Quavo and Pharrell Williams Debut New Song “Hit-A-Lik” at Louis Vuitton Show

The show took place at a venue where an LV-themed house was built.

Pharrell Williams and Quavo
(Photo by Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images)

A new song from Quavo and Pharrell, "Hit-A-Lik" had its grand debut at the Louis Vuitton Fall/Winter 2026 show at Fondation Louis Vuitton.

The song, produced by Skateboard P, sees Quavo celebratinh making it out of the streets and into better situations, experiences and opportunities.

The show, attended by Future, SZA, Kai Cenat and more, was equally as special. At the museum where the show was held, Pharrell and the brand built a glass house that featured LV bags on display and cutting-edge furniture.

When the show started, dozens of models draped in LV’s latest walked around the house as dancers grooved to the track from the balcony overlooking the house. Live performances from Voices by Fire and l'Orchestre du Pont Neuf occurred, with Pusha T even walking the runway.

Check out a clip of the experience below.

Quavo's new song wasn't the only track premiered during Pharrell's show. Skateboard P also debuted three other unreleased tracks from A$AP Rocky ("Disturbing"), John Legend ("Pray For Ya") and Jackson Wang featuring Pusha-T ("Sex God"). According to a press release, the tracks from Quavo, Jackson Wang, and John Legend are also set to appear on upcoming albums.

In a statement from LV about the house, the brand said, “The prefabricated house concept embodies the collection’s idea of timelessness in architectural form: a vision of future living built on function, savoir-faire and human need.”

About what was exactly inside the house, the brand revealed that it was a series of site-specific pieces of furniture created for the show, in a collection titled “HOMEWORK.”

“The objects explore what [Williams] described as ‘ten per cent imperfection': subtly irregular forms, tactile surfaces, and visible traces of the hand,” said LV in a statement. “Conceived as part of the environment, the pieces reinforce the idea of space as something human, lived-in and evolving, rather than pristine or fixed.”

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