King

Album: Bully (2026)
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Songfacts®:

  • "King" is the opening track on Bully, Kanye West's 12th album. The song sets out the album's central preoccupation: how one becomes a "king" in a world that can't quite decide whether to crown you or cancel you. Ye revisits familiar territory; the sense of being misunderstood, the isolation that followed his various controversies, and the long-standing belief, first sketched out somewhere between The College Dropout and "I Am a God" on Yeezus, that he occupies a category of one.
  • A much-discussed lyric references Kanye's interracial marriage to Australian architect Bianca Censori.

    I brought a white queen to the altar
    Couldn't happen without Martin Luther


    West is thanking Martin Luther King for paving the civil rights road that made his marriage to Bianca Censori possible.

    "White queen" doubles as both a literal nod to the wedding dress and because Bianca in Italian means white.

    Reactions, as are customary with Kanye, were divided. Some found it clumsy, others saw it as entirely on-brand; Ye has long enjoyed stitching together the personal and the epochal, often in ways that make you pause, rewind, and occasionally wince.
  • The track is built around "Reach for a Star" by Duke Edwards & The Youngones, a spoken-word piece released in 1968.

    The sampled line, "Nature in all her glory has named you her king," is folded into Ye's own coronation narrative. It's a classic bit of Kanye crate-digging: obscure, slightly left-field, and deployed with absolute confidence.
  • Ye produced "King" alongside The Legendary Traxster, a key figure in Chicago hip-hop in the 1990s alongside No ID. His resumé includes producing Twista's 1997 Platinum album Adrenaline Rush and Ludacris' "My Chick Bad" featuring Nicki Minaj.

    Traxster appears elsewhere on Bully, including the title track. He previously collaborated with Ye on his Vultures projects with Ty Dolla $ign, contributing to tracks such as "Burn" and "Field Trip."
  • As an opener, "King" functions as a mission statement. It continues a long Kanye tradition: beginning albums with a thesis. From the cinematic orchestral surge of "Dark Fantasy" - which opens My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy like a Hollywood epic announcing its own mythology - to the deliberately abrasive industrial jolt of "On Sight," which from the first few seconds tells you exactly how uncomfortable Yeezus is going to be, Ye has always liked to tell you, early on, what sort of journey you're in for. "King" does the same, only now the journey involves reputation, redemption, and the awkward question of whether declaring yourself royalty counts if half the kingdom is rolling its eyes.
  • West also concluded the Vultures 1 album with a track titled "King". While the Kanye and Ty Dolla $ign song plants its flag with a straightforward declaration, this cut circles the idea more cautiously, still confident, but tinged with the faint suspicion that crowns, once claimed, can be surprisingly heavy.

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