Music

Megan Thee Stallion Reveals She’s Not Signed to a Label Ahead of New Album

"I don’t want to sign to a new label right now because I just want to do it myself," she said

Published by

Megan Thee Stallion is entering her independent era.

Amid her legal battle with label 1501 Certified Entertainment, Megan Thee Stallion went on Instagram Live Thursday and revealed that she is not currently signed to anyand is self-funding her upcoming music project.

“This part of my album is definitely very much funded by Megan Thee Stallion because we’re trying to get off… Y’all know what’s the tea. But I have no label right now,” she said. “We’re doing everything funded straight out of Megan Thee Stallion’s pockets.”

“The budget is coming from me. Motherfucking Hot Girl Productions! The next shit y’all about to see is all straight from Megan Thee Stallion’s brain, Megan Thee Stallion’s wallet,” she added. “We in my pockets, hotties, so let’s do our big one.”

The singer said she’s still looking for a new label but that she’s “excited” to be dropping music on her own. “I don’t want to sign to a new label right now because I just want to do it myself.”

Megan Thee Stallion gives fans an update on her upcoming album; says she’s footing the bill while still fighting to get out of the record deal with 1501.

“I have no label right now, we’re doing everything funded straight out of Megan Thee Stallion’s pocket.” pic.twitter.com/5vOmVvLiLY— Mílagro (@MobzWorld) October 13, 2023

In a complaint filed last August, Megan asked a Harris County judge to declare that Traumazine, her new album released Aug. 12, along with Something for Thee Hotties “both constitute an ‘album’ as defined in the parties’ recording agreement,’ to satisfy the agreements of her contract with 1501. She also asked for at least $1 million in damages, upping the ante after her first lawsuit asked for non-monetary damage.

According to Pete, she’s the victim of a “tortured” relationship with 1501 that was first outlined in an initial legal battle with 1501 dating back to March 2020. She’s been very public about her efforts to remove herself from her “unconscionable” contract signed with the independentowned by ex-professional baseball player Carl Crawford.

In filings reviewed by Rolling Stone, the label argued that the relationship started to sour when Pete hired Roc Nation as her management firm in September 2019. Pete says Roc Nation simply helped her understand for the first time that her 1501 contract was not in keeping with industry norms. Instead of the standard 50-50 split of recording profits, Pete’s initial deal gave the label 60 percent of her recording income – with payments to outside parties such as producers coming out of her paycheck. The initial contract also gave the label a 30 percent chunk of her touring and merchandising profits.

“When I got with Roc Nation, I got management – real management – and real lawyers,” Pete said in a March 2020 video posted on Twitter. “They were like, ‘Do you know that this is in your contract?’ And I was like, ‘Oh, damn, that’s crazy. No, I didn’t know.’”

From Rolling Stone US.

Recent Posts

Tiger Baby Records Debuts an Album Made the Old-School Way

City Sessions aims to be a love letter to the analog age in a world…

May 10, 2025

Bengaluru Gets a New Gig Series for Underground Music

Phantom Pulse brings together the band XrepeatX, industrial act Essenar Zero and seasoned collective Indian…

May 10, 2025

Rap Recap: Rawal, Dino James, Panther and All The Hip-Hop Releases We’re Digging

From Kerala artist GWS to Odisha’s Azaad, Meghalaya’s A’hosea and more

May 9, 2025

What to Check Out at this Upcoming Global Festival for K-Culture Lovers

From an exciting lineup of K-pop performances to immersive exhibits and global industry insights, this…

May 9, 2025

Hamza Rahimtula and Rajasthan Folkstars’ ‘Origins’ Album Was a Decade in The Making

The DJ-producer and folk artists performed in India and France last year

May 9, 2025

Ed Sheeran Builds an ‘Old Phone’ Pub for Small New England Town in New Video

The documentary-style short shows Sheeran watching fans’ footage from their old phones, too

May 9, 2025