What if Drake, J. Cole, and The Weeknd had all started their careers under Jim Jones?
In a candid interview with The Art of Dialogue, the Harlem rapper and former Koch Records executive dropped a bombshell: he passed on signing three artists who went on to become global superstars.
As Vice President of Urban A&R at Koch Records in 2009, Jones was presented with early opportunities to sign Drake, J. Cole, and The Weeknd—but for various reasons, he decided not to move forward.
“Alan Grunblatt let me hear some of Drake’s music, but I kept telling him that he had no image. It just didn’t resonate with me,” Jones admitted.
His revelations have sent shockwaves through hip-hop circles, sparking heated debates about vision, timing, and legacy in the music industry.
“I Didn’t See the Image”: Why Jim Jones Passed on Drake
Jones recalled being introduced to Drake’s music by Koch executive Alan Grunblatt but ultimately passed on the Toronto rapper who would later redefine hip-hop’s global sound.
“Drake had the lyrics, but I couldn’t see the image. It didn’t connect for me back then,” Jones said, according to AllHipHop.
Considering Drake’s meteoric rise—with countless No. 1 hits and billions of streams—the comment drew mixed reactions online.
???? “Jim Jones fumbled the entire bag,” one fan tweeted.
???? “To be fair, nobody saw Drake coming like this in 2009,” another countered.
Missed Connection With The Weeknd
Jones also shared that he was scheduled to meet The Weeknd early in the singer’s career, but tragedy struck.
“On the day we were supposed to connect, I got the call that Stack Bundles had been killed. My mind wasn’t in business mode anymore,” Jones explained somberly.
“Would it have been nice? Sure, that could have been dope. But who’s to say they would have achieved the same success if they had gone through the channels I had to offer?”
J. Cole Was in the Room—But Still Overlooked
As for J. Cole, Jones admitted the North Carolina rapper was frequently around his studio during those years but wasn’t signed either.
Fast forward, and Cole has become one of hip-hop’s most respected lyricists and hitmakers, further highlighting the magnitude of Jones’s missed opportunities.
Jones Stirs Up More Controversy With Nas Comments
Beyond reflecting on industry “what ifs,” Jones has also been making headlines for his comments about New York rap legend Nas.
On Bagfuel Podcast, Jones suggested his critiques of Nas’s career helped bring him back into public conversation:
“What I did for Nas recently probably has never been done in his life. The last time he was involved in something as viral as this was during his feud with Jay-Z.”
While some fans called the remarks disrespectful, others defended Jones’s unapologetic confidence, noting it’s a hallmark of his career.
???? Legacy or Liability? Fans Debate Jim Jones’s Place in Hip-Hop
Jim Jones’s interview has sparked larger discussions about legacy, generational shifts, and the unpredictable nature of the music industry.
???? “Imagine a world where Jim Jones signed Drake, Cole, and Abel. Hip-hop history would be so different,” one fan mused.
???? “Or maybe they wouldn’t be as big as they are now. Timing is everything,” another replied.
???? What Do You Think?
???? Did Jim Jones drop the ball by passing on these future icons—or were they destined to blow up no matter what?
???? Sound off in the comments and stay locked to The Pop Radar for more behind-the-scenes hip-hop stories and exclusives.