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WikiHits · The Dossier 2020s Files Nº 02

The 2020s File Feature

Type Shit

Type Shit — Future, Metro Boomin, Travis Scott, and Playboi Carti Light Up the Hot 100When four of hip-hop's most commercially dominant figures align on a si…

Hot 100 Peaked at Nº 2 126.0M plays
Watch « Type Shit » — Future, Metro Boomin, Travis Scott & Playboi Carti, 2024

01 The Story

Type Shit — Future, Metro Boomin, Travis Scott, and Playboi Carti Light Up the Hot 100

When four of hip-hop's most commercially dominant figures align on a single track, the conversation about the music almost gets lost inside the conversation about the event itself. Type Shit, from the We Don't Trust You album by Future and Metro Boomin, arrived in April 2024 with precisely that energy: the song was almost secondary to the spectacle of who was on it and what it meant that they were all on it together.

The Album Behind the Track

We Don't Trust You arrived as Future and Metro Boomin's joint project and landed in the middle of one of hip-hop's most charged months in recent memory. The broader context included ongoing tensions in the genre's upper tier, and the album's arrival was a statement about where Future and Metro Boomin stood in that landscape. Type Shit served as one of the project's most attention-commanding moments, stacking Travis Scott and Playboi Carti onto the Metro-produced foundation for a track that sounded like a summit meeting of trap's current establishment.

Metro Boomin and the Architecture of the Beat

Metro Boomin has been one of the defining producers of trap music across the 2010s and into the 2020s. His production signature involves an atmospheric density; sounds that feel layered and intentional without becoming cluttered, with a bass presence that rewards high-quality speakers while still hitting hard on phone speakers. Type Shit uses that template effectively, creating a sonic backdrop that accommodates four distinct voices without homogenizing them. The production on this track is credited to Metro Boomin, whose fingerprints are on some of the era's most recognizable sounds.

The Chart Impact

Type Shit debuted at number 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 on April 6, 2024, its very first week on the chart; that debut position reflects the combined streaming firepower of all four featured artists. It held for 20 weeks on the chart, climbing back after slight drops to stay in the top 15 for several additional weeks. That kind of sustained chart presence for a trap album cut, rather than a crossover single, demonstrates how fully the genre has integrated with the mainstream pop listening ecosystem. The track also pulled in 126 million YouTube views.

Four Artists, Four Registers

The appeal of a posse cut in hip-hop has always been the contrast between styles and the implicit competition between performers. Future, Metro Boomin (as host/producer), Travis Scott, and Playboi Carti each bring a distinct approach. Future's melodic melancholy sits differently from Scott's elastic, pitched vocal style, which in turn contrasts with Carti's more confrontational and rhythmically playful delivery. Placed together on the same canvas, the differences amplify rather than cancel each other out.

The Larger Cultural Moment

Spring 2024 in hip-hop was unusually competitive and unusually engaged at the public level. The album cycle for We Don't Trust You unfolded alongside some of the most-discussed back-and-forths between major artists in years. Type Shit was part of a larger cultural argument about who was operating at the highest level, and its debut at number two was part of the answer Future and Metro Boomin gave to that question.

Set the volume where it belongs and let Metro Boomin's architecture do what it was built to do.

“Type Shit” — Future, Metro Boomin, Travis Scott & Playboi Carti's singular moment on the 2020s charts.

02 Song Meaning

Type Shit: What It Means to Operate at a Certain Level

The phrase "type shit" in hip-hop slang functions as a quality marker: whatever follows is on a particular level, a cut above what most people are doing. Type Shit uses that self-designation as its organizing principle, with all four artists articulating what their version of operating at that level looks, feels, and sounds like.

The Trap Artist's Self-Portrait

Contemporary trap music has developed a sophisticated set of conventions for self-presentation. Wealth, control, indifference to critics, and a specific kind of unshakeable confidence are the recurring themes, but the most skilled practitioners find ways to make these familiar subjects feel fresh through delivery and specificity. All four artists on this track carry that tradition forward, each framing their version of the "type shit" template through their own lens.

Future's Emotional Register

Future's contribution to the track fits within his broader creative project, which has always been more emotionally complex than simple bravado. His melodic delivery tends toward a reflective sadness even when the lyrical content is triumphant; there's a melancholy embedded in his voice that functions as its own kind of credibility. He sounds like he's won at significant cost, which is a far more compelling self-portrait than simple victory.

Carti and the Body as Instrument

Playboi Carti's approach on Type Shit reflects his broader artistic evolution toward rhythm as primary value. His delivery is percussive in ways that treat his voice less as a lyrical vehicle and more as another element of the production. For listeners who find this approach abrasive, the appeal can be invisible; for those tuned into it, the physical energy of the delivery is the point entirely.

What the Collaboration Communicates

A track this densely stacked communicates something beyond its individual performances. The assembled cast signals mutual respect and shared position at the top of a particular hierarchy. Travis Scott in 2024 is one of the most commercially dominant artists in any genre; Future has been consistent across a 15-year run; Carti has become one of the more divisive but genuinely influential voices in experimental trap. Together they form a kind of informal panel on what "type shit" looks like in 2024.

The Audience It Addressed

The song's number 2 debut and 20 weeks on the Hot 100 suggest a massive and diverse audience, but at its core Type Shit is speaking to a community that invests deeply in hip-hop's internal quality debates. Who is operating at the highest level? Who has earned the right to self-designation? The 126 million YouTube views suggest those questions have wide appeal.

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