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Nayvadius DeMun Cash [8] (né Wilburn; born November 20, 1983), known professionally as Future, is an American rapper, singer-songwriter, and record producer. Known for his mumble -styled vocals and prolific output, Future is considered a pioneer of the use of Auto-Tuned melodies in trap music .
On February 15, 2020, a remix of the song was released by Future featuring Drake and American rappers DaBaby and Lil Baby. [14] Three days prior to the release, Future teased DaBaby and Lil Baby's vocals on an Instagram story. The remix is featured on Future's eighth studio album High Off Life, along with the original version.
We Don't Trust You 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.
"Fine China" was called a "light and bouncy attempt at a bombastic love song" and a "syrupy-sweet party record" by Spin. [4] Billboard summarized the song as the "woozy rhymers detail[ing] various experiences regarding their love life over hard-hitting production", [1] with Rap-Up labeling the collaboration a "celebration" of the rappers' girlfriends, [5] and XXL also noting it is an "ode to ...
Future wrote the song with producers Wheezy, Taurus, Jasper Harris, and Russ Chell. A Valentine's Day song that sees Future rap about his hate for the holiday, it was released three days before it. It also serves as his first solo single in almost two years, following the release of "Tycoon", from his eighth studio album, High Off Life (2020).
But that is the beauty of Future. He tries new things, regardless of what the backlash might be." [ 3 ] Reviewing Mixtape Pluto for HotNewHipHop , Gabriel Bras Nevares stated "As cringe as many find Future's chorus on 'PLUTOSKI,' and as much as that instrumental deserved better, it's actually one of the most fun parts of the mixtape, thanks to ...
Chuck D famously rapped “our freedom of speech is freedom or death” on Public Enemy’s 1989 single “Fight the Power,” one of hip-hop’s most powerful anthems. Thirty-five years later ...
HipHopDX ' s Scott Glasher wrote that the song is a "true assembly of modern rap’s Avengers". Glasher wrote that Travis and Carti's "dystopian distorted vocals" on the "harrowing beat" can be described as "Medieval church bells drenched with thundering 808s".