Future and Casino sheds more light on the F.B.G.: The Movie by renting out Atlanta’s Pin Ups strip joint for the project’s new viral treat.
Tag: future
For the love the P-U-S-S-Y, Stunna rounds up his fellow YMCMB comrades and Future for his brand new single. Premiered by Flex.
Although Future is the only one exploring it, Ciara invites us all to the party on the latest single featuring ad-libs from her boo. One Woman Army in stores this summer. Mike Will Made It. Billboard
Clocking in at number nine on MTV‘s Hottest MC list is Auto-tuner, Future. Turn off the lights and turn up the debate. What began as a strictly underground run began to take off in 2011 with Future’s “Tony Montana” single and its Drake-assisted remix. During 2012, however, Future sky-rocketed to new heights with high-powered pop hooks, while still keeping his hold on the streets. His mix of melodic arrangements and raspy rap bars were a sure-shot formula for some of […]
Flo Rida is born ready. And with Future’s helping hand, he pulls an all-nighter on his new track, which premiered on South Florida’s 99 Jamz.
This originally featured FBG’s Mexico Rann, but now, Future enlightens us with an alternation featuring French Montana. Their Medusa project is still on the way. x
Stunna also provided a soundtrack for this weekend with his Rich Gang: All Stars mixtape. It features a majority of recent releases, but ball out with the players on this exclusive.
In a sea full of women, Tune gives a whole new meaning to a water bed in his new video featuring Drake and Future. Dope scenery. Doper chicks. Directed by Hannah Lux, but Mike Will Made It. I Am Not A Human Being 2 drops March 26. Sidebar: Weezy & Dre are Pill chasing
LA Clippers Chris Paul and Lowkey
Put it in a song, alright! MTV caught up with the likes 50, Fab, Nas, Talib, Future and more for their favorite Rap love song. From Meth and MJB’s “All I Need” to even Future’s “Turn On The Lights”, this is what they choose, to get you in the mood. But what do y’all think? Sidebar: The Boombox Top 25
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.