Megan Thee Stallion Warns Fans To "Get Ready"

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Megan Thee Stallion implied she's got new music dropping this month and wants fans to get ready for the content. In a post on Twitter, on Wednesday morning, Megan described it as "Megan May" and shared a new picture of herself. "Hotties it’s officially MEGAN MAY [snake emoji]. Get ready [Fire emoji]," she captioned the post.

Fans expressed their excitement for the news in the replies. "Megan’s reputation era is coming! The world done plotted against her and tried to paint her as so many different things. She’s ready to tell all. Speak your truth Meg!" one user wrote. Another added: "OMG MEGAN IS COMING, WE ARE SO READY! THE MUSIC INDUSTRY ISN’T READY! THE WORLD ISN’T READY!"

Megan Thee Stallion Performs At Coachella

2022 Coachella Valley Music And Arts Festival - Weekend 1 - Day 2

INDIO, CALIFORNIA - APRIL 16: Megan performs onstage at the Coachella Stage during the 2022 Coachella Valley Music And Arts Festival on April 16, 2022, in Indio, California. (Photo by Rich Fury/Getty Images for Coachella)

Megan previously confirmed that she's got a new album in store for the summer during an appearance on Good Morning America back in January. At the time, she revealed that the project would be dropping before summer hits and that she'll be traveling on a Hot Girl Summer 2024 tour to promote the new music. "We're having the tour this year," she said at the time. "The Hot Girl Summer tour is gonna be 2024 summer time. I feel like I've never been able to be outside doing my own thing during the summer, since like 2019, so this is gonna be the first time I drop an album on time for the summer. I do want to give the hotties the Megan Thee Stallion experience."

Megan Thee Stallion Teases New Music

Check out Megan's announcement about the month of May above. She didn't provide any other specifics about what to expect from new music. Be on the lookout for further updates on Megan Thee Stallion on HotNewHipHop.

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Common Reveals Which Iconic Kanye West Beats He Turned Down

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Common is a legend. He's been around since 1992, and has multiple classics under his best. One of these classics is partially due to Kanye WestBe is a perfect blend of Com's lyricism and West's beats. They were inseparable in the 2000s, but the way the former tells it, he could have had even more West beats during this period. The Chicago rapper recently went on the podcast 7PM In Brooklyn, and rattled off a staggering number of Kanye West demos that he decided to pass on. Some of which went on to be hits for other artists.

In total, Common told the 7PM hosts that he passed on roughly ten West beats during the mid-2000s. It may not sound like a lot, given that West was Mr. "ten beats a day for three summers," but it's the quality of the beats that really struck the hosts. Common turned down "Dreams" and "Wouldn't Get Far," which would go on to become iconic songs for The Game in 2005 and 2006, respectively. The latter was even a single off Game's sophomore album, Doctor's Advocate. Common also passed on the chance to rap over "Heard 'Em Say," which became the opening song on West's 2005 masterpiece, Late Registration.

Common Claimed The Beats Didn't Match His Vision

"The song, 'Heard 'Em Say,' he made that beat for me," the rapper revealed. "It was like, he made that beat, and I was like 'This beat is dope.'" Common explained that he was impressed by the musicality of the beat itself, but felt that it didn't match with the sound he had in mind for Be. He claimed that West then wrote the lyrics to his version of the song (the one we know) in ten minutes flat. "I promise you he wrote that song in ten minutes," Com said. "I sat there and watched this man write this song. He made the beat, and I was just like, 'This is meant for you.'"

Common also threw in "I Wonder" and "Everything I Am" as beats that he passed on. Both turned up on West's 2007 album Graduation. The latter reportedly dated back to the Late Registration sessions, which wasn't previously known. "Everything I Am" is perhaps the most famous example of Com passing on a K. West beat, however.

The controversial rapper even incorporated the decision into the chorus of the song. "Common passed on this beat I made it to a jam," he spit. "But everything I'm not made me everything I am." Given the hits that materialized for The Game, West, and Common, we'd say everybody made out just fine.

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