A$AP Rocky is continuing to keep us on our toes as he releases new material from his upcoming album, At.Long.Last.A$AP or A.L.L.A. After dropping his Rod Stewart-sampling single "Everyday" earlier this month, he's back with another imaginative track, a collaboration with producer Danger Mouse. The 42-second hazy, black-and-white teaser video -- shot by artist Daniel Arsham -- features Flacko lighting a blunt and rapping over some trippy, ominous production (via GQ).

"Psycho / Psychopathic man loaded ammunition in his hand," he appears to be rapping from what I can decipher. "Another lost soul from the city full of lost hope / Where they go, who knows / But I would bet my bottom dollar / It was over somethin' like money cash hoes, clothes / But I would bet my bottom dollar, down to my last cent that heaven won't accept his soul."

At.Long.Last.A$AP is scheduled to drop June 2, and in addition to Danger Mouse, it features production from Juicy J and the late A$AP Yams, to whom Rocky pays tribute in his cover art.

Prior to this new track and "Everyday," Rocky dropped his single "M's" last month and has slowly been releasing new material over the past few months. He unveiled the music video for his single "Lord Pretty Flacko Jodye 2" earlier in the year and dropped "Multiply" late last year. Another track titled "The Beauty and the Beast," which he teased during his CRWN interview last month, will possibly surface soon.

The album was recorded at both Red Bull Studios in London and at Sound Factory in Los Angeles and will feature the likes of Mark RonsonLykke Li, FKA Twigs, Pimp C, Clams Casino and potentially others.

In an interview with Billboard, Rocky discussed the diversity of the album, saying, "People really don't know the other side of me. The deeper side, the more musical side, the more intellectual side. When I first came on the scene it was more of this trendy, bourgeois, pizazz attitude. That's still me but at the end of the day I think that kind of overshadowed the whole purpose of me doing what I do. I'm an incredibly diverse artist, I'm a universal artist. At least that's how I see it."

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