J. Prince has been on a press run not just to address the Drake and Pusha T beef, but also to promote his upcoming book. The Rap-A-Lot Records CEO is set to release his memoir The Art & Science of Respect: A Memoir by James Prince on June 22, and the foreword is written by none other than Aubrey Graham.

Prince shared a photo on his Instagram account with him, his son Jas Prince and Drake showing the day that they met. Prince revealed that Drake wrote the foreword for his book and the audio of those words is included in the post.

He also noted how proud he is of his son for discovering and believing in Drake, and of Drake for evolving into a megastar. "Now we shall continue to deal with all haters and weapons that plot against us. 'After all its Gods Plan, even when the enemies fall in my hand'," Prince wrote.

Also included in J. Prince's memoir are quotes from Jay-Z and Bun B. “When you do business with [J. Prince], you're held at your word,” Hov said, per XXL. “You know if he tells you something, he's gonna do it, which is refreshing.”

Here's the full text of Drake's The Art & Science of Respect foreword (via XXL):

I honestly don't remember meeting James Prince. It was years ago and a lot of life has happened since then. What I do remember is like scenes from a movie, being in Houston, on our way to a nightclub escorted by a motorcade; seas parting everywhere we went. Waves, handshakes—all blatant signs of respect and admiration and maybe even fear to be honest.

But it all equaled up to a man straight out of all my favorite movies about power, loyalty and respect. My story from Degrassi until now has been pretty well documented. Everyone has heard how Jas Prince found me on MySpace, reached out, brought me to Houston and introduced me to Lil Wayne. But not much has been said about the things I witnessed from the Prince family during those early years in that city.

There's a common thread throughout the careers of mine and many others. And that is that no one becomes great on our own. Not even me or Pops. You know me, Jas, Jr., Baby Jay, those are my brothers, so I call him Pops. He's a complicated man, and it takes time to learn how to read him, even for me. Through our ears, he reinforced the importance of being self-contained, how to build a team, and how to respect and value their unconditional support to the movement that you're creating.

Our parallels became clearer and clearer. At a time where Toronto was as unlikely to succeed as a former car salesman out of Houston, at a time where rap was either East Coast or West Coast, here we both are. He helped pave the way by building a Third Cost the same way we established the North.

The challenges of creating a movement from scratch are indescribable. Everyone is different and no one has the cheat codes. We're all just feeling our way through, relying on instinct, using whatever tools we've been given. And what James Prince did, from rap to boxing, was build a movement. And he did it for his city.

Source: complex.com