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‘The Last Waltz’ Is The Best Thanksgiving Movie Ever Made

(Editor’s note: Today, in honor of Thanksgiving, we’re republishing this piece, originally published in 2016. We hope you enjoy it.)

The Last Waltz is a concert film directed by Martin Scorsese about a star-studded “retirement” show by The Band that occurred 40 years ago on Thanksgiving day in San Francisco. The co-stars are Bob Dylan, Van Morrison, Neil Young, Joni Mitchell, Muddy Waters, Dr. John, Neil Diamond, and about another half-dozen rock stars from the ’60s and ’70s. Every year around this time, I try to watch The Last Waltz at least once, in the way that people watch A Christmas Story or It’s a Wonderful Life whenever mid-December rolls around. I’ve come to regard The Last Waltz — and I preface this by offering sincere apologies to Planes, Trains, and Automobiles — as the greatest Thanksgiving movie ever. That’s not simply because The Last Waltz takes place on the holiday, but also because this film embodies what’s wonderful, horrible, hilarious, and moving about one of this country’s most sacred annual traditions, and how many of us manage to survive it. Other films have used Thanksgiving as a backdrop. But to me, The Last Waltz is Thanksgiving.

Allow me to recount the plot of The Last Waltz: A dysfunctional family of five brothers has decided to stop living together. Before they split up, they invite a coterie of friends dressed in colorful suits and floppy hats over for a holiday celebration. Despite years of pent-up resentment — the brother with the amazing voice loathes the brother with the amazing haircut, whom he views as disloyal and undermining — all parties agree to put these tensions aside and put on a good face in front of the guests.

The guest list at this party is truly a mixed bag. There is a wise old man from Mississippi. There is a beautiful blonde poet from the Hollywood hills. There is a jive-talking hipster from New Orleans. There is a coked-up Canadian hippie. There is a portly, purple-suited Irishman who mistakenly believes that he knows karate. And then there’s the Jewish rock star for Minnesota who can’t decide if he really wants to be there.

Thus far, it sounds like I’m describing a Wes Anderson film. And, in some ways, I am — beneath the formalism of the filmmaking is a whole lot of messiness.

On the surface, the party is lavish — there are chandeliers on loan from Gone with the Wind (really!) and the lighting is bold and theatrical and there are famous writers reciting indecipherable passages from Chaucer. Beyond the pomp and circumstance, however, it’s like the bowery. Nearly everyone is sneaking away to get smashed on booze and smuggled chemicals — this is out of habit, but also because family reunions tend to be fraught with tension. It is the most certain of all inalienable truths. The trio of sweet, soft-spoken brothers know that the brother with the amazing haircut will be overbearing and arrogant, and that the brother with the amazing voice will make his stirring but problematic case sympathizing with Southerners who lost the Civil War. And the sweet, soft-spoken ones will once again be caught hopelessly in the middle. You feel for them. Weird politics and flawed family dynamics – who can’t relate to dreading these things at this time of the year?

And yet — in spite of the resentments, and the betrayals, and the intensifying intoxication — everyone is able to come together and conjure a feeling of community. When they gather around to tell old family stories that have been told and re-told umpteen times — like the one about Jack Ruby, or the one about shoplifting bologna and cigarettes — the brothers pretend to laugh whenever the overbearing brother takes over the conversation. (The upside of being on stage is that you can turn off his microphone.) After a while, the laughs seem less forced. They’re faking it so well that they start to feel actual community and love and understanding. This is what The Last Waltz, and Thanksgiving, is all about.

Earlier this month, Robbie Robertson put out a memoir, Testimony, that concludes not long after The Last Waltz. (Condolences to anyone hoping for an in-depth, behind-the-scenes look at the making of 2011’s How To Become Clairvoyant.) My feelings about Testimony are as conflicted as they are about Robertson — he’s a great artist and an insufferable person, and Testimony similarly is artfully rendered and often hard to stomach.

As is my custom with rock memoirs, I’ve been reading Testimony out of order, in order to get to the parts that most interest me. The Last Waltz is near the top of that list. Robertson was the chief engineer of The Last Waltz — he conceived the concert, brought on Scorsese, and acted as the film’s producer. Unsurprisingly, his view of the concert is sanitized and romanticized — he goes into deep (perhaps unnecessary) detail about the conception and planning of the concert, recounting every personnel hire and rehearsal. Of course, every move is confirmation of Robertson’s genius.

For people that have seen The Last Waltz as many times as I have, Testimony will be interesting be default. Because I am one of those nerds who is curious about any and all minutia related to this concert, including what Van Morrison was wearing before the show. (“A beige trench coat,” Robertson writes, clearly less exciting than the extravagant purple jumpsuit he wore on stage.) For anyone else, however, Robertson might seem ponderous. He heaps praise upon the performers, particularly Neil Diamond, who in Robertson’s estimation performed “Dry Your Eyes” (which Robertson co-wrote) “like a sermon out of Elmer Gentry.” Robertson even spends a paragraph describing the Japanese bath in his San Francisco hotel room.

As for the other guys in The Band… well, Robertson admits that they weren’t as into the film as he was, but “they didn’t have the cinematic passion that I did.” Hm … sounds a little fishy, Robbie.

At that point, I decided it was best to chase what I was reading in Testimony with some passages from Levon Helm’s scathing 1993 book This Wheel’s On Fire, a dishier and more overtly nasty book than Testimony.

(Notice that I said “overtly” — Robertson isn’t above score settling, he just does it in a more magnanimous tone. For instance, when describing a disastrous 1970 gig at the Hollywood Bowl, Robertson hints that Helm’s heroin addiction adversely affected The Band’s performance, though he later diffuses the accusation by adding that Helm himself admitted as much after the show. Why Robertson chose to write about a forgotten concert — and throw Helm under the bus 46 years later — is a mystery. Though, perhaps, it does explain why he waited until after Helm died to write a book.)

In Testimony, Robertson claims that when he brought up the idea of a retirement concert to the guys in The Band, “no one was opposed to the idea.” Even Helm “knew we couldn’t continue with out live shows.” If Robertson really believes that, then I suggest that he read This Wheel’s On Fire. Helm’s take on The Last Waltz is unequivocal: “I didn’t want any part of it,” he writes. “I didn’t want to break up the band.”

In Helm’s version of events, Robertson pressed Helm about the dangers of the road, and how it took the lives of everyone from Hank Williams Sr. to Jimi Hendrix. “Every time I get on the plane I’m thinking about this stuff,” Helm recalls Robertson saying. “The whole thing just isn’t healthy anymore.”

“I’m not in it for my health,” Helm replies. “I’m a musician, and I wanna live the way I do.” (This quote later inspired the title of the heart-rending 2013 documentary, Ain’t in It for My Health: A Film about Levon Helm.)

Helm claims he only went along with The Last Waltz because management made it seem that he had no choice — whether that’s really true or if it speaks to the same self-defeating fatalism that caused Helm and the rest of the Band to slowly cede control to Robertson, it’s hard to say. Like so many families, the Band was undone by money problems. Robertson was credited as the Band’s primary songwriter, a distinction that Helm felt put too fine a point on the group’s collaborative process. At one time, these men freely pooled their talents and personal experiences for the common good. While Robertson technically wrote “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down,” the song’s authenticity and soul came from Helm. But that partnership was over by the time of The Last Waltz.

In The Last Waltz, Robertson’s dark proclamations about “the road” form the narrative, while Helm’s contrasting view goes unacknowledged. This inevitably influenced Helm’s view of the film. When Helm finally saw The Last Waltz, he “was in shock over how bad the movie was,” he writes in This Wheel’s On Fire. Helm hated how many overdubs there were. (In Helm’s book, the Band’s producer John Simon claims that the only tracks that weren’t re-recorded were Helm’s vocals and drums.) Helm hated that Scorsese (whom he refers to, hilariously, as “the dummy”) didn’t shoot the dress rehearsal or any of the pre-show festivities orchestrated by concert promoter Bill Graham, which he felt were some of the best parts of the event.

Most of all, Helm despised Robertson’s “world-weary angst” about the life of touring musicians. In Helm’s view, this was like a gangster trying to leave the mafia. Ultimately, Helm felt that Robertson sold out his former comrades. “To me,” Helm concludes, “it was unforgivable.”

All of this stuff composes the poisonous subtext of The Last Waltz. Perhaps it’s easier to enjoy the movie if you aren’t aware of it. Or if you stick with Testimony and ignore This Wheel’s On Fire. But for me, the subtext actually deepens the experience of watching The Last Waltz.

I don’t think the movie would be as rich if it was simply about an old ’60s rock group that decided to hang it up. The tension between the joyous performances and the embittered back-stage reality is what gives The Last Waltz its emotional and spiritual power. If Helm really hated being there, then his ecstatic yodeling at the end of “Up On Cripple Creek” is all the more remarkable. If Rick Danko was already focused on his solo career — when Scorsese tries to interview him in The Last Waltz, Danko instead plays the luminous “Sip The Wine” from 1977’s Rick Danko — then his definitive performance of “It Makes No Difference” is that much more awe-inspiring. If Richard Manuel already seemed to be on his last legs, as both Robertson and Helm suggest in their books, the courageous grit he lends to “The Shape I’m In” is flat-out heroic.

(Garth Hudson is the only member of The Band I have not yet directly referenced. I am the one billionth person to make this mistake when talking about The Band, but only because he was seemingly unbothered by the humanoid craziness surrounding him in The Last Waltz. To quote Ronnie Hawkins, Hudson was werrrd, a musical genius living in his own solar system.)

Perhaps Helm’s point of view made it into The Last Waltz after all. No matter what Robertson says about the impossibility of road life, the rest of the guys refute by showing. These musicians are so devoted to their craft that they can perform masterfully, no matter the circumstances. They are weary men who find the wherewithal to transcend their weariness and approach grace.

This is what keeps me coming back to The Last Waltz every Thanksgiving. It affirms the faith in the power of ritual to heal — at least temporarily — whatever is awkward or unresolved or plain broken about your familial bonds. Sometimes, that belief is just enough to make things okay for a little while.

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Wacky Pillow Man Mike Lindell Is Whining To Elon Musk That It’s ‘Disgusting To Be One Of The Few People Still Banned From Twitter’

There are a lot of “disgusting” things going on in America (never mind the world) right now, including rampant political corruption, institutional racism, and the government assault on the rights of the LGBTQ+ community and a woman’s right to bodily autonomy — to name just a few. What doesn’t rise to that same level of social injustice? A guy who makes sh*tty informercial pillows and spreads bonkers conspiracy theories not being allowed to tweet. Yet here we are.

On Tuesday, former crack addict Mike Lindell, who doesn’t seem to know what a “shoutout” is, gave a “shoutout to Elon Musk” to let him know just what he thinks of his new Muskified Twitter — and whine about his suspended account remaining suspended while chatting with Steve Bannon (who seems to revel in making Lindell perform hysterics for the cameras).

The way the pillow scion sees it, if Musk’s goal is to make a platform for “free speech,” then he shouldn’t be “carving out the guys who are going to talk about our election crimes and our election integrity… I think I would like to do a shoutout to Elon Musk right now: Hey, check out the evidence! I was banned because I was telling the truth. And that’s disgusting to be one of the few people that’s still banned.”

Disgusting!

Not to be outdone when it comes to wackadoo conspiracy theories, Bannon told Lindell that he has no desire to be on Twitter because it’s “financed by the Chinese Communist Party.” He then called upon Musk to prove that what he was saying is not true.

But Bannon wasn’t through with Lindell yet. As Raw Story reports, the layered-shirt enthusiast wanted to see just how far the Pillow Man would go to get back on Twitter. “Would you commit — right now — to do an open live Twitter with Elon Musk?,” Bannon asked the man who once organized a protest outside Fox News HQ that even he failed to show up to. “He could play 20 questions, he’d rip your face off, you present your evidence and he takes you on mano a mano and your evidence about what you believe is the voter fraud related to machines and other things in the 2020 election.”

“Absolutely,” Lindell replied, because of course he would. “And I would do that any day anytime, any time of day or night, and I’ll drop everything I have to do that, Steve, because I believe it’s very important to our country.”

By “drop everything” he means… what exactly?

(Via Raw Story)

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50 Cent And The Houston Rockets Gave Away Thanksgiving Meals To A Thousand Families

50 Cent has teamed up with the Houston Rockets to give back to the city. Yesterday (November 22), the rapper, along with the team, held a turkey drive outside of the Toyota Center, where the Rockets play their home games. Houston residents were invited to line up in their cars and receive a Thanksgiving meal on a first-come-first-serve basis.

The meals came by way of donations from Kroger, Spec’s, 50’s G-Unity Foundation, and the Rockets’ Clutch City initiative. Recipients also received a voucher to an upcoming Rockets home game.

At the event, 50 spoke to local Houston station KPRC, saying, “I just want them to have a great Thanksgiving and enjoy themselves, you know what I’m saying? I’m actually coming in here fashionably. My kids been here working and putting it together, so I gotta catch up and put in more work so they don’t gotta look at me like I got them out here first.”

At the conclusion of the drive, 50 and the Rockets gave away turkeys to 1,000 families.

50 first moved to Houston back in January 2021, and has since been involved in several causes, including the NAACP Toy Drive, Houston’s Christmas Eve Super Feast, the Houston Symphony, and the Houston Livestock Show And Rodeo.

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Paulo Londra Rocks Out With Blink-182’s Travis Barker In His New Video For ‘Nublado’

Paulo Londra is dropping highly-anticipated album Back To The Game tonight (November 23). Before then, the Argentine star released the high-octane music video for “Nublado” featuring Blink-182’s Travis Barker.

After a few years being caught up in a contractual dispute, Londra signed a new partnership with Warner Music Latina in March. Since then, he has re-established himself as one of Argentina’s top artists. This past year, Londra dropped multiple stellar collaborations. Ed Sheeran featured in his love song “Noche De Novela” and hit-maker Bizarrap enlisted him for “BZRP Music Sessions #23.”

Londra is keeping the star power coming with his new version of “Nublado.” He re-recorded the song with Barker playing on the drums. Barker packs the Latin pop-punk anthem with the punch behind Blink-182’s classics. Londra sounds like he’s having a blast with the electrifying edge that Barker brings to their collaboration. In the video, Londra rocks out with Barker in a LA recording studio.

Londra’s songs with Sheeran and Barker will be included on Back To The Game, his first studio album in three years. His collaboration with Feid, “A Veces,” is also on the tracklist that he revealed earlier this week. Londra’s song with Timbaland, “Toc Toc,” will appear on the LP as well. Back To The Game will be released tonight at 7 p.m. ET.

Find the Back To The Game tracklist below.

1. “Chango”
2. “Plan A”
3. “Party En El Barrio” Feat. Duki
4. “Luces”
5. “Por Deporte”
6. “Noche De Novela” Feat. Ed Sheeran
7. “Nublado” Feat. Travis Barker
8. “A Veces” Feat. Feid
9. “Cansado” Feat. Joaqo
10. “Tenso”
11. “Ella”
12. “Julieta”
13. “Ojalá”
14. “Necio” Feat. Lit Killah
15. “Chance”
16. “Toc Toc” Feat. Timbaland

Back To The Game is out 11/23 via Warner Music Latina. Pre-order it here.

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

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Canadian Legends The Weeknd And Ryan Reynolds Might Be Buying The NHL’s Ottawa Senators

During a recent episode of Sportsnet’s 32 Thoughts: The Podcast, a rumor about The Weeknd joining Ryan Reynolds in buying the Ottawa Senators hockey team was mentioned — and seems to lend some possible credibility to the news. After Canadian sports commentator Ron MacLean made a joke about the deal, hosts Elliotte Friedman and Jeff Marek discussed the possibility.

“I don’t think we’ve heard the end of this when it comes to star power,” Friedman said. “I don’t think Reynolds is the only one.”

“But, you know, the one thing about him, he’s from Scarborough,” he added. “He has some representation that has tie-ins to Ottawa. At least two of his representatives — well, they were born overseas and moved to Canada and have connections to Ottawa. So, you know, we’ll see, Jeff. I don’t know that it’s true, I don’t know that it isn’t. But that rumor is out there. I’ve heard there’s the potential to be more. And Ron [MacLean] made the joke and a couple people started texting me — like, are you hinting that The Weeknd could buy into the Ottawa Senators? I don’t know that that’s going to happen.”

At least for now, Reynolds is the only person who has thrown a name in the hat to buy the team. It’s not his first foray into sports deals either, as he owns Wrexham Football Club. The actor opened up about his hopes for the Ottawa Senators during an appearance on The Tonight Show.

“I am trying to do it. It’s very expensive,” Reynolds revealed earlier this month. “I need a partner with very deep pockets.”

While it seems unlikely that The Weeknd will get involved with the deal, he is Canadian and certainly has money… so, you never know.

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Billie Eilish, Alicia Keys, And Others Donated Unique Signed Memorabilia For Annie Lennox’s Charity Auction

One of the latest Rock And Rock Hall Of Fame inductees, Annie Lennox, continues to use her platform to raise awareness for the end of violence against women and girls. The former Eurythmics singer’s latest philanthropic efforts include acquiring rare musical items for The Music Icons auction.

The auction will feature signed memorabilia from musicians Billie Eilish, Brandi Carlile, Alicia Keys, Angelique Kidjo, as well as Lennox herself. Supporters can bid on handwritten lyrics from each of the artists’ breakout song including Eilish’s “Your Power,” Carlile’s “Right On Time,’ Keys’ “Fallin’,” Kidjo’s “Agolo,” and Eurythmics’ “Sweet Dreams (Are Made Of This).”

The singer spoke with Billboard about why she got involved with the cause, stating, “I have long believed that music can build bridges and bring people together, and it is wonderful to see these phenomenal female artists stand side by side with women and girls around the world facing and fighting gender-based violence.”

Raakhi Shah — CEO of The Circle, the organization behind the auction — released a statement thanking them for their support. Shah said, “We are so grateful to Alicia, Angelique, Annie, Billie, and Brandi for their outstanding generosity and for supporting women facing violence and abuse around the world.”

Fans will have until December 5 to enter a bid for The Music Icons auction. To learn more about the auction and to enter a bid, click here.

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‘Avatar: The Way Of Water’ Is Expected To Have A Huge Opening Weekend At The Box Office (But Maybe Not Huge Enough)

Most of 2022’s biggest movies have already been released — Top Gun: Maverick, Doctor Strange in the Multiverse of Madness, Jackass Forever (hey, it was big for some of us) — with one exception. Avatar: The Way of Water comes out on December 15, and it’s expected to do big business. The sequel to the highest-grossing movie of all-time “should open to at least $150 million-$170 million when sailing into North American theaters,” according to the Hollywood Reporter, “and those are conservative estimates.”

More bullish observers believe the Christmas corridor tentpole has a shot at becoming only the fourth December tentpole to cross $200 million in its opening weekend behind last year’s Spider-Man: No Way Home ($260.1 million), 2015’s Star Wars: The Force Awakens ($248 million) and 2017’s Star Wars: The Last Jedi ($220 million). One difference: those films were all fanboy events, whereas the first Avatar was more of a slow burn.

Let’s say that Avatar: The Way of Water makes $200 million during opening weekend. That would put it only $1.8 billion away from being profitable! “You have to be the third or fourth highest-grossing film in history [to break even],” director James Cameron told GQ about his “very fucking [expensive]” movie. Hollywood accounting, don’tcha love it?

But if anyone can do it, it’s Mr. Alien$.

(Via the Hollywood Reporter)

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What Happened To Rosita In ‘The Walking Dead?’

The Walking Dead is over, and so is Rosita’s story. AMC’s zombie drama ended its 11-season run on Sunday, November 20. Some people lived, and some people died, as per usual on this show. If you watched the series finale of The Walking Dead and already forgot what happened, that’s understandable: the holidays wreck our brains and there’s a lot of information to take in. Or maybe you used to watch The Walking Dead and are desperate to know what happened in the series finale without watching it. In that case, this post is also for you.

Rosita, played by Christian Serratos, spent the last several episodes of the series trying to save her daughter, Coco. In The Walking Dead series finale, Rosita saves her baby daughter but doesn’t survive the episode. She ends up falling into a pack of walkers and gets bitten. But she ultimately gets a peaceful, heroic death.

On most television shows, the fate of characters is up to the writers and producers. But in an interview with Entertainment Weekly, Serratos said that killing off Rosita in the series finale was her idea. “It tugging at your heartstrings was something that I really fell in love with about the show,” Serratos told EW. “And I just really wanted people to have that emotional experience in our finale, especially. I think a show that was about possibly losing your loved ones, you want to lose somebody at the end. I know it sounds so dark, but I feel like the show, we owed it to the fans to break their hearts one last time, if that makes sense,” she said.

“There’s so much talk about spin-offs and stuff, and I couldn’t live in limbo,” she continued. “I couldn’t not know if she was going to ever come back or not. It was going to drive me insane. So it really helped me, Christian, have closure. And I really think it made sense for Rosita. I mean, she was so willing to die for her loved ones and die for her child, and I just thought it really made sense for her.”

So Rosita from The Walking Dead died because… emotions or because Serratos wanted to ensure she wouldn’t be available for any The Walking Dead spin-offs. Or maybe both things are true?

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James Cameron Almost Didn’t Cast Leonardo DiCaprio In ‘Titanic’ (And He Almost Cast Gwyneth Paltrow As Rose)

Nearly 30 years after the release of James Cameron‘s epic disaster movie Titanic, Cameron still loves to bring it up in order to talk about how much money it made and also to justify taking over a decade to put out Avatar 2: The Way Of The Water. You can’t be mad once you remember that this man created one of the most iconic movies of all time, right? Well, you could. But still, he is going to remind you of it all the time.

In a recent interview with GQ, Cameron detailed the casting process for Titanic, which resulted in him actively disliking Leonardo Dicaprio, and almost casting Gwyneth Paltrow as Rose.

“I didn’t see Kate [Winslet] at first [as Rose],” Cameron confirmed. “But I was thinking maybe Gwyneth Paltrow.” Paltrow has addressed the rumor that she had turned down the role in the past. “I know that the story is that I turned it down. I think I was really in contention for it — I was one of the last two,” the Goop founder told Howard Stern in 2015 that Winslet beat her out for the role.

After asking DiCaprio to come in for a screen test with Winslet, he was surprised to learn that the young actor hadn’t even read the script. Cameron was not pleased.

[DiCaprio] said, ‘You mean, I’m reading?’ I said, ‘Yeah.’ He said, ‘Oh, I don’t read.’ I shook his hand and said, ‘Thanks for coming by.’ And he said, ‘Wait, wait, wait. If I don’t read, I don’t get the part? Just like that?’ And I said, ‘Oh, yeah. Come on. This is a giant movie that is going to take two years of my life, and you’ll be gone doing five other things while I’m doing post-production. So, I’m not going to f*** it up by making the wrong decision in casting. So, you’re going to read, or you’re not going to get the part.’”

DiCaprio decided to take his chances and audition alongside Winslet, who was already cast. The director continued, “So he comes in, and he’s like every ounce of his entire being is just so negative — right up until I said, ‘Action.’” That’s when DiCaprio and his ’90s heartthrob hair stole the screen and America’s hearts. Sometimes being negative works! He added, “Kate just lit up, and they played the scene. Dark clouds had opened up, and a ray of sun came down and lit up Jack. I’m like, ‘All right. He’s the guy.’”

Eventually, DiCaprio became one of the world’s most iconic actors, Winslet was nominated for an Academy Award for her role, and Paltrow began a vagina candle empire. That’s all one could ever hope for.

(Via People)

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Metro Boomin’s ‘Heroes Vs. Villains’: Everything To Know, Including The Release Date, Tracklist, And Artwork

Nearly four years after his chart-topping debut with 2018’s Not All Heroes Wear Capes, Metro Boomin returns to music with his highly anticipated sophomore effort, Heroes Vs. Villains.

Despite rumors that the prolific producer pushed the album back because of Drake and 21 Savage’s Her Loss, which was released earlier this month, he revealed that the album would be delayed because he couldn’t get the samples cleared in time. The album was initially set to release on November 4, but it has been pushed back to December.

“I couldn’t get all the samples on my album cleared in time for next week, so I’m dropping on December 2 now, so I have enough time to make sure you all get this masterpiece as intended,” he tweeted. “I promise it’s worth the wait!! P.S. I would NEVER move my album date because of anyone else [laughing emoji].”

This past September, the “Runnin” producer announced that he would drop his forthcoming project and shared a trailer about the upcoming project on YouTube.

Yesterday (November 22), Metro shared the cover for his forthcoming project on Twitter. To date, no tracklist or features have been released for the long-awaited project, but it’s fair to assume they will be coming quickly.

Heroes & Villains is out 12/2 via Boominati Worldwide/Republic. Pre-order it here.