hypothesis
stringlengths
17
1.31k
premise
stringlengths
104
5.14k
label
stringclasses
3 values
Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of [M]Pump’s trio[/M] with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which [M]will make its debut[/M] at Coachella in April).
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
e
Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of [M]Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp[/M], which will make its debut at Coachella in April).
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
e
Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube ([M]Gucci Gang also[/M] happens to be [M]the name of Pump’s trio[/M] with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April).
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
e
Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, [M]“Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube[/M] (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April).
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
n
Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, [M]“Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views[/M] on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April).
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
n
Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with [M]his next smash[/M], [M]“Gucci Gang,”[/M] coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April).
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
n
Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by [M]dropping[/M] “D Rose” and [M]“Boss”[/M] on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April).
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
n
Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by [M]dropping[/M] “D Rose” and [M]“Boss” on SoundCloud[/M], with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April).
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
n
Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by [M]dropping “D Rose”[/M] and “Boss” [M]on SoundCloud[/M], with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April).
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
n
Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by [M]dropping “D Rose”[/M] and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of [M]Pump[/M]’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April).
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
n
Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old [M]started making hits in 2017[/M] by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of [M]Pump[/M]’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April).
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
n
Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old [M]started making hits[/M] in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of [M]Pump[/M]’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April).
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
n
Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the [M]now-19-year-old[/M] started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of [M]Pump[/M]’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April).
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
n
[M]Working[/M] social media, streaming outlets and YouTube [M]with the skill of[/M] a surgeon (or [M]almost a Kardashian[/M]), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of [M]Pump[/M]’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April).
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
n
[M]Working[/M] social media, streaming outlets and YouTube [M]with the skill of a surgeon[/M] (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of [M]Pump[/M]’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April).
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
n
[M]Working[/M] social media, streaming outlets and [M]YouTube[/M] with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of [M]Pump[/M]’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April).
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
n
[M]Working[/M] social media, [M]streaming outlets[/M] and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of [M]Pump[/M]’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April).
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
n
[M]Working social media,[/M] streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of [M]Pump[/M]’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April).
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
n
Having said that, [M]he hasn’t really switched up his[/M] sonic styling or [M]baritone flow from[/M] his initial singles or his [M]self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort.[/M]
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
n
Having said that, [M]he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling[/M] or baritone flow from his initial singles or [M]his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort.[/M]
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
n
Having said that, [M]he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling[/M] or baritone flow from his initial singles or [M]his self-titled album debut[/M] of 2017 [M]for his new effort.[/M]
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
n
Having said that, [M]he hasn’t really switched up his[/M] sonic styling or [M]baritone flow from[/M] his initial singles or his [M]self-titled album debut[/M] of 2017 [M]for his new effort.[/M]
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
n
Having said that, [M]he hasn’t really switched up his[/M] sonic styling or [M]baritone flow[/M] from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort.
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
n
Having said that, [M]he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling[/M] or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort.
Lil Pump has finally unveiled his new album, Harverd Dropout. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify. The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017. It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”. Portishead’s Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission. (Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”). Advertisement The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation. Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”. Lil Pump is also playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival. Harverd Dropout Artwork: Harverd Dropout Tracklist: 01.
n
[M]It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in[/M] the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and [M]“Racks on Racks”[/M].
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
[M]It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in[/M] the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, [M]the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”[/M], and “Racks on Racks”.
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, [M]the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”[/M], and “Racks on Racks”.
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
e
[M]It spans 16 tracks, including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”[/M], the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”.
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
[M]It spans 16 tracks[/M], including early teaser singles in the controversial “Butterfly Doors”, the absurd Kanye West collaboration “I Love It”, and “Racks on Racks”.
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, [M]Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”.[/M]
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
e
Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and [M]Smokepurpp[/M] are [M]expected to debut[/M] their [M]new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”[/M].
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
e
Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, [M]Gucci Mane[/M], and Smokepurpp are [M]expected to debut[/M] their [M]new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”[/M].
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
e
Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled as a result, but [M]the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella[/M], where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”.
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
e
[M]Original plans for a supporting “Harverd Dropout Tour” have also been canceled[/M] as a result, but the MC is scheduled to appear at Coachella, where he, Gucci Mane, and Smokepurpp are expected to debut their new collaboration under the name “Gucci Gang”.
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
[M]Lil Pump[/M] has finally unveiled his new [M]album[/M], [M]Harverd Dropout[/M].
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
e
[M]Lil Pump[/M] has finally [M]unveiled his new album[/M], Harverd Dropout.
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
(Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) [M]Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in[/M] Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and [M]YG and 2 Chainz[/M] (“Stripper Name”).
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
(Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) [M]Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in[/M] Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), [M]Smokepurpp[/M] (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”).
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
(Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) [M]Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in[/M] Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), [M]Lil Wayne[/M] (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”).
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
e
(Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and [M]YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”).[/M]
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
(Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), [M]Smokepurpp (“ION”)[/M], and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”).
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
(Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), [M]Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”)[/M], Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”).
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
e
(Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), [M]Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”)[/M], Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”).
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
(Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) [M]Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in[/M] Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), [M]Lil Uzi Vert[/M] (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”).
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
(Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and [M]Offset (“Fasho Fasho”)[/M], Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”).
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
(Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in [M]Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”)[/M] and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”).
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
(Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) [M]Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in[/M] Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and [M]Offset[/M] (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”).
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
(Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) [M]Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests in Migos’ Quavo[/M] (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”).
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
(Read: The Top 20 Highest Paid Rappers) [M]Harverd Dropout boasts additional guests[/M] in Migos’ Quavo (“Too Much Ice”) and Offset (“Fasho Fasho”), Lil Uzi Vert (“Multi Millionaire”), Lil Wayne (“Be Like Me”), Smokepurpp (“ION”), and YG and 2 Chainz (“Stripper Name”).
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
Portishead’s [M]Geoff Barrow[/M] has condemned [M]Lil Pump[/M] for the latter track, [M]accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission.[/M]
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
Portishead’s [M]Geoff Barrow has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track[/M], accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission.
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
[M]Portishead’s Geoff Barrow[/M] has condemned Lil Pump for the latter track, accusing the rapper of stealing one of his samples without his permission.
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
[M]Lil Pump is[/M] also [M]playing Miami’s Rolling Loud Festival.[/M]
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
[M]The[/M] much-delayed, [M]long-awaited effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP[/M] from 2017.
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
e
The [M]much-delayed[/M], long-awaited [M]effort follows Lil Pump’s self-titled LP[/M] from 2017.
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
e
The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows [M]Lil Pump’s self-titled LP from 2017[/M].
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
e
The much-delayed, long-awaited effort follows [M]Lil Pump’s self-titled LP[/M] from 2017.
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
e
The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for [M]Lil Peep[/M], including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a [M]concert evacuation[/M].
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for [M]Lil Peep[/M], including an [M]arrest for disorderly conduct[/M] and a concert evacuation.
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
The album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes and drama for [M]Lil Peep[/M], including an [M]arrest[/M] for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation.
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
The [M]album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes[/M] and drama for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation.
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
The [M]album’s release comes amidst[/M] a long list of legal woes and [M]drama for Lil Peep[/M], including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation.
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
The [M]album’s release comes amidst[/M] a long list of legal woes and [M]drama[/M] for Lil Peep, including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation.
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
The [M]album’s release comes amidst a long list of legal woes[/M] and drama [M]for Lil Peep[/M], including an arrest for disorderly conduct and a concert evacuation.
On the cover of “Harverd Dropout,” the sophomore album from Miami rapper Lil Pump, the young MC is tossing homework papers in the air and looking rakish with his graduation cap askew, while wearing a robe emblazoned with the misspelled university name from his new full-length’s title. If this is meant to signal some sort of stupidity, that lean is surely incongruous. Working social media, streaming outlets and YouTube with the skill of a surgeon (or almost a Kardashian), the now-19-year-old started making hits in 2017 by dropping “D Rose” and “Boss” on SoundCloud, with his next smash, “Gucci Gang,” coming close to 900 million views on YouTube (Gucci Gang also happens to be the name of Pump’s trio with Gucci Mane and Smokepurpp, which will make its debut at Coachella in April). His recent collaboration with Kanye West, “I Love It” has racked up more than 407 million views with a viral #ILoveItChallenge that has won imitative memes from James Corden and Ellen Degeneres. You can’t be that dumb if you can get Cordon and Degeneres to pump up your jams, although the lyrics to new tracks such as “Drug Addicts” and the repetitive “Racks on Racks” may not rock Foucault’s Pendulum with their wit or originality. Claiming he “Learned how to sell crack before I learned to read a book” (on “Nu Uh”) makes him sound more juvenilely stupid than he needs, but Lil Pump is wise to his world and smart where it counts. Having said that, he hasn’t really switched up his sonic styling or baritone flow from his initial singles or his self-titled album debut of 2017 for his new effort. Along with helping to turn trap into a pop-hop vibe, his tracks are simplistic, contagiously catchy, and occasionally enhanced by rousing choruses. “Be Like Me,” featuring Lil Wayne, is similar to “I Love It,” in that Pump makes his partner shine brighter and, well, kinder: The autotuned Wayne doesn’t sound menacing and young Pump doesn’t sound like a shaggy dog. Instead, both men come across as cheerfully goofy and braggadocio-filled, yet adult in a mentor/apprentice fashion with a warm, electro bounce boppiness for added pop attention.
n
[M]Henry[/M], Duke of Sussex, better known as Harry (Henry Charles Albert David Mountbatten-Windsor; London, 15 September 1984), [M]is[/M] a prince and member of the British royal family, [M]sixth in line to the throne of the United Kingdom and the realms of the Commonwealth.[/M]
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
e
[M]Henry, Duke of Sussex[/M], better known as Harry (Henry Charles Albert David Mountbatten-Windsor; London, 15 September 1984), [M]is a[/M] prince and [M]member of the British royal family[/M], sixth in line to the throne of the United Kingdom and the realms of the Commonwealth.
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
n
[M]Henry, Duke of Sussex[/M], better known as Harry (Henry Charles Albert David Mountbatten-Windsor; London, 15 September 1984), [M]is a prince[/M] and member of the British royal family, sixth in line to the throne of the United Kingdom and the realms of the Commonwealth.
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
e
Henry, Duke of Sussex, better known as Harry ([M]Henry Charles Albert David Mountbatten-Windsor; London, 15 September 1984[/M]), is a prince and member of the British royal family, sixth in line to the throne of the United Kingdom and the realms of the Commonwealth.
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
e
[M]Henry, Duke of Sussex[/M], better known as Harry [M](Henry Charles Albert David Mountbatten-Windsor[/M]; London, 15 September 1984), is a prince and member of the British royal family, sixth in line to the throne of the United Kingdom and the realms of the Commonwealth.
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
n
[M]Henry, Duke of Sussex, better known as Harry[/M] (Henry Charles Albert David Mountbatten-Windsor; London, 15 September 1984), is a prince and member of the British royal family, sixth in line to the throne of the United Kingdom and the realms of the Commonwealth.
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
e
[M]Henry, Duke of Sussex[/M], better known as Harry (Henry Charles Albert David Mountbatten-Windsor; London, 15 September 1984), is a prince and member of the British royal family, sixth in line to the throne of the United Kingdom and the realms of the Commonwealth.
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
n
[M]He is the[/M] second son of Charles, Prince of Wales (heir to the British throne) and the late Princess of Wales Diana (1961-1997), as well as the [M]fourth grandson of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh[/M].
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
e
[M]He is the[/M] second son of Charles, Prince of Wales (heir to the British throne) and the late Princess of Wales Diana (1961-1997), as well as the [M]fourth grandson of[/M] Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and [M]Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh[/M].
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
n
[M]He is the[/M] second son of Charles, Prince of Wales (heir to the British throne) and the late Princess of Wales Diana (1961-1997), as well as the [M]fourth grandson of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom[/M] and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
n
[M]He is the second son of[/M] Charles, Prince of Wales (heir to the British throne) and [M]the late Princess of Wales Diana (1961-1997)[/M], as well as the fourth grandson of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
n
[M]He is the second son of Charles, Prince of Wales (heir to the British throne)[/M] and the late Princess of Wales Diana (1961-1997), as well as the fourth grandson of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
e
He is the second son of [M]Charles, Prince of Wales (heir to the British throne)[/M] and the late Princess of Wales Diana (1961-1997), as well as the fourth grandson of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
e
[M]He is the second son of Charles[/M], Prince of Wales (heir to the British throne) and the late Princess of Wales Diana (1961-1997), as well as the fourth grandson of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
e
[M]He held the rank of major in the British Army's Household Cavalry (Blues and Royals) regiment.[/M]
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
n
[M]He held the rank of major in the British Army's Household Cavalry[/M] (Blues and Royals) [M]regiment[/M].
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
n
[M]In January 2020, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan Markle announce their willingness to retire from public office of the royal family[/M] (therefore to give up the Sovereign Grant, a sort of royal salary) and to want to become financially independent.
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
n
In January 2020, Prince Harry and his wife [M]Meghan Markle[/M] announce their willingness to retire from public office of the royal family (therefore to give up the Sovereign Grant, a sort of royal salary) and to [M]want to become financially independent[/M].
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
n
In January 2020, [M]Prince Harry[/M] and his wife Meghan Markle announce their willingness to retire from public office of the royal family (therefore to give up the Sovereign Grant, a sort of royal salary) and to [M]want to become financially independent[/M].
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
n
In January 2020, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan Markle announce their willingness to retire from public office of the royal family (therefore to give up [M]the Sovereign Grant, a sort of royal salary[/M]) and to want to become financially independent.
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
n
In January 2020, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan Markle announce their [M]willingness to retire from public office of the royal family (therefore to give up the Sovereign Grant[/M], a sort of royal salary) and to want to become financially independent.
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
n
In January 2020, Prince Harry and his wife [M]Meghan Markle announce[/M] their [M]willingness to retire from public office of the royal family[/M] (therefore to give up the Sovereign Grant, a sort of royal salary) and to want to become financially independent.
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
n
In January 2020, [M]Prince Harry[/M] and his wife Meghan Markle [M]announce[/M] their [M]willingness to retire from public office of the royal family[/M] (therefore to give up the Sovereign Grant, a sort of royal salary) and to want to become financially independent.
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
e
In January 2020, [M]Prince Harry[/M] and [M]his wife Meghan Markle[/M] announce their willingness to retire from public office of the royal family (therefore to give up the Sovereign Grant, a sort of royal salary) and to want to become financially independent.
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales . His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. He is sixth in line to the British throne behind his father, his brother, Prince William, Duke of Cambridge, and his nephews, Prince George of Cambridge, Princess Charlotte of Cambridge and Prince Louis of Cambridge. He has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second. In early 2020, the couple announced that they would like to relinquish part of their official duties, and with this, by order of the Queen, Henry lost the treatment of Her Royal Highness. In February 2021, the departure of the couple from the Royal Family as active members was made official in a statement, and with this, the prince also lost his military honorary titles and patronages linked to the Royal House.
e
[M]He[/M] has been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress [M]Meghan Markle, with[/M] whom he has a [M]child[/M], Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and [M]is waiting for a second[/M].
Henry, Duke of Sussex, better known as Harry (Henry Charles Albert David Mountbatten-Windsor; London, 15 September 1984), is a prince and member of the British royal family, sixth in line to the throne of the United Kingdom and the realms of the Commonwealth. He held the rank of major in the British Army's Household Cavalry (Blues and Royals) regiment. He is the second son of Charles, Prince of Wales (heir to the British throne) and the late Princess of Wales Diana (1961-1997), as well as the fourth grandson of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. Harry, during his youth, was known as the "rebellious" member of the British royal family due to his unorthodox and scandalous attitudes and numerous flirtatious flirtations, although this image was largely counterbalanced by his tenacious will to serve the his own country, opportunities granted him in Afghanistan between 2007 and 2008, until the leak of news of his presence in the theater of war forced him to return home for reasons of his and his fellow soldiers' safety. In January 2020, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan Markle announce their willingness to retire from public office of the royal family (therefore to give up the Sovereign Grant, a sort of royal salary) and to want to become financially independent.
n
[M]He has[/M] been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress [M]Meghan Markle, with[/M] whom he has [M]a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor[/M], and is waiting for a second.
Henry, Duke of Sussex, better known as Harry (Henry Charles Albert David Mountbatten-Windsor; London, 15 September 1984), is a prince and member of the British royal family, sixth in line to the throne of the United Kingdom and the realms of the Commonwealth. He held the rank of major in the British Army's Household Cavalry (Blues and Royals) regiment. He is the second son of Charles, Prince of Wales (heir to the British throne) and the late Princess of Wales Diana (1961-1997), as well as the fourth grandson of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. Harry, during his youth, was known as the "rebellious" member of the British royal family due to his unorthodox and scandalous attitudes and numerous flirtatious flirtations, although this image was largely counterbalanced by his tenacious will to serve the his own country, opportunities granted him in Afghanistan between 2007 and 2008, until the leak of news of his presence in the theater of war forced him to return home for reasons of his and his fellow soldiers' safety. In January 2020, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan Markle announce their willingness to retire from public office of the royal family (therefore to give up the Sovereign Grant, a sort of royal salary) and to want to become financially independent.
n
[M]He has[/M] been married since May 19, 2018 to former American actress Meghan Markle, with whom he has [M]a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor[/M], and is waiting for a second.
Henry, Duke of Sussex, better known as Harry (Henry Charles Albert David Mountbatten-Windsor; London, 15 September 1984), is a prince and member of the British royal family, sixth in line to the throne of the United Kingdom and the realms of the Commonwealth. He held the rank of major in the British Army's Household Cavalry (Blues and Royals) regiment. He is the second son of Charles, Prince of Wales (heir to the British throne) and the late Princess of Wales Diana (1961-1997), as well as the fourth grandson of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. Harry, during his youth, was known as the "rebellious" member of the British royal family due to his unorthodox and scandalous attitudes and numerous flirtatious flirtations, although this image was largely counterbalanced by his tenacious will to serve the his own country, opportunities granted him in Afghanistan between 2007 and 2008, until the leak of news of his presence in the theater of war forced him to return home for reasons of his and his fellow soldiers' safety. In January 2020, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan Markle announce their willingness to retire from public office of the royal family (therefore to give up the Sovereign Grant, a sort of royal salary) and to want to become financially independent.
n
He has been married since May 19, 2018 to [M]former American actress Meghan Markle[/M], with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second.
Henry, Duke of Sussex, better known as Harry (Henry Charles Albert David Mountbatten-Windsor; London, 15 September 1984), is a prince and member of the British royal family, sixth in line to the throne of the United Kingdom and the realms of the Commonwealth. He held the rank of major in the British Army's Household Cavalry (Blues and Royals) regiment. He is the second son of Charles, Prince of Wales (heir to the British throne) and the late Princess of Wales Diana (1961-1997), as well as the fourth grandson of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. Harry, during his youth, was known as the "rebellious" member of the British royal family due to his unorthodox and scandalous attitudes and numerous flirtatious flirtations, although this image was largely counterbalanced by his tenacious will to serve the his own country, opportunities granted him in Afghanistan between 2007 and 2008, until the leak of news of his presence in the theater of war forced him to return home for reasons of his and his fellow soldiers' safety. In January 2020, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan Markle announce their willingness to retire from public office of the royal family (therefore to give up the Sovereign Grant, a sort of royal salary) and to want to become financially independent.
n
[M]He has been married since May 19, 2018 to[/M] former American actress [M]Meghan Markle[/M], with whom he has a child, Archie Harrison Mountbatten-Windsor, and is waiting for a second.
Henry, Duke of Sussex, better known as Harry (Henry Charles Albert David Mountbatten-Windsor; London, 15 September 1984), is a prince and member of the British royal family, sixth in line to the throne of the United Kingdom and the realms of the Commonwealth. He held the rank of major in the British Army's Household Cavalry (Blues and Royals) regiment. He is the second son of Charles, Prince of Wales (heir to the British throne) and the late Princess of Wales Diana (1961-1997), as well as the fourth grandson of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. Harry, during his youth, was known as the "rebellious" member of the British royal family due to his unorthodox and scandalous attitudes and numerous flirtatious flirtations, although this image was largely counterbalanced by his tenacious will to serve the his own country, opportunities granted him in Afghanistan between 2007 and 2008, until the leak of news of his presence in the theater of war forced him to return home for reasons of his and his fellow soldiers' safety. In January 2020, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan Markle announce their willingness to retire from public office of the royal family (therefore to give up the Sovereign Grant, a sort of royal salary) and to want to become financially independent.
n
His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and [M]Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.[/M]
Henry, Duke of Sussex, better known as Harry (Henry Charles Albert David Mountbatten-Windsor; London, 15 September 1984), is a prince and member of the British royal family, sixth in line to the throne of the United Kingdom and the realms of the Commonwealth. He held the rank of major in the British Army's Household Cavalry (Blues and Royals) regiment. He is the second son of Charles, Prince of Wales (heir to the British throne) and the late Princess of Wales Diana (1961-1997), as well as the fourth grandson of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. Harry, during his youth, was known as the "rebellious" member of the British royal family due to his unorthodox and scandalous attitudes and numerous flirtatious flirtations, although this image was largely counterbalanced by his tenacious will to serve the his own country, opportunities granted him in Afghanistan between 2007 and 2008, until the leak of news of his presence in the theater of war forced him to return home for reasons of his and his fellow soldiers' safety. In January 2020, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan Markle announce their willingness to retire from public office of the royal family (therefore to give up the Sovereign Grant, a sort of royal salary) and to want to become financially independent.
e
His paternal grandparents are [M]Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom[/M] and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.
Henry, Duke of Sussex, better known as Harry (Henry Charles Albert David Mountbatten-Windsor; London, 15 September 1984), is a prince and member of the British royal family, sixth in line to the throne of the United Kingdom and the realms of the Commonwealth. He held the rank of major in the British Army's Household Cavalry (Blues and Royals) regiment. He is the second son of Charles, Prince of Wales (heir to the British throne) and the late Princess of Wales Diana (1961-1997), as well as the fourth grandson of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. Harry, during his youth, was known as the "rebellious" member of the British royal family due to his unorthodox and scandalous attitudes and numerous flirtatious flirtations, although this image was largely counterbalanced by his tenacious will to serve the his own country, opportunities granted him in Afghanistan between 2007 and 2008, until the leak of news of his presence in the theater of war forced him to return home for reasons of his and his fellow soldiers' safety. In January 2020, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan Markle announce their willingness to retire from public office of the royal family (therefore to give up the Sovereign Grant, a sort of royal salary) and to want to become financially independent.
e
[M]His paternal grandparents are[/M] Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and [M]Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.[/M]
Henry, Duke of Sussex, better known as Harry (Henry Charles Albert David Mountbatten-Windsor; London, 15 September 1984), is a prince and member of the British royal family, sixth in line to the throne of the United Kingdom and the realms of the Commonwealth. He held the rank of major in the British Army's Household Cavalry (Blues and Royals) regiment. He is the second son of Charles, Prince of Wales (heir to the British throne) and the late Princess of Wales Diana (1961-1997), as well as the fourth grandson of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. Harry, during his youth, was known as the "rebellious" member of the British royal family due to his unorthodox and scandalous attitudes and numerous flirtatious flirtations, although this image was largely counterbalanced by his tenacious will to serve the his own country, opportunities granted him in Afghanistan between 2007 and 2008, until the leak of news of his presence in the theater of war forced him to return home for reasons of his and his fellow soldiers' safety. In January 2020, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan Markle announce their willingness to retire from public office of the royal family (therefore to give up the Sovereign Grant, a sort of royal salary) and to want to become financially independent.
e
[M]His paternal grandparents are Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom[/M] and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh.
Henry, Duke of Sussex, better known as Harry (Henry Charles Albert David Mountbatten-Windsor; London, 15 September 1984), is a prince and member of the British royal family, sixth in line to the throne of the United Kingdom and the realms of the Commonwealth. He held the rank of major in the British Army's Household Cavalry (Blues and Royals) regiment. He is the second son of Charles, Prince of Wales (heir to the British throne) and the late Princess of Wales Diana (1961-1997), as well as the fourth grandson of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. Harry, during his youth, was known as the "rebellious" member of the British royal family due to his unorthodox and scandalous attitudes and numerous flirtatious flirtations, although this image was largely counterbalanced by his tenacious will to serve the his own country, opportunities granted him in Afghanistan between 2007 and 2008, until the leak of news of his presence in the theater of war forced him to return home for reasons of his and his fellow soldiers' safety. In January 2020, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan Markle announce their willingness to retire from public office of the royal family (therefore to give up the Sovereign Grant, a sort of royal salary) and to want to become financially independent.
e
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of Charles, Prince of Wales, and his first wife, [M]Diana, Princess of Wales[/M] .
Henry, Duke of Sussex, better known as Harry (Henry Charles Albert David Mountbatten-Windsor; London, 15 September 1984), is a prince and member of the British royal family, sixth in line to the throne of the United Kingdom and the realms of the Commonwealth. He held the rank of major in the British Army's Household Cavalry (Blues and Royals) regiment. He is the second son of Charles, Prince of Wales (heir to the British throne) and the late Princess of Wales Diana (1961-1997), as well as the fourth grandson of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. Harry, during his youth, was known as the "rebellious" member of the British royal family due to his unorthodox and scandalous attitudes and numerous flirtatious flirtations, although this image was largely counterbalanced by his tenacious will to serve the his own country, opportunities granted him in Afghanistan between 2007 and 2008, until the leak of news of his presence in the theater of war forced him to return home for reasons of his and his fellow soldiers' safety. In January 2020, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan Markle announce their willingness to retire from public office of the royal family (therefore to give up the Sovereign Grant, a sort of royal salary) and to want to become financially independent.
e
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of [M]Charles, Prince of Wales[/M], and his first wife, Diana, Princess of Wales .
Henry, Duke of Sussex, better known as Harry (Henry Charles Albert David Mountbatten-Windsor; London, 15 September 1984), is a prince and member of the British royal family, sixth in line to the throne of the United Kingdom and the realms of the Commonwealth. He held the rank of major in the British Army's Household Cavalry (Blues and Royals) regiment. He is the second son of Charles, Prince of Wales (heir to the British throne) and the late Princess of Wales Diana (1961-1997), as well as the fourth grandson of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. Harry, during his youth, was known as the "rebellious" member of the British royal family due to his unorthodox and scandalous attitudes and numerous flirtatious flirtations, although this image was largely counterbalanced by his tenacious will to serve the his own country, opportunities granted him in Afghanistan between 2007 and 2008, until the leak of news of his presence in the theater of war forced him to return home for reasons of his and his fellow soldiers' safety. In January 2020, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan Markle announce their willingness to retire from public office of the royal family (therefore to give up the Sovereign Grant, a sort of royal salary) and to want to become financially independent.
e
Henry Charles Alberto David (Henry Charles Albert David; 15 September 1984, London), better known as Prince Harry, is the youngest son of [M]Charles[/M], Prince of Wales, and [M]his first wife, Diana[/M], Princess of Wales .
Henry, Duke of Sussex, better known as Harry (Henry Charles Albert David Mountbatten-Windsor; London, 15 September 1984), is a prince and member of the British royal family, sixth in line to the throne of the United Kingdom and the realms of the Commonwealth. He held the rank of major in the British Army's Household Cavalry (Blues and Royals) regiment. He is the second son of Charles, Prince of Wales (heir to the British throne) and the late Princess of Wales Diana (1961-1997), as well as the fourth grandson of Queen Elizabeth II of the United Kingdom and Prince Philip, Duke of Edinburgh. Harry, during his youth, was known as the "rebellious" member of the British royal family due to his unorthodox and scandalous attitudes and numerous flirtatious flirtations, although this image was largely counterbalanced by his tenacious will to serve the his own country, opportunities granted him in Afghanistan between 2007 and 2008, until the leak of news of his presence in the theater of war forced him to return home for reasons of his and his fellow soldiers' safety. In January 2020, Prince Harry and his wife Meghan Markle announce their willingness to retire from public office of the royal family (therefore to give up the Sovereign Grant, a sort of royal salary) and to want to become financially independent.
n