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The song also includes a posthumous appearance from Nipsey Hussle on the intro, which is sampled from his leaked collaboration "I Just Wanna Know" with Ty Dolla Sign and fellow rapper Cardi B. [ 2 ] [ 3 ] West and Ty Dolla Sign recorded "Do It" during the sessions for Vultures 1 in Duabi, transforming an empty building of a hotel complex into ...
The song did not initially appear on streaming platforms, until it was released as the lead single from Vultures 1 five days later. [ 83 ] [ 84 ] [ 85 ] On February 7, 2024, an alternate version of "Vultures" with production from Havoc of Mobb Deep was released as a promotional single for the album, along with a music video on Instagram that ...
On “Do It,” nestled halfway through Kanye West and Ty Dolla Sign’s collaborative album “Vultures 1,” America’s second-biggest controversy magnet raps, “You don’t like it? That’s ...
Spanning songs across two decades from Late Registration to the Vultures series, most cases of West's illegal sampling in his music have arrived at private settlements, while others have successfully demanded that songs be withdrawn from circulation or modified under threat of legal action.
DJ Pharris debuted the new song “Vultures” during his Friday night show on Chicago radio station Power 92. In addition to Kanye, the track features Ty Dolla Sign and Lil Durk. Complex first ...
"Vultures" is the debut single by the American hip hop supergroup ¥$, composed of rapper Kanye West and singer Ty Dolla Sign, featuring Chicago-based rappers Bump J and Lil Durk. It is the lead single and title track from the duo's collaborative album, Vultures 1 .
"Burn" is a song by the American hip hop superduo ¥$, composed of rapper Kanye West and singer Ty Dolla Sign, from their debut studio album Vultures 1 (2024). It was produced by both West and Ty Dolla Sign, along with Leon Thomas III and The Legendary Traxster. The song contains samples of "Love Me or Leave Me" by Band of Thieves.
Reviewing Vultures 1 for HipHopDX, Scott Glaysher commented the song is "where things get a little strange, not necessarily for Kanye, but by listeners' standards" and in regard to the use of the line from Dogma, "Ye and Ty Dolla's creative output gets a little mundane when they simply repeat the actor's soundbite with some programmed drums ...