For quite some time, Quavo has been hinting at the release of his joint album with Travis Scott, and it appears like the project could happen soon.
On Monday, July 8, the former Migos rapper shared a sneak peek of a new song with La Flame on his Instagram Story. The video showed off the tune when the two were on a Miami boat.
He just imprinted “HJ2” (probably Huncho Jack 2) over a picture of the sea, according to a follow-up story.
View the sample below:
At Travis Scott’s Super Bowl party in Las Vegas back in February, Quavo gave a song teaser, but he didn’t say when it could be released.
Fans were even more ecstatic when Quavo used the side-eye and rocket emojis in the comments section after Instagram site Our Generation Music posted a footage of the occasion to their page.
When he posted on Instagram last year, he raised expectations by teasing a new release while also praising Travis Scott’s accomplishments. He said, “That’s tuff next one loading.. battery up.”
“Huncho A few others commented on the subdued statement, “OMG PLEASE and we need The Scott’s then I can die peacefully,” and “Jack SO slept on shit is amazing.” Excitement stems from Quavo’s prime, but I’m also eager to watch Travis and Don Toliver’s collaboration.
Quavo and Scott collaborated on the release of Huncho Jack, Jack Huncho at the end of 2017. The project did well on the commercial front, debuting at No. 3 and surpassing Eminem’s Revival.
89,775 album-equivalent units (16,561 in pure albums and 105,321,887) were generated by the album, which had features from Offset, Takeoff, Murda Beatz, Southside, Buddah Bless, and Cardo. It was deemed an overall success.
“Huncho Jack, Jack Huncho conveys exactly what fans might expect from two of the hottest trap rappers out,” Aaron McKrell stated in his review of the album. Elevating, robotic rhythms? Verify. Never-ending conceit? Verify. A smooth fusion of brazen flowing and singing with vocoder tones? Look, look, the Nike Swoosh.
However, don’t anticipate a well-planned, exacting project. Instead, it seems like La Flame and the Migos leader went into the studio, smoked some ganja, and then everything went groovily crazy. This lighthearted atmosphere usually makes up for a lack of strong lyrical substance.