Yeat feat. King Kylie – Let King Tonka Talk [Audio]
Yeat throws a curveball on “Let King Tonka Talk,” a slick, left-field single that feels less like a routine drop than a deliberate jolt to the “ADL” rollout.
The track arrived today as a 3:01 standalone release through Lyfestyle Corporation, Field Trip Recordings, and Capitol Records, with the official audio already live on DSPs. Taken from Yeat’s upcoming album, “ADL,” landing on March 27, 2026.
What gives the record its intrigue is the guest billing. King Kylie is Kylie Jenner’s musical alias, and her appearance instantly shifts the song from a standard Yeat release into something stranger, more online, and more conversation-starting by design. That kind of wildcard move fits Yeat’s orbit unusually well: he has always thrived on building his own language and universe, and “Let King Tonka Talk” feels like another example of him bending pop-culture chaos into part of the aesthetic. The production comes from Dylan Brady, Lucid, and Daniel Chetrit, which helps explain why the track feels glossy, off-center, and slightly unstable in a way that keeps it interesting.
More importantly, the song does what a late-rollout single is supposed to do. It does not spell out the whole “ADL” vision, but it adds another sharp piece to the picture and keeps the anticipation climbing. With the album now just a week away, “Let King Tonka Talk” lands like one last provocation before the full project arrives—flashy, odd, and calculated enough to make sure everybody is paying attention.