SAFETY

Album: The Fall-Off (2026)
Charted: 51 29
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Songfacts®:

  • "SAFETY" is a Fayetteville check-in built on worry, loyalty, and distance: old friends and family reach out to Jermaine the superstar, asking when he's coming home and whether he's still the same person they knew before rap and fame.
  • The track echoes the conversational letter-writing framework of Nas' 1994 track "One Love," where prison notes and neighborhood updates double as social commentary. Cole updates that blueprint for the smartphone era, turning the verses into a series of imagined voicemails and DM-style check-ins to him from back home in Fayetteville. The messages bring news of jail stints, funerals, children being born, modest victories and neighborhood gossip.
  • The hook transforms the word "safety" into something broader than physical survival. The callers want reassurance that Cole is not just alive, but spiritually intact, still loyal to the people and streets that helped shape him, even as global fame steadily bubble-wraps his day-to-day existence.
  • A later verse focuses on a queer childhood friend whose sexuality became visible once he left for college; Cole admits he distanced himself out of discomfort, then watches the friend migrate into full expression and, eventually, danger; an attempt at empathy that draws comparison to Kendrick Lamar's "Auntie Diaries."
  • Cole produced the track with:

    DZL: A trusted Dreamville producer whose previous Cole collaborations include "Port Antonio" and "cLOUDs."

    Powers Pleasant: A New York-based producer known for his work with Pro Era and Joey Bada$$.

    Sucuki: He previously contributed to Cole's The Off-Season hit "Amari."

    Wu10 (Kelvin Wooten): A multi-instrumentalist whose organic textures (often involving bass or guitar) helped create the track's moody atmosphere. He worked on The Off-Season cuts "My Life" and "Let Go My Hand."
  • "SAFETY" nods to hip-hop lineage by sampling Queen Latifah's "U.N.I.T.Y.," weaving its sax riff into the song's reflective closing moments.
  • "SAFETY" appears early on Cole's double album, The Fall Off. It follows the hard flex of "Two Six," helping pivot the album from chest-out hometown pride into more intimate, consequence-focused storytelling about the same streets.

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