Champain & Vacay
by Travis Scott (featuring Don Toliver)

Album: Jackboys 2 (2025)
Charted: 60 53
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Songfacts®:

  • "Champain & Vacay" is a 2025 single by Travis Scott released as part of the album Jackboys 2.

    Scott's chorus centers on a woman who isn't into the usual flashy stuff like vacations and champagne. She's not chasing luxury or trying to impress anyone, preferring to "go hard in the damn paint."

    Now, for those of you not fluent in the arcane dialects of urban parlance, "going hard in the paint" is a basketball term for getting down and dirty in the thick of it, being aggressive. So, basically, she's a go-getter, a grinder, a woman who isn't afraid to get her hands dirty to achieve her aims. And that is precisely why Scott finds her so utterly captivating.
  • The verse is vintage Travis Scott, with flexes about success, nightlife, and loyalty, and quick references to private jets and luxury cars.

    But then it gets juicy as Scott responds to Pusha T's diss on the Clipse song "So Be It." The beef stems from a trip La Flame took to the Louis Vuitton HQ in Paris, where Clipse were working with Pharrell Williams on music. Scott played some tracks from his then-forthcoming album Utopia. Only he didn't preview Drake's verse on the song "Meltdown," which contains disses aimed at both Pusha and Pharrell. When the full version of "Meltdown" came out, Pusha wasn't amused. Cue "So Be It," and a whole lot of lyrical shade.

    So, how did Travis Scott respond? With a kind of nonchalant dismissal.

    Yeah, man, I swear these old n----s kill me
    Know my YNs feel me
    They just want the real me, yeah
    Blue Bugatti, I'm dodgin' TMZ
    Made a hundred off pushin' T's
    Now my phone on DND, yeah


    Let's break that down:

    "Old n---s kill me": Scott mocks Pusha T's age and veteran status in hip-hop.

    "Made a hundred off pushin' T's": This line is a play on words. It references Scott's own business ventures (selling his Cactus Jack T-shirts) while alluding to Pusha T's name, insinuating that Scott has profited by "pushing T's" (T-shirts), not substances or drama.

    "Dodgin' TMZ": This may recall a threat from Pusha's "So Be It," where he hinted at possessing video evidence that could have been leaked to TMZ, a threat Scott brushes off like a speck of lint on his designer jacket.

    The overall vibe here isn't one of outright hostility, mind you. It's more of a dismissive, playful shove. Scott is emphasizing that Pusha T's critiques don't faze him and casting Push as an out-of-touch antagonist.
  • Don Toliver provides melodic vocals at the end of the verse and then sings the second chorus, while fellow American rapper Waka Flocka Flame spits ad-libs throughout. It ends with a spoken outro by Bun B, which nods to rap history and tour life.
  • Bbykobe, Mcenvoy and Kesh created the psychedelic trap production.

    Bbykobe (real name Evan Kobe Hood) also has the sole production credit on another Jackboys 2 track, "PBT." His resumé includes high-profile collaborations with artists like Kanye West and Ty Dolla Sign ("Fuk Sumn") and Don Toliver ("Tore Up," "Attitude," "Geeked Up").

    Vancouver producer Mcenvoy's other credits include Drake and 21 Savage's "Hours In Silence."

    Kesh's other placements include Skepta and Flo Milli's "Why Lie?"

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