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J. Cole Previews New Album ‘The Fall-Off’ With Introspective Teaser

J. Cole Previews New Album ‘The Fall-Off’ With Introspective Teaser

J. Cole revels in the simplicity of domestic life in the official announcement trailer for this seventh studio album, The Fall-Off, out Feb. 6.

The clip opens with the rapper rinsing his truck at a self-service car wash. The next scene zooms in on him dining solo at a local restaurant. There’s nothing high-scale or even particularly exciting about either. It’s all painstakingly normal, which seems to be the exact point.

The announcement features a voiceover that interrogates the idea of weaponizing rest. “Everything is supposed to go away eventually,” an unnamed man says. “You see this especially in like show business with famous actors, or like musicians, and it’s like, ‘Oh, this guy used to be famous and then he fell off. What happened?’ And they want to point to, they did this and this and they made some sort of mistake —instead of thinking that look, it’s kind of crazy they got famous in the first place.”

Cole has been famous for a while in a way that is perpetually undeniable, but not overstated. The rapper has no significant social media presence and isn’t often heard from. His most recent album, The Off-Season, arrived in 2021 as his first full-length in three years. And yet, in 2024, Cole was woven into the narrative of one of hip-hop’s biggest stories when he retreated from battle, while Kendrick Lamar and Drake continued to wage war against each other. More headlines followed in 2025, when he announced the conclusion of his long-running Dreamville festival.

Over the years, more and more time has passed between Cole’s releases. Between 2011 and 2016, he released four studio albums. Between 2016 and 2026, he’ll have released three, including The Fall-Off. Fans have pointed out that the Feb. 6 release date, or 2-6-26, corresponds with the local nickname for his hometown, Fayetteville, North Carolina, something he’s mentioned frequently throughout his catalog. As evidenced in the announcement, home is where the heart is for Cole. It’s a good constant to have when everything else remains volatile and uncertain.

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“So few people reach that level that yes, of course, it’s not going to last forever because somebody else has to take that spot and that’s how show business has been since forever,” the voiceover continues. “But no, they always want to say, ‘Oh, that guy fell off.’ They want to look down on him for just going through the natural cycle of rising and falling.”

Cole seems happy to pass the torch, but remains wholly disinterested in extinguishing it. About one minute into the announcement, he stares down into the camera, and his simple life cuts away to a fiery screen reading The Fall-Off. As the bass kicks in, he raps, “He wanted love, but it only made more pain.”

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