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In the years following Juice’s death, Bibby has worked alongside G-Money and Grade A COO and Juice manager Peter Jideonwo to sift through the roughly 1,000 unreleased songs the label holds. As ...
"AGATS2 (Insecure)" is a trap-pop song that finds both artists rapping and singing. [2] Juice Wrld expresses his sorrow from unrequited love in the first verse, [3] starting with the opening line from the original "All Girls Are the Same" ("I admit it, another ho got me finished") and mentioning how he self-medicates. His tone changes from sad ...
"In My Head" was first previewed by Juice Wrld on August 30, 2019, and would remain unreleased for nearly three years after his passing. On October 22, 2022, Lil Bibby, owner of Grade A Productions, began teasing the track's release under the title "Rush Hour"; on October 24, a 30-second snippet of the song was uploaded to streaming services.
Juice Wrld's second studio album Death Race for Love, was released on March 8, 2019. Led by the singles " Robbery " and " Hear Me Calling ", it debuted at number one on the Billboard 200 with 165,000 album-equivalent units.
In January 2020, a month following Juice Wrld's death, it was reported that at least two thousand songs were recorded before he died. 26 of these were leaked onto the streaming platform SoundCloud by the user "999 WRLD". [2] Juice's label (Grade A) and family released a statement regarding his unreleased music:
Yahoo Entertainment/SiriusXM Volume spoke with Oliver at length about why the music and story of Juice WRLD (who is still Spotify’s third-most streamed artist in the U.S., right behind Drake and ...
Jarad Anthony Higgins (December 2, 1998 – December 8, 2019), known professionally as Juice Wrld (pronounced "juice world"; stylized as Juice WRLD), was an American rapper and singer-songwriter. He emerged as a leading figure in the emo and SoundCloud rap genres, which garnered mainstream attention during the mid-to-late 2010s.
"Wandered to LA" is a "glossy pop" song that is set in the key of C major with a tempo of 135 beats per minute. Writing for GQ, Grant Rindner felt that the song was "true to the artist Juice was becoming"; [2] [3] in the chorus and his verse, Juice details his love for consuming drugs, while Bieber details his effort to make a relationship work in his verse.