Ye (Kanye West) & Ty Dolla $ign May Be Rolling Out “New Body” With Ice Spice Verse

LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA - NOVEMBER 04: Ice Spice attends the Kate Spade New York and NYLON "Holiday Duo-ets" hosted celebration at Chateau Marmont on November 04, 2025 in Los Angeles, California.
LOS ANGELES, CALIFORNIA – NOVEMBER 04: Ice Spice attends the Kate Spade New York and NYLON “Holiday Duo-ets” hosted celebration at Chateau Marmont on November 04, 2025 in Los Angeles, California. (Photo by Rodin Eckenroth/Getty Images)

Among longtime followers of hip-hop leaks, Ye (formerly known as Kanye West) and Ty Dolla $ign’s “New Body” has remained a lingering point of curiosity since it first surfaced in 2018. The record includes Nicki Minaj, though it has never arrived in official form, largely because her clearance for release has not been granted. Over the years, anticipation around the track has gradually softened into resignation, as listeners have watched it drift further from any clear release plan.

During a recent Ty Dolla $ign livestream, that quiet stalemate briefly shifted again. He played a portion of the song before stopping suddenly when a different vocal section appeared. The voice heard is not Nicki Minaj and instead resembles Ice Spice, sparking speculation online widely. The moment quickly circulated, though it offered little clarity about the song’s final structure or direction.

Unfinished, Unreleased, Still in the Conversation

Whether this change reflects a replacement, an experiment, or simply an unfinished edit remains unresolved. Neither Ye nor Ty Dolla $ign has offered details about a formal release strategy. The uncertainty has only deepened the track’s unusual life cycle, where partial versions circulate almost as widely as fully finished records in online spaces. No release timeline has been announced publicly yet.

Despite the lack of clarity, interest in the collaboration has persisted, sustained largely by periodic resurfacing across digital platforms and fan discussion threads. It reflects a broader pattern in contemporary music, where unreleased material can maintain visibility long after its initial recording. Even without clarity, the track continues to occupy space in conversations about both artists involved. Each fragment renews attention when it reappears online among listeners and discussions continue growing. It ultimately highlights how unfinished collaborations can sustain cultural interest over extended periods of time.


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