Kanye Westis ramping up his comeback.
Months after the controversialrapper, now known as Ye,took out afull-page ad in the Wall Street Journalto apologize for previous hateful remarks, he's announcing a live performance in Los Angeles.Ye willplay SoFi Stadium in the Southern California city on April 3, according tothe venue's website.
The show, billed "Ye Live in Los Angeles," is described as the only performance in the city in a promo image for the event. A website associated with the concert offers little more information except a directive to pre-save "Bully," the name of his upcoming album.
Previously released preview EPs under the same name were dropped bythe rapperin June 2025. A video posted tothe artist's Instagram storiesalsotakes you to a pagewith the album's title. The album is set for release in late March.
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Look back on Ye's life and career, from his marriage and divorce from Kim Kardashian to his polarizing political statements. Here, Ye and Bianca Censori attend the 67th Grammy Awards on Feb. 2, 2025, in Los Angeles." style="max-width:100%; height:auto; border-radius:6px; margin:10px 0;" loading="lazy" />
See Kanye West, Ye, the polarizing rapper, fashion mogul
Born Kanye Omari West, Ye transformed himself from a college dropout in Chicago to an undisputable icon of music and fashion. But a string of controversies has the rapper facing a fallout. In October 2022, several companies, including Adidas and Balenciaga fashion house,cut ties with the starafter he made antisemitic remarks.Look back on Ye's life and career, from his marriage and divorce from Kim Kardashian to his polarizing political statements. Here, Ye and Bianca Censori attend the 67th Grammy Awards on Feb. 2, 2025, in Los Angeles.
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News of the concert comes on the heels of a tumultuousfew years for Ye, once a titan of the genre, who has since become better known for public outbursts on social media deriding both Jewish and Black people. He has lauded Adolf Hitler with the release of a song titled "Heil Hitler," sold clothing emblazoned with the swastika symbol through his clothing company Yeezy and used pro-Nazi language in his social media posts and tirades.
The rapper is also facingallegations of sexual misconductandharassment. He has denied wrongdoing.
In an apology letter featured in a Wall Street Journal advertisement in January, Ye said his mental health history – including a diagnosis ofbipolar disorderand a four-month manic episode that took place in the first half of 2025 – was what allegedly fueled his "reckless" behavior.
"When you're manic, you really don't think that you're sick," he told Vanity Fair in an interview at the time. "You think that everyone else is deeply overreacting. You feel like you're seeing the world so much more clearly on things, when in reality you're losing your grip entirely."
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY:Ye to play show at Los Angeles stadium after apology for antisemitism