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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.
Yeat rose to prominence in mid-2021 following the release of his mixtape 4L and debut studio album Up 2 Me, with the tracks "Money So Big" and "Get Busy" from the latter gaining considerable popularity on TikTok. In 2022, he released his second studio album: 2 Alive, and the EP Lyfe, with both projects debuting in the top ten on the Billboard 200.
"Money So Big" (stylized as "Monëy so big") is a song by American rapper Yeat from his debut studio album Up 2 Me (2021). It was produced by Trgc and Nest. It gained traction through the video-sharing platform TikTok and has become one of Yeat's most popular songs. [1]
It should only contain pages that are Yeat songs or lists of Yeat songs, as well as subcategories containing those things (themselves set categories). Topics about Yeat songs in general should be placed in relevant topic categories .
Pitchfork reviewer Alphonse Pierre claims that "Yeat's inspiration feels like it refreshingly goes beyond Whole Lotta Red" while giving the album a 6.7/10. [3] AllMusic stated that "It's funny, weird, and infectious, like the best of Up 2 Më. Uncommon production choices and Yeat's laid-back but surprisingly off-center personality make these ...
Lyfe debuted at number ten on the US Billboard 200 with 30,000 sales in its first week, becoming Yeat's second top-ten project. [5] The EP also accumulated a total of 42.08 million on-demand streams of the EP's songs during the tracking week.
"If We Being Real" (stylized as "If We Being Rëal") is a song by American rapper Yeat, released on February 16, 2024, from his fourth studio album 2093 (2024). It was produced by Synthetic, Perdu, Radiate, Fendii, LRBG and Dreamr.
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."