Quavo has seemingly teased some exciting news for fans, as he recently hinted that there is new music on the horizon with none other than Travis Scott.

This week, the Migos frontman incited excitement when he took to Instagram to respond to a thread — reshared by Our Generation Music — that both celebrated the achievements of fellow rapper Travis Scott but also subtly suggested the possibility of an imminent release.

AD

AD LOADING...

“That’s tuff next one loading….. battery up,” he wrote, accompanied by a full battery emoji.

“Huncho Jack SO slept on shit is amazing,” read one response to the subtle announcement.

AD

AD LOADING...

“OMG PLEASE and we need The Scott’s then I can die peacefully,” wrote another user. “Hyped cause Quavo in his prime rn but I also really wanna see that Travis × Don Toliver project,” added a third.

In late 2017, Quavo and Scott partnered up for the release of Huncho Jack, Jack Huncho. Commercially, the project was well-received, debuting at #3. It beat out Eminem’s Revival, which sat in the #4 spot.

Collecting 89,775 total album equivalent units (16,561 in pure albums and a streaming count of 105,321,887), the album, which boasted features from fellow Migos members Offset and the late Takeoff,  as well as production from Murda Beatz, Southside, Buddah Bless, and Cardo, was dubbed an overall success.

Donald Trump Hires Same Attorney Gunna Used In YSL RICO Case
Donald Trump Hires Same Attorney Gunna Used In YSL RICO Case

Meanwhile, in a review of the album, DX’s very own Aaron McKrell wrote that “Huncho Jack, Jack Huncho conveys exactly what fans might expect from two of the hottest trap rappers out. Soaring, robo-rhythmic tunes? Check. Endless braggadocio? Check. A seamless blend of vocoder-tinged singing and cocky flows? Check, check, Nike Swoosh. But don’t expect a structured, meticulous project. Rather, it feels as if La Flame and the Migos leader went into the studio, indulged in the ganja, and all grooviness broke loose.

AD

AD LOADING...

“More often than not, this breezy vibe compensates for a lack of solid lyrical content. ‘Trampoline (trampo), Michael Jordan dreams (Jordan)/Half a bale in that vacuum clean (bale),’ Quavo rhymes pointlessly on ‘Dubai Shit.’ However, OZ and Vinyl’s bassline is so entrancing that it hardly matters what he, Scott or guest Offset say,” McKrell continued. “Mostly, though, Huncho Jack, Jack Huncho further proves the duo’s strength is entertainment on cruise control.”