ScHoolboy Q is celebrating the long-awaited arrival of his new album Blue Lips, however the rollout hasn’t been completely easy crusing.
In a tweet on Friday (March 1) hours after its launch, the Top Dawg Entertainment rapper referred to as out Spotify, in addition to his label Interscope Records, over a difficulty along with his challenge on the streaming service.
“Wait.. I can’t even play my own sHit [palm on face emoji],” he wrote. “Umm @Spotify @Interscope I know I’m not the only 1.. only rappers get did like this smH.”
Q’s submit included a screenshot of him attempting to play Blue Lips on Spotify however solely two songs — “THank God 4 Me” and the beforehand launched single “Yeern 101” — had been out there.
The L.A. native later deleted his tweet, nevertheless it seems he wasn’t the one one encountering the glitch. When one other fan raised the difficulty with him, he replied: “Sumbody HELP.”
Spotify has but to touch upon the matter. As of this writing, Blue Lips is on the market to stream in full on the platform, so it’s unclear if the bug has been resolved or remains to be affecting sure customers.
🗣️ Sumbody HELP https://t.co/CM71u3qx4F
— ScHoolboy Q (@ScHoolboyQ) March 1, 2024
Of course, ScHoolboy Q isn’t the primary rapper to run into points with streaming companies in 2024.
Shortly after its launch final month, Kanye West and Ty Dolla $ign’s Vultures 1 was faraway from streaming companies completely following a variety of complaints.
The duo’s preliminary distributor, FUGA, claimed that the album had been wrongfully “delivered through the platform’s automated processes, violating our service agreement.”
The challenge was reinstated quickly after when Ye and Ty reached a brand new distribution settlement with a distinct firm.
However, followers are nonetheless with out the tune “Good (Don’t Die)” after it was pulled from DSPs over a dispute concerning its pattern of Donna Summer’s 1977 disco hit “I Feel Love.”
The late singer’s property accused the pair of borrowing from the tune with out permission and has since filed a copyright infringement lawsuit in opposition to them.
Blue Lips, in the meantime, has arrived to a lot fanfare and marks ScHoolboy Q’s first album in 5 years following 2019’s CrasH Talk.
The 18-track providing boasts appearances from the likes of Freddie Gibbs, Ab-Soul and Rico Nasty, in addition to manufacturing from The Alchemist, Cardo and DJ Khalil, amongst others.
Gibbs’ visitor verse on “oHio” has already made waves because of some selection phrases aimed on the Indiana native’s long-running rival Akademiks.
On the three-part tune, he takes a shot on the media persona by rapping: “Smack a n-gga in his mouth for the loot/ If I ever see that pussy n-gga Akademiks I’ma catch another lawsuit.”
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