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We Still Don't Trust You is the second collaborative studio album by American rapper Future and American record producer Metro Boomin. It was released on April 12, 2024, through Freebandz (under the business name Wilburn Holding Co.), Epic Records , Boominati Worldwide , and Republic Records .
On October 6, 2023, Drake released the song "First Person Shooter" as part of his album For All the Dogs with rapper J. Cole, [1] in which the latter shouts out the two rappers and Kendrick Lamar as the "big three" of rap music. [2] Additionally, Drake indirectly called out Metro Boomin in December 2023 for being a "tweet and deleter" after the ...
We Don't Trust You (stylized in all caps) is the first collaborative studio album by American rapper Future and American record producer Metro Boomin, released on March 22, 2024, by Freebandz (under the business name Wilburn Holding Co.), Epic Records, Boominati Worldwide, and Republic.
Kendrick Lamar Disses Drake and J. Cole on Future and Metro Boomin's New Song 'Like That' Future and Metro Boomin Announce Two Collaborative Albums, 'We Don't Trust You' to Release in March. Metro ...
Nearly a month ago, Future and Metro Boomin’s collaborative “We Don’t Trust You” album debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 and spurred a ravenous back and forth between hip-hop giants ...
Picking his proudest moment from the past year is not easy for Metro Boomin. The super-producer has been on quite a run since releasing his second solo album, “Heroes & Villains,” in December ...
On March 8, 2024, Future and Metro Boomin revealed plans to release two collaborative studio albums titled We Don't Trust You and We Still Don't Trust You, which were released on March 22 and April 12, 2024, respectively. [1] [2] In March 2024, Future and Metro Boomin were announced as co-headliners for the Lollapalooza festival in August. [3]
Not All Heroes Wear Capes debuted at number one on the US Billboard 200 with 99,000 album-equivalent units, making it Metro Boomin's first US number-one album. [12] The album dropped to the number eight in its second week, earning an additional 52,000 album-equivalent units. [ 13 ]