YG Announces New Album ‘I Got Issues’
The album is out September 30.
YG has announced that his new album, I Got Issues, will be available on all digital platforms as well as a special physical CD offering on September 30.
The album will feature previous released tracks “Scared Money” featuring J Cole and Moneybagg Yo, “Run” featuring Tyga, 21 Savage, and BIA, as well as YG’s most recent single “Toxic,” which he recently performed for A COLORS Studios.
In the COLORS video, YG wears a signature red bandana-laced outfit as he spits against a magenta backdrop. Rocking futuristic shades, the LA-based rapper brings his signature cool to the stripped-down performance.
On the track, YG shows off his always-clever bars, spitting, “I know what she want, she want what’s inside my jeans/ She want my heart with the lock, she wanna throw away the key.”
Earlier this year, YG and Moneybagg Yo performed from a recreated bank vault for their collaborative single “Scared Money” to The Tonight Show starring Jimmy Fallon.
Weeks after the single’s release, YG gave fans a behind-the-scenes look at the “Scared Money” video shoot. The four-minute video showed the MC hanging out with Moneybagg Yo and J. Cole at the shoot, with the trio inspecting stills and shots to check on the video’s progression.
The forthcoming project will follow YG’s critically acclaimed 2020 album, My Life 4Hunnid, which was accompanied by an instantly iconic video for the bouncy opening track “Jealous.” The visuals were released weeks before the 2020 US election and offered a scathing parody of the then-President Donald Trump.
My Life 4Hunnid received praise from the media upon its release, with The Los Angeles Times writing: “In his music, YG speaks to the immediate, hour-to-hour rage and vulnerability of Black life as protests churn and police kill and terrorize with seeming impunity. It’s fitting that My Life 4Hunnid is his darkest and most wounded album for Def Jam yet, one where the memories of his murdered friend [Nipsey] Hussle and fears of rampaging police are stalked by worries that, on the eve of the 2020 election, the country might not have what it takes to fix it all.”