YG released The Gentlemen's Club on June 19 — 15 songs, 54 minutes — through his own 4Hunnid and 10K Projects. It's his first major-label arrangement in nearly five years, and crucially, his imprint sits on the marquee next to the distributor.
The take: the headline isn't that YG made a star-studded West Coast record. It's the deal structure. A veteran who spent years between major deals came back with his own label name on the release and a partner doing distribution — the difference between being signed and being in business.
The deal is the flex
The album dropped via 4Hunnid and 10K Projects, marking YG's first major-label deal in roughly five years. After a stretch of independence, he re-entered the system with his imprint intact rather than folded into someone else's. That's the ownership posture this brand watches for.
A coast-spanning guest list
The Gentlemen's Club features JID, Pusha T, Ab-Soul, Tyler, The Creator, Shoreline Mafia, Buddy, and more. "ON THE LOW" with Tyler and "HOLLYWOOD" with Shoreline Mafia anchor the L.A. side; the broader list shows YG still commands cross-regional respect.
Storytelling over sonics
Rolling Stone's review landed mixed — praising YG's vulnerability and the true-crime narrative on "HITMAN" while wanting more from the soundscape. The writing carried the record further than the beats, a reversal for an artist built on bounce.
A West Coast vet still maneuvering
YG has never been only a rapper — 4Hunnid has been a vehicle the whole way. The Gentlemen's Club is the sound of a veteran using a new distribution partner to fund his own house rather than rent space in someone else's. The album reviews will fade. The deal structure is the part that compounds.

