Schoolboy Q's new collection CrasH Talk is out April 26, and today, he uncovered the collection's tracklist. Travis Scott, Child Cudi, and 21 Savage show up on the new collection, as do Ty Dolla Sign, 6lack, and Lil infant. Locate the full tracklist underneath. The collection includes the recently discharged singles "Numb Juice" and "CHopstix."
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Tracks Listing:
1 Gang Gang
2 Tales
3 CHopstix by ScHoolboy Q & Travis Scott
4 Numb Numb Juice
5 Drunk (Ft. 6LACK)
6 Lies (Ft. Ty Dolla $ign & YG)
7 5200
8 Black Folk
9 Floating (Ft. 21 Savage)
10 Dangerous (Ft. Kid Cudi)
11 Die Wit Em
12 CrasH
13 Water (Ft. Lil Baby)
14 Attention
The new collection pursues Q's ongoing appearances on 21 Savage's I am > I was ("great day"), Dark Jaguar: The Collection ("X"), Statement of faith II: The Collection ("Kill Them With Progress"), DJ Esco's KOLORBLIND ("Code of Respect"), and Kamaiyah's "Dependent on Ballin'."
We are barely seven days from the arrival of ScHoolboy Q's new collection, CrasH Talk. The rapper commenced the battle a month ago with "Numb Juice" before discharging the Travis Scott helped, "CHopstix." As we approach the April 26th discharge date, the rapper took to Instagram to share the official tracklist and spread workmanship for the venture.
ScHoolboy Q is prepared to make his arrival.
The TDE rapper has declared a title and discharge date for his hotly anticipated fifth collection CrasH Talk, which is set for discharge on April 26.
Taking to internet based life, he shared a trailer for the undertaking. The 40-second clasp includes a piece of another track with vocals from Kendrick Lamar. "I've been tallying dead men/Puttin' bodies in the sand," raps Q while wearing a paper sack over his head. "52 hunnid, one swipe, discard it/Affirmative, whip, whip, whip till it's recolored on ya."
ScHoolboy Q is prepared to make his arrival.
The TDE rapper has declared a title and discharge date for his hotly anticipated fifth collection CrasH Talk, which is set for discharge on April 26.
ScHoolboy Q season is authoritatively upon us. Following the arrival of two singles, "Numb Juice" and the Travis Scott, artful dance enlivened "Chopstix," Q has formally declared his inevitable collection CrasH Talk. Taking to Twitter to ring in the news, Q conveyed a concise visual trailer, which incorporates a review at one of his new tracks. "NEW Collection "CrasH Talk" 4.26.19" peruses the declaration, while a line of secretive figures wear paper packs over their countenances. From the sound of, Q has another banger on deck, this time carrying woodwinds into the overlap.
In 2008, Hanley discharged his first full-length venture, a mixtape titled ScHoolboy Turned Hustla. He later discharged a follow-up in 2009, titled Gangsta and Soul. He at that point returned in January 2011, with his first free collection, titled Difficulties. The venture, discharged under TDE, to advanced retailers just, achieved number 100 on the US Announcement 200 diagram. Barely a year later, his second autonomous collection Propensities and Logical inconsistencies, was additionally discharged solely to computerized retailers. The collection got commonly good audits and appeared at number 111 on the US Announcement 200.
In the wake of marking with Interscope, Hanley subsequently started account his significant name debut studio collection, titled Ironic expression. The collection was discharged on February 25, 2014 and appeared at number one on the US Bulletin 200. The collection was upheld by the singles, "Collard Greens", "Man of the Year", "Burn up all available resources" "Studio" and "Whale of a Night", with "Collard Greens", "Man of the Year" and "Studio" all outlining on the US Board Hot 100 diagram.
Quincy Matthew Hanley was conceived October 26, 1986 on an army installation in Wiesbaden, Germany.[2][3] His folks separated before he was conceived, and his mom gave him a surname diverse to those of the two his folks, as far as anyone knows at random.[4] His dad stayed in the Military while his mom left and moved with Hanley to Texas for two or three years, before settling in California.[4] He experienced childhood in South Focal Los Angeles, California, on 51st Road, neighboring Figueroa and Hoover Road. He went to John Muir Center School.[5] He professes to have been playing American football from the age of six years, up until he was 21. Hanley played beneficiary, cornerback, and running back, and in school he played recipient and returner.
In the wake of graduating Crenshaw Secondary School, Hanley proceeded to go to Glendale Junior college, Los Angeles City School, Los Angeles Southwest School and West Los Angeles School, the last of which is the place he played football for the West Los Angeles Oilers.[6]
Experiencing childhood with Hoover Road, Hanley joined a road posse called the 52 Hoover Criminal Crips: "I was pack slamming at 12. I was a Hoover Crip. My homies were doing it and I needed to do it. I can't generally clarify that. I didn't get into it with another hood or anything like that. I was simply following the pioneer." Before swinging to music, Hanley turned into a street pharmacist selling Oxycontin, and for a brief span break and marijuana.[7] In 2007, he was captured for a wrongdoing he, at the time, would not uncover and says he was sent to imprison for a half year, half of which he completed on house arrest.[4][7] He later uncovered on reddit that it was identified with a home intrusion yet did not go into detail.[8] In a meeting with Montreality, when asked what employments he held as a youngster, he noticed that beside selling medications, taking, and group slamming, he used to place air in bicycles at an auto shop on 49th and Figueroa Road, when he was 10 years of age. His first enormous check was around $20,000 from his first rap records.
Schoolboy Q began composing stanzas when he was in his youngster years, yet didn't genuinely begin thinking of self-broadcasted, completely dedicated refrains and verses until he was 21, expressing that as he developed towards his lawful years he began to understanding that music permitted "you...to let your hostility out, so you got the chance to get in the corner and let it out." On Quincy's inward battle to endure the boulevards and bring home the bacon, while becoming well known, he says "I was simply lost; I didn't have even an inkling what I needed to do. I was simply attempting to accomplish something. At that point I discovered music and it was only over after that. I made my first tad of cash doing music, after that I needed to become accustomed to doing it, and I continued rapping. At that point it moved toward becoming something that I needed to do.
Hanley has said he composed his first refrain when he was 16, yet was not genuine about music until he was 21. Music turned into his method for communicating himself.[11] In 2006, he started to work with Top Dawg Diversion (TDE), a Carson-based autonomous record mark, recording at their studio Place of Agony and teaming up with their specialists. His first time at TDE's studio, Hanley worked with his prospective Dark Hippy accomplices Jay Shake and Stomach muscle Soul. This in the end prompted Hanley marking an account contract with TDE.
On July 29, 2008, Hanley discharged his first mixtape titled Schoolboy Turned Hustla, with G.E.D. Inc., a similar engraving that helped dispatch the vocation of individual West Coast rapper Tyga, with whom Schoolboy Q worked with from the get-go in their particular professions. After the arrival of Schoolboy Turned Hustla, he marked an arrangement with Top Dawg Diversion in 2009, where he later framed Dark Hippy, with individual name mates and frequent partners, Kendrick Lamar, Jay Shake and Stomach muscle Soul.[12][13]
In 2009, Hanley was engaged with a fleeting competition with individual West Coast rapper 40 Glocc. Hanley discharged a diss track titled "Ezell (40 Glocc Killa)", where he questions 40 Glocc's pack slamming. Hanley later expressed in a video meet with respect to why they were "beefing": "He owned some bogus expressions about my kid, Tyga, that is my younger sibling. He completed a great deal of phony stuff with Wayne, a ton of falsehoods, gossipy tidbits and immature poo that I truly didn't care for, and I truly felt slighted by this jokester saying this crap so I simply needed to like air it out".
He proceeded to state "It's over with, I did what I did, I said what I said and I won't diss him no more, since it's conspicuous he ain't on my level...so why classify myself with a loser?".[14] Hanley discharged Gangsta and Soul, his second mixtape on May 14, 2009, which incorporated the previously mentioned diss track. The mixtape was his first official venture with Top Dawg, which exhibited the mixtape close by G.E.D. Inc.