LL Cool J Taps Saweetie For ‘Proclivities’ & Red Light District Video
LL Cool J has recruited Saweetie for a brand new observe “Proclivities,” which arrived alongside a Red Light District-themed visible.
The New York icon shared the clip on Friday (August 9), with the music scheduled to seem on his new album, The FORCE, out on September 6.
On the observe, LL cooks up some raunchy lyrics, rapping: “Damn baby I don’t know if you dance or not/ I’d love to see you on the pole/ I don’t know if you conservative or if you a freak/ But I’d love to see you lose control.”
In the accompanying video, LL walks into after hours membership known as “Proclivities,” and acts out among the fantasies within the music as Saweetie poses seductively.
Last month, LL shared the tracklist and launch date for The FORCE, which will even function Eminem, Nas, Snoop Dogg, Busta Rhymes and extra.
Rick Ross and Fat Joe additionally lend their abilities to the 14-track LP by way of the current single “Saturday Night Special.”
The album additionally boasts some legendary firepower behind the boards, with Q-Tip producing your complete challenge.
LL Cool J spoke about Q-Tip producing The FORCE in a crimson carpet interview on the 2023 Grammy Awards.
“I know all the tricks. I got this covered,” he instructed E! News. “Look, it was executive produced by Q-Tip. The album I think is really, really special. I think it’s something it’s modern without chasing. It’s a whole new thing. I can’t wait for the people to see it.
“I think honestly and sincerely that Q-Tip as a producer is unbelievable and what he did on this record for me, I think is amazing. So the world will decide.”
Another legendary beatmaker was initially slated to deal with manufacturing on the challenge.
Speaking with Angela Yee final 12 months, LL revealed that Dr. Dre was initially alleged to helm the album they usually even recorded dozens of songs collectively.
“So the real story is that I did about 30 to 40 songs with Dr. Dre, and in doing those songs, I felt like — the music was amazing, what Dre was bringing to the table was super dope — but I felt like the writing, what I was bringing to these songs didn’t feel strong enough to me,” he defined.