With anticipation already high for his long-awaited album The Fall-Off, J. Cole added fuel to the fire by dropping a surprise EP to mark his 41st birthday. The project, titled Birthday Blizzard ’26, arrived without warning and serves as a prelude of sorts to the album, which is scheduled for release on February 6.
Hosted by legendary mixtape DJ DJ Clue, the EP leans heavily into nostalgia and lyrical sharpness. Clue, a pioneer of the classic New York mixtape era and longtime Power 105.1 personality, provides the framing for a project that feels deliberately raw and unfiltered.
In a move that reflects Cole’s fan-first approach, Birthday Blizzard ’26 is available on a pay-what-you-want basis — with a minimum price of just $1 — allowing listeners to access the EP ahead of the album rollout.
Five Tracks, No Gimmicks
The EP contains five tracks, all centered on freestyles and lyrical showcases rather than polished radio singles. One standout sees Cole rapping over Stevie J’s iconic instrumental for Diddy’s “Victory,” complete with The Notorious B.I.G.’s original ad-libs, a nod to hip-hop’s golden era.
Another major highlight is “Bronx Zoo Freestyle,” which appears to continue Cole’s effort to close the chapter on his complicated and highly publicized feud with Kendrick Lamar.
Addressing the Kendrick Lamar Fallout
The roots of the tension trace back to 2023, when Cole placed himself alongside Kendrick Lamar and Drake as part of rap’s so-called “big three.” That comment indirectly helped ignite the Kendrick–Drake conflict that would soon dominate the genre.
Cole briefly entered the fray with the diss track “7 Minute Drill,” only to reverse course days later. Speaking to fans at Dreamville Festival, he openly criticized himself, calling the song “the lamest sht I ever did in my f**ing life” and removing it from streaming platforms.
Since then, Cole has taken a noticeably introspective tone. He attempted to position himself as a mediator on the track “Port Antonio,” and Birthday Blizzard ’26 continues that reflective stance.
On “Bronx Zoo Freestyle,” Cole delivers one of the EP’s most revealing lines:
“I used to be top seed / The apology dropped me way out of the top three / No problem, I’m probably best when they doubt me.”
The bars suggest acceptance rather than bitterness — a veteran artist embracing doubt as fuel rather than weakness.
A Calm Before the Storm
While Kendrick Lamar emerged from last year’s rap wars with critical acclaim and Drake’s future remains uncertain amid controversy, Cole appears focused on longevity, growth, and clarity. Birthday Blizzard ’26 doesn’t chase headlines — it reasserts Cole’s lyrical identity just days before what many believe could be a defining album in his career.
With The Fall-Off finally set to arrive, the surprise EP feels less like a detour and more like a reminder: J. Cole is still very much in control of his narrative.
Originally appeared on Pitchfork.

