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Lil Yachty Explains How a Poland Spring Water Bottle Inspired Viral Track âPolandâ
During an appearance in a reaction video to his latest visual, Lil Yachty has revealed the story of how his viral track âPolandâ came together.
View this video on YouTube
Lil Yachty has revealed the story of how his viral track âPolandâ came together.
In an appearance in a reaction video to the Cole Bennett-directed music video  with the YouTube channel ZIAS!, the Georgia rapper revealed what inspired the catchy hook.
âIâma tell yâall the truth. I was in the studio, right, working on my new album,â Yachty said, as seen around the 4:30 point of the video above. âAnd I was actually just trolling. My mans was just drinking a Poland Springs water bottle.â
The hosts interjected, âAnd thatâs how it happened?â
The 25-year-old replied with a smile, âYeah, I mean obviously I had some wock, but he had a Poland Springs water bottle.â He also explained that he never really even finished the song, but decided to put it out anyway to capitalize on its building virality.Â
âI was like, âDamn.â And the song was a joke! I was just trolling,â he continued. âIt leaked, and thatâs why I was like, technically itâs not finished. Itâs just a verse. I never finished the song, but it went crazy. So I was like, âShit, I might as well put it out.ââ He also conceded that he doesnât agree with the idea of âholding outâ a song after a leak spreads on the internet, which is a common practice among many artists.
The story behind Yachtyâs âPolandâ đ pic.twitter.com/Dijrv5NW4h — Complex Music (@ComplexMusic) October 14, 2022
During the reaction video, Lil Yachty was also asked if he actually snuck the wock into Poland, as he raps on the song.
âNah, but now I got to,â he said.
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âBro Built Like a Hot Water Bottleâ: Lil Yachty Has Unexpected Response to Cruel Jokes Body-Shaming His Physique
Lil Yachty kept it light-hearted when he responded to a tattoo roast that went left.
Yachty has had one of his best years in the rap game since coming on the scene in the mid-2010s. The Mableton, Georgia, native has released a constant stream of new music and projects that have separated him from some of the criticism he had early in his career about being a âmumble rapper.â
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His latest projects have ranged from gritty Detroit bars to bouncy pop-sounding tunes, and now he has more of a psychedelic feel to some of his new music. Fans have fallen in love with his new wide-ranging approach to his songs, but that love didnât save him from getting roasted recently.
One X (Twitter) user posted a shirtless picture of Lil Boat with the caption , âRappers spend so much money on jewelry but never on a good tattoo artist.â The picture showed off Yachtyâs torso, littered with a random assortment of tattoos of different sizes and styles.
To run down a few of them: he has concrete tatted under his chest, but each letter is a different symbol. He has âDaddy Soldier” and “Momma Baby” on his left and right biceps, respectively. There’s a stick figure on his left forearm, and he has a compass to the right of his left nipple.
View this post on Instagram A post shared by ⌠kailee ⌠(@painbutmakeitart)
One social media commenter joked about his ink, saying, âBro need to refund his tattoos.â
Another commenter stated, âBro looks like one of them notebooks you draw on when you tryna kill time.â
While some people kept the jokes about his tattoos, other commenters started attacking Yachtyâs figure.
“Bro built like a hot water bottle.”
“Why does his body look so flat bro is 2d.”
“My dawg got that teddy graham cracker shape boiii.”
My dawg got that teddy graham cracker shape boiii pic.twitter.com/bYDVmODdqV — Gr8life.ethđ© (@gr8life_eth) October 3, 2023
While many people wouldnât have responded to the roast session, Yachty reacted in an unexpected way. The rapper acknowledged that he was getting flamed, replying, âYea my tats suck hahahaha.â He followed the now-deleted post with a video of boxer Adrien Broner saying, âI ainât gonâ lie, Iâm getting cooked.â
https://t.co/az5MeAasJX pic.twitter.com/XNgqGjLjA9 — CONCRETE BOY BOAT^ (@lilyachty) October 3, 2023
Yachty didnât stay down, though. Later that night, on Oct. 3, he performed in Toronto for his âThe Field Trip Tour.â Fans at the concert got a major surprise, as Yachtyâs friend and collaborator Drake made a guest appearance.
The âSlime You Outâ rapper told the concertgoers that he came straight from his studio to the concert and that he was finishing up his latest album, âFor All The Dogs,â which came out on Oct. 6. He also revealed to anxious fans that Yachty was on the new album before rapping his âMeltdownâ verse from the venue’s mezzanine.
Read The Original Story Here.
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How Lil Yachty Got His Second Act
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Until the pandemic, Lil Yachty never stopped to think about how quickly he became famous. “It was a full year from walking across the stage in high school to then I’m in this penthouse in midtown Atlanta , I got this G-wagon, put my mother in a house,” Yachty explains. “It’s a fast life. You not ever getting the chance to think about a lot of shit.”
Yachty’s 2016 hit “Minnesota,” which had the treacly energy of a nursery rhyme, earned the then-17-year-old the title “King of the Teens.” But since then, he’s become an elder statesman of a certain brand of young superstar — and something like the Gen Z answer to Diddy. He collaborated with brands like Nautica and Target; he appeared in the movie How High 2 ; he signed an endorsement deal with Sprite. Signees to his new label imprint, Concrete Boys, even get an iced-out chain.
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Born Miles Parks McCollum, Yachty embodies many of the ways the music industry has changed in the past decade. He rose to fame on the internet and commands attention with or without new music. Over Zoom in March, he’s calm and reserved, pausing intently before he responds to questions. The youthful exuberance is still there, though. At one point, his mom, who lives nearby, calls to ask what he wants from the grocery store. “I need Pop-Tarts,” he says sweetly. “I really want them cinnamon-bun Pop-Tarts.”
He can afford lots of Pop-Tarts. Yachty reportedly made $13 million on endorsements in 2016 and 2017. (“Work hard, play hard,” he responds when asked about the number.) He spends more than $50,000 a month on various expenses, according to one recent headline. (“If anything I pay a little more. I have many assets and insurance, plus an elaborate payroll.”) He’s working on a Reese’s Puffs cereal collaboration, a film based on the card game Uno, and he was one of the first rappers to hop on the crypto craze, selling something called a “YachtyCoin” last December in an auction on the platform Nifty Gateway. According to a report from Coinbase, the token sold for $16,050. Yachty explains that when he was first discovered by Quality Control records founder Kevin “Coach K” Lee, “one of the biggest things he talked about was being a brand. Being bigger than just an artist — being a mogul.”
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In fact, collaboration has come to be a useful tool for Yachty as he sheds the King of the Teens title for something more akin to a rap mogul. “I only work with people I have friendships with, who I really admire,” Yachty says. “And I love working with newer artists, up-and-coming artists.” Within the world of hip-hop, Yachty has found for himself somewhere between a megastar and internet hero, and it would appear that he’s just settling in. “I just fuck with new talent. Not even like, ‘let me sign you, get under my wing,’ ” he explains. “Just ‘hey, I’ve been in this spot before. I know what that’s like, bada bing, bada boom.’ ”
Yachty started Concrete Boys last year. One of the first signees was his childhood friend Draft Day, who offers one of the more exciting features on Lil Boat 3, on the cut “Demon Time.” “I feel old sometimes,” Yachty admits. “I feel old as fuck when someone’s popping and I don’t know who they are. Which is rare, because I be on my shit.”
Yachty is also at the forefront of a new realm of social platforms, namely Twitch and Discord, that engender more direct communication within communities. Yachty frequently talks directly to fans on both platforms, and in April he collaborated with Discord on “sound packs,” which allowed users to replace the app’s normal notifications with sounds he created.
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I ask Yachty where he sees himself in five years. “Hopefully, a really successful actor,” he responds. “And with a bangin’ eight pack. I’ll probably cut my hair up, maybe a little beard. Real sex-symbol shit, you know what I’m saying?” For Yachty, who opened the door to a new brand of celebrity rapper, it doesn’t register as wishful thinking. His enduring celebrity is proof of what’s possible with a solid flow and internet savvy. “I just want to do everything. Because I’ve realized I can,” Yachty explains. “I’ve learned the power I have. The only thing stopping me is me, for real.”
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Music Features
Lil yachty's delightfully absurd path to 'let's start here'.
Matthew Ramirez
LOS ANGELES, CA - OCTOBER 29: Lil Yachty performs on the Stage during day 2 of Camp Flog Gnaw Carnival 2017 at Exposition Park on October 29, 2017 in Los Angeles, California. Rich Fury/Getty Images hide caption
LOS ANGELES, CA - OCTOBER 29: Lil Yachty performs on the Stage during day 2 of Camp Flog Gnaw Carnival 2017 at Exposition Park on October 29, 2017 in Los Angeles, California.
Lil Yachty often worked better as an idea than a rapper. The late-decade morass of grifters like Lil Pump, amidst the self-serious reign of Future and Drake (eventual Yachty collaborators, for what it's worth), created a demand for something lighter, someone charismatic, a throwback to a time in the culture when characters like Biz Markie could score a hit or Kool Keith could sustain a career in one hyper-specific lane of rap fandom. Yachty fulfilled the role: His introduction to many was through a comedy skit soundtracked by his viral breakout "1 Night," which tapped into the song's deadpan delivery and was the perfect complement for its sleepy charm. The casual fan knows him best for a pair of collaborations in 2016: as one-half of the zeitgeist-defining single "Broccoli" with oddity D.R.A.M., or "iSpy," a top-five pop hit with backpack rapper Kyle. Yachty embodied the rapper as larger-than-life character â from his candy-colored braids to his winning smile â and while the songs themselves were interesting, you could be forgiven for wondering if there was anything substantial behind the fun, the grounds for the start of a long career.
As if to supplement his résumé, Yachty seemed to emerge as a multimedia star. Perhaps you remember him in a Target commercial; heard him during the credits for the Saved by the Bell reboot; spotted him on a cereal box; saw him co-starring in the ill-fated 2019 sequel to How High . TikTok microcelebrity followed. Then the sentences got more and more absurd: Chef Boyardee jingle with Donny Osmond; nine-minute video cosplaying as Oprah; lead actor in an UNO card game movie. Somewhere in a cross-section of pop-culture detritus and genuine hit-making talent is where Yachty resides. That he didn't fade away immediately is a testament to his charm as a cultural figure; Yachty satisfied a need, and in his refreshingly low-stakes appeal, you could imagine him as an MTV star in an alternate universe. Move the yardstick of cultural cachet from album sales to likes and he emerges as a generation-defining persona, if not musician.
Early success and exposure can threaten anyone's career, none so much as those connected to the precarious phenomenon of SoundCloud rap. Yachty's initial peak perhaps seeded his desire years later to sincerely pursue artistry with Let's Start Here , an album fit for his peculiar trajectory, because throughout the checks from Sprite and scolding Ebro interviews he never stopped releasing music, seemingly to satisfy no one other than himself and the generation of misfits that he seemed to be speaking for.
But to oversell him as a personality belittles his substantial catalog. Early mixtapes like Lil Boat and Summer Songs 2 , which prophetically brought rap tropes and pop sounds into harmony, were sustained by the teenage artist's commitment to selling the vibe of a track as he warbled its memorable hook. It was perhaps his insistence to demonstrate that he could rap, too, that most consistently pockmarked his output during this period. These misses were the necessary growing pains of a kid still finding his footing, and through time and persistence, a perceived weakness became a strength. Where his peers Lil Uzi Vert and Playboi Carti found new ways to express themselves in music, Yachty dug in his heels and became Quality Control's oddball representative, acquitting himself on guest appearances and graduating from punchline rapper to respectable vet culminating in the dense and rewarding Lil Boat 3 from 2020, Yachty's last official album.
Which is why the buzzy, viral "Poland" from the end of 2022 hit different â Yachty tapped back into the same lively tenor of his early breakthroughs. The vibrato was on ten, the beat menaced and hummed like a broken heater, he rapped about taking cough syrup in Poland, it was over in under two minutes and endlessly replayable. Yachty has already lived a full career arc in seven years â from the 2016 king of the teens, to budding superstar, to pitchman, to regional ambassador. But following "Poland" with self-aware attempts at similar virality would be a mistake, and you can't pivot your way to radio stardom after a hit like that, unless you're a marketing genius like Lil Nas X. How does he follow up his improbable second chance to grab the zeitgeist?
#NowPlaying
Lil yachty, 'poland'.
Let's Start Here is Lil Yachty's reinvention, a born-again Artist's Statement with no rapping. It's billed as psychedelic rock but has a decidedly accessible sound â the sun-kissed warmth of an agreeable Tame Impala song, with bounce-house rhythms and woozy guitars in the mode of Magdalena Bay and Mac DeMarco (both of whom guest on the album) â something that's not quite challenging but satisfying nonetheless. Contrast with 2021's Michigan Boy Boat , where Yachty performed as tour guide through Michigan rap: His presence was auxiliary by function on that tape, as he ceded the floor to Babyface Ray, Sada Baby and Rio Da Yung OG; it was tantalizing curation, if not a work of his own personal artistry. It's tempting to cast Let's Start Here as another act of roleplay, but what holds this album together is Yachty's magnetic pull. Whether or not you're someone who voluntarily listens to the Urban Outfitters-approved slate of artists he's drawing upon, his star presence is what keeps you engaged here.
Yachty has been in the studio recording this album since 2021, and the effort is tangible. He didn't chase "Poland" with more goofy novelties, but he also didn't spit this record out in a month. Opener (and highlight) "The Black Seminole" alternates between Pink Floyd and Jimi Hendrix-lite references. It's definitely a gauntlet thrown even if halfway through you start to wonder where Yachty is. The album's production team mostly consists of Patrick Wemberly (formerly of Chairlift), Jacob Portrait (of Unknown Mortal Orchestra), Jeremiah Raisen (who's produced for Charli XCX, Sky Ferreira and Drake) and Yachty himself, who's established himself as a talented producer since his early days. (MGMT's Ben Goldwasser also contributed.) The group does a formidable job composing music that is dense and layered enough to register as formally unconventional, if not exactly boundary-pushing. Yachty frequently reaches for his "Poland"-inspired uber-vibrato, which adds a bewitching texture to the songs, placing him in the center of the track. Other moments that work: the spoken-word interlude "Failure," thanks to contemplative strumming from Alex G, and "The Ride," a warm slow-burn that coasts on a Jam City beat, giving the album a lustrous Night Slugs moment. "I've Officially Lost Vision" thrashes like Yves Tumor.
Yet the best songs on Let's Start Here push Yachty's knack for hooks and snaking melodies to the fore and rely less on studio fireworks â the laid-back groove of "Running Out of Time," the mournful post-punk of "Should I B?" and the slow burn of "Pretty," which features a bombastic turn from vocalist Foushee. That Yachty's vaunted indie collaborators were able to work in simpatico with him proves his left-of-center bonafides. It's a reminder that he's often lined his projects with successful non-rap songs, curios like "Love Me Forever" from Lil Boat 2 and "Worth It" from Nuthin' 2 Prove . That renders Let's Start Here a less startling turn than it may appear at first glance, and also underlines his recurring talent for making off-kilter pop music, a gift no matter the perceived genre.
At a listening event for the record, Yachty stated: "I created [this] because I really wanted to be taken seriously as an artist. Not just some SoundCloud rapper, not some mumble rapper. Not some guy that just made one hit," seemingly aware of the culture war within his own genre and his place along the spectrum of low- to highbrow. To be sure, whether conscious of it or not, this kind of mentality is dismissive of rap music as an artform, and also undermines the good music Yachty has made in the past. Holing up in the studio to make digestibly "weird" indie-rock with a cast of talented white people isn't intrinsically more artistic or valid than viral hits or a one-off like "Poland." But this statement scans less as self-loathing and more as a renewed confidence, a tribute to the album's collective vision. And people like Joe Budden have been saying "I don't think Yachty is hip-hop " since he started. So what if he wants to break rank now?
Lil Yachty entered the cultural stage at 18, and has grown up in public. It adds up that, now 25, he would internalize all the scrutiny he's received and wish to cement his artistry after a few thankless years rewriting the rules for young, emerging rappers. Let's Start Here may not be the transcendent psychedelic rock album that he seeks, but it is reflective of an era of genreless "vibes" music. Many young listeners likely embraced Yachty and Tame Impala simultaneously; it tracks he would want to bring these sounds together in a genuine attempt to reach a wider audience. Nothing about this album is cynical, but it is opportunistic, a creation in line with both a shameless mixed-media existence and his everchanging pop alchemy. The "genre" tag in streaming metadata means less than it ever has. Credit to Yachty for putting that knowledge to use.
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With his debut mixtape, âLil Boat,â Lil Yachty fully shed the mumble rap label, transitioning from SoundCloud sensation to major label star.
Published on
Lil Yachtyâs debut mixtape, Lil Boat , is one of the pre-eminent releases of the SoundCloud era. Released on March 9, 2016, it made Lil Yachty a star, spawned multiple hits, and further legitimized the DIY-style rap that emerged at the beginning of the decade.
The Atlanta MC entered the crowded rapper-singer fray with a work thatâs split into two distinct sides, seeing him grapple with dueling elements of his personality and career. The first half of Lil Boat sees Yachty flex his flow, while the second half finds him crooning in AutoTune. That may be a slightly reductive way to look at the collection (in reality, he does both throughout), but thereâs certainly a kind of TI vs TIP split-personality concept to the whole affair. Yachty uses his style to demarcate who is who, and, despite his glee throughout, Lil Boat is a surprisingly subtle work for the chaotic time it represents.
Listen to the best of Lil Yachty on Apple Music and Spotify.
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A standout work.
Yachtyâs debut mixtape is a standout work for the usual reasons â great name, great cover, and two singles that will forever be associated with Yachty and the era from which he emerged: âOne Nightâ and âMinnesota.â
As a title, Lil Boat was perfect. Serving two purposes at once, it created a fitting alt.moniker for the MC while helping a lot of people to pronounce his name (did you actually say it like âyachtâ?). Nautical luxury isnât the most commonly-evoked lifestyle in hip-hop (outside of Puffy), so that theme alone was enough to put Yachty in his own lane. And then thereâs the artwork: not a yacht, barely even a boat; itâs basically a little wooden dinghy. Beautifully composed, the image looks like a classical painting, bordered in a red that matches Yachtyâs hair. Itâs almost Americana in tone â though Yachtyâs music is anything but.
All hail âKing Of The Youthâ
Yachty may be poised and confident on that cover, but heâs also lost in the gloom at sea â an apt metaphor for the musical style he was leading. While not traditional in any sense, Yachty is honest with his emotions in a way that younger generations have always been, and Lil Boat found him attempting to navigate his way through the emotionally turbulent years of his late youth. Shortly after his breakout, Yachty would declare himself âKing Of Teensâ or, alternatively, âKing Of The Youth.â This might have sounded ridiculous to adults who werenât even sure how to pronounce his name, but those adults were no longer in charge. Lil Yachty was not part of some hip-hop assembly line; like other DIY pioneers before him, Yachty and his crew were making these songs at home, often in a matter of minutes.
Outside of the Vikings football team and Ice Cube âs âWhat Can I Do?,â Minnesota doesnât get name-checked very often in hip-hop. Simply naming a track after a state was seemingly in line with the aforementioned âhalf-Americana, half trollingâ theme of Lil Boat â but, of course, the song isnât actually about Minnesota. Itâs more of a celebration of Lil Yachtyâs arrival on the scene. The draw and significance of having both Quavo and Young Thug on a song in 2016 is hard to overstate, and their guest appearances turned âMinnesotaâ into a certified-gold hit. At the time, Quavo was just months away from releasing âBad And Boujee,â while Thug was fresh off Barter 6 and in the middle of his Slime Season run. Together, he and Yachty appeared at Kanye Westâs Yeezy Season 3 fashion show, on February 11, where The Life Of Pablo received its public unveiling. Just two days after releasing his debut mixtape, Yachty was at the epicenter of one of hip-hopâs biggest cultural shifts.
Unprecedented moves
Lil Boat was big enough that Burberry Perry â Yachtyâs right-hand man at the time and the producer behind most of the mixtape â came under pressure from the fashion label Burberry and was forced to change his name. That wasnât exactly an unprecedented move, but the speed with which it happened certainly was. Itâs not often that an internationally renowned fashion house serves a cease-and-desist to a kid who got famous on the internet and was barely old enough to vote.
Perryâs production on Lil Boat âs lead single, âOne Nightâ (Yachtyâs best-known song to date), guided the way for the rest of the collection. Even the beats he didnât produce fall right in line, all cascading bells, and whistles alongside keys that let you hear Yachtyâs grin throughout.
Lil Yachtyâs emergence closely resembles that of the Odd Future collective, who, years earlier, more or less launched DIY rap on the internet (depending on how you view Lil Bâs rise to fame). Seemingly overnight, Yachty was partnering with Urban Outfitters and the aptly titled Nautica clothing brand. His rapid ascent would have sounded like fan fiction just a few years earlier but, after his breakout, many artists began following his path to fame on a regular basis.
Having hit it big in such a short space of time, Yachty wasnât about to slow down. He went on to guest (and absolutely steal the show) on âBroccoli,â a DRAM song with a Yachty-perfect beat. As one of the stars in Quality Control âs shining roster, Yachty was operating alongside some of the biggest acts in hip-hop. With Lil Boat, he fully shed the âmumble rapâ label, completing the transition from SoundCloud sensation to major label star.
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Lil Yachty and REESE'S PUFFS Are Dropping a Lil Yacht Cereal Boat
Milkcuzzi your puffs to your favorite bangers..
Building onto his cereal collaboration, Lil Yachty and REESEâS PUFFS are releasing a limited edition run of a tricked-out “Lil Yacht” to transform your cereal-eating experience.
The Oprah’s Bank Account rapper dropped his rendition of his childhood staple cereal box back in December 2020 after releasing his REE-MIX of the REESE’S PUFFS jingle . He’s still riding the wave as the collaboration continues with a Lil Yacht that “swirls your milk and blasts your bops.”
View this post on Instagram A post shared by REESE’S PUFFS CEREAL (@reesespuffs)
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Lil Yachty: The Full Profile
Home » Artist » Lil Yachty: The Full Profile
As someone who would describe himself as more of an artist than a rapper, Lil Yachty burst onto the scene in 2016 after one of his SoundCloud tracks went viral. Since then, his aptitude on social media has kept him afloat and kept the collaboration requests rolling in. But what type of a man is Lil Yachty really, and what does the future have in store for him?
Lil Yachty was born under the name Miles Parks McCollum in Mableton, Georgia. He grew up in Atlanta and was introduced to a life of media production through his father, Shannon McCollum, a well-known photographer. At an early age, he became accustomed to being in front of a camera and was introduced to music of many genres, inspiring him to be someone that didnât hold to one version of what art could be. His musical influences ranged from the likes of Kanye West and Soulja Boy to Coldplay and Fall Out Boy to classics like the Beatles.
Growing up, Lil Yachty wasnât afraid to stand out. He liked fashion, he liked bright colors, and he was bullied for it. But he always knew that his differences were what made him stand apart from others, distinct and memorable instead of fading into the background. He would use that to build his brand and his following.
Going Viral: A Burgeoning Career
Lil Yachty has been grouped with a new generation of rappers. These rappers gain huge fan bases from social media and achieve fame by going viral off Soundcloud and other media platforms. The longevity of their careers depends on if they can adapt to the new trends and keep their fans while remaining distinctly themselves.
The Beginning of Lil Yachty, the Artist
In 2015, Miles Parks McCollum decided to move to New York City after living in Atlanta and working at McDonaldâs. He stayed with a friend and lived humbly, slowly building up his social media presence and networking skills. This slow pace led to him attending college at Alabama State University for what would only be a short two months, before he decided to move back and fully dedicate himself to cultivating a network of like-minded artists. Thus, Miles McCollum became Lil Yachty.
Going Viral
Lil Yachty got his start on Soundcloud, where his song âOne Nightâ went viral after it was used in a comedy video. With these newfound thousands of eyes on him, he was able to capitalize on his months of hard work networking with fashion personalities and get a job modeling for Kanye Westâs 2016 Yeezy show in Madison Square Garden.
Soon after his modeling exposure, he released his first mixtape Lil Boat , which peaked at 106th on the US Billboard 200. The rest of 2016 was filled with successful collaborations and featuring spots. Two features in particular, on âBroccoliâ by DRAM and âiSpyâ by Kyle, were extremely well received and were nominated for numerous awards, putting Lil Yachty firmly in the public eye.
Signing With a Label
Nearly a year after signing a joint record deal with Motown Records, Quality Control Music, and Capitol Records, Lil Yachty released his first full-length studio album, Teenage Emotions, in May of 2017. The album peaked at 5th on the US Billboard 200 and paved the way for two additional studio albums released in 2018, Lil Boat 2 and Nuthinâ 2 Prove respectively.
Throughout 2019 and 2020, Lil Yachty continued his streak of features and collaborations with other artists until he released his fourth studio album in May of 2020, Lil Boat 3 . The album peaked at 14th on the US Billboard 200, the lowest position of any of his albums. However, the lower ranking of his last album didnât deter the rapperâs determination at all. In fact, it was seemingly bolstered by the fact that Drake , a man who Lil Yachty has long looked up to and idolized, featured on one of Lil Yachtyâs Lil Boat 3 tracks, âOprahâs Bank Account.â
Image and Musical Style
A unique figure in the crowd, Lil Yachty has long said he doesnât want to be put in a mold, stuck in one genre or image. He wants to be considered an artist more than a rapper.
When Lil Yachty broke out on the scene, he was instantly recognizable for his brightly dyed red hair with beads, usually styled artfully in his face. However, 2020 saw the rapper ditch the red braids for his natural black color. Although some fans tried to analyze it as a sign of a turn to darker tones in his music, Lil Yachty has maintained that (much like Ariana Grande) his new hair is due to the strain that the red dye had on his hair, causing it to not grow correctly and to even fall out. So yes, the red dye is gone, but he still maintains his braids and beads.
Although Lil Yachty once was well known for his sparkling grill, nowadays, youâll see him rocking a pair of very expensive veneers, as has been the trend for social media stars in 2020.
As someone who has deliberately kept a more mysterious and yet still open persona, Lil Yachty doesnât have a specific style. Or, at least he wonât share it. He seems to be open to all types of fashion but isnât one to follow specific trends. He does what he feels looks and feels right in the moment, whether it be matching his beads to his clothes or admiring crop tops on men.
For a man with such a unique combination of influences, styles, likes, and dislikes, defining him is actually very straightforward. Heâs easygoing. This easygoing nature is what has appealed to his fans for so long. Heâs humorous, fun, and distinctly lighthearted, a recipe for success on social media.
Musical Style
Early on in his career, Lil Yachtyâs music was disregarded by established rappers who thought his generation of Soundcloud rappers wasnât authentic or real to the genre. He was accused of being style over substance, with his rap style specifically being called â mumble rap .â
These early criticisms didnât seem to phase Lil Yachty much, as he had long wanted himself to be genre-defying with his music anyways. He rejected restrictions of what people consider to be real rap. As his fanbase is mainly young like him, he wants to remain relatable, wholesome even, wanting to rap more about teenage life than alcohol and drugs. In fact, in his early days, he claimed to not like the taste of alcohol or the effects of drugs, saying he didnât need either in his life.
Lil Yachty has described his music as âhappy bubblegum trapâ and âboat music,â an interesting choice of description since three of his four albums are named Lil Boat 1 , Lil Boat 2 , and Lil Boat 3 .
He wants his music to be fun and genre defying. To that end, he raps about video games and samples music and themes from cartoons to include in his songs. Lighthearted and fun, Lil Yachty doesnât want his music to be a copy of rappers before him; he wants to be distinctly unique. An artist more than a rapper, a recognizable brand above all else.
Accomplishments
With 14 songs on the Billboard Hot 100 Songs, four full studio albums, and a fervent young fan base founded on social media, Lil Yachty is quickly blazing a path in the music industry. He continues to reap the rewards of his hard-won networking skills, collaborating with dozens of rappers and producers – some up and coming, while others are people he has admired for ages. In 2016, he even appeared in a Sprite commercial with Lebron James, expanding his network even further beyond artists in the music business.
Lil Yachty has appeared in three movies: Life-Size 2: A Christmas Eve , Long Shot , and How High 2 . He has also done voice work in one animated movie: Teen Titans Go! To the Movies .
Awards – Songs
âBroccoliâ by Dram featuring Lil Yachty
- 2017 Billboard Music Awards nominations for top rap collaboration, top rap song, and top audio streaming song
- 2017 MTV Video Music Awards nominations for best hip hop video and best collaboration.
- 2017 Grammy nomination for best rap/sung collection.
âiSpyâ by Kyle featuring Lil Yachty
- 2017 MTV Video Music Awards nomination for best visual effects.
- 2017 MTV Europe Music Awards nomination for best video.
Awards – Personal
- 2017 iHeartRadio Much Music Video Awards nomination for best new international artist.
Personal Life
Although he gained fame through social media, Lil Yachtyâs personal life has been fairly quiet when compared to the blatant over-exposure of other artists and influencers.
Famous Friends and Feuds
At the beginning of his career, Lil Yachty was a part of a group called The Sailing Team, composed of other rappers and producers such as K$upreme, Burberry Perry, and his own sister Kodie Shane. However, since 2019 Lil Yachty has stated that The Sailing Team is no more, claiming that his effort in the group outweighed the rest of their contributions.
Lil Yachty gained his initial fame from social media. He owes much to it, and yet it has also landed him in controversy and feuds. Most controversy comes from his twitter account, and song lyrics, namely his song âE-ER,â which fans have felt sexualizes a female TikTok star inappropriately.
One of Lil Yachtyâs most famous controversies was a three-day feud with Soulja Boy over a photo and leaked audio. It resulted in a public reconciliation over social media and a few extra thousand followers each for them.
Issues With the Law
In 2015, Lil Yachty was arrested in Florida for credit card fraud and stayed in jail until he paid a bail of $11,000. He cited the incident as something he never wanted to repeat. However, the dreaded year of 2020 brought more issues with the law in the form of speeding and crashing Ferraris.
He is also currently being sued for assault and battery following an altercation with a man during the 2019 Rolling Loud festival.
Whatâs Next?
Lil Yachty has promised his fans new music for 2021 and has so far released a music video called â Royal Rumble ,â a collaboration with six other rappers all hailing from Michigan. He also has plans to tour starting in May, with a stop at the Rolling Loud Festival in Portugal in June.
Beyond music, he will have a role in the upcoming Mattel Films movie based on the game Uno. So far, it is said to be a heist movie based in Atlanta, following Atlantaâs underground hip hop culture.
Other than that, he stays a constant influence on social media, recently showing off his closet and impressive collection of shoes. As someone who was built on the backbone of social media, the race to stay relevant is ever important to an artist such as Lil Yachty. The music industry held more interest in him in the beginning of his career, as he had skyrocketed so fast and so young into the public eye. However, Lil Yachty still peaks interest and is bound to remain in the game for a while, if at least due to his business skills.
The Sudden Rise of Lil Yachty | NY Times
They Came From Soundcloud: Lil Uzi Vert and the 6 Rappers Who Could Be Rock Stars | W Magazine
Lil Yachty Drops New Video for Michigan Hip-Hop Posse Cut ‘Royal Rumble’ | Rolling Stone
Lil Yachty | Biography & History | All Music
Lil Yachty Says He Stopped Trying To Promote The Sailing Team Because They Were âReally Lazyâ | Genius
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Lil Yachty Is Out to Claim What He Rightfully Deserves Ahead of Lil Boat 3 Album
Respect My Conglomerate Four years in the school of hard knocks has taught Lil Yachty that credit isn’t always given where it’s due. Now the Atlanta rapper is out to claim what he rightfully deserves. Words: Georgette Cline Editor’s Note: This story originally appeared in the Spring 2020 issue of XXL Magazine, on stands now.
Based on the quarter-sized 10.5 carat diamond sailboat earrings dangling from Lil Yachty ’s ears on this February morning in New York City, diamonds aren’t just a girl’s best friend. The $98,000 jewelry the Atlanta rapper copped from jeweler Wafi is certainly on brand for Yachty, who is at a yoga studio around the corner from the Big Apple’s famed Diamond District. But today, instead of dropping racks on racks on racks on another iced-out chain or bracelet, Yachty is sweating his ass off down the street. He’s inside an 80-degree heated room at AtthenaYoga learning how to be a yogi.
“I feel like I’m begging for mercy,” the 22-year-old artist exclaims while he’s positioned on a red (his favorite color) mat with his arms out in front of him on the floor, head down and legs tucked under his body. Atthena Breitton, his instructor for the private class, informs Yachty, dressed in black Nike Pro workout gear, that she’ll be getting him into “a lot of fun shapes that are different.”
The “One Night” rhymer’s commentary as he goes from sinking his belly (“You giving me arch lessons right now”) to engaging his core while lifting his knees (“I’m shaking, what the fuck?”) to trying a plank pose (“This some punishment shit”) is comical, yet endearing. Don’t underestimate Lil Boat’s abilities. For a guy who eats pizza daily and never consumes fruits or vegetables, hot yoga is pushing himself to the limit, but he’s holding it down. “You’re pulling me apart like pizza dough,” says Yachty, a fitting response as he likens his favorite food to Breitton maneuvering his limbs into yoga poses.
Downward-Facing Dog is up next. “Think of a dog making a little mountain pose with its body,” instructs Breitton. “Why would a dog do that?” Yachty utters, seemingly irked at the thought. The groans grow louder, the poses get more technical and the heat is stifling. “Are you stressed about your upcoming album?” the instructor inquires, to which Yachty can’t even concentrate to give a valid response. “I don’t know right now,” he replies. “It’s a lot.”
Two hours later after picking up $12,000 worth of Jean Paul Gaultier, Yohji Yamamoto and Walter Van Beirendonck clothing at Middleman Instagram boutique, Yachty is seated inside the lounge area at Capital Records Midtown Manhattan offices. Domino’s pizza, assistant Maddy, videographer Ari and manager Kevin “Coach K” Lee, cofounder of Quality Control Music to which Yachty is signed, surround him. He’s no longer sweaty from his hot yoga adventure, and confesses it did nothing to relax him.
Yachty’s about to play “Oprah’s Bank Account” featuring Drake and DaBaby , the official first single from his upcoming fourth studio album, Lil Boat 3 , due this spring. The project’s cover will feature a black-and-white photo of a 2-year-old little Yachty that his father snapped. The album is scheduled to officially culminate the LB series.
Four years ago, Yachty, born Miles McCollum, was an 18-year-old neophyte just entering the rap game with his debut mixtape, Lil Boat . He crafted colorful, convivial bops like his platinum-selling “One Night” and gold-certified “Minnesota,” became a poster child for mumble rap—though he’ll argue against the designation when applied to him—introduced the masses to the motley crew known as the Sailing Team and reigned as the “King of Teens” with his succinct, monotonous delivery and straight-edge tendencies. Whether it was online, in a Sprite commercial or a Target ad on TV, his signature red hair and beaded braids were seemingly everywhere.
And the music kept flooding in, as constant as the crimson on his head. 2016 also welcomed Yachty’s Summer Songs 2 mixtape , plus projects Big Boat and The Lost Files with Digital Nas . The following year ushered in his debut album, Teenage Emotions , Yachty’s earnest attempt at a commercial project and highest-charting effort, coming in at No. 5 on the Billboard 200. In 2018, he was busy with his sophomore LP, Lil Boat 2 , the Birthday Mix 3.0 , his stellar writing credits on City Girls’ platinum-selling, Earl on the Beat-produced banger “Act Up” and his Nuthin’ 2 Prove opus, the latter of which kicked off with the minacious ode “Gimmie My Respect”: “Niggas gon’ keep forgetting about who goddamn started this muhfuckin’ new wave shit, bruh/Come on, man, gimme my respect, bitch.”
Despite the work put in and the accolades, there are still people that think Lil Yachty can’t rap. His personal statement for the last two years has been apparent across social media: he’s been vocal about his ability to out-rap 75 percent of the new generation, feels slept-on but has nothing to prove. For his own benefit, last year, he took a step back from the spotlight and releasing music except for the SoundCloud freestyle “Go Krazy, Go Stupid” and his collaborative work on the Quality Control: Control the Streets, Vol. 2 compilation. Caliginous Boat, as he describes himself, was in full effect. “I didn’t put any music out,” recalls Yachty, who cites Lil B, Kid Cudi, Soulja Boy and Kanye West as artists who made him want to rap on the come up while Coldplay is his favorite band. “I just was real low-key. So, it’s just like being real low-key, just under the radar, you know what I mean? That’s what I meant by that.” Like a senior in high school preparing to head into his first year of college, Yachty hunkered down.
The last year was the longest stretch of time he’s gone without dropping consistent music, an occurrence he promises won’t happen again. Relevancy is key. Though time spent out of the public eye didn’t mean he was sitting idle. For roughly two years, Yachty was perfecting Lil Boat 3 , an album he recorded four times over before submitting the final effort to the label in early 2020. “I kept going through so many different phases of creativity,” Yachty admits. Black Hair Boat being one of them. Gone is the bright-red head full of hair he was once synonymous with; now bloodshot tips are all that remain.
The new ’do is reflective of taking it back to the basics. No so-called gimmicks, so the focus is strictly on the bars. His recent feature run is indicative of this: Sada Baby’s 30 Roc-produced “SB5,” Duke Deuce’s “Crunk Ain’t Dead Mob” with Lil Thad, Tadoe’s “Get It Bussin” and “Speed Me Up” with Wiz Khalifa, Ty Dolla $ign and Sueco The Child, to name a few. Each track reflects Yachty’s punchy brand of lyrical wizardry, clever couplets included.
“Give me my credit,” demands Yachty, referring to both his rhymes and his ’fits. “I feel like I’m slept-on in general, just period. I’m not saying I’m the best, you know, I never can say I’m the best rapper, or even if I was best-dressed. But I do this shit. For real. It don’t break me. I’m still here… That’s ’cause I’m really a fly nigga. I don’t get enough credit for it. I feel like I’m one of the best-dressed rappers in the rap game. And no one gives me any credit. And it upsets me. Not even upsetting, but it upsets me. It’s like, yeah, y’all just playing with me right now. I don’t have no stylist for real.”
As he leans back on the couch in the Capitol Records lounge, (Capitol is QC’s parent company) dressed in a vintage hunter green and mustard Nike letterman jacket decorated with The Beverly Hillbillies logo, vintage Evisu denim jeans stitched with dice, chocolate brown Air Force 2s and a green-and-white trucker hat, it’s clear Yachty’s style is fresh, but his new music is what’s on the agenda right now. Yachty’s new single “Oprah’s Bank Account,” produced by his childhood friend Earl on the Beat, is bittersweet as it signals the beginning of the end of the Lil Boat series. Once Yachty presses play on the melodic, uptempo track, it’s apparent how the song got its title. “Diamond in the rough, you look as good as Oprah’s bank account,” he raps.
Drake hopped on the beat after Yachty previewed the song on his Finsta page (Boat's secondary private Instagram account) late last year. DaBaby linked with Lil Boat in an Atlanta studio last October to add his signature sound. “It was fire,” Earl on the Beat remembers of DaBaby’s studio session. “They got in. We were there, we was chillin’. DaBaby came in, he was cool. Had a blunt. The blunt started going, started recording.”
According to Earl, he has roughly nine songs he produced on Yachty’s new album, which will feature throwback 2016 melodies the rapper built his career on. Overall, Yachty describes Lil Boat 3 as an uptempo experience featuring further production from Pi’erre Bourne, 30 Roc and MitchGoneMad. “I just hope it provides good tunes for the youth,” Yachty says. After the album's spring release, Yachty already has another project lined up to release around his birthday, Aug. 23. “ End of the Summer ,” he reveals of the tentative title. “And just make it a summer feel.” And then there’s a string of collab projects he has hopes for with three producers he knows all too well: 30 Roc, Earl and Pi’erre, the latter of whom Yachty would like to join forces with as an artist, too. “I’m a big fan of his music,” Yachty affirms.
2020 isn’t just solely about witnessing Lil Yachty on the mic either. He’s got goals outside the booth. “I love acting,” he admits. “It’s really cool.” With six official projects ranging from mixtapes to albums currently under his belt, Yachty sees a future in which he graduates from hip-hop. “I don’t plan on being a rapper forever.” He’s already landed roles as the voice of Green Lantern in the 2018 animated film Teen Titans! Go to the Movies and the 2019 comedy How High 2 , in which he plays a teen stoner named Roger who discovers a secret strain of weed. Now he has two more movies and a spot in a television show on the way; one of the three is based on his life story. He’s hush on any further details. Yachty’s dream role? To play a killer similar to the character Rico in Paid in Full . Rappers-turned-actors like Will Smith also inspire him and prove making the jump to a successful acting career is possible.
Watching Yachty land TV and movie gigs in real time motivates Earl, who’s known the Grammy Award-nominated artist since they were 7 years old growing up in ATL. “This nigga’s a star,” Earl maintains. “When you see somebody that you actually grew up with, that you actually go to school with, that you actually be doing day to day shit with go and do this shit... you just be like, damn, that’s fire. And you get inspired. Man, my nigga is a businessman, bro. This nigga is a jack of all trades. This nigga really do this shit.”
Coach K has also seen Yachty’s progression firsthand, having signed the rapper at the age of 18, shortly after Yachty left Alabama State University, where he attended for two months. “It’s crazy, we signed Yachty in 2016,” Coach K reflects. “In school, it’s like four years of high school and then you graduate and go to college. This last year, he’s taking the time, it’s like his senior year in high school. And it’s like he’s been preparing himself to get ready for college, you know? When you get ready to go to college, it’s like you’re on your own, a lot of things start changing, you’re kinda in between from here to there. I think it’s when he took this year out, you know, in really just discovering [himself]. There’s a lot of things he did in the film industry and now I think that’s what brung everything back to completion. We worked this [ Lil Boat 3 ] album for the last year-and-a-half. I’ve seen him turn me in four albums… You never want to get in the way of the artist and their process… I think it’s in those four years, he’s had time to grow up and figure out who he is. He was the ‘King of the Teens’ when we first signed him, he’s still young as hell, you know? It’s that transition. He’s come into himself.”
And moved up in tax brackets, too. Just three years shy of hitting 25, Lil Yachty is a self-proclaimed millionaire. Buying a $400 Denim Tears Black Jesus blanket as he randomly scrolls through Instagram is as standard as eating pizza every day. In Yachty’s world, both are the norm. More money may bring more problems depending on who you ask, but when you’ve been able to keep the same circle of friends since kindergarten like Yachty has, life is good. His reality will be even better once Lil Boat 3 arrives. “It’s a heavy-hitting album,” he promises. “I’m ready to drop. My god. I want to put it out so bad.” Coach K believes this project will further solidify Lil Yachty as not only a trendsetter who breaks barriers, but an artist deserving of his credit. “I’ma get my respect before I’m done,” Yachty adds. “I’ma get it.”
See Exclusive Photos From Lil Yachty's XXL Magazine Spring Issue
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Lil Yachty and Reese's Puffs Teamed Up to Make Lil Yacht Cereal Boats, So Pass the Milk
Published on 4/9/2021 at 9:35 PM
In food news you didn't see coming, Lil Yachty and Reese's Puffs teamed up to make waves in the cereal-eating world yet again. The rapper has collaborated with the General Mills cereal brand before , but this time remote-controlled yachts are involved, and they're here to serve up breakfast like never before. These mini boats have got it all â from a waterproof Bluetooth speaker to a wireless yacht remote, a custom purple chrome "Eat 'Em Up" spoon, and, of course, a box of Lil Yacht's crave-worthy Puffs. On top of that, the little boats also feature "milkcuzzis," which circulate the milk and cereal together, ensuring that every puff is doused to perfection.
According to the Reese's Puffs site , these sleek ships "swirl your milk, blast your beats, and sail the seas," proving that this is the best (and only) way to ever eat cereal . If you've never had the pleasure of enjoying these chocolate-and-peanut-butter-flavored puffs on a yacht before, now's your chance. Head over to the cereal brand's site to get notified before the Lil Yachts drop on April 9 at 1 p.m. ET. For 150 bucks, you can let your cereal-eating dreams set sail and soar.
- Reese's
IMAGES
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Oct 14, 2022. Video via ZIAS! Subscribe On Youtube. Lil Yachty has revealed the story of how his viral track "Poland" came together. In an appearance in a reaction video to the Cole Bennett ...
Lil yachty hands out over 300 water bottles to the crowd, and when the beat drops everyone's goes mental.
Lil Yachty kept it light-hearted when he responded to a tattoo roast that went left.. Yachty has had one of his best years in the rap game since coming on the scene in the mid-2010s. The Mableton ...
The time has come. Man of the hour Lil Yachty making his BR debut at One Night Only w/ AXE Music. Subscribe to our YT channel: http://blrrm.tv/YT
Lil Yachty has 'Water Fight' @ Rolling Loud Portugal 2022 đ”đčLil yatchy has a water fight on the Punx Stage @ Rolling Loud 2022Follow me ; instagram.com/ahh...
Miles Parks McCollum (born August 23, 1997, in Mableton, Georgia), popularly known as Lil Yachty, is an American rapper and singer from Atlanta, Georgia. He's known for his comical lyrics and ...
How Lil Yachty Got His Second Act. As a youth, the rapper garnered the title 'King of the Teens' â and a lot of criticism. Today, he's a mentor and a mogul. By Jeff Ihaza. April 12, 2021 ...
Album Credits. Primary Artists Lil Yachty & Lil Yachty & J. Cole. Producers 98K, Aaron Bow, Aris Tatalovich & 9 more. Writers Aaron Bow, Aris Tatalovich, Cardo & 5 more. A&R Gelareh "G ...
Miles Parks McCollum (born August 23, 1997), known professionally as Lil Yachty, is an American rapper, singer, songwriter, record producer, and actor.He first gained recognition in August 2015 for his viral hit "One Night" from his debut EP Summer Songs.He then released his debut mixtape Lil Boat in March 2016, and signed a joint venture record deal with Motown, Capitol Records, and Quality ...
Lil Yachty often worked better as an idea than a rapper. The late-decade morass of grifters like Lil Pump, amidst the self-serious reign of Future and Drake (eventual Yachty collaborators, for ...
March 9, 2024. By. Patrick Bierut. Cover: Courtesy of Quality Control. Lil Yachty's debut mixtape, Lil Boat, is one of the pre-eminent releases of the SoundCloud era. Released on March 9, 2016 ...
Lil Boat 3 is Lil Yachty's fourth studio album and the follow-up to October 2018's Nuthin' 2 Prove.The album is also the final entry in Yachty's Lil Boat trilogy, which began in March 2016
Rap icon Lil Yachty posed shirtless for a series of photos - and Black Twitter is roasting the living heck out of him, Media take Out has learned. View this post on Instagram A post shared by ⌠kailee ⌠(@painbutmakeitart) One X (Twitter) user posted a shirtless picture of Lil Boat with the caption, [âŠ]
Inspired by the artist himself, the Lil Yachty B.O.A.T. features a one-of-a-kind Milkcuzzi, a remote for sailing, and a waterproof Bluetooth speaker. Cop the drop for $149.99 USD on REESE'S ...
Lil Yachty has described his music as "happy bubblegum trap" and "boat music," an interesting choice of description since three of his four albums are named Lil Boat 1, Lil Boat 2, and Lil Boat 3. He wants his music to be fun and genre defying. To that end, he raps about video games and samples music and themes from cartoons to include ...
May 22 The Field Trip Tour Berlin BUY RSVP VIP. May 25 The Field Trip Tour Stockholm BUY RSVP VIP. May 26 The Field Trip Tour Oslo BUY RSVP VIP. Click here for new Lil Yachty music. Stream the latest album and watch the newest visualizers. Sign up for official updates.
Last November, Yachty wrote a lengthy note on Instagram about his current headspace, creative process, and Lil Boat 3:. Hello to my fans, I just want to let you all know as I get ready to travel ...
For roughly two years, Yachty was perfecting Lil Boat 3, an album he recorded four times over before submitting the final effort to the label in early 2020. "I kept going through so many ...
Lil Yachty has reached a new high as two of his albums have exceeded half a million each in sales units.. On Friday (March 8), the Recording Industry Association of America certified the rapper ...
Watch the official video for Lil Yachty's "Split / Whole Time."Get Lil Yachty's new album "Lil Boat 3" here: https://QualityControl.lnk.to/LilBoat3Get Lil Bo...
Lil Yachty and Reese's Puffs Teamed Up to Make Lil Yacht Cereal Boats, So Pass the Milk. By Lauren Harano. Published on 4/9/2021 at 9:35 PM. In food news you didn't see coming, ...
Music video by Lil Yachty performing Slide. Quality Control Music/Motown Records; © 2023 Quality Control Music, LLC, under exclusive license to UMG Recording...
Lil Yachty 's debut commercial mixtape Lil Boat through label Quality Control tells the story of Yachty and his alter ego Lil Boat, essentially two sides of the same red-headed coin, as they are ...
Provided to YouTube by Warner RecordsBoat Interlude (feat. Lil Yachty) · Veeze · Lil YachtyGangerâ 2023 Warner Records Inc.Vocals: Lil YachtyProducer: Rocain...