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Yeat ADL Album | Cinematic Shift, Elton John, Kid Cudi

Sixth studio album by Yeat, released March 27, 2026 via Capitol Records

Last updated: March 30, 2026

Overview

ADL (A Dangerous Lyfe / A Dangerous Love) is the sixth studio album by Portland-born rapper Yeat (Noah Olivier Smith), released on March 27, 2026. Distributed via Lyfestyle Corporation, Field Trip, and Capitol Records, the 21-track double album clocks in at approximately 70 minutes and represents the most ambitious project of Yeat’s career to date.

ADL signals a deliberate departure from the lo-fi, heavily Auto-Tuned rage-rap sound that defined his earlier work. In his first sit-down interview in five years, conducted with Apple Music’s Zane Lowe, Yeat described the project as a “turning point”, driven by lifestyle changes, a more deliberate creative process, and a desire to slow down and reflect.

Album Structure | Two Discs, Two Worlds

The album is split into two distinct discs, each carrying its own sonic identity and thematic focus.

Disc Tone Standout Tracks
A Dangerous Lyfe Gritty, aggressive, introspective “Purpose General”, “Lose Control”, “2Planës”
A Dangerous Love Melodic, experimental, vulnerable “Let King Tonka Talk”, “My Way”, “Back Home”

Disc one leans into the aggressive, street-coded energy that built Yeat’s core fanbase. Disc two pivots toward melody, orchestral textures, and emotional vulnerability, an area Yeat has rarely explored at this depth across his prior catalogue.

Production and Sonic Shift

Production credits span a heavyweight and eclectic team. BNYX and Sonny Digital handle the harder-edged material on disc one, while Dylan Brady of 100 gecs and Berlin-based producer Rampa bring experimental and electronic influence to disc two.

The overall sonic shift moves away from the muddy, compressed rage-beat aesthetic of Yeat’s earlier mixtapes into “widescreen” territory, incorporating live instrumentation, orchestral string arrangements, and, on key moments, a noticeably reduced dependence on heavy Auto-Tune processing. Critics have described the result as “cinematic” and “blockbuster-scaled.”

Critical Reception

Early critical response is polarized, a common outcome for ambitious double albums that deviate sharply from an artist’s established sound.

  • Clash Magazine gave the album a 5/10, calling it a “bombastic blockbuster” that “occasionally succumbs under its own weight” and described the 70-minute runtime as “flabby.”
  • Core fans have praised the growth evident on tracks like “Real Life Shit”, specifically citing Yeat’s willingness to pull back Auto-Tune in key moments as a sign of genuine artistic maturation.
  • The Elton John collaboration on “Lose Control” has drawn the widest mainstream attention and has been described by listeners as one of the album’s standout moments.

Marketing and Rollout

The album’s rollout matched the scale of the project itself. Promotional activations included:

  • New York City yellow cabs with prosthetic arms hanging from the trunks, a surrealist street marketing stunt that generated significant social media coverage.
  • A full-page spread in The New York Times announcing the album’s guest list.
  • Yeat’s first sit-down interview in five years, conducted with Apple Music’s Zane Lowe, published alongside the release date announcement.

The marketing approach signals a major-label investment in ADL as a mainstream crossover bid, a deliberate step beyond the underground streaming dominance Yeat built through his early catalogue.

See Also

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