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2093 is the fourth studio album by American rapper Yeat, released on February 16, 2024, through Capitol Records, Field Trip Recordings and Lyfestyle Corporation. The album features guest appearances from Lil Wayne and Future, while the P2 deluxe edition adds another guest appearance from Drake.
The song also peaked at number 99 on the Billboard Hot 100, making it his second song to reach that chart, the first being "Money So Big", which debuted at number 95. [2] On September 2, 2022, Yeat released a single from his sixth extended play Lyfe titled "Talk". [3] Lyfe was released a week later on September 9, 2022.
Certain aspects of Yeat's music have led him to be associated with various Internet memes and trends, especially the frequent use of bell sounds in his music; an example being one of his breakout songs, "Get Busy", in which he raps "This song already was turnt but here's a bell" followed by the ringing of bells throughout the rest of the track.
Flawless (Yeat song) I. IDGAF (Drake song) If We Being Real This page was last edited on 29 October 2024, at 01:08 (UTC). Text is available under the Creative ...
On June 15, 2022, Yeat took to Twitter to announce the title of the EP. [2] On September 2, 2022, he released the lead single, "Talk", a collaboration with American producer Bnyx . [ 3 ] Upon releasing the EP's single "Talk", Yeat confirmed on Instagram that his forthcoming EP would release the following week on September 9, 2022.
The title of the song refers to an alter-ego of Yeat which he introduces. [1] The song uses "banging drums" and "harmonies that interact with each other such that it sounds like five different Yeats having conversations beneath the main vocal line." [2] Yeat also raps, "I'ma cut you off, cut you off when you talkin' to me". [3]
Lyrics were found in an open book at the library pop-up, and Us Weekly rounded up each big pre-album reveal: “I Love You, It’s Ruining My Life” “As She Was Leaving It Felt Like Breathing”
Gabriel Bras Nevares of HotNewHipHop stated that Future's appearance is "mixed way too low, but he does his thing" and the song "feel[s] repetitive". [1] Jeff Ihaza of Rolling Stone described Future's guest verse as "half-hearted" but wrote that it "still manage[s] to feel jarring in contrast with the general emptiness of Yeat's content."