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Kanye West releases ‘lost’ album ‘Donda 2’ to streamers

Kanye West posing in sunglasses and a leather jacket
First appearing Tuesday on streamers under the artist name Donda, the new LP from Kanye West features 18 songs. West’s recent music output has competed with his incendiary actions.
(Evan Agostini / Invision / AP)

By Kanye West’s recent standards, the surprise release of his “lost” album “Donda 2” to streaming services is relatively sedate news.

The rapper, now known as Ye, first released “Donda 2” in very limited fashion in 2022, when its core musical components were uploaded into a proprietary Stem player, a physical device where listeners could tweak its mixes.

Alex Klein, the founder of Kano, the company that made the Stem player, told The Times in 2022 that West was initially “very funny, and can be super candid,” but after his collapse into neo-Nazi sloganeering, Klein said, “I asked Kanye not to take the path he’s on. We’ve told him that we’re unable to work together while he’s putting out racial conspiracy theories.”

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When Ye released ‘Donda 2,’ you could only hear it through a device called the Stem Player. Its creator, Alex Klein, speaks out on the end of their partnership.

The album was a sequel to his 2021 record “Donda,” his last mainstream solo album before his descent into openly neo-Nazi rhetoric. Klein said he cut all ties with West in 2022: “There’s no deal in place.”

First appearing Tuesday on streamers under the artist name Donda, the LP features 18 songs. Given that the album was recorded in a very different point in West’s collapse, it still has some star cameos: Future appears on “Happy” and “Mr. Miagi,” while Jack Harlow appears on “Louie Bag.” The LP has a version of “5:30,” from West’s “Vultures 2” album with Ty Dolla Sign, and West’s ex-wife Kim Kardashian makes an unexpected appearance on “SCIFI,” saying, “I married the best rapper of all time. Not only that, he’s the richest Black man in America. A talented, legit genius who gave me four talented, incredible kids.”

First Ye, f.k.a. Kanye West, reveals alleged childhood sex acts with a younger male cousin. Then he complains again about not being allowed to raise his children.

West’s recent music output has competed with his incendiary actions. His single “Carnival” with Ty Dolla Sign topped the Hot 100 last year, and his LP “Bully” was seen as somewhat of a return to his old musical form. Yet his stunt selling swastika-branded merch with a Super Bowl ad and a startling claim he engaged in sex acts with a male cousin in his youth have overshadowed much of the music.

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“This song is called COUSINS about my cousin that’s locked in jail for life for killing a pregnant lady a few years after I told him we wouldn’t ‘look at dirty magazines together’ anymore,” Ye tweeted. “Perhaps in my self centered mess I felt it was my fault that I showed him those dirty magazines when he was 6 and then we acted out what we saw.”

Lawsuits and interviews The Times conducted provide a fresh glimpse into the extraordinary dysfunction inside Donda and the erratic behavior of its controversial founder that led to its unraveling.

Additionally, new details have emerged about Donda Academy, the troubled private school he opened in Los Angeles. Chekarey Byers, a former fifth-grade teacher at Donda, sued West and Donda Academy.

“It was a lot of disorder and chaos,” Byers told The Times before a recent settlement, echoing claims in her lawsuit. “Donda didn’t really have any structure. They had books that they had bought that were just sitting on shelves. Kids were just playing all day. It was just a free-for-all.”

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