Drake References Bitcoin in His New “Iceman” Album 

1 hour ago 10

Drake namedrops Bitcoin on his new album “Iceman,” released May 15, 2026. On the track “Dust,” he identifies himself as a “A BTC crypto big-timer.” The line lends fresh celebrity visibility to the leading digital asset.

The same album also references former FTX chief Sam Bankman-Fried and the exchange’s penthouse era. The verses tie Drake’s lyrics directly to one of the most prominent collapses in crypto history.

On midnight Friday, Drake dropped the albums “Iceman,” “Habibti” and “Maid of Honour.”

With three new albums and 43 total songs, Drake fans have a lot to unpack — and debate. After the Kendrick Lamar beef, will the albums be enough for a Drake comeback? https://t.co/T3w3Mmxpbt pic.twitter.com/YMMnB3r0vC

— The Washington Post (@washingtonpost) May 15, 2026

Bitcoin Hovers Near $80,700 as the Bar Drops

The new lyric arrives as BTC consolidates well below its October 2025 all-time high above $126,000. Cultural references like Drake’s tend to coincide with periods of renewed retail attention.

For Drake, the bar continues a long pattern of using Bitcoin as a personal flex. He has previously placed multi-million dollar bets on sporting events denominated in BTC. He also lost a six-figure sum on a Mavericks wager during a recent NBA Finals run.

Iceman Also Nods to Sam Bankman-Fried and FTX

On the same “Dust” track, Drake raps:

An FTX penthouse high-riser, yeah Samuel Bankman, free all my guys up

The line directly names the disgraced former FTX chief.

Sam Bankman-Fried was convicted in 2023 over the collapse of FTX. Roughly $8 billion in customer funds went missing during the implosion. He is currently serving a 25-year federal prison sentence and was denied a retrial earlier in 2026.

The “free all my guys up” reference also lands amid speculation about a possible presidential pardon for Bankman-Fried. The topic has gained traction in crypto circles this year.

A Cultural Stamp on Bitcoin

Parts of the crypto community read Drake’s verse as a bullish signal for Bitcoin’s cultural acceptance. The reference joins earlier nods from artists, athletes, and brands that have made the asset shorthand for status.

Drake is not the first major artist to invoke Bitcoin. References to BTC have appeared across hip-hop, pop, and electronic music for nearly a decade. Each cycle pulls celebrity attention back to the asset.

Whether the “Iceman” name-check moves price action is doubtful. It does confirm that crypto’s biggest characters, from BTC bulls to disgraced founders, now sit comfortably inside mainstream pop lyrics.

The post Drake References Bitcoin in His New “Iceman” Album  appeared first on BeInCrypto.

Read Entire Article