Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Vultures 1 is the debut studio album by the American hip hop supergroup ¥$, composed of the rapper Ye and the singer Ty Dolla Sign. It was released independently by the former's YZY brand on February 10, 2024.
"Burn" is a song by the American hip hop superduo ¥$, 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 .
Vultures 1 was released with a new cover art featuring a photograph of West completely obscured by all-black clothing, including an opaque head covering, standing next to his partner, Bianca Censori, with her back turned, wearing stockings and a sheer black cloth around her waist.
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 ...
On January 25, 2024, West posted a video on Instagram titled "Vultures Havoc Version", featuring a remix of "Vultures" produced by Mobb Deep rapper and record producer Havoc, who has previously collaborated with West. On February 8, 2024, West released the full song and music video on Instagram and later on YouTube.
The music video serves as a tribute to Inter Mlian's ultras, [96] featuring CGI shots of them at a stadium during a football match. [24] [93] A shot of the song's artwork is shown around 20 seconds in and the "Vultures" logo appears several times, although West, Ty Dolla Sign, and the featured artists do not make any appearances in the video.
Midnite Vultures is the seventh studio album by American musician Beck, released on November 16, 1999, by DGC Records. While similar to most of Beck's previous albums in its exploration of widely varying styles, it did not achieve the same blockbuster success as his breakthrough album Odelay , but was still critically acclaimed and commercially ...
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 ...