The road to Lil Uzi Vert’s  Luv is Rage 2 followup has been a long one. Though a two-year gap between releases was once fairly standard, it might as well be an eternity in the streaming era— especially since, prior to this, the longest fans ever had to wait between Uzi projects was around six months.

Uzi’s past two years have been plagued with leaks, rumors of label trouble, and a lukewarm reception to his sole official release and apparent Eternal Atake single “New Patek.”You’d be hard-pressed to call “New Patek” a flop, though— it’s been streamed over 119 million times on Spotify as of the writing of this article— but its impact is microscopic compared to his 2017 mega-hit “XO TOUR Llif3,” which currently sits comfortably at over 1 billion streams. Uzi has since stated the song was scrapped from the album, though it’s unknown whether this was a personal decision or pressure from the label to find his next “XO TOUR Llif3.”

All of this culminated with Uzi announcing his retirement from hip-hop back in January, claiming he was “done with music” and even going so far as to state that he “deleted everything,” implying Eternal Atake as we know it no longer existed (we can only hope that by “deleted” he meant “scrapped” and not “obliterated from his hard drive”). Still, as any rap fan knows, most artists who formally announce their retirement don’t tend to stay retired, and a few weeks back Uzi posted an Instagram story that read “Back in the studio, thanks Roc Nation” with a since-removed single titled “Free Uzi” being upload to Tidal soon after.

It’s hard to say how much of Atake’s holdup and Uzi’s alleged retirement was due to Atlantic holding the music hostage until he found a viable single and how much of it was simply because Uzi wasn’t happy with how the album was turning out. Luckily, after dropping two new singles last night, it seems as if the album’s release cycle has finally begun, thanks in part with his new partnership with Roc Nation. You can listen to “Sanguine Paradise” and “That’s A Rack” and read our takeaways from the songs and their rollout below.