We Don't Trust You

Future & Metro Boomin

Sale - Sale price $49.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $49.99 CAD
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Sale - Sale price $12.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $12.99 CAD
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Sale - Sale price $53.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $53.99 CAD
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Description

We Don’t Trust You is the first collaborative studio album by rapper Future and producer Metro Boomin, released on March 22, 2024 via Freebandz, Boominati Worldwide, Epic Records, and Republic. Recorded in 2023–2024, the album is a 17‑track, roughly one‑hour trap project that formally crystallizes a partnership dating back to earlier hits like “Karate Chop” and the famous “If Young Metro don’t trust you…” tag. The tracklist includes songs such as “We Don’t Trust You,” “Young Metro,” “Ice Attack,” “Type Shit” (with Travis Scott and Playboi Carti), “Claustrophobic,” “Like That” (with Kendrick Lamar), “Cinderella” (with Travis Scott), “Everyday Hustle” (with Rick Ross), “Seen It All,” and “WTFYM,” with Metro handling most of the production alongside contributions from Mike Dean, Southside, Boi‑1da, Oz, Honorable C.N.O.T.E., and others. The album debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 with about 251,000 equivalent units and over 324 million streams in its first week, giving Future his ninth and Metro his fourth US chart‑topping album and, at the time, the biggest opening week of 2024.

Artistically, We Don’t Trust You is framed as a dark, paranoid trap opus about betrayal, loyalty, and power, built on Metro’s cinematic, ominous soundscapes and Future’s “demon” persona. Tracks like “We Don’t Trust You,” “Young Metro,” and “Ice Attack” set a tone of suspicion and menace, while “Type Shit” and “Cinderella” bring in high‑energy, star‑studded flexing; “Everyday Hustle” leans into hustler gospel with Rick Ross, and “WTFYM” and “Seen It All” extend Future’s trademark blend of boastful bars and weary, street‑veteran perspective. The most talked‑about song, “Like That,” features Kendrick Lamar over a sparse, pounding beat, and became a cultural flashpoint thanks to Lamar’s pointed disses at Drake and J. Cole—helping the track debut at No. 1 on the Hot 100 and cementing the album’s place in rap history as the spark for one of hip‑hop’s biggest beefs. Critics generally praised the album’s cohesion, production quality, and standout performances, often describing it as a culmination of the Future–Metro aesthetic: cold, moody trap that marries blockbuster hooks with a unified, distrust‑soaked atmosphere.

We Don’t Trust You is the first collaborative studio album by rapper Future and producer Metro Boomin, released on March 22, 2024 via Freebandz, Boominati Worldwide, Epic Records, and Republic. Recorded in 2023–2024, the album is a 17‑track, roughly one‑hour trap project that formally crystallizes a partnership dating back to earlier hits like “Karate Chop” and the famous “If Young Metro don’t trust you…” tag. The tracklist includes songs such as “We Don’t Trust You,” “Young Metro,” “Ice Attack,” “Type Shit” (with Travis Scott and Playboi Carti), “Claustrophobic,” “Like That” (with Kendrick Lamar), “Cinderella” (with Travis Scott), “Everyday Hustle” (with Rick Ross), “Seen It All,” and “WTFYM,” with Metro handling most of the production alongside contributions from Mike Dean, Southside, Boi‑1da, Oz, Honorable C.N.O.T.E., and others. The album debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 with about 251,000 equivalent units and over 324 million streams in its first week, giving Future his ninth and Metro his fourth US chart‑topping album and, at the time, the biggest opening week of 2024.

Artistically, We Don’t Trust You is framed as a dark, paranoid trap opus about betrayal, loyalty, and power, built on Metro’s cinematic, ominous soundscapes and Future’s “demon” persona. Tracks like “We Don’t Trust You,” “Young Metro,” and “Ice Attack” set a tone of suspicion and menace, while “Type Shit” and “Cinderella” bring in high‑energy, star‑studded flexing; “Everyday Hustle” leans into hustler gospel with Rick Ross, and “WTFYM” and “Seen It All” extend Future’s trademark blend of boastful bars and weary, street‑veteran perspective. The most talked‑about song, “Like That,” features Kendrick Lamar over a sparse, pounding beat, and became a cultural flashpoint thanks to Lamar’s pointed disses at Drake and J. Cole—helping the track debut at No. 1 on the Hot 100 and cementing the album’s place in rap history as the spark for one of hip‑hop’s biggest beefs. Critics generally praised the album’s cohesion, production quality, and standout performances, often describing it as a culmination of the Future–Metro aesthetic: cold, moody trap that marries blockbuster hooks with a unified, distrust‑soaked atmosphere.

We Don’t Trust You is the first collaborative studio album by rapper Future and producer Metro Boomin, released on March 22, 2024 via Freebandz, Boominati Worldwide, Epic Records, and Republic. Recorded in 2023–2024, the album is a 17‑track, roughly one‑hour trap project that formally crystallizes a partnership dating back to earlier hits like “Karate Chop” and the famous “If Young Metro don’t trust you…” tag. The tracklist includes songs such as “We Don’t Trust You,” “Young Metro,” “Ice Attack,” “Type Shit” (with Travis Scott and Playboi Carti), “Claustrophobic,” “Like That” (with Kendrick Lamar), “Cinderella” (with Travis Scott), “Everyday Hustle” (with Rick Ross), “Seen It All,” and “WTFYM,” with Metro handling most of the production alongside contributions from Mike Dean, Southside, Boi‑1da, Oz, Honorable C.N.O.T.E., and others. The album debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 with about 251,000 equivalent units and over 324 million streams in its first week, giving Future his ninth and Metro his fourth US chart‑topping album and, at the time, the biggest opening week of 2024.

Artistically, We Don’t Trust You is framed as a dark, paranoid trap opus about betrayal, loyalty, and power, built on Metro’s cinematic, ominous soundscapes and Future’s “demon” persona. Tracks like “We Don’t Trust You,” “Young Metro,” and “Ice Attack” set a tone of suspicion and menace, while “Type Shit” and “Cinderella” bring in high‑energy, star‑studded flexing; “Everyday Hustle” leans into hustler gospel with Rick Ross, and “WTFYM” and “Seen It All” extend Future’s trademark blend of boastful bars and weary, street‑veteran perspective. The most talked‑about song, “Like That,” features Kendrick Lamar over a sparse, pounding beat, and became a cultural flashpoint thanks to Lamar’s pointed disses at Drake and J. Cole—helping the track debut at No. 1 on the Hot 100 and cementing the album’s place in rap history as the spark for one of hip‑hop’s biggest beefs. Critics generally praised the album’s cohesion, production quality, and standout performances, often describing it as a culmination of the Future–Metro aesthetic: cold, moody trap that marries blockbuster hooks with a unified, distrust‑soaked atmosphere.

Details
detail icon barcode
Barcode :
0196588989612 0196588989629 0196588989711
detail icon publisher
Publisher :
Wilburn Holding Co. / Boominati / Epic / Republic Wilburn Holding Co. / Boominati / Epic / Republic Wilburn Holding Co. / Boominati / Epic / Republic
detail icon genre
Genre :
Rap/Hip Hop
Product Dimensions
detail icon width
Length x Width x Height :
12.5 x 12.5 x 0.5 in 6 x 5.2 x 0.5 in 12.5 x 12.5 x 0.5 in
detail icon weight
Weight :
500 g 90 g 500 g

We Don't Trust You

Future & Metro Boomin

Sale - Sale price $49.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $49.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Sale - Sale price $12.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $12.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Sale - Sale price $53.99 CAD Regular price
Regular price $53.99 CAD
Sold Out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Description

We Don’t Trust You is the first collaborative studio album by rapper Future and producer Metro Boomin, released on March 22, 2024 via Freebandz, Boominati Worldwide, Epic Records, and Republic. Recorded in 2023–2024, the album is a 17‑track, roughly one‑hour trap project that formally crystallizes a partnership dating back to earlier hits like “Karate Chop” and the famous “If Young Metro don’t trust you…” tag. The tracklist includes songs such as “We Don’t Trust You,” “Young Metro,” “Ice Attack,” “Type Shit” (with Travis Scott and Playboi Carti), “Claustrophobic,” “Like That” (with Kendrick Lamar), “Cinderella” (with Travis Scott), “Everyday Hustle” (with Rick Ross), “Seen It All,” and “WTFYM,” with Metro handling most of the production alongside contributions from Mike Dean, Southside, Boi‑1da, Oz, Honorable C.N.O.T.E., and others. The album debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 with about 251,000 equivalent units and over 324 million streams in its first week, giving Future his ninth and Metro his fourth US chart‑topping album and, at the time, the biggest opening week of 2024.

Artistically, We Don’t Trust You is framed as a dark, paranoid trap opus about betrayal, loyalty, and power, built on Metro’s cinematic, ominous soundscapes and Future’s “demon” persona. Tracks like “We Don’t Trust You,” “Young Metro,” and “Ice Attack” set a tone of suspicion and menace, while “Type Shit” and “Cinderella” bring in high‑energy, star‑studded flexing; “Everyday Hustle” leans into hustler gospel with Rick Ross, and “WTFYM” and “Seen It All” extend Future’s trademark blend of boastful bars and weary, street‑veteran perspective. The most talked‑about song, “Like That,” features Kendrick Lamar over a sparse, pounding beat, and became a cultural flashpoint thanks to Lamar’s pointed disses at Drake and J. Cole—helping the track debut at No. 1 on the Hot 100 and cementing the album’s place in rap history as the spark for one of hip‑hop’s biggest beefs. Critics generally praised the album’s cohesion, production quality, and standout performances, often describing it as a culmination of the Future–Metro aesthetic: cold, moody trap that marries blockbuster hooks with a unified, distrust‑soaked atmosphere.

We Don’t Trust You is the first collaborative studio album by rapper Future and producer Metro Boomin, released on March 22, 2024 via Freebandz, Boominati Worldwide, Epic Records, and Republic. Recorded in 2023–2024, the album is a 17‑track, roughly one‑hour trap project that formally crystallizes a partnership dating back to earlier hits like “Karate Chop” and the famous “If Young Metro don’t trust you…” tag. The tracklist includes songs such as “We Don’t Trust You,” “Young Metro,” “Ice Attack,” “Type Shit” (with Travis Scott and Playboi Carti), “Claustrophobic,” “Like That” (with Kendrick Lamar), “Cinderella” (with Travis Scott), “Everyday Hustle” (with Rick Ross), “Seen It All,” and “WTFYM,” with Metro handling most of the production alongside contributions from Mike Dean, Southside, Boi‑1da, Oz, Honorable C.N.O.T.E., and others. The album debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 with about 251,000 equivalent units and over 324 million streams in its first week, giving Future his ninth and Metro his fourth US chart‑topping album and, at the time, the biggest opening week of 2024.

Artistically, We Don’t Trust You is framed as a dark, paranoid trap opus about betrayal, loyalty, and power, built on Metro’s cinematic, ominous soundscapes and Future’s “demon” persona. Tracks like “We Don’t Trust You,” “Young Metro,” and “Ice Attack” set a tone of suspicion and menace, while “Type Shit” and “Cinderella” bring in high‑energy, star‑studded flexing; “Everyday Hustle” leans into hustler gospel with Rick Ross, and “WTFYM” and “Seen It All” extend Future’s trademark blend of boastful bars and weary, street‑veteran perspective. The most talked‑about song, “Like That,” features Kendrick Lamar over a sparse, pounding beat, and became a cultural flashpoint thanks to Lamar’s pointed disses at Drake and J. Cole—helping the track debut at No. 1 on the Hot 100 and cementing the album’s place in rap history as the spark for one of hip‑hop’s biggest beefs. Critics generally praised the album’s cohesion, production quality, and standout performances, often describing it as a culmination of the Future–Metro aesthetic: cold, moody trap that marries blockbuster hooks with a unified, distrust‑soaked atmosphere.

We Don’t Trust You is the first collaborative studio album by rapper Future and producer Metro Boomin, released on March 22, 2024 via Freebandz, Boominati Worldwide, Epic Records, and Republic. Recorded in 2023–2024, the album is a 17‑track, roughly one‑hour trap project that formally crystallizes a partnership dating back to earlier hits like “Karate Chop” and the famous “If Young Metro don’t trust you…” tag. The tracklist includes songs such as “We Don’t Trust You,” “Young Metro,” “Ice Attack,” “Type Shit” (with Travis Scott and Playboi Carti), “Claustrophobic,” “Like That” (with Kendrick Lamar), “Cinderella” (with Travis Scott), “Everyday Hustle” (with Rick Ross), “Seen It All,” and “WTFYM,” with Metro handling most of the production alongside contributions from Mike Dean, Southside, Boi‑1da, Oz, Honorable C.N.O.T.E., and others. The album debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 with about 251,000 equivalent units and over 324 million streams in its first week, giving Future his ninth and Metro his fourth US chart‑topping album and, at the time, the biggest opening week of 2024.

Artistically, We Don’t Trust You is framed as a dark, paranoid trap opus about betrayal, loyalty, and power, built on Metro’s cinematic, ominous soundscapes and Future’s “demon” persona. Tracks like “We Don’t Trust You,” “Young Metro,” and “Ice Attack” set a tone of suspicion and menace, while “Type Shit” and “Cinderella” bring in high‑energy, star‑studded flexing; “Everyday Hustle” leans into hustler gospel with Rick Ross, and “WTFYM” and “Seen It All” extend Future’s trademark blend of boastful bars and weary, street‑veteran perspective. The most talked‑about song, “Like That,” features Kendrick Lamar over a sparse, pounding beat, and became a cultural flashpoint thanks to Lamar’s pointed disses at Drake and J. Cole—helping the track debut at No. 1 on the Hot 100 and cementing the album’s place in rap history as the spark for one of hip‑hop’s biggest beefs. Critics generally praised the album’s cohesion, production quality, and standout performances, often describing it as a culmination of the Future–Metro aesthetic: cold, moody trap that marries blockbuster hooks with a unified, distrust‑soaked atmosphere.

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