R. Kelly Drops Album, 'I Admit It' While Locked Up for Federal Sex Crimes
R. Kelly New Album, 'I Admit It' Drops ... Unofficial Release Hits Streamers
1:00 PM PT -- Billboard reports the album was uploaded by Ingrooves, a distributor owned by Universal Music Group and without ties to Sony Music.
11:36 AM PT -- The album has been pulled from both Spotify and Apple Music.
10:17 AM PT -- A source at Sony Music tells us despite the album's claim of being a release from Legacy Release is not true, and it appears this is a bootleg version. It's still unclear how the album was dropped and who was behind putting it out.
R. Kelly just dropped the biggest surprise album of 2022 ... a project called "I Admit It" with lyrics that address the years of allegations leveled against the disgraced singer.
The 13-song album features tracks with titles like "I Found Love," "Good Ole Days" and "Freaky Sensation."
But his last 3 tracks might be the most revealing -- it's a 3-part piece called "I Admit it (I Did It)," where he unloads a ton of stuff he's done in the past. He put the full 19-minute track on SoundCloud back in 2018, but this marks the first time it's made it to Apple or Spotify.
In it, R. Kelly talks about helping people that ended up turning against him ... before admitting to a laundry list of things -- including "I done f***ed with a couple of fans" and says he even slept with his girlfriend's friend.
He digs even deeper, "How they gon' say I don't respect these women when all I've done is represent" ... and "You mad I've got some girlfriends."
R. Kelly directly addresses the allegations as the tracks go on ... saying, "They're brainwashed, really? Kidnapped, really? Can't eat, really? Real talk, that s*** sound silly."
While it's unclear exactly who he's talking about, he also seems to blame the parents of one of his female flings for introducing them. Saying, "And if you really, really wanna know. Her father dropped her off at my show. And told this boy to put her on the stage. I admit that she was overage."
As we reported, Spotify made the call back in 2018 to stop promoting his music when allegations about running a sex cult continued to pick up steam ... but it sounds like R. Kelly's made it back to the platform with his telling tracks.
Originally Published -- 9:16 AM PT