Collaborators
FEATURED ARTISTS
40+ collaborators across Don's discography — 35 artists across 105 songs
Top Collaborators
3+ songs
Born Jacques Bermon Webster II in Missouri City, Houston in 1991, Travis Scott is the founder of Cactus Jack Records and the single most important artist in Don Toliver's career. After hearing the unreleased 'Diva' demo in 2018, Travis signed Don to Cactus Jack and immediately featured him on Astroworld's 'Can't Say' — the breakout moment that introduced Don's signature woozy croon to a global audience. Their creative partnership has only deepened since: Travis appears on 'Euphoria,' additional vocals on 'After Party,' and 'Spaceship' across Heaven or Hell, then 'Flocky Flocky' and 'You' on Life of a Don, 'Embarrassed' on the Love Sick deluxe, 'Ice Age' and 'Inside' on Hardstone Psycho, and 'Rosary' on Octane. Beyond the album cuts, Travis and Don anchor every JackBoys release together — from the 2019 self-titled compilation through JackBoys 2 in 2025 — and tour as a unit on Astroworld, Utopia, and Circus Maximus runs. Travis's own catalog (Rodeo, Birds in the Trap Sing McKnight, Astroworld, Utopia) reshaped 2010s-2020s hip-hop with its psychedelic, autotuned maximalism, and that aesthetic DNA runs straight through Don's solo work. The two share producers (Mike Dean, WondaGurl, Cubeatz, Cardo), engineers (206Derek), and a Houston-rooted sonic worldview that treats melody and atmosphere as primary tools. More than a labelmate, Travis is Don's mentor, frequent co-writer, and the architect of his commercial trajectory.

Born Khadimou Rassoul Cheikh Fall in Harlem in 1998, Sheck Wes is a Senegalese-American rapper whose 2018 viral single 'Mo Bamba' became one of the defining street anthems of the late 2010s. He was signed to Cactus Jack in February 2018 — the same year as Don — making him one of the original three flagship artists alongside Don and Travis. With four Don features, Sheck is one of the most-recurring voices in the catalog. He appears on Heaven or Hell's 'Spaceship' (with Travis), JackBoys' 'GANG GANG,' then returns across JackBoys 2 ('Velour,' '2000 Excursion'), confirming his status as a permanent Cactus Jack rotation player. His abrasive, shouted delivery sits in deliberate contrast to Don's melodic croon — a sonic foil that gives every track they share its dramatic dynamic range. Outside Cactus Jack, Sheck's solo catalog is anchored by Mudboy (2018) and a smaller follow-up output, but his label-cohort presence remains his most important cultural footprint. The Don-and-Sheck pairing represents Cactus Jack's original-class chemistry — two 2018 signees who built the label's early identity together.

Born Nayvadius DeMun Wilburn in Atlanta in 1983, Future is the most prolific and influential melodic trap rapper of his generation — the architect of DS2, Hndrxx, the Monster mixtape, and a catalog whose autotuned-narcotic vocal approach is arguably the closest spiritual ancestor to Don's own style. The two finally connected in studio for Love Sick's 'Private Landing' (2023, alongside Justin Bieber) — a Toto-'Africa'-interpolating skybound R&B record co-produced by Cardo, Rob Bisel, Omar Guetfa, and 206Derek that became one of the album's signature crossover moments. They reunited for Hardstone Psycho's 'Purple Rain' (2024, with Metro Boomin and Zaytoven) and again on JackBoys 2's 'Cant Stop' (2025, with newest Cactus Jack signee Wallie the Sensei). Don also opened Future's One Big Party Tour before launching his own Love Sick Tour, deepening their on-stage partnership. Future's catalog (DS2, Evol, Future, Hndrxx, the WIZRD, I Never Liked You, We Don't Trust You with Metro) has redefined what mainstream rap can sound like; his presence on three Don records positions Don squarely inside that lineage as a successor-not-imitator.

Born Aaron Thomas in Beaumont, Texas, Teezo Touchdown is the genre-bending experimentalist whose 2023 debut How Do You Sleep at Night? (RCA) blended punk, R&B, soul, hip-hop, and post-hardcore into one of the most distinctive rookie albums of the year — and whose nail-encrusted hairstyle and theatrical aesthetic made him one of pop's most visually arresting new figures. His Beaumont-Houston roots place him in the same East Texas lineage as Don. With three Don features — 'Luckily I'm Having' on the Love Sick deluxe (2023, produced by Cardo), 'Backstreets' on Hardstone Psycho (2024), and 'All the Signs' on Octane (2026) — Teezo is one of Don's most-recurring collaborators outside the Cactus Jack roster. His high, expressive vocal sits in deliberate contrast to Don's lower croon, and the trio of records together represents one of the most artistically adventurous feature-relationships in Don's catalog. Teezo's broader catalog (Tickle My Heart, the Travis-featuring Modern Jam guest spot, How Do You Sleep at Night?) and his Beyoncé / Tyler the Creator co-signs position him as one of the most genre-fluid voices of his generation; his three-track Don run is a small masterclass in cross-genre R&B-rap collaboration.
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Born in Tulsa, Oklahoma in 1953, Charlie Wilson is a four-time Grammy-nominated R&B legend best known as the lead singer of The Gap Band — the funk-soul institution behind 'Outstanding,' 'You Dropped a Bomb on Me,' and 'Yearning for Your Love' — and as Snoop Dogg's longtime collaborator and uncle-figure. His timeless tenor anchors two of Don's most-prized records: 'If I Had' on Love Sick (2023, produced by DJ Dahi) and 'Attitude' on Hardstone Psycho (2024, with Cash Cobain). That Wilson — at 70+ years old and decades into a career that reshaped 80s funk and 2000s hip-hop hooks — chose to lend his voice to Don's records is a rare cross-generational stamp of approval. His phrasing on both tracks bridges Don's Houston narcotic-soul to the gospel-rooted R&B tradition Wilson helped define, gesturing toward the same lineage that runs through Snoop, Kanye, and Pharrell records of the 2000s. Wilson's solo catalog (Charlie, Last Name Wilson, Uncle Charlie, Just Charlie, Love, Charlie, In It to Win It) and Gap Band years make him the elder statesman of any room he enters; 'If I Had' and 'Attitude' confirm Don as a serious modern R&B vocalist worthy of that kind of pairing.


Born Karly-Marina Loaiza in Alexandria, Virginia in 1994 to Colombian parents, Kali Uchis is a Latin-Grammy-winning singer whose albums Isolation (2018), Sin Miedo (del Amor y Otros Demonios) (2020), Red Moon in Venus (2023), and Orquídeas (2024) have made her one of the defining bilingual R&B-pop voices of her generation. She and Don began dating in 2020 and welcomed their first child — a son — in March 2024, making her not just his most artistically intimate collaborator but the central figure in his personal life. Their on-record chemistry has produced three pillar tracks: 'Drugs n Hella Melodies' on Life of a Don (2021, with the music video filmed in Colombia), '4 Me' on Love Sick (2023, sequenced as the album's romantic centerpiece and built on a Beenie Man 'Girls Dem Sugar' interpolation), and Don's reciprocal feature on 'Fantasy' from Red Moon in Venus that same year. Kali typically functions as Don's most concept-driven foil — pulling him toward bossa nova, bolero, and lo-fi soul textures he rarely visits otherwise. The Don-and-Kali partnership is one of the most quietly influential modern R&B couples, blending Houston narcotic-soul with Latin-pop sophistication.

Born Kiari Kendrell Cephus in Lawrenceville, Georgia in 1991, Offset is the third Migos member and — through his marriage to Cardi B and his solo run on Father of 4 (2019) and Set It Off (2023) — one of the most recognizable trap voices of his generation. He and Quavo together appear on 'Had Enough,' Don's breakout JackBoys / Heaven or Hell rap-feature record. The track, produced by the Cactus Jack production circle, marked Don's first time trading verses with rappers of Migos's chart stature, and Offset's clipped, percussive cadence sits in deliberate contrast to Don's smoke-and-syrup hook. Issued as part of the December 2019 JackBoys compilation rollout, 'Had Enough' became a fixture of Cactus Jack's live show and one of the songs that set the template for Don's rap-adjacent melodic identity. While Offset hasn't returned for additional Don solo cuts, his presence on that record places him in the small handful of artists who were on the runway when Don took off — a 2019-2020 inflection point that turned a Houston unknown into a charting Cactus Jack flagship.

Born Quavious Keyate Marshall in Athens, Georgia in 1991, Quavo is the co-founder of Migos — the trio (with Offset and the late Takeoff) whose triplet flow and ad-lib vocabulary reset trap rap in the mid-2010s. As a long-running Travis Scott collaborator (Huncho Jack, Jack Huncho with Travis in 2017), Quavo was a natural early Cactus Jack-orbit co-sign for Don. He joins Offset on 'Had Enough' from JackBoys (Dec 2019, later included on Heaven or Hell) — Don's first major rap-feature record, an on-the-rise moment that put Don's hook-craft in conversation with two of the most-streamed rappers of the decade. The track became a fan favorite from the Astroworld-era Cactus Jack run and helped define the post-Astroworld 'JackBoys sound' of brooding melodic verses over Mike Dean-mixed beats. Outside Don's catalog, Quavo's discography includes Migos's Culture trilogy, his solo Quavo Huncho (2018), Rocket Power (2023), and a steady run of features that made him one of the most-charted hook-singers of his era. His role on 'Had Enough' remains a template for how Don's voice fits inside trap's call-and-response architecture.

Born Noah Olivier Smith in Irvine, California in 2000 (Portland-via-LA-based), Yeat is a rage-trap pioneer whose Up 2 Më, 2 Alive, AftërLyfe, and 2093 albums made him one of the most genre-defining new voices of the early 2020s — an artist whose rumbling 808s, autotuned shouts, and 'twizzy' vocabulary built an entire subgenre. He shares Bnyx as a producer with Don, making the collaboration sonically inevitable. Yeat joined Don on the Hardstone Psycho deluxe cut 'Geeked Up' (2024), the standalone single 'Heavy Stunts' (2024), and Octane's 'Rendezvous' (2026) — making him one of Don's most-recurring rap-orbit collaborators across the post-Love-Sick era. His abrasive rage-trap energy provides the perfect foil to Don's narcotic-soul croon, and the three-track run represents Don's most committed engagement with the post-2022 rage scene. Yeat's broader catalog and his role as the de facto leader of the Bnyx-orbit rage-trap movement positions him as one of the most influential voices of his generation; his Don collaborations confirm Don's willingness to evolve sonically alongside the genre's leading edge.

Born Hykeem Jamaal Carter Jr. in Las Vegas in 2000 (raised in Carson, CA), Baby Keem is a PgLang-affiliated rapper-producer (and Kendrick Lamar's cousin) whose 2021 debut The Melodic Blue won the Grammy for Best Rap Performance ('Family Ties' with Kendrick) and made him one of the most-watched new rap voices of the early 2020s. His DIY-leaning production aesthetic — built on chopped vocal samples, beat-switches, and unconventional song structures — made him a natural Don collaborator. Keem co-produced and featured on 'Outerspace' from Life of a Don (Oct 2021) — a Mike-Dean-co-mixed cut that places Don's vocals inside Keem's signature off-kilter beat-architecture. Don then reciprocated with a feature on Keem's 'Cocoa' from The Melodic Blue (Sep 2021), making the two-record exchange one of the cleanest cross-album collaborations in either artist's catalog. Keem's broader catalog (Die for My Bitch mixtape, The Melodic Blue) and his PgLang-affiliated artistic discipline place him inside the most-curated post-Kendrick rap orbit; his Don pairing is one of the more aesthetically adventurous moments in either career.

Born Christopher Brent Wood in Columbia, Maryland in 1995, Brent Faiyaz is a singer-producer whose Sonder-affiliated breakthrough Sonder Son (2017) and his solo Lost (2020), Wasteland (2022), and Larger Than Life (2023) established him as one of the most-influential post-Frank-Ocean R&B voices of his generation — an artist whose breathy, conversational vocal and minimalist production aesthetic have shaped the entire late-2010s and 2020s alt-R&B landscape. He featured on (and co-produced) Love Sick's 'Bus Stop' (2023, with Hit-Boy) — one of the album's crispest R&B fusions and a record that placed two of the post-Frank-Ocean generation's most distinctive vocalists in direct duet. The pairing was also one of Love Sick's most-anticipated features given how rarely Brent appears as a guest on other artists' projects. Brent's broader catalog and his careful gatekeeping of his own appearances makes the 'Bus Stop' collaboration one of Don's most prestigious R&B co-signs — a record that positions Don inside the most-curated end of contemporary R&B alongside artists like Steve Lacy, SZA, and Daniel Caesar.

Born Cashmere Small in The Bronx in 1996, Cash Cobain is a NYC sample-drill innovator whose Pretty Girls Love Slizzy and Play Cash Cobain projects helped invent the 'sexy drill' aesthetic — a slower, more sensual NYC drill subgenre that's reshaped 2020s East Coast rap. He's also an in-demand producer whose work spans Bay Swag, Chow Lee, and a deep bench of NYC artists. He features on (and produces) Hardstone Psycho's 'Attitude' (2024, with Charlie Wilson) — a rare double-credit feature that places Cash's signature sexy-drill aesthetic inside Don's narcotic-soul template, and pairs both with Charlie Wilson's gospel-rooted R&B tenor. He also co-produces 'Ice Age' on the same album, deepening the production relationship. Cash's broader catalog and his role as one of NYC drill's most-creative new voices makes the 'Attitude' collaboration a meaningful cross-regional moment in the Hardstone Psycho rollout — a record that pulls Don into NYC's post-2022 sexy-drill conversation while preserving his Houston-rooted vocal core.

Born in Houston, Dice Soho is a Houston rapper whose 2010s catalog established him as one of the more distinctive new voices in the post-Sauce-Walka Houston rap scene. His Houston roots make him a natural Don collaborator from the pre-Cactus-Jack era. He features on 'Holdin' Steel' (2018, from Don's pre-fame mixtape Donny Womack) — one of Don's earliest pre-fame collaborations and a record that captures both artists in their earliest creative phases. The track sits inside the small but important pre-Cactus-Jack Don catalog that documented his Houston-rap origins before the 2018 Travis Scott signing transformed his trajectory. Dice Soho's broader catalog and his role as one of the more distinctive new Houston rap voices of the late 2010s makes the 'Holdin' Steel' collaboration a meaningful early-Don artifact — a record that documents the Houston rap network from which Don emerged before his Cactus Jack era began.

Born Tahliah Debrett Barnett in Cheltenham, England in 1988, FKA Twigs is the British art-pop singer-dancer-producer whose LP1 (2014), Magdalene (2019), Caprisongs (2022), and Eusexua (2025) albums established her as one of the most-distinctive avant-pop voices of her generation — a Mercury-nominated, multiple-Grammy-nominated artist whose work spans pop, electronic, R&B, and performance art. Her additional vocals appear on Hardstone Psycho's opener 'Kryptonite' (2024) — a record that places her unmistakable upper-register vocal inside the album's most cinematic opening moment. The pairing represents one of the most aesthetically ambitious moves in the Hardstone Psycho rollout and signals Don's interest in operating across the alt-pop / R&B border that few rap-orbit artists ever cross. Twigs's broader catalog and her status as one of the most-critically-respected art-pop voices of her generation makes the 'Kryptonite' contribution a meaningful sonic-art moment in the Hardstone Psycho production — a record that confirms Don's place inside the more curatorial, alt-leaning end of contemporary R&B-rap.

Born Gloria Hallelujah Woods in Memphis in 1999, GloRilla is the breakout star whose 2022 single 'F.N.F. (Let's Go)' (with Hitkidd) and 'Tomorrow 2' (with Cardi B) made her one of the most-streamed new rappers of the early 2020s. Her CMG/Interscope debut Anyways, Life's Great… and 2024 Glorious cemented her as the leading new voice in Memphis rap. She joins Lil Durk on 'Leave the Club' from Love Sick (2023, produced by OZ) — one of the album's hardest cuts and the only Don record to feature her. Her percussive, snarling cadence sits in stark contrast to Don's smoke-and-syrup hook, producing one of Love Sick's most stylistically ambitious moments. The pairing also signals Don's interest in the post-2022 wave of female rappers who reshaped streaming consumption patterns. GloRilla's broader catalog (Anyways, Life's Great…, Ehhthang Ehhthang, Glorious) has produced multiple platinum singles and Grammy nominations; her single Don feature remains a high-energy standout from one of his most successful albums.

HVN is a Cactus Jack-adjacent affiliate whose footprint across Don Toliver's catalog is small but symbolically meaningful. He joins fellow Cactus Jack signee SoFaygo on 'Smoke' from Life of a Don (Oct 2021) — a track that exists primarily to give a younger generation of the label's roster a co-sign moment on Don's biggest commercial album to date. His presence on the song positions HVN within the post-2020 wave of Cactus Jack-orbit talent that Travis began curating after the Astroworld run, and slots Don into the role of in-house elder-statesman willing to share his platform with newer voices. Outside the Don orbit, HVN's solo output remains low-profile — placing his Life of a Don appearance among the more sought-after deep cuts in his discography. 'Smoke' itself functions as a roster-cohort moment more than a chart play, the kind of inside-the-camp record that defines Cactus Jack as a creative collective rather than a one-artist label. HVN's appearance is a small but real piece of that camp's mythology.

Born James Blake Litherland in London in 1988, James Blake is the British electronic producer-singer whose self-titled 2011 debut helped invent post-dubstep alt-soul and whose subsequent Overgrown, The Colour in Anything, Assume Form, Friends That Break Your Heart, and Playing Robots into Heaven albums established him as one of his generation's most distinctive electronic auteurs. He's also a in-demand producer for Beyoncé, Frank Ocean, Travis Scott, and Kendrick Lamar. He produced and sang on two key Love Sick records — 'Let Her Go' and 'Slow Motion' (the latter with Wizkid) (both 2023) — representing Don's most explicit alt-soul / IDM crossover and one of the most artistically ambitious moves in the Love Sick rollout. Blake's spare, harmonically adventurous production sits beautifully against Don's narcotic-soul vocal, and the two records together broaden Don's sonic palette in ways few other producer-collaborators have managed. Blake's broader catalog and his Mercury-nominated, Grammy-winning critical reputation makes the two-track Don collaboration one of the most prestigious sonic-art statements of Love Sick — a record that confirms Don's place inside the more curatorial, alt-leaning end of contemporary R&B.

Born in London, Ontario in 1994, Justin Bieber is one of the defining pop superstars of the 21st century — the architect of My World, Believe, Purpose, Changes, and Justice, and one of streaming's most-consumed artists. His recurring chemistry with Don spans three records: 'Don't Go' (2021, with Skrillex co-leading) gave Don his first dance-crossover hit; 'Honest' (2022, the standalone single that peaked at #44 on the Hot 100) deepened the partnership; and 'Private Landing' on Love Sick (2023, with Future) put both vocalists on a Toto-'Africa'-interpolating sky-bound R&B production. The Bieber-and-Don pairing is one of pop's quietly enduring duets of the 2020s — both artists share a willingness to blend R&B, dance, and pop melody, and both have producer relationships (Skrillex, Mike Dean, the Internet Money network) that overlap meaningfully. Their three records form a small but commercially significant arc that helped position Don as a credible pop crossover artist beyond the rap sphere. Bieber's catalog and his post-Purpose pivot toward R&B-flavored pop made him an obvious Don-orbit ally; the records they made together remain among Don's most-streamed non-Travis collaborations.

Born Janae Wherry in Dallas in 2000, Kaash Paige is an R&B singer whose 2019 viral single 'Love Songs' and her subsequent Teenage Fever (2020) and Soft Tendencies projects established her as one of the most distinctive new R&B voices of the early 2020s — an artist whose breathy, conversational vocal aesthetic places her inside the post-Frank-Ocean alt-R&B tradition. She joined Travis and Don on Heaven or Hell's 'Euphoria' (2020) — one of the album's most-prized R&B-leaning cuts and a record that placed Paige's voice alongside the two flagship Cactus Jack vocalists. The pairing represents one of the early-career signal moments for both Paige (gaining a platform on Don's debut album) and Don (sharing a record with Travis on his own album for the first time). Paige's broader catalog and her role as one of the most-promising new alt-R&B voices of her generation makes the 'Euphoria' feature a meaningful Heaven-or-Hell-era touchstone — a record that confirmed Don's debut as an artistically ambitious project beyond its trap-rap commercial center.

Born Bill Kapri (formerly Dieuson Octave) in Pompano Beach, Florida in 1997, Kodak Black is one of the most distinctive Florida rap voices of his generation — a singer-rapper whose Painting Pictures, Dying to Live, and Back for Everything albums made him a perennial chart presence and whose catalog ('Tunnel Vision,' 'Roll in Peace,' 'ZEZE,' 'Super Gremlin') runs deep with platinum hits. He delivered 'Brother Stone' on Hardstone Psycho (2024) — a slow, narcotic Florida-meets-Houston hybrid that ranks among the album's standout features — then returned for 'Florida Flow' alongside Travis Scott on JackBoys 2 (2025). The two-track, two-album run with Don positions Kodak as one of the more committed Don-orbit guest vocalists post-2024. Kodak's nasal, drawled cadence and his willingness to lean into vulnerable melodic moments makes him an unusually compatible Don pairing — both artists treat singing and rapping as a continuum rather than a binary. 'Brother Stone' and 'Florida Flow' together represent a deliberate Florida-Houston bridge that's rare in modern rap collaboration.

Born Dominique Armani Jones in Atlanta in 1994, Lil Baby is one of the most-streamed rappers of his generation — the architect of My Turn (2020, the best-selling album of that year), It's Only Me (2022), and WHAM (2025), and an artist whose Quality-Control-affiliated rise has made him one of Atlanta rap's most enduring 2020s voices. He also features on the JackBoys-era 'HIGHEST IN THE ROOM (REMIX)' alongside Don and Rosalía. He jumps on the 2026 'Tuition' remix from Octane — a melodic-rap pairing built for radio that places one of streaming's most-consumed voices next to Don's narcotic-soul croon. The pairing extends Don's already-deep ATL-rap collaborator network (Future, Gunna, Quavo, Offset, GloRilla) and confirms Don's status as a continuing destination for the most commercially significant rap voices of his era. Lil Baby's broader catalog (Harder Than Ever, My Turn, It's Only Me, WHAM, multiple Lil Durk and Gunna joint projects) and his role as one of Quality Control's most-decorated artists positions the 'Tuition' remix as a meaningful late-Octane chart-play moment — a record built to extend the album's commercial life through one of rap's most-reliable hitmakers.

Born Durk Derrick Banks in Chicago in 1992, Lil Durk is the founder of Only the Family (OTF) and one of the most influential Chicago drill rappers of his generation — a singer-rapper whose catalog (Just Cause Y'all Waited 2, The Voice, 7220, Almost Healed, Deep Thoughts) has produced multiple #1 albums and made him one of streaming's most-consumed artists. He teamed with Memphis breakout GloRilla on 'Leave the Club' from Don's Love Sick (2023, produced by OZ) — one of the album's hardest-hitting cuts. The track sits Durk's melodic-drill cadence next to Don's velvety hook and GloRilla's percussive bark, producing one of the most stylistically ambitious three-way features in Don's catalog. It also marks one of the few times Don has worked with a rapper from outside the Atlanta/Houston/Toronto orbits that dominate his collaborator network — a deliberate Midwest reach. Durk's broader catalog and his role in shaping post-2017 Chicago drill into a melodic, introspective mode positions him as one of the genre's most versatile voices; 'Leave the Club' captures that range inside a single Don-led record.

Born Symere Bysil Woods in Philadelphia in 1994, Lil Uzi Vert is the rap-rock-emo crossover star whose Luv Is Rage 2 (2017), Eternal Atake (2020), and Pink Tape (2023) reshaped what mainstream rap could sound like — pulling from My Chemical Romance, System of a Down, and trap in equal measure. They joined Don on the 2021 standalone single 'His & Hers' (with Gunna) and returned for the Hardstone Psycho deluxe rager 'Donny Darko' (2024) — a Bnyx-produced highlight that leans hard into the rage-trap aesthetic both artists helped popularize. Uzi also features on Pusha T's 'Scrape It Off' alongside Don (It's Almost Dry, 2022), making them one of Don's most-recurring rap-orbit collaborators outside the Cactus Jack roster. Their high, melodic vocal and fashion-maximalist persona slot naturally next to Don's, and the two share Bnyx as a producer — the rage-trap auteur whose work also defines records by Playboi Carti, Yeat, and Destroy Lonely. Uzi's catalog and their role in shifting rap toward emo-rock energy positions them as one of the genre's most influential 2020s figures; their three Don features confirm the kinship.



Born Divine Ikubor in Benin City, Nigeria in 2000, Rema is a Mavin Records afrobeats star whose 2022 single 'Calm Down' (later remixed with Selena Gomez) became one of the highest-charting African songs in US history and whose albums Rave & Roses (2022) and HEIS (2024) established him as one of the most globally important afrobeats voices of his generation. He features on Octane's 'Secondhand' (2026) — Don's continuing afrobeats lineage after Wizkid's Love Sick appearance, and a record that places Don's narcotic-soul template inside Rema's signature afro-rave aesthetic. The pairing extends Don's deliberate 2020s-era engagement with global afrobeats and continues a cross-Atlantic R&B-meets-afrobeats conversation that's reshaped pop's sonic vocabulary. Rema's broader catalog and his commercial breakthrough as one of afrobeats' most-streamed new artists positions 'Secondhand' as a meaningful continuation of Don's post-Love-Sick global pop ambitions — a record that pulls Don further into the African pop diaspora alongside Wizkid, Victony, and Tempoe collaborations.

Born Rosalía Vila Tobella in Barcelona in 1992, Rosalía is the Spanish flamenco-pop superstar whose Los Ángeles, El Mal Querer, Motomami, and LUX albums made her one of the most globally important Spanish-language pop voices of her generation — and a multiple-Grammy and Latin-Grammy winner whose flamenco-meets-experimental-pop aesthetic has reshaped the broader pop landscape. She features on JackBoys' opening 'HIGHEST IN THE ROOM (REMIX)' (2019) alongside Lil Baby — a track that's part of the broader JackBoys cast which includes Don. The pairing represents one of the early Cactus Jack moments where the collective deliberately engaged with global pop forms beyond US rap, and helped position the JackBoys release as an internationally ambitious project. Rosalía's broader catalog and her status as one of the most genre-fluid pop artists of her generation makes the JackBoys appearance a meaningful early-Cactus-Jack global-pop moment — a record that signaled the collective's interest in operating across language and genre boundaries.

Born Saaheem Valdery in Atlanta in 1997, SahBabii is a rapper-producer whose 2017 viral single 'Pull Up Wit Ah Stick' and his subsequent S.A.N.D.A.S. and Barnacles mixtapes established a distinctive flute-laced, harp-shimmered Atlanta trap aesthetic that has quietly influenced a generation of producers. His self-produced approach makes him a natural Don collaborator — both artists treat texture and atmosphere as the primary lyrical mechanism. He features on Octane's 'K9' (2026) and the standalone 'Beep Beep' (2025, with Travis Scott), making him one of the more aesthetically distinctive recent additions to Don's collaborator network. His feathery, autotuned delivery sits in pleasant counterpoint to Don's lower croon, and the two records together extend Don's reach into the more experimental Atlanta rap underground. SahBabii's broader catalog and his role as one of the most-sampled producers in his subset of Atlanta trap make him a valuable Don-orbit ally; the two-track run represents a deliberate move toward more producer-led, sound-design-forward collaborations.

Born Andre Dontrel Burt Jr. in Grand Rapids, Michigan and based in Atlanta, SoFaygo is a Cactus Jack signee (since 2021) whose 2022 debut Pink Heartz (Cactus Jack/Atlantic) established him as one of the more melodic new voices on the label. His autotuned, atmospheric aesthetic places him in the post-Travis-Scott melodic-rap tradition that Don himself helped popularize. He joins HVN on Life of a Don's 'Smoke' (2021) — a roster-cohort moment that gave the newly-signed SoFaygo an early co-sign on Don's biggest album to date. The track sits inside the broader 2021-2022 Cactus Jack roster expansion that also brought Don's flagship status into sharper focus, and represents one of the more deliberate label-cohort moments in the Don catalog. SoFaygo's broader catalog and his role as one of the post-2020 Cactus Jack flagship-development projects makes the 'Smoke' pairing a meaningful inside-the-camp moment — a record that positioned Don as the elder-statesman willing to share his platform with newer label signees.

Born in Houston, TisaKorean is a rapper-producer-internet-personality whose self-produced, meme-adjacent dance-rap aesthetic and viral 'The Mop' (2018) made him one of the most distinctive Houston rap voices of his generation. His self-produced approach and his Houston roots make him a natural Don collaborator — both artists treat hometown rap traditions as a starting point rather than a constraint. He self-produced Love Sick's 'Go Down' (2023) — a record that brings UGK-meets-meme energy to the album and represents one of the most-distinctively-Houston moments on a project that otherwise mostly travels far from Don's hometown sonic roots. His self-produced beat and his rapid-fire delivery sit in pleasant contrast to Don's narcotic-soul croon. TisaKorean's broader catalog and his role as one of the most-creative Houston rap-internet figures of his generation makes the 'Go Down' pairing a meaningful Houston-loyal moment in the Love Sick rollout — a record that connects Don back to the city that raised him, even as the rest of the album travels far afield.

Born Chazwick Bradley Bear in Berkeley, California in 1986 (raised in South Carolina), Toro y Moi is the chillwave pioneer whose Causers of This (2010), Underneath the Pine, Anything in Return, and Boo Boo albums helped invent and popularize the chillwave genre — a hazy, synth-laden indie-electronic aesthetic that has influenced everyone from Frank Ocean to Childish Gambino. He joins Don on Love Sick's chillwave-leaning closer 'Cinderella' (2023) — a record that pulls Don into the most explicit indie-electronic territory of his career, and one of the album's most aesthetically adventurous deep cuts. Bear's hazy, melodic production aesthetic creates an unexpectedly beautiful frame for Don's narcotic-soul croon, producing one of Love Sick's most quietly distinctive moments. Toro y Moi's broader catalog and his role as one of the architects of the chillwave-into-indie-R&B pipeline make the 'Cinderella' pairing one of the more critically respected indie crossovers in Don's catalog — a record that signals Don's interest in operating across genre boundaries that few rap-orbit artists ever cross.

Born and raised in Compton, California, Wallie the Sensei is a melodic-rap singer whose Big Wallie Productions catalog established him as one of the more distinctive new West Coast voices of the early 2020s. He became Cactus Jack's newest signee in 2025, the first major addition to the roster since SoFaygo's 2021 signing. He joined Future and Don on JackBoys 2's 'Cant Stop' (2025) — his on-record debut as a Cactus Jack signee, and a record that immediately positioned him alongside one of the most-respected melodic-rap veterans (Future) and one of the label's flagship vocalists (Don). The three-way pairing represents one of the most-prestigious roster-launch moments in recent Cactus Jack history. Wallie's broader catalog and his role as the newest Cactus Jack flagship-development project makes the 'Cant Stop' feature a particularly weighted label moment — a record that confirms Don's status as the in-house elder-statesman willing to lend his platform to emerging label signees, and a signal that Cactus Jack's roster expansion continues to prioritize melodic-rap voices.

Born Ayodeji Ibrahim Balogun in Lagos in 1990, Wizkid is the most globally significant Nigerian afrobeats artist of his generation — the architect of Made in Lagos (2020), the Drake-featuring 'One Dance' co-write, and the Beyoncé 'Brown Skin Girl' duet. His Love Sick collaboration 'Slow Motion' (2023, co-produced and featuring vocals from James Blake) marked Don's most committed afrobeats crossover and one of the album's most-covered tracks. Wizkid's languid, dance-floor-ready melodic instincts blend seamlessly with Don's narcotic-soul template — both artists treat groove and texture as the primary delivery mechanism for emotional content. The track sits inside a larger 2020s-era afrobeats-meets-R&B convergence that reshaped global pop sonics, and Don's choice of Wizkid as collaborator over a US-centric R&B feature signals his intent to participate in that broader genre conversation. Wizkid's catalog (Superstar, Ayo, Sounds from the Other Side, Made in Lagos, More Love Less Ego, Morayo) has made him one of Africa's most-streamed artists; 'Slow Motion' remains a sleeper highlight and a foundation stone for Don's later afrobeats forays with Rema and Victony.

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