Kylie Jenner has quietly switched on her music-era profiles, unveiling official King Kylie artist pages on Spotify and Apple Music after the single “Fourth Strike” dropped with Terror Jr.
The streaming platforms feature her new artwork and list the collaboration as the first release, marking a clear Kylie Jenner King Kylie music debut moment.
The rollout nods to her throwback “King Kylie” persona while signaling current plans tied to Kylie Jenner’s Fourth Strike promotions.
Kylie Jenner launches ‘King Kylie’ pages on Spotify and Apple Music after ‘Fourth Strike’ debut
Jenner launched branded artist pages on Spotify and Apple Music on October 14, with “Fourth Strike” credited alongside Terror Jr. The move formalizes her Kylie Jenner King Kylie identity in music and anchors her Kylie Jenner King Kylie music debut to one track and image set.
The King Kylie artist banner shows Kylie against a black backdrop, her shoulders and neck dusted in silvery, star-like glitter. She wears sleek winged eye makeup and nude lips, with a faint crown-like sparkle above her head for a cosmic, pop-diva vibe.
In the song itself, the chorus teases the project’s hook. Apple Music’s on-page lyrics display lines like: “Only you, only you, fa-fallin’… on my fourth strike.” The simple refrain gives the collab an immediate, sing-back center and aligns with Terror Jr’s glossy pop aesthetic.
There’s also a layered history. Nearly a decade ago, fans speculated Jenner was secretly the voice of Terror Jr after their breakout “3 Strikes” premiered in her lip-gloss campaign.
At the time, Kylie publicly denied it. As Teen Vogue summarized her statement, Kylie wrote on Snapchat, “I’m not the lead singer of Terror Jr.” She was distancing herself from the duo in 2016.
Terror Jr, for their part, kept the mystery alive in that era and declined to clarify identities. That fueled the online guessing game around the project’s vocalist and Kylie’s proximity to it.
Contextually, the “King Kylie” tag isn’t new. It’s a long-running nickname from her earlier social media phase. An aesthetic era WWD recently traced through hair colors, metallics, and the visual styling that defined that brand persona.
Originally reported by Santanu Das for RealityTea.