André 3000 & Supreme Team Up For New Collab

    André 3000 is the next artist to collab with streetwear brand Supreme, with the Outkast legend looking set to appear on a new t-shirt.

    As the brand gears up to drop the first batch of products for its all-new Fall/Winter 2022 collection, it’s beginning to roll out a series of teasers on its social media pages.

    Earlier this week, Supreme volunteered a glance at what many are speculating to be a leather jacket collaboration with F1 driver Lewis Hamilton, and now it’s released a new campaign photo of Three Stacks in one of the brand’s classic white box logo tee.

    Shot by Deana Lawson, the pic of André 3000 also sees him sporting an olive military jacket and pinstripe overalls that hang halfway off his body. He’s also seen rocking a pair of large framed shades and a bold red beanie to complete his look.

    Fans of Supreme will know that whenever the brand recruits a figure of André 3000’s stature then it’s likely said figure will be the featured guest on its seasonal photo tee. While this hasn’t been confirmed, Streetwear news page DropsByJay has reported the Outkast rapper will be next up on a Supreme tee.

    In other André 3000 news, B.o.B recently recalled Eminem’s reaction to when he played him his “Play the Guitar” collaboration with the Outkast legend during a studio session.

    Outkast 'Aquemini' Album Cover Artist Says André 3000 Played Him Music To Spark His Vision

    The song features a show-stealing guest verse from Three Stacks and was released in 2011 following the success of B.o.B’s chart-topping debut album The Adventures of Bobby Ray.

    “I remember when I was in the studio with Eminem and I played Eminem ‘Play the Guitar,'” he said. “And I remember Em being like, ‘You just never know where [André 3000] gon’ land at.’ I know what he meant when he said that.

    “I was watching him listening to André 3000’s verse on my song and he was like, ‘Damn, man. You just never know where he’s gon’ land with the flow.’ And I’m just like, ‘Yo, this is wild to me!'”

    11 thoughts on “André 3000 & Supreme Team Up For New Collab

      1. How you know he getting money??? I mean do you know the details of any deals he does?? He doesn’t do shows, and rarely does any music, Laface was his label in the 90’s we already know how they operate, just ask TLC and Toni Braxton.

          1. Like that one lady who just made millions of Running Up That Hill, own the rights to your content and its basically gambling on yourself

          2. So Laface gave them a better deal than they gave Toni Braxton and TLC??? Two young cats fresh out of High school signed to Baby face got a better deal than TLC and Toni Braxton??? Both of those artist were way more of a commercial success than outkast in the 90’s. Toni Braxton had two back to back 8 times platinum selling albums. Thats 2 albums that sold 8 million back to back one sold like 15 million internationally and she had nothing to show for it finically NOTHING. So you mean to tell me that that same label, ceo took care of Outkast??? gave them a great deal??? Ok. Rarely any of our favorite artist, rappers, singers got favorable deals especially upfront. That doesn’t take away from their talent, but facts is facts, the music industry is filled with shaky bad deals.

            1. They were DISTRIBUTED by LaFace. They were signed to Organized Noize and Rico Wade let all his artists keep their publishing. Do your research before you speak.

            2. Organized Noise was a production team not a label. Organize noise signed to laface as a production team. And Laface didn’t even distribute records, Laface had to distribute through Arista. Arista was the label in charge of Laface, Laface wasn’t even a full fledge record label it was a few people that starting a record label owned by a even bigger record label in Arista. Which goes back why Laface artist might not have been seeing the moneys they should have been seeing. Whenever they make money on something, Arista will get the biggest slice of that return first, then Laface gets the next biggest slice and then it trickel downs to the artist. Artist have to pay their managers, assistant with their cut which leaves a even smaller slice of the pie for them. Now Laface could have made it to were artist were paid fairly but they obviously didn’t care and were a greedy label. This is how you get Tlc and Toni Braxton selling all of these records and having nothing to show for it at that time.

            3. You’re right about the label situation but TLC and Toni were different. OutKast already had a product written and produced – that’s different from a label making a singer a star. Not to be sexist but female artists rarely even write their own shit. Then there’s stylists and etc that’s why labels dread working with women. LaFace wrote and produced most of the hits for them that’s why they didn’t make money.

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