J. Cole has shared the backstory behind the artwork for his upcoming album The Fall-Off — which is a double-disc project featuring multiple covers.
Taking to social media on Thursday (January 29), Cole revealed the alternate CD cover which is an up-to-date portrait of the Dreamville rap star looking pensive in a typically casual outfit.
The main album cover, which surfaced earlier this month, is a grainy photo of Cole’s very first beat-making station in his childhood home in North Carolina.
“The Fall-Off cover that is currently circulating is a picture I took on a disposable camera when I was 15 years old. My very first set up. My first beats were made in that spot, surrounded by my mother’s CD collection that I would comb through looking for samples,” he wrote.
“The first full song that I ever made came to life in that very chair you see in that picture. I sat for hours, in a zone I had never experienced before, until I was done writing a track that I titled ‘The Storm.’ I probably rapped it out loud 50 times back-to-back, my young mind blown that I had actually wrote something ‘this great.’ I called Nervous Reck immediately to ask if I could come over to The Sheltuh to record it.”
He continued: “The mental space I entered writing that joint was a feeling I will attempt to explain, but I doubt I will do it justice. It was the strongest possible combination of creativity (the imagination at work), focus (in search of the next line), faith (belief that the next line will come) and excitement (in knowing this thing being written is truly something special) that I imagine one can’t understand until they’ve been in it.
“It’s like God letting you into Heaven for a few hours. Then, even after it’s time to leave, there is a lasting glow, a high and a fulfilment that stays with you for days… and now every time you sit down to write, you’ll close your eyes, cross your fingers, and hope he’ll open the gates for you again.”
J. Cole then explained that his controversial apology to Kendrick Lamar in 2024 — and the ensuing backlash and endless debates about his place in hip-hop’s “Big Three” — inspired him to expand The Fall-Off into a double-disc album.
“The picture of where it all started for me felt fitting for an album that I made with the ending in mind. It has been the cover of The Fall-Off for about the past 7 years. Perfect in my mind. However, 2 years ago, after the events that still feed the algorithm til this day, I became incredibly re-inspired, and the album slowly blossomed into a double disc as the concept expanded,” he revealed.
“I felt there should be an additional cover that represented that. Something just as strong as the first, with my face on it, so that when I look back in 20 years, I can see an image of who I was at the time I released the project I worked on for so long. This is that cover.”
The Fall-Off will be released on February 6 and will serve as J. Cole’s seventh and final album, capping off one of modern hip-hop’s most storied careers.
“For the past 10 years, this album has been hand crafted with one intention: a personal challenge to myself to create my best work. To do on my last what I was unable to do on my first,” he recently said of the project.
“I had no way of knowing how much time, focus and energy it would eventually take to achieve this, but despite countless challenges along the way, I knew in my heart I would one day get to the finish line. I owed it first and foremost to myself. And secondly, I owed it to hip hop.”
Cole has already given fans a taste of what’s to come with “Disc 2 Track 2,” a conceptual, storytelling track that lays out his life story in reverse — touching on his death, legacy, parenthood, marriage, career milestones and eventually his birth.
The 40-year-old also recently dropped Birthday Blizzard ’26, a surprise four-pack of freestyles hosted by DJ Clue that finds him spitting fire over classic hip-hop beats like Biggie‘s “Who Shot Ya?,” Diddy‘s “Victory” and The LOX‘s “Money, Power & Respect.”









