Kanye West & Ty Dolla $ign’s ‘Vultures’ Delayed For A Third Time
Kanye West and Ty Dolla $ign’s album has been delayed for a third time. Vultures was set to arrive on Jan. 12 but now the project has no release date., A rep confirmed the news to Forbes. This is the album’s third delay.
Vultures was first scheduled for Dec. 15, then Dec. 31, and most recently, Jan. 12. So far, only the lead single has been released, which is the title track featuring Lil Durk and Bump J. It finally hit a Billboard chart on the No. 8 spot on Billboard’s Bubbling under 100 which ranks the top 100 songs in the country. The Bubbling Under 100 chart is 25 songs long and as “Vultures” takes the eighth spot; it is the 108th most popular song in the country currently.
Last month, Ty shared the tracklist, revealing 18 songs that are to be on the project. During the listening party, there seemed to be snippets from other artists, such as Future, Young Thug, Playboi Carti, Chris Brown, and Quavo. However, the only confirmed guest appearance on an unreleased track is Timberland on “Timbo Freestyle.”
What We Know About Vultures So Far
So far, there is no release date, but we know the tracklist and, possibly, the album cover. The cover art has been posted to Ty’s Instagram, and it takes inspiration from an 1800s painting showing a vulture perched on a shovel atop a grave. The post also shows a version of the original painting in sepia. The painting was created by Caspar David Friedrich around 1835 – 1837. The potential album cover was posted by Playboi Carti and from a Kanye fan account.
One fan provided additional insight into the historical background of the painting.
“His sepia drawing Landscape with Grave, Coffin, and Owl is symptomatic of the obsession with which Friedrich tracked death in the last years of his life. The eyes of the exaggeratedly large, surreal night bird glint in the light of the moon, which floats like a nimbus above the owl’s head,” a fan wrote, quoting the art site Web Gallery of Art. “Visible in the background is Cape Arkona on the island of Rügen, although in a different landscape setting. It is possible that the owl, while undoubtedly a bird of death, here also represents a symbol of wisdom.”