Music

Kanye West Says Donda Was Released by Label Without His Approval

Kanye West Says Donda Was Released by Label Without His Approval

“Universal put my album out without my approval and they blocked Jail 2 from being on the album”

Kanye West on the street

Kanye West, October 2020 (Neil Mockford/GC Images)

Earlier today (August 29), Kanye West’s long-awaited album Donda was finally released on streaming services. Now, merely hours after its release, West has taken to social media to say that it was issued without his approval. “Universal put my album out without my approval and they blocked Jail 2 from being on the album,” he wrote in an Instagram post. Find that post below.

Representatives for Universal offered no comment to Variety, but the publication cited unnamed sources at the company who called West’s claim “preposterous.” Pitchfork has reached out to Kanye West’s representatives at Universal for further comment.

Donda includes contributions from JAY-Z (on “Jail”), the Weeknd, Jay Electronica, Young Thug, the late Pop Smoke, Travis Scott, Lil Baby, Kid Cudi, and many others. The LP was released after the rapper’s third listening party—a Chicago event that controversially featured appearances from Marilyn Manson and DaBaby.

Manson is credited as a composer and lyricist on “Jail,” while both Manson and DaBaby appear on  “Jail, Pt. 2.” That song was not officially available upon Donda’s initial release, but it eventually made its way on to the album. Earlier today, West posted a pair of photos on Instagram (viewed by Pitchfork) showing text threads that claimed that DaBaby’s manager was not clearing the Charlotte rapper’s verse for “Jail.” Arnold Taylor—the founder and president of South Coast Music Group, the label to which DaBaby is signed—disputed West’s claim.

In September 2020, West posted a series of tweets about his relationship with Universal Music Group. He addressed his desire to buy back his master recordings from the company, claiming his efforts were obstructed by contracts he’d signed. He then tweeted multiple images of his supposed contracts. Read more about the dispute in Pitchfork’s article “What Does Kanye West Actually Gain (or Lose) From Sharing His Record Contracts.”

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This article was originally published on August 29 at 3:59 p.m. Eastern. It was last updated at 5:19 p.m. Eastern.

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