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Rb Hip Hop

Drake Drops Booking Agent He Shared With Kendrick Lamar

After more than a decade of working together, Drake has cut ties with Brent Smith at Wasserman Music.

Drake performs onstage during Wireless Festival at Finsbury Park on July 11, 2025, in London.
Drake performs onstage during Wireless Festival at Finsbury Park on July 11, 2025, in London.
Joseph Okpako/WireImage

Drake quietly parted ways with the booking agent he shared with longtime rival Kendrick Lamar earlier this year, Billboard has learned, in a move largely kept quiet to avoid media scrutiny.

One source tells Billboard that Drake and former longtime agent Brent Smith of Wasserman Music have not worked together for most, if not all, of 2025 due in part to the fallout over last year’s feud with Lamar and the release of his Billboard Hot 100-topping diss track “Not Like Us.”


Drake had been repped by Smith for more than a decade; the two began working together at WME and continued their relation after Smith joined Wasserman Music in 2020, where he now serves as executive vice president and managing executive.

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Drake will reportedly be repped at CAA by a team led by Daryl Eaton, Billboard has learned. The news was first reported by Hits Daily Double.

Drake’s decision to split with Wasserman comes after Lamar and SZA grossed an impressive $358.6 million gross on their Grand National Tour, making it one of the highest-grossing hip-hop treks of all time, according to Billboard Boxscore, moving 1.76 million tickets. Drake is reportedly planning his own tour for 2026 with Live Nation, where he has long had an exclusive global touring deal.

The fact that Drake and Lamar shared a booking agent was a topic of intrigue in the music business, especially as the two rappers’ feud worsened. At one point, Drake even sued his record label Universal Music Group over the lyrics to “Not Like Us,” which Drake claimed were untrue and defamatory. A federal judge dismissed the lawsuit last month, and attorneys for Drake have appealed.

This article was first published by Billboard U.S.

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Bruce Springsteen and Tom Morello at A Concert of Solidarity & Resistance to Defend Minnesota held at First Avenue on January 30, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Jesse Roberson/Rolling Stone

Bruce Springsteen and Tom Morello at A Concert of Solidarity & Resistance to Defend Minnesota held at First Avenue on January 30, 2026 in Minneapolis, Minnesota.

Rock

Musicians’ Unions Back The Boss After Trump Dumps On Bruce Springsteen Again: ‘We Stand in Complete Solidarity With Bruce’

The president called the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame legend a "bad and very boring singer" while accusing Springsteen of having "Trump Derangement Syndrome" in a post on Tuesday (April 2).

The war of words between Bruce Springsteen and Donald Trump cranked up another notch on Thursday (April 2) when Dan Point, the president of the Local 802 American Federation of Musicians and Local 47 AFM president Marc Sazer lashed out at the president for his latest broadside against the Boss.

“We can not remain silent as one of our most celebrated members is singled out and personally attacked by the President of the United States,” the union presidents said in a joint statement following a post on Trump’s Truth Social in which the president again took aim at the rock icon for speaking out against his administration. “Bruce Springsteen is not just a brilliant musician, he is a voice for working people, a symbol of American resilience, and an inspiration to millions in this country and around the world.”

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