Why Is 'Bully' Not on Spotify? What Happened to the Kanye West Album?

Published 03/27/2026, 10:20 AM EDT

If anticipation were an art form, Kanye West would have already staged a retrospective. For nearly nineteen months, West has teased 'Bully' with the precision of a slow-burn spectacle. Beginning in September 2024, the album has lingered in previews, whispers, and carefully timed reveals.

The buildup has been anything but ordinary, even by West’s standards. Positioned as his twelfth studio album, Bully promises a self-produced, no-AI approach that leans into raw, melodic introspection. Tracks like ‘Preacher Man’ and ‘Beauty and the Beast’ have surfaced as proof of concept, hinting at themes of faith, family, and reflection, reportedly shaped during time spent in Tokyo.

Yet on March 27, fans expecting yet another unbeatable Kanye West album found confusion instead and are now scrambling to understand why 'Bully' has still not arrived.

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

Why Kanye West's Bully has not been released yet?

The simplest explanation may also be the most accurate: Kanye West likely did not meet the widely expected March 27 release deadline for 'Bully'. The album’s absence from Spotify and other major streaming platforms strongly suggests a last-minute delay. While no official statement confirms this outright, the missing release speaks louder than any announcement.

What is confirmed, however, is that several expected rollout events did not proceed as planned. A report from the NFR podcast indicated that global listening parties scheduled a day earlier were canceled and the reason stated was West's dissatisfaction with the music. At the same time, West did premiere the album through a YouTube livestream shortly after midnight, though the video was quickly unlisted, adding to the confusion.

The reasons behind this delay remain speculative, but there are strong indications pointing to creative revisions. Earlier versions of 'Bully' faced criticism for incorporating AI-generated vocals. In response, West publicly committed to delivering a 'no AI' album, which likely required re-recording multiple tracks with authentic vocals, a process that can significantly extend production timelines.

Kanye West Net Worth 2026: How Rich In His New 'Bully' Era?

Yet, this move by Kanye West feels more familiar to fans than any track he has previewed so far.

Kanye West's obsession with 'living' albums

For Kanye West, the calendar has always been more decorative than directive. ‘The College Dropout’ missed its January 27 engagement and arrived fashionably on February 10, while ‘Late Registration’ drifted from July 12 to August 30, all in the name of artistic improvement. What began as perfectionism has since matured into a rather reliable habit.

By February 2016, ‘The Life of Pablo’ made punctuality seem almost quaint. Scheduled for February 11, it appeared days later and then refused to settle, continuing to evolve after release. ‘Donda’ elevated this tendency to spectacle, slipping from July 24, 2020 to August 29, 2021, with stadium performances serving as both delay and distraction.

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

Even abandoned or troubled projects reflect this tendency toward perpetual reworking. ‘Yandhi’ was delayed repeatedly before being scrapped and reimagined as ‘Jesus Is King’, while ‘Vultures 1’ and ‘Vultures 2’ faced rollout issues ranging from sample clearances to unfinished releases that were updated after launch. In each case, delay was framed less as failure and more as an evolving pursuit of perfection.

At this stage, West’s relationship with time appears almost deliberately fluid, where improvement often overrides immediacy. The result is a catalog shaped as much by its revisions as its releases, blurring the line between process and product, and perhaps ‘Bully’ is simply the latest example of that same instinct at work.

Kanye West Documentary on Netflix: Rapper’s Rare Intimate Moments, Controversies and More

ADVERTISEMENT

Article continues below this ad

Do you think 'Bully' will release any time soon? Let us know in teh comments!

SHARE THIS ARTICLE :

ADVERTISEMENT

Iffat Siddiqui

862 articles

Iffat is an Entertainment Journalist at Netflix Junkie. A word wizard, she had the sorting hat smoke at the seams owing to her excellence in everything Hollywood and cinema until it finally declared that she belonged to the Royals, specifically Meghan Markle. Boasting over 300 articles (and counting), each one tastefully infused with the right mix of facts, wit, opinion, and essentially everything to make a perfect pop culture piece, she is the epitome of a trustworthy entertainment journalist.

Edited By: Hriddhi Maitra

ADVERTISEMENT

ADVERTISEMENT

EDITORS' PICK