Vultures 2 | ||||
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Studio album by | ||||
Released | August 3, 2024 | |||
Recorded | 2016–2024 | |||
Genre | ||||
Length | 49:48 | |||
Label | YZY | |||
Producer |
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¥$ chronology | ||||
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Kanye West chronology | ||||
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Ty Dolla Sign chronology | ||||
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Singles from Vultures 2 | ||||
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Vultures 2 is the second studio album by the American hip hop supergroup ¥$, composed of the rapper Kanye West and the singer Ty Dolla $ign. It was surprise released independently by the former's YZY brand on August 3, 2024. Guest performances include Don Toliver, Playboi Carti, Kodak Black, Future, Lil Durk, Lil Baby, Yuno Miles, West's daughters North and Chicago, Young Thug, Lil Wayne, Desiigner, Cyhi the Prynce, 070 Shake, and Ty Dolla Sign's brother Big TC. The album's digital deluxe editions add guest vocals from Peso Pluma, Kodak Black, Kid Cudi and Travis Scott.
Recording sessions were first held for the track "Can U Be" in 2016, two years before West started recording "Sky City" and six years before "530", which were then finalized in 2024. West and Ty Dolla Sign focused on composing Vultures 2 with collaborators after the release of its predecessor in 2024; the rapper quickly backtracked on an announcement of retirement in July 2024. The former sustained multiple delays before release, with the performers initially considering to issue it exclusively on West's Yeezy website. In March 2024, audio rips of tracks such as "River" and "Promotion" were made available for streaming online. West and Ty Dolla Sign previewed tracks from the album at listening parties in the United States throughout the same month, before holding events in international locations like Goyang and Haikou during August and September.
Following the release of Vultures 2, West continuously updated the tracks. Encompassing hip hop, R&B, house, and trap, it was noted for an unfinished sound. Themes of women, money, freedom, and redemption are present, while West portrays himself as a victim of others. The cover art sees Ty Dolla Sign wearing a black mask and holding a picture of Big TC, who is serving a prison sentence for a murder that they both denied he committed.[1] A few hours before the album's release, "Slide" was issued as the lead single. A music video for the track "Fried" was also shared in August 2024.
Vultures 2 received generally negative reviews from music critics, who mostly criticized the unfinished sound and incomplete ideas. Some panned West's lyricism, although a few critics praised aspects of Ty Dolla Sign's performances and the production. Listeners also accused West of having used artificial intelligence (AI) for his vocals on "Field Trip" and "Sky City", as well as post-release versions of "Forever" and "530" . The album charted at number two on the US Billboard 200, held off the summit by Taylor Swift's eleventh studio album, The Tortured Poets Department. It reached number one on the Canadian Albums Chart and attained top–five positions in eight other countries, including Australia and Norway.
Songs from the album were recorded off and on from 2016 to 2024. On January 23, 2024, West revealed that he would be releasing a Vultures series as a trilogy with Ty Dolla Sign, with the first set for release in February, the second on March 8, and the final on April 5.[2] Vultures 1 was released after a slight delay as the first installment of the series on February 10, reaching number one on the US Billboard 200 and experiencing worldwide chart success.[3][4] On February 25, 2024, Timbaland, who worked on the album, announced that the second installment was "on the way".[5] On March 3, French Montana announced his involvement and shared a clip of himself with the duo in the recording studio.[6] After Vultures 2 had not met its scheduled release five days later, West explained that he and Ty Dolla Sign were still recording in the studio.[7][8]
On April 24, 2024, Rolling Stone confirmed a track entitled "Let Me Chill Out" had been recorded for the album, featuring the deceased rapper Takeoff with fellow rappers Rich the Kid and NBA Youngboy.[9] On June 22, Ty Dolla Sign appeared on a cover story for Billboard and played some of the tracks from Vultures 2. The singer explained that all the songs were recorded, although him and West were still trying to "go bigger than the first album".[10] On July 9, 2024, Rich the Kid shared an exchange of text messages where West announced that he was retiring from music. Rich the Kid argued to West that he was needed for music and his cultural impact, requesting for him to release Vultures 2. The announcement caused divided reactions amongst West's fans, with some disappointed in his retirement and others celebrating.[11][12] Shortly after announcing his retirement, West returned to feature on frequent collaborator Consequence's track "No Apologies" on July 12, 2024.[13]
Several songs on Vultures 2 had appeared on track lists for West's previous albums or been played during his listening events.[14] West started recording "Can U Be" during the 2016 sessions for his seventh studio album The Life of Pablo, the same year that fellow rapper Travis Scott previewed it with a video of him. He stopped working on the track in 2017, although it experienced multiple internet leaks and became popular with his fans online.[15][16] "Sky City" was reportedly recorded during the 2018 sessions for West's unreleased album Yandhi, having previously leaked online. "530" also leaked and appeared on a track list for his demo album Donda 2, recorded in 2022;[14][17][18] the final version remained largely unchanged.[19] "Slide" was previewed during multiple events in 2023, before appearing on a track list for Vultures 1 in 2024.[20] A listening event was leaked in December 2023, where West and Ty Dolla Sign previewed "River".[21] In January 2024, North West wore a T-shirt with an early track list for Vultures 1 that included songs such as "Time Moving Slow", "Promotion", "Dead" and "Take off Your Dress".[22]
Vultures 2 is a hip hop, R&B, house, and trap album,[23] incorporating avant-garde.[18] It features a raw style, including prominent synths.[23] Multiple publications noted the album's unfinished sound,[24] comparing its songs to demotapes.[25][26] The instrumentation at the start of Vultures 2 invokes the Deep Note of THX that is also used at the beginning of rapper and record producer Dr. Dre's 2001 (1999); Kanye West previously stated the album's track "Xxplosive" influenced his sound.[23][27]
Ty Dolla Sign provides harmony with his singing throughout, while some tracks feature few vocals from West.[25][24] Incomplete verses are delivered by West, who has been accused of using artificial intelligence (AI) for certain performances.[18][23][24]Vultures 2 features themes of women, money, freedom, and redemption.[23][25][28] West portrays his character as a victim of others, such as the music industry and his former wife Kim Kardashian.[25][27] He depicts as the music industry not wanting him to succeed and himself a survivor of cancel culture, remaining in the spotlight.[23]
The album's opening track, "Slide", begins with a cinematic sound that combines a booming percussion section with organs,[24] alongside THX synths.[23] Ty Dolla Sign performs first on the song as he delivers smooth soulful vocals,[26] while West stands defiant in the face of industry opposition in a villainous tone.[25][27] Resembling Donda 2 track "Flowers",[23][29] "Time Moving Slow" features drum kicks and West declaring "I rewrote my ending".[18][26] "Field Trip" is based on a sample of the piano from Portishead's "Machine Gun" (2008),[26][28] which is combined with Kodak Black's vocals.[24] The guest rappers have more vocals than West on the song, including fast rapping from Playboi Carti.[18] "Fried" relies on chants that invoke Vultures 1 single "Carnival",[23][24][27] with lyrics from West threatening people who consider becoming opposed to him and Ty Dolla Sign comparing himself to deceased rapper Tupac Shakur.[18] The interlude "Isabella" follows, consisting of a rock sample.[18][23] "Promotion" contains synth tones and drum sounds,[23] alongside a lyrical reference from West to his 2007 single "Good Life".[18][27] An introspective number, "530" features West lamenting over his relationship with ex wife, Kim Kardashian.[25][28] "Dead" includes booming drums and synth tones,[23] with lyrics from West reflecting on a former lover after fellow rapper Future's verse.[18][27] Future's voice is sequenced and he raps about his involvement with an Instagram model, while Ty Dolla Sign identifies himself as "the new [Hugh] Hef" and rapper Lil Durk engages in a call and response with the singer and West.[18][26] "Forever Rolling" incorporates clattering drums in its grand production,[30] opening with a verse from West calling out companies that parted ways with him. Lil Baby and Ty Dolla Sign deliver lines back and forth,[18] focusing on staying together and making the most of life.[26]
A bouncy track with a Jersey club beat, "Bomb" consists of bilingual rapping from Kanye's daughters North and Chicago West, the former of whom repeats greetings in Japanese.[18][24][27] "River" prominently samples Leon Bridges' 2015 track of the same name and its first verse is performed by rapper Young Thug,[18][25][31] who harmonizes at the start.[26] The song is themed around the freedom of Young Thug and mobster Larry Hoover,[18][23][24] marking a rare reference to the criminal justice system from Kanye West on Vultures 2.[26] "Forever" contains elements of dance music, seeing West and Ty Dolla Sign focus on their desire for love.[18] "Husband" features West depicting Kardashian as having needed their relationship to maintain her finances,[18][26][28] expressing self-pity.[24] West continues this subject matter into "Lifestyle",[23][28] ridiculing women who envision a luxury lifestyle outside of their reach. The song features a verse from fellow rapper Lil Wayne about women's Brazilian butt lift, as well as a reference to West's rival Taylor Swift.[18] "Sky City" is driven by lightly strummed electric guitar and changes the song structure from its original leak,[23][28][30] while Ty Dolla Sign harmonizes the chorus of the Five Stairsteps' single "O-o-h Child" (1970).[26] West raps incoherently on the song as he compares his brand YZY to liberation from "picking cotton", followed by associate and fellow rapper Cyhi the Prynce envisioning making visits to his ancestors.[18][26] The closing track, "My Soul", sees West call out Adidas and address incarceration in the United States. Ty Dolla Sign delivers an emotional prayer to his brother Big TC, who harmonizes about the freedom of maintaining his Muslim faith in spite of imprisonment.[18][26]
West shared the cover art for the album through his Twitter account on March 9, 2024, showing a masked figure standing in all-black outfit. The figure on the cover was revealed to be Ty Dolla Sign and he holds a photo of Big TC, who has the real name of Jabreal Muhammad and has been given a 16-year prison sentence under for a murder that they both insist he did not commit.[32][33] On March 10, 2024, in a conversation with a fan page, West mentioned that he would be selling Vultures 2 on his Yeezy website for $20 instead of releasing it on streaming platforms like Vultures 1. West thought streaming devalues music and is "basically pirating", offering that he could reach one million album sales from five percent of his then-20 million Instagram followers.[34][35] He said the decision was made to stop streaming companies being "in control of the artist" and Ty Dolla Sign echoed West's views in spite of requests for the album to be streamed, declaring the release went against "what these streaming services want u to to [sic] believe so they can stay on top".[36]
On March 14, 2024, audio rips of the tracks "River", "Everybody", "Worship", "Promotion", "Slide", and "Field Trip" were made available for streaming on Instagram and TikTok.[37][38] During an appearance on Justin LaBoy's podcast, West announced a new release date of May 3, 2024, around two months later than the initially slated release. Vultures 2 missed the release date, with both West and Ty Dolla Sign largely silent on social media at this time.[9][39][40] On July 30, West announced through his website that all the orders for the album placed had been fulfilled and shipped out, and that it would be released on August 2, 2024. However, hours later, the release date was removed from his website.[41][42] On August 3, 2024, Vultures 2 was surprise released independently to streaming platforms such as Spotify and Apple Music by West's YZY brand.[14][43] It was also made available on the iTunes Store, sold at a discounted price of $4.99 in the first week.[44] Geoff Barrow of English band Portishead responded to the sample of their 2008 single "Machine Gun" on "Field Trip" by expressing disappointment that an artist used the song without permission again, as well as questioning why West can not "write his own beats".[45][46] On August 4, 2024, Swsh posted that West had not cleared the sample of "Break the Fall (Acoustic)" for "530",[31] although did not take issue with his usage.[47]
Following the album's release, fans of West accused him of using AI to create his vocals on "Field Trip" and "Sky City". They analyzed that his verse on the first song was recorded by Ty Dolla Sign and the verse on the latter was from Cyhi the Prynce, believing its punching in sounded like AI;[48][49][50] Billboard's Michael Saponara observed West's "robotic flow" on "Sky City".[18] On August 7, 2024, the album's first deluxe edition was released, which featured updated songs and the bonus track "Take Off Your Dress". According to West's chief of staff, the track will eventually be made available on streaming platforms.[51] On August 8, 2024, four additional deluxe editions were released with a bonus track for each: "Believer"; "Gun to My Head" featuring Kid Cudi; "Drunk" featuring Peso Pluma in place of Bad Bunny and Kodak Black; and "Can U Be" featuring Travis Scott.[52][53] The five deluxe editions were sold through West's website, priced at $5 each and listeners received real-time updates of the songs.[44][54]
On August 2, 2024, "Slide" was released through West's website and streaming services as the lead single from Vultures 2. Before its release, the song was rumored to feature vocals from British musician James Blake. It was released at night, a few hours before the album.[20][55][56] An accompanying black-and-white music video was released on August 13, 2024, featuring women almost naked in a single side-angle shot.[57] The song reached numbers 88 and 92 on the US Billboard Hot 100 and UK Singles Chart, respectively.[58][59] On August 7, 2024, West shared an animated music video for "Fried" that depicts a group of masked individuals running around a concrete landscape.[60]
After fans complained about the mixing on Vultures 2 following its release, West announced that updates "will be published in real time", with no specified conclusion to potential revisions to the songs.[61] West had previously updated his albums Yeezus (2013),[62] The Life of Pablo (2016), Donda (2021),[63][64] and Donda 2 (2022)[a] after their initial releases. Within the first few hours of Vultures 2 being released, the mixes, mastering, and vocals of songs were tweaked.[18] For the first update on August 6, 2024, "River" received a new mix and drums, with sound effects removed too. "530" was provided with altered sound effects and some distorted vocals, as well as a pitched-up vocal bridge done by Ty Dolla Sign. "Fried" had a new mix and seemingly unmastered ad-libs (removed the day after), while "Field Trip", "Sky City", "Dead",[31][67][68] and "Time Moving Slow" also received alterations.[69] "My Soul" was remastered and rearranged, centering the mix due to complaints of the vocals being primarily in the left ear, and swapped the placements of West's and Ty Dolla Sign's verses; a rhythm creating using sampled prison bars during Big TC's was added, having previously been heard in leaked versions of the song. On August 16, 2024, "Forever", originally titled "Maybe",[18] had a new verse added. The verse sees West discussing the value of time on Earth, with its first part being taken from the original version.[68]
On October 15, multiple songs once again received updates. Both "River" and "My Soul" were shortened, the former removing an instrumental outro, cutting the song from 4:09 to 3:35 in runtime, and the latter removing 15 seconds of silence. The tracks "Take Off Your Dress", "Can U Be", and "Gun To My Head" were uploaded to YouTube Music and SoundCloud, but were later taken down. Only "Can U Be" has been reinstated. Playboi Carti's verse on "Field Trip", which had accidentally been de-synced during remastering, was properly adjusted.
On November 10, patches went out to multiple other songs. "530" added an updated take of West's second verse, with both sections of the song containing additional punch ins by Ty Dolla Sign. The drums produced by Cruza for "Time Moving Slow" were replaced by those that producer Shdøw had created in previous sessions. "Bomb" added a verse from rapper Yuno Miles, which had been previously played at a South Korea listening party. Other songs received several changes to their mixing, the most obvious being "Lifestyle", "Fried", and "Husband", where compression applied to these songs was removed. The updated mix for "Fried" also places greater emphasis on the songs drums and background synths.
During the listening events for Vultures 2, West and Ty Dolla Sign dressed in all-black outfits and wore masks, with the rapper wearing a hockey mask.[70][71][72] The duo held a private listening party in Los Angeles on the album's original release date of March 8, 2024. The event featured a DJ setting and they mostly previewed new tracks, with West joined by his partner Bianca Censori.[32][73] On March 10, 2024, West and Ty Dolla Sign held a listening party at Footprint Center in Phoenix, Arizona, where they played songs from the first two installments of the Vultures series on a stage with minimal lighting and backing from smoke.[70] Two days later, the performers hosted a listening event for Vultures 1 at San Francisco's Chase Center, previewing tracks from the sequel. They arrived around 20 minutes late and North previewed her feature on the track "Matthew", which was expected to be included on Vultures 2.[71] On April 2, 2024, a spokesperson for West told Billboard that the album's public listening parties across the US had been cancelled. However, tickets remained on sale for the event at the Pyramids of Giza in Egypt and the spokesperson insisted replacement dates would be announced.[4]
On July 25, 2024, Ty Dolla Sign announced a listening event in Taiwan one month away, although it was reportedly cancelled four days beforehand.[74][75] The singer also revealed that a listening experience would be held in Salt Lake City on August 9.[76] The event was held at the city's Delta Center and alongside Vultures 2, songs were played from West's fifth studio album My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy (2010) and The Life of Pablo. Towards the end, the rapper appeared maskless as he switched to an all-white attire.[72] Censori was in attendance wearing a nude bodysuit, accompanied by her family members.[77] On August 11, 2024, West previewed his unreleased collaboration "Alpha Omega" (fan-titled "Cash Cow") with British rapper Skepta at a private listening event in Los Angeles.[78]
On August 23, 2024, West and Ty Dolla Sign hosted a listening event at the Goyang Stadium in Goyang, South Korea, marking the rapper's first concert in the country for 14 years.[79] The accompanying merchandise included a T-shirt with the duo's two-headed eagle emblem, as well as a hoodie featuring the ¥$ logo at the chest and their Vultures logo on the back.[80] West arrived on a white horse and performed a medley of more than 70 songs from across his career, including hit singles "Stronger" (2007), "Runaway" (2010), and "Famous" (2016). The rapper dedicated a performance of the 2007 song "I Wonder" to Drake, whom he has recurringly feuded with since 2018, and previewed an alternate version of "Bomb" that features vocals from rapper Yuno Miles.[81][82] West added fellow rapper Joe Budden's name to the lyrics of his 2021 song "24" after Budden had criticized him, which he responded to by mocking him and insisting they are at peace.[83] On August 30, 2024, West announced a listening party at a venue in Haikou, China, after having previously cancelled an event in the country's disputed territory Taiwan.[84] The listening party was held at the city's Wuyuan River Stadium on September 15, 2024. West performed the unreleased Vultures 1 track "Everybody" as he was accompanied by his children North, Psalm, Chicago, and Saint, who held hands with each other.[85] The crowd chanted "Fuck Adidas" during the event, as West acknowledged by raising his middle finger and then quipping if this was okay in reference to China's strict laws against obscenity.[86]
Aggregate scores | |
---|---|
Source | Rating |
Metacritic | 39/100[87] |
Review scores | |
Source | Rating |
AllMusic | [30] |
The Guardian | [28] |
HipHopDX | [25] |
Pitchfork | 4.6/10[27] |
Rolling Stone | [26] |
Slant Magazine | [24] |
Vultures 2 was met with generally negative reviews from critics. According to Metacritic, which assigns a normalized rating out of 100 to reviews from professional publications, the album received an average score of 39, based on six reviews, indicating "generally unfavorable reviews".[87]
In a highly critical review, AllMusic's Fred Thomas disregarded the album as worse than Vultures 1 in terms of "listenability, charm, or staying power".[30] Thomas opined that even the "scant elements that recall the long-faded glory of Kanye's best work" resemble a self-impersonation, calling it a forgettable album.[30] Stephen Kearse from Pitchfork called the album "even shoddier in construction and execution than its predecessor" with a clear lack of purpose, praising the production and some guest appearances, despite the lack of any "vision or direction connecting all the moving parts".[27] Providing a similar review at HotNewHipHop, Gabriel Bras Nevares said that the album's "greatest flaw is its hollow execution" and was disappointed with the lack of effort, unoriginality, and unclear purpose.[23] He described the unfinished demos as seeming like "a scam tracklist" uploaded to a YouTube channel and found the lyrical themes poorly written, although he commended Ty Dolla Sign for being a more skilled performer than West at points and elements of the production.[23] Writing for Rolling Stone, Mosi Reeves compared Vultures 2 to "second helpings of a memorably distasteful meal" and questioned unfollowing West's "shitty content", considering aspects like the demos and lyricism to be typical of him.[26]
For HipHopDX, Sam Moore commented that West and Ty Dolla Sign have not established any chemistry, delivering a combination of "half-completed ideas and dueling demotapes".[25] Even though Moore appreciated Ty Dolla Sign's vocals, he found the singer to seem anonymous and criticized West's lyricism; he finalized that the album is completely "devoid of substance".[25] In Slant Magazine, Paul Attard said that even though West's albums are expected to be somewhat incomplete upon release, Vultures 2 is "in shambles" due to the "improper mixes", incomplete verses, and demo quality tracks.[24] He felt that it sets a new limit of "West's methodology of pushing the limits of a deadline" and some tracks sound lazily executed as the album focuses more "on vibes and aesthetics than substance or emotion", noting West's ideas are not developed into songs and Ty Dolla Sign's good performances are neglected to a supporting role.[24] The Guardian's Ben Beaumont-Thomas said that Vultures 2 follows West's "tried and tested current blend of edgelording and emotional candour", with the confusion echoed in the beats and musical style for going from clever details to mindless ones.[28] Beaumont-Thomas concluded that the album is "bloated and occasionally focused, tired and occasionally futurist, morally redundant" with redemption lightly supplied by humility and he saw some of West's flows as inventive.[28] In a mixed review, Billboard's Saponara asserted that the album has potential to be great and highlighted West's avant-garde production, although found it to be held back by instances of "sound quality issues, unfinished thoughts or portions when Ye's rapping dips".[18]
Vultures 2 debuted at number two on the US Billboard 200 after a six-day tracking period, selling 107,000 album-equivalent units.[44] This was higher than the 83,000 units predicted, although less than the 148,000 scored by Vultures 1.[88] The first-week units consisted of 46,000 streaming-equivalent units, 60,500 pure album sales, and 500 track-equivalent units. The album also accumulated a total of 50.44 million on-demand streams of its songs.[44] Vultures 2 was blocked from the top spot by Swift's 11th album The Tortured Poets Department. This prevented West from achieving his 12th number-one record and in an article for Billboard, Andrew Unterberger noted the significance of the release coming around 15 years after West's interruption of Swift at the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards and during the chart reign of her album for over three months.[89][90] Vultures 2 topped the US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, becoming Ty Dolla Sign's second number-one on the chart after its predecessor. This also marked West's 12th chart-topper, tying with R. Kelly for the fifth most on the chart. Nine of the songs entered the US Billboard Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart, with "Field Trip" charting the highest at number 10.[91]
Elsewhere in North America, the album peaked at number one on the Canadian Albums Chart.[92] Vultures 2 debuted at numbers three and four on the New Zealand Albums and ARIA Albums charts, respectively.[93][94] In Europe, it reached number two on both the Norwegian Topp 40 Albums and Swiss Albums Top 100 charts.[95][96] The album further reached the top five in Iceland,[97] Denmark,[98] Poland,[99] and Lithuania.[100] It charted at number six in both Ireland and the Netherlands,[101][102] while also attaining top 10 positions in Austria,[103] Belgium's Flanders region,[104] Portugal,[105] the United Kingdom,[106] the Czech Republic,[107] Germany,[108] and Sweden.[109]
Credits adapted from Tidal.[110]
No. | Title | Writer(s) | Producer(s) | Length |
---|---|---|---|---|
1. | "Slide" |
|
| 3:18 |
2. | "Time Moving Slow" |
|
| 2:40 |
3. | "Field Trip" |
|
| 2:43 |
4. | "Fried" |
|
| 2:46 |
5. | "Isabella" |
|
| 0:09 |
6. | "Promotion" |
|
| 2:39 |
7. | "530" |
| 4:48 | |
8. | "Dead" |
|
| 4:23 |
9. | "Forever Rolling" |
|
| 3:15 |
10. | "Bomb" |
|
| 2:31 |
11. | "River" |
|
| 3:35 |
12. | "Forever" |
|
| 2:15 |
13. | "Husband" |
|
| 2:17 |
14. | "Lifestyle" |
|
| 3:23 |
15. | "Sky City" |
|
| 4:22 |
16. | "My Soul" |
| 3:57 | |
Total length: | 49:49 |
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
17. | "Take Off Your Dress" |
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
17. | "Believer" |
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
17. | "Drunk" |
No. | Title | Length |
---|---|---|
17. | "Gun to My Head" |
Notes
Sample credits[31]
Chart (2024) | Peak position |
---|---|
Australian Albums (ARIA)[112] | 4 |
Australian Hip Hop/R&B Albums (ARIA)[113] | 1 |
Austrian Albums (Ö3 Austria)[103] | 7 |
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Flanders)[104] | 7 |
Belgian Albums (Ultratop Wallonia)[114] | 17 |
Canadian Albums (Billboard)[92] | 1 |
Czech Albums (ČNS IFPI)[107] | 8 |
Danish Albums (Hitlisten)[115] | 4 |
Dutch Albums (Album Top 100)[102] | 6 |
Finnish Albums (Suomen virallinen lista)[116] | 18 |
French Albums (SNEP)[117] | 16 |
German Albums (Offizielle Top 100)[108] | 8 |
Hungarian Albums (MAHASZ)[118] | 11 |
Icelandic Albums (Tónlistinn)[97] | 3 |
Irish Albums (OCC)[101] | 6 |
Italian Albums (FIMI)[119] | 12 |
Japanese Digital Albums (Oricon)[120] | 31 |
Lithuanian Albums (AGATA)[100] | 5 |
New Zealand Albums (RMNZ)[93] | 3 |
Norwegian Albums (VG-lista)[95] | 2 |
Polish Albums (ZPAV)[99] | 4 |
Portuguese Albums (AFP)[105] | 7 |
Slovak Albums (ČNS IFPI)[121] | 15 |
Spanish Albums (PROMUSICAE)[122] | 16 |
Swedish Albums (Sverigetopplistan)[123] | 9 |
Swiss Albums (Schweizer Hitparade)[96] | 2 |
UK Albums (OCC)[124] | 7 |
UK Independent Albums (OCC)[125] | 10 |
UK R&B Albums (OCC)[126] | 1 |
US Billboard 200[127] | 2 |
US Independent Albums (Billboard)[128] | 1 |
US Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums (Billboard)[129] | 1 |
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