Metro Boomin Says Joint Album With Future Is ‘Definitely’ Dropping This Year
December 09, 2000
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Metro Boomin shouldn’t be gone for long following the success of his Heroes & Villains album as he’s promised a joint project with Future will arrive in 2023.
Young Metro spoke to FLAUNT and confirmed that he’s planning to drop his collaborative album with longtime friend Future later this year.
“Definitely. I would bet on it,” he said of the chances of the joint LP making landfall in the calendar year. “I would definitely bet on it.”
The multi-platinum producer also expanded on his friendship with Pluto, with whom he reunited onstage at Atlanta’s State Farm Arena in January.
“Oh, that was fire,” he said. “You know, Pluto, that’s my brother. We’ve been at it for a long time. This whole superhero moment, it’s like the beginning of our phase two.
‘We haven’t had a song out since ‘Mask Off,’ they’ve been on our heads. With this, and then the whole State Farm thing, it’s starting to slowly put people on notice: we crankin’ that shit back up too.”
Metro Boomin reunited with Future on his
Heroes & Villains album, which arrived in December. The Freebandz boss appeared on several songs, most notably “Superhero (Heroes & Villains)” alongside
Chris Brown, ending their five-year collaborative drought.
The Atlanta duo previously teamed up for an array of hits that ruled the Billboard Hot 100 for much of the mid-2010s, including “Mask Off,” “Jumpman,” “Thought It Was a Drought,” “Karate Chop,” “Digital Dash,” “Low Life,” “Freak Hoe,” “Big Rings, “Stick Talk” and more.
Prior to the release of
Heroes & Villains, which still sits comfortably inside the Billboard 200’s Top 10, Metro was
noticeably absent from Future’s monster 2022 album I NEVER LIKED YOU — but with good reason.
“Let me tell you why. [Future] actually finished most of the album at my studio in LA,” he told Ebro Darden. “That’s my brother, but we’re working on some things. At first, we were going to put a couple of songs with me and him on the album, but we had took them off because I had talked to him.”
He continued: “I was like, ‘Look, the last time anybody’s really heard a song from me and you was ‘Mask Off.’ So instead of us randomly throwing one or two songs we did on here, we got to wait and just give them a joint.’”
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