After leaving my headphones elsewhere, I plugged my wired earphones into my laptop and sat cross-legged on my bed. It felt like the universe wanted me to rewind time, back to when 2014 Forest Hills Drive first dropped, a teen in my room, listening to tinny rap through cheap speakers, imagining myself on some apartment rooftop in New York. The Fall Off took me straight back there, safe and familiar, as J. Cole carries that same boom bap spirit into his latest, and possibly last, 24-track album.
From the opening moments, the album feels like home. Cole’s voice sounds like countless artists and rappers I grew up with melted into one, but never in a way that feels overused or samey. Instead, he sounds reflective, grounded, and deeply familiar, like hearing from an old friend who’s lived a lot since you last spoke. There’s a calm confidence running through the record; he sounds relaxed, like he has nothing left to prove, but still so much he wants to get off his chest. It’s timeless, tapping into emotion without chasing whatever sound is popular right now.
The boom bap influence is threaded throughout the album, and it’s one of the things that kept pulling me back in to artists like J. Cole. It never gets stale. Genres flow naturally into one another, and the collaborations feel current but carefully chosen, adding to the world Cole’s building rather than pulling focus away from it. The nostalgia of 2014 Forest Hills Drive is clearly there and openly acknowledged, not copied, more like a quiet conversation between who he was then and who he is now.
“39 Intro” feels like the perfect bite of everything that’s always made me love J. Cole: introspection, hunger, and honesty delivered with restraint. But “Safety” is the track that really stuck with me. It’s a 90s-leaning anthem that keeps pushing forward, full of energy and warmth. I already know it’ll be a staple for me, walking through the city in the summer running off of sunshine and beats, letting everything else blur past.
The Fall Off feels like closure without finality, a reminder of why J. Cole’s voice has mattered for so long, and why it still does now.

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