On February 6, 2026, music fans welcomed a diverse array of new releases, including J. Cole's anticipated seventh album, The Fall-Off, marking a potential end to his career. Ella Mai returned with her third studio effort, Do You Still Love Me?, while indie acts like Ratboys and Daphni delivered acclaimed projects. These drops span hip-hop, R&B, and alternative genres, offering fresh sounds amid a packed weekly lineup.
February 6, 2026, brought a robust New Music Friday slate, featuring standout albums across genres. J. Cole's The Fall-Off, released via Interscope, arrives as his seventh studio album and possibly his last. The two-disc set reflects on his career, with Cole winding down his Dreamville festival and past feuds, including with Kendrick Lamar. In a note accompanying the video for “Disc 2 Track 2,” Cole wrote, “For the past ten 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.”
R&B singer Ella Mai unveiled Do You Still Love Me? on Interscope, executive produced by Mustard. The 14-track album explores romantic themes with poise, including singles “100,” “Little Things,” and “Tell Her.” Mai, known for hits like “Boo’d Up,” maintains her blend of ’90s R&B and retro pop, singing on “100” about staying true to a less affluent partner.
Indie rock band Ratboys released Singin’ to an Empty Chair on New West, their sixth album produced by Chris Walla in a Wisconsin cabin. Walla noted in a Pitchfork profile, “Some [bands] are fractured and tormented... Ratboys work because they work.” Electronic artist Daphni (Dan Snaith of Caribou) dropped Butterfly on Jiaolong, featuring self-collaboration on “Waiting So Long.”
Other highlights include Beverly Glenn-Copeland's Laughter in Summer on Transgressive, a collaboration with his wife amid his dementia diagnosis, and Mandy, Indiana's URGH on Sacred Bones, blending industrial and post-punk. Joji's Piss In The Wind arrived with eclectic tracks like “Hotel California.” These releases, available on streaming platforms, underscore a vibrant start to the year's music calendar.