Obie Trice has announced his return to music as he inks a deal with Conor McGregor’s Greenback Records.
Joining the likes of Xzibit and Bone Thugs-N-Harmony, the Detroit rapper dropped new single “TBH” on Friday (September 12).
McGregor and Obie are yet to comment on the new partnership though the UFC legend did put out a video welcoming the rapper to the label.
It is also expected that Obie will drop his first full-length release since in more than six years through the label.
— Obie Trice (@realobietrice) September 14, 2025
Obie has also not had a major label release since 2006’s Second Round’s On Me which was put out through Shady Records and Interscope.
The “Snitch” rapper has been quiet since he was arrested in 2022 after being accused of harassing a former girlfriend.
Deputy Chief at the West Bloomfield Police Department Curt Lawson said after they broke up, Trice allegedly sent “threatening” messages to her and some of her relatives. Police also said Trice would consistently show up to the woman’s house uninvited until law enforcement was forced to intervene.
Trice allegedly ignored the cops’ warning and continued to contact the woman, resulting in his arrest. Trice is currently being held at the West Bloomfield Jail on a $10,000 bond stemming from the misdemeanor charge, which is punishable by a $1,000 fine, six months in jail or both.
According to Detroit’s NBC affiliate WDIV Local 4, the former Shady Records artist was sentenced to 90 days in Michigan’s Oakland County Jail after pleading guilty to possession of an unregistered gun in June. The Eminem affiliate was later credited with five days of time served at a hearing.
In December 2019, he was arrested following a shooting incident in which a gun went off and injured his girlfriend’s 18-year-old son. The victim was hit by a bullet during an allegedly drunken altercation between Obie and his 40-year-old girlfriend.
Obie was originally brought in on charges of aggravated felony assault of a family member with a gun and contempt of court for violating a protective order. The felony charge was downgraded to misdemeanor possession of an unregistered firearm after police determined the gun was accidentally discharged.