Whoa, free money? Gucci and Big Sean’s got racks on deck. But thanks to the
Tag: big sean
G.O.O.D. Music continued their radio run with Big Sean and Pusha T
Big Sean was in Vancouver, BC and kicked it with Nardwuar. Of course, The Human Serviette came bearing gifts. Big Sean on the other hand, should’ve brought his sense of humor.
Last night, the NBC reality series ended their season on a good note. Bieb and Big Sean hit the stage with another televised performance of “As Long You Love Me” while Ne-Yo performed “Let Me Love You”.
During his Canada Is Finally Famous tour’s first show last night, Big Sean held it down solo and gave his debut performance of “Clique” in front of the sold-out crowd at Vogue Theatre. nav UPDATE: “24K Of Gold” via perajok
At the VMAs, Big Sean tells Bootleg Kev he’s eyeing a 4th quarter release for his sophomore LP and its single to drop in a few weeks. He also mentions a Nas collabo produced by No I.D. that will make the cut. hhnm
Crew love 2.0? Find out when Cruel Summer arrives September 18th. flex UPDATE: That was fast. Now with CDQ. Sidebar: Big Sean Talks “Clique” With L.A. Leakers

It’s so cold in the D. So Big Sean releases his new mixtape for the 313. Guests tagging along include J.Cole, Kendrick Lamar, French Montana, Chris Brown and more. Download below.
Before Big Sean takes us to Detroit tomorrow, we follow him out in the middle of the wilderness for his new music video. Remember: only you can prevent forest fires.
Riding shotty across town, Big Sean gives us a first listen of his J.Cole-collabo. Like the previous tease, this sounds good so far. Detroit drops September 5.
With "Which One," Drake and Central Cee bridge the Atlantic through their shared affinity for Caribbean-influenced sonics, cementing UK drill's arrival in mainstream hip-hop's upper echelon. This collaboration isn't just another checkbox on Drake's endless list of co-signs—it represents the continued global evolution of Black music dialects, with Central Cee's gritty London cadence providing the perfect counterbalance to Drake's melodic versatility. The track's immediate chart success proves that the UK-Toronto pipeline remains one of hip-hop's most fruitful cross-cultural exchanges.