Latto has taken a classic T.I. track and put her own spin on it in what could be a song of the summer contender.

Taking to Instagram on Tuesday (May 7), the Atlanta rapper shared a collage of photos and a video from what appears to be a music video shoot.

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The fifth slide of the carousel shows Latto and her friends outfitted in leopard print and hitting the strip club with stacks of cash.

The accompanying song samples Tip’s hard-hitting 2003 trap anthem “24’s,” continuing the trend among her peers of mining early 2000s Hip Hop for new material.

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Reworking the King of the South’s original chorus, Latto raps: “Money, clothes, thick ass hoes/ I like all my diamonds froze/ Big bankroll, all summer white toes/ I can’t fuck no n-gga that’s broke.”

Skip to slide five in the below post to hear the teaser.

HHDX YouTube Video Player - Play ButtonYoutube Video - Latto Puts Spin On Classic T.I. Song In Snippet Of New Summer Anthem

While further details about the song have yet to be revealed, Latto has been busy in 2024 so far.

In February, she released the single “Sunday Service” which further fueled her rivalry with fellow rap princess Ice Spice.

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Hitting back at the Bronx rap star’s subliminal shots on “Think U the Shit (Fart),” Latto rapped: “Think I’m the shit, bitch, I know it, ho/ Jesus walked on water, I got ice boilin’ though.”

The song included other less obvious stabs at Spice including: “These bitches corny, soon as monkey see, then you know monkey do/ Do you rap or do you tweet?/ ‘Cause I can’t tell, get in the booth, bitch” and “I just want a one on one, don’t know why she so nervous.”

Latto Pays Homage To 'King' Magazine With Steamy New Photos
Latto Pays Homage To 'King' Magazine With Steamy New Photos

The 25-year-old has yet to announce a home for the track, but she did share details about her new album in an interview with Cosmopolitan last year.

“At first, I was feeling a lot of pressure, and I think it was hindering my creative process,” she admitted of the follow-up to her sophomore LP 777. “Then I got myself in the space where I’m like, ‘You’ve been here. You’ve done it.’

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“People keep forgetting the fact that I’ve been rapping since I was 8 years old. My first moment was not ‘Big Energy.’ That was just another moment. This now has been the best recording process thus far in my career.”