One of the standouts from Wale’s catalogue just got upgraded with vocals from Dos Chainz, Trey Songz and Ricky Rozay. Also it’s never too late to pick up, Ambition in stores now.
Tag: wale
Wale still got that work. And like Drake, Mr. Folarin has already started recording his third LP just less than a month since his latest release. Still no days off, so spend yours purchasing
For this week’s issue of Billboard, Ricky Rozay and Wale make their cover debut. Below is an excerpt from the cover story in which Rozay speaks on the success of MMG/WB this past year. Full cover story here. “I understand why New York’s a huge fan of Derek Jeter — because in the playoffs he always delivered, he always came through,” Ross says. “And that’s what it is when it comes to big records, big collaborations. I was fortunate last […]
With the Detroit Lions duke it out with the Green Bay Packers today, Wale releases his ode to the team’s former running back featuring some classic sports clips. Off his The Eleven One Eleven Theory
Last week, Wale brought his club anthem to Fuel Tv’s The Daily Habit show for a live performance.
During Wale’s performance last night in San Francisco, he brought out Big Sean for the live rendition of their track, “Slight Work”. Afterward, Sean did an impromptu performance of
You might remember this dropping back in 2010 with Gudda Gudda as the feature. But now, Flex releases a new version featuring Mr. Folarin.
pic: arthurpitt Mr. Miller certainly has a reason to jump for joy. Mac covered Saturday’s NY Times Art section. The feature highlighted the recent success of his debut as well as J.Cole’s and Wale’s new albums.
Wale keeps the camera rolling by giving his ode to all the indepedent women the visual treatment. Off last year’s More About Nothing mixtape. Ambition in stores now. Go girl.
If you’re due for some body ink, you’re in luck. Wale and Rozay invite us to the tat parlor for their joint track. Directed by Dre Films. Hopefully, you got Ambition by now. wshh Yesterday: “Lotus Flower Bomb“
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.