YeloHill & TKO – Dead Homies [Video]
YeloHill and TKO come out swinging on “Dead Homies” — a street-hymn built around that specific mix of grief, loyalty, and pressure that turns a memory into a mission.
The record arrives as a standalone drop with the official video landing on YeloHill’s channel, and the framing is clear from the jump: this is for the people who aren’t here anymore, and for the ones still carrying it.
Sonically, “Dead Homies” leans into that late-night, concrete-and-neon atmosphere where every line feels like it’s being delivered from the passenger seat. YeloHill keeps the energy grounded and direct, letting the words do the heavy lifting, while TKO brings that raw edge that makes the record feel less like a performance and more like a statement you’d never say unless you meant it. The hook lands like a vow—not melodramatic, just blunt, the kind of repetition that turns pain into routine. And the visual matches the mood: no overexplaining, no extra gloss, just presence, pacing, and a reminder that some songs aren’t “for the algorithm,” they’re for the circle.
If this is the tone they’re setting for 2026, then “Dead Homies” isn’t just a video drop—it’s a marker in the road, the kind that lets you know they’re locked in and not interested in making it easy on anybody.