says:

    The beat is a slowed down version of pop style

  22. Chronic says:

    That damn Daniel line was too funny

  23. @tr_414 says:

    Dope beat. Dope verse from King Push but am I the only one feeling like Jay is falling off? His last few verses been super average (for a Jay verse). #KingPush

    1. Lmfao! says:

      Pusha definitely out-rapped him on this one. Jay can be mad repetitive at times. I mean “what more can he say?”

    2. eastpointvet says:

      so you saying this verse is super average on the topic at hand?

      1. @tr_414 says:

        Yup. That’s what I said. Pusha T ate the track up.

        1. eastpointvet says:

          he did as well as jay but i guess people have to pick a winner on tracks these days instead of it just being a good track

          1. @tr_414 says:

            Nah, no winners on this one. Jay definitely earned that L. #ItIsWhatItIs

  24. Cantona says:

    “The money count is the only moment of silence
    Cause hush money balances all this drugs and violence”
    Take a moment…

  25. Glarmada.com says:

    Jay-Z is Out Of Hiding lol.. Thanks To Fat Joe & Pusha T haha

  26. mrbabyhands says:

    UMMM FUCK TIDAL?

  27. True Shit Bro... says:

    This nigga the hardest in Va foreal… Heard this shit on the radio here tonight & had to find cuz… http://www.audiomack.com/song/amir-driver/drug-dealers-anonymous-freestyle

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