In an Instagram comment, Ocean clarified that the “unreleased 2020 project” circulating online in recent years is not a scrapped album of his and some of its tracks are inauthentic. He also explained the origin of the “LAUWIL” tagline, which some fans had mistaken for the title and rollout of his fifth album.
Read MoreFrank Ocean’s scrapped vinyl—originally intended to replace “Little Demon” orders in 2020—sold on eBay for a price that ranks it among the most expensive 7-inch singles ever sold on the site.
Read MoreThe unreleased 7-inch vinyl track has surfaced three years after Frank Ocean shelved its release due to the COVID-19 outbreak.
Read MoreEmails from Frank Ocean’s producers shed light on his 2016 album’s development, detailing changes made to several released and unreleased tracks between January 2014 and February 2015.
Read MoreA known hip-hop hacker took control of Frank Ocean’s Tumblr account for several hours, causing confusion.
Read MoreTwo snippets of what sound like new Frank Ocean songs have been posted online.
Read MoreThere’s no news yet for when these designs will be available.
Read MoreFrank's manager Christian Clancy says that the song is "fake," but the vocal sounds authentic. So we did a little more digging.
Read MoreThe past year has been good for new Frank Ocean tracks popping up on the web.
Read MoreThe community on KanyeToThe.com has been collecting rarities from Frank Ocean's songwriting days for a while now, but more and more tracks keep popping up.
Read MoreOver the years, numerous reference tracks have leaked out onto the Internet to be collected by fans.
Read MoreIn addition to being featured as a vocalist on this demo, Lonny wrote the track.
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