Sunday, May 3, 2026

Quavo and Offset Reunite in Recording Studio, Teasing Posthumous Takeoff Album

The most important trio in modern Atlanta hip-hop is officially repairing its fractured foundation to honor the one who held them together.

On Sunday evening, the hip-hop world was sent into overdrive after Offset posted footage to his Instagram Story showing himself and Quavo working together in a recording studio. The video serves as the first definitive visual confirmation that the two foundational members of Migos have reconciled and are actively collaborating, confirming rumors of a posthumous project honoring their late groupmate, Takeoff.

The studio reunion follows a highly emotional exchange between the two rappers on social media earlier this week. Quavo initiated the public reconciliation by posting a tribute on Instagram, explicitly laying out the roadmap for their upcoming releases.

Quavo outlines the future of the Migos legacy in a heartfelt Instagram Story tribute to the late Takeoff, confirming plans for a dedicated posthumous album. The emotional post served as the catalyst for a highly anticipated public reconciliation with Offset earlier this week. (Quavo via Instagram)
"Warriors Never fold," Quavo wrote in the caption. "Jobs Not Finished. TAKEOFF ALBUM. UNC N PHEW 2. LAST ????? ALBUM. REAL MIGO BLOOD RUN IN MY VIENS!!! AINT NO NEW CHAPTER JUST THE NEXT ONE!!!"

Offset quickly validated the post, commenting, "On dat!!!" before sharing a photograph of all three Migos members together on his own page.

For fans of 2010s trap music, the reconciliation is the ultimate silver lining to a devastating few years. Migos has not released a collective studio album since "Culture III" in 2021. Shortly after that release, internal business disputes and personal grievances caused Quavo and Offset to drift apart, leading Quavo and Takeoff to form the splinter duo Unc & Phew.

Quavo commands the mixing console during a late-night recording session in a photo shared to Offset’s Instagram Story on Sunday. The studio link-up provides the first definitive visual confirmation that the surviving Migos members have officially reunited to finish Takeoff's posthumous project. (Offset via Instagram)
The tragic shooting death of Takeoff in late 2022 left a massive void in the Atlanta rap scene, fundamentally altering the trajectory of the group. While both surviving members have since released successful solo material — including Quavo's recent collaboration "MUTT" with NAV — the underlying tension regarding the group's legacy remained a heavy, unresolved topic in urban media.

Tonight's studio footage effectively closes that chapter of division. By putting their differences aside to finalize a posthumous Takeoff album, Quavo and Offset are ensuring that the architect of their signature triplet flow receives a proper musical send-off.

While an official release date and tracklist have yet to be confirmed, the image of Quavo and Offset back behind the boards guarantees that the Migos story is not over.

Friday, May 1, 2026

12-Year-Old North West Praised by Critics for Sonic Pivot on Debut EP 'N0rth4evr'

North West signals a definitive shift in her family's musical legacy. The 12-year-old artist released her self-produced debut EP, "N0rth4evr," on Friday, May 1, 2026, earning critical praise for bypassing traditional hip-hop to engineer her own wave of hyperpop, kawaii metal, and Gen Alpha digital aesthetics.
For millennials who grew up worshipping the chopped-up soul loops of the Roc-A-Fella dynasty, the sound of the future is officially a system shock.

On Friday, 12-year-old North West shattered expectations — and traditional hip-hop purists’ eardrums — with the release of her debut EP, "N0rth4evr."

Released via Larry Jackson's gamma. imprint, the six-track project acts as a blistering precursor to her highly anticipated full-length album, "The Elementary School Dropout." But instead of leaning on the classic boom-bap or polished R&B that defined her parents' generation, North has engineered a chaotic, self-assured masterclass in Gen Alpha aesthetics.
Operating with total creative conviction, she weaves a heavy, digital tapestry of kawaii metal, pluggnb, and hyperactive jersey club bounce.

The bold pivot is already paying critical dividends. Reviewing the project, Jeff Ihaza of Rolling Stone noted that the young artist "traverses the sonic styles of her generation — from nu-metal riffs to rage-rap 808s — with startling confidence." That sentiment was echoed across the industry Friday morning. The FADER praised her for "mutating her source material into something darker and more feral," while Apple Music described the EP as a space where "blistering rage-rap meets goth-rock with a sprinkle of Harajuku street style."

It is a critical reception that mirrors the industry-shaking impact of her father's 2004 debut, "The College Dropout." Just as a 26-year-old Kanye West bypassed the dominant gangster rap of the era by speeding up Chaka Khan and Lauryn Hill samples, his daughter is bypassing traditional pop structures entirely.

Instead of 1970s soul, North is aggressively mining 2000s digital culture. The EP’s opening track, "H0w Sh0uld ! f33l," flips a sample from Meg & Dia’s 2006 emo-pop anthem "Monster." Her experimental instincts drive the entire runtime. On "Th!s t!m3," she loops artist Social Repose's rock cover of Mumford & Sons' "Little Lion Man." The closing cut, "Aishite (愛して)," folds in 2015 Japanese Vocaloid culture, sampling producer Kikuo's "Love Me, Love Me, Love Me" alongside a credited appearance from digital icon Hatsune Miku.

Visually and sonically, "N0rth4evr" is a pure product of the internet. As Dazed magazine pointed out in its glowing review, her track titles "read like Roblox usernames or the mashed-up chat of a streamer Discord." The publication commended her "Carti-inspired maximalism" and the "whiplash melodics of jersey club basslines."


The response from her inner circle has been immediate. Her mother, Kim Kardashian, celebrated the release via Instagram with blue heart emojis, while her uncle Rob Kardashian made a rare social media appearance to post a screenshot of the EP. Beyond her family, North's credibility in the alternative space is cementing rapidly, building on her recent Japanese verse on FKA twigs' "Childlike Things." To cement the moment, West will be celebrating the EP today at a special pop-up experience at Complex L.A.

Lyrically, the 12-year-old tackles the reality of her impossible inheritance head-on. "How am I younger than you? / I'm who you look up to!" she taunts on the shuddering trap beat of "D!e." Later, on the trap-metal ripper "W0ah," she embraces the "nepo baby" discourse with an unexpectedly poignant finality: "I was born a star, I never had a choice."

"N0rth4evr" is a chaotic, 12-minute adrenaline shot. It proves that the scion of the West-Kardashian empire is not just inheriting the family business — she is tearing it down and rebuilding it on her own server.

Thursday, April 30, 2026

Parliament-Funkadelic Founder George Clinton Praises Kendrick Lamar in New Interview

FILE — In this undated promotional photo, Parliament-Funkadelic architect George Clinton poses in his signature eccentric eyewear and a rhinestone-draped fur hat. The 84-year-old funk legend recently made headlines after publicly praising modern hip-hop icon Kendrick Lamar, comparing the rapper's cultural permanence to Motown and The Beatles. (Courtesy Photo)
The godfather of funk is giving his ultimate co-sign to the current king of the West Coast.

In a newly published tribute for The New York Times Magazine's "30 Greatest Living American Songwriters" list, Parliament-Funkadelic architect George Clinton offered profound praise for Kendrick Lamar, placing the Compton lyricist in the same historical echelon as The Beatles and Motown.

Clinton, whose 1970s funk catalog was heavily sampled to create the foundational 1990s G-Funk sound championed by Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg, did not mince words regarding Lamar's cultural permanence.

"I'll put it like this: He, along with Motown, Sly Stone, the Beatles — that kind of institution is going to last," Clinton told the publication. "There are a lot of slick writers out here nowadays with lyrics and things, but he writes with soul."

The 84-year-old icon, who directly collaborated with Lamar on the opening track of the rapper's 2015 studio album, "To Pimp a Butterfly," went on to compare that specific project to one of the most important soul albums ever recorded.

"It was like Marvin Gaye's 'What's Going On,'" Clinton noted. "And he's starting all over each time he puts an album out — he's like a brand-new kid."

For fans of '90s hip-hop, Clinton’s words carry the ultimate historical weight. Without Clinton's "Atomic Dog" or "Flash Light," the 1990s West Coast dominance would simply not exist. To hear him validate a modern artist with such reverence highlights Lamar's unique ability to bridge generational divides.

"He's a young kid, but when I met him, he sounded my age," Clinton explained. "He's like a psychiatrist on record — he talks about [expletive] that most people are afraid to talk about. He's at that point where he can move the conversation. Nobody will talk about these topics, and he talks about them so matter-of-factly that you don't even think, 'You can't say that.'"

Lamar, who recently set a new Grammy record by becoming the most-awarded rapper in history with 27 wins — surpassing Jay-Z's 25 — has managed to do what very few artists can: maintain a vice grip on both the older hip-hop heads and the new generation.

"Kids today, they want their new artist; they don't want their older brother or sister's artist or their mother and father's," Clinton concluded. "Kids don't like you after a few years. When you can go past that and have the next generation after that still talking about you, you're doing something."

Slider[Style1]

Trending