Skip to main content

From Swish to Waves: Kanye changes album title and hints at collaborators

kanye changes swish to waves west
Peter Hutchins / flickr.com
Rapper/producer Kanye West has changed the name of his upcoming seventh studio album. The record, which was previously set to be called Swish, will now be called Waves, according to a recent Twitter post by the musician.

The announcement came just days after West released a photo of the album’s 10-song tracklist including the name of the album — then called Swish —  on his social media accounts. Interestingly, a song called Waves was listed on his original post as track three, typically the lead single spot on a full-length release.

The name change announcement came in tandem with a new photo of the same list, with Swish crossed out and replaced by Waves as the album title, along with one added song, called Ultra Light Beam, at the very end as track eleven. The musician also indicated in ink that the record would take place in three acts, and in-studio collaborators like Swizz Beats, A$AP Rocky, and The-Dream appeared to have signed the scribbled-over track list, along with wife Kim Kardashian and others.

https://twitter.com/kanyewest/status/691489910293991424

https://twitter.com/kanyewest/status/692175106286682112

The new record, about which Kanye also tweeted, “This is not album of the year. This is album of the life,” will premiere at New York’s Madison Square Garden during the musician’s presentation at New York Fashion Week in February.

Waves, the first studio release from West since 2013’s Yeezus, is set to hit streaming services and record stores the same day as the fashion week show, but where exactly it will stream remains to be seen.

The musician has been slowly leaking tracks via what he calls the G.O.O.D. Friday series  — tracks that typically, but not always, come out on the musician’s Soundcloud every Friday — and says that a new song will appear each week until the album hits stores everywhere.

[amz_nsa_keyword keyword=”Kanye West”]
Parker Hall
Former Digital Trends Contributor
Parker Hall is a writer and musician from Portland, OR. He is a graduate of the Oberlin Conservatory of Music in Oberlin…
What is spatial audio? Apple’s 3D sound feature fully explained
Person listening to spatial audio using Apple AirPods Max headphones.

At WWDC 2021 (Apple's annual Worldwide Developers Conference), Apple officially added support for spatial audio with Dolby Atmos Music for Apple Music. It quickly became a popular format among consumers, too: Apple estimates that by February 2022, playback of spatial audio tracks had quadrupled from just a few months prior as people experimented with the format. But what exactly is spatial audio? How is it different from (or the same as) Dolby Atmos? And what kind of audio equipment do you need to listen to it?

There's a lot of ground to cover, and some of it is a bit technical, but we're going to break it all down in easy-to-understand terms. You'll be a spatial audio expert in minutes, and you'll know exactly how to access this growing trend in movie and music streaming.
What exactly is spatial audio?

Read more
The best podcasts of 2022
best podcasts

Whether you've already stored all your favorite podcasts in your app of choice, ready for listening, or are new to the world of podcasts, there's no denying their popularity. Podcasts are everywhere these days and have become some of the most beloved entertainment and education mediums worldwide. Whatever you're into, from tech and video game chat to world news and politics or true crime, there are plenty of specialized interest shows to choose from.

With so many podcasts available, there’s no way that you can listen to all of them. To help you out, no matter your interests, we've gathered a variety of shows to turn you on to your next great listen.

Read more
How to convert your vinyl to a digital format
Rebirth of cool: Is vinyl ready for a second wind, or just a fad?

It doesn't matter one bit if your vinyl collection consists of just a single milk crate or if it fills several Ikea Kallax shelves and is slowly taking over your home — we can all agree that there's just something about vinyl.

Maybe it's the warm, uncompressed sound spinning off a solid turntable, or the feel of holding a physical piece of art in your hands while the record spins — it's a special experience that has regained much of its glory in a world dominated by digital streaming. The problem is, records are fragile, and crates full of them don't fit in your back pocket.

Read more