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New yo gotti interview
New yo gotti interview











new yo gotti interview

You recently released a song titled “Letter to the Trap” where you spoke on how grateful you were for the trap, despite losing your homies in the process. Let’s go in and do a whole project where we both put our creativity together and go make something special. It had to be bigger than one song or two songs on an album. We decided that we needed to do something together like it had to be bigger than a record. Me and Mike Will knew each other a long, long time ago and we haven’t done a lot of work since he blew up and did his thang and I did my thang. I think that was unique because I normally work with different producers throughout my albums or ‘tapes that I put out. I’ve worked with a lot of producers before  I’ve never worked on an isolated project with one producer. What makes the chemistry between you and Mike Will different from any other producer that you’ve worked with in the past? You just released your collaborative EP Gotti Made-It with Mike Will Made-It. The deal landed him back at a major label after leaving Epic Records in 2020.Billboard recently spoke to Yo Gotti about his new project with Mill Will, why he loves working with Nicki Minaj, advice he has received from Jay Z and Diddy, and if T.I. Yo Gotti’s CMG signed a partnership with Interscope Records in 2021. The Memphis native expanded outside of Hip Hop too, adding R&B singer Lehla Samia to the label a few months later.

new yo gotti interview

CMG also signed 42 Dugg as part of a joint deal with Lil Baby’s 4PF imprint.Įarlier this year, Yo Gotti bolstered the CMG roster by signing Sacramento’s Mozzy. He eventually settled on Collective Music Group, which became the home of Moneybagg Yo and EST Gee. What else does CMG mean?’ He put it in my head to start thinking in that direction.”

new yo gotti interview new yo gotti interview

“They’re going to be scared of that.’ thought about it like, ‘Damn, he’s right. “I was having a conversation with 50 Cent, and he was like, ‘Yo, you’re winning, but you can’t be Cocaine Muzik Group - that’s too harsh,” Yo Gotti recalled. The CMG founder said a chat with 50 Cent made him reconsider the original moniker. Yo Gotti discussed why he changed the label’s name in an interview with Billboard. 50 Cent played a key role in Yo Gotti’s decision to alter his Cocaine Muzik Group’s name to Collective Music Group.













New yo gotti interview