Katy Perry and Chief Keef Tease Remix After 2013 Beef — Katy Perry Legendary Lovers (save Me)
Katy Perry and Chief Keef turned katy perry legendary lovers (save me) into a real link-up on May 27, posting footage that teased a new remix of “Legendary Lovers” with Chief Keef vocals. Perry’s TikTok, captioned “Legendary link up.”, put a decade-old feud back into circulation with an actual studio-facing payoff.
Perry’s May 27 TikTok
The key move was Perry’s TikTok dapping up Chief Keef and soundtracking the clip with her 2013 track “Legendary Lovers.” The remix appeared to carry new vocals from Chief Keef, which shifts the post from nostalgia bait to something that looks built for release rather than a one-off reunion.
Perry had tried to summon Chief Keef on TikTok over the weekend before the link-up surfaced on Wednesday night, May 27. That sequence matters because it shows the tease was not random background content; it was staged as a reunion and then pushed into public view once both artists were in the same frame.
2013 Twitter beef
The collaboration tease lands with baggage from 2013, when Perry and Chief Keef were locked in a Twitter beef over his “Hate Bein’ Sober” single featuring Wiz Khalifa and 50 Cent. Perry wrote, “Just heard a new song on the radio called ‘I Hate Being Sober’ and I have serious doubt for the world,” and Chief Keef later threatened to “smack” her.
Perry apologized by tweeting, “I’m sorry if I offended you. I heard a lot of people guesting on the song & didn’t even know it was you in particular,” and Chief Keef also apologized for how he handled himself in his reply. That makes the May 27 footage less like a simple celebrity hangout and more like a public reset between two artists who once went at each other in public.
Legendary Lovers and No. 117
“Legendary Lovers” originally landed on Perry’s 2013 Prism album, and the remix tease pulls an older cut back into play at a moment when her catalog is already moving again. The song was also included on The Ones That Got the Plays compilation in May, which debuted at No. 117 on the Billboard 200 and also includes songs from One of the Boys through 2020’s Smile and her 2025 “Bandaids” single.
For Perry, the practical result is simple: the clip gives her a conversation-driving catalog moment without waiting on a formal rollout, while Chief Keef gets positioned inside one of her best-known 2013 tracks. If the remix follows the tease, this turns a feud-era flashpoint into a usable release built on two names that were once trading shots online.