Two Six

Album: The Fall-Off (2026)
Charted: 45 16
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Songfacts®:

  • "Two Six" finds J. Cole planting a flag in his hometown of Fayetteville, North Carolina. The track operates as a Fayetteville chest-thumper, a warning shot to the rap industry, and a late-song confession about what it cost to come out of the "2-6" and still sleep at night.
  • "Two Six" refers to Fayetteville's "2-6" nickname, a piece of local shorthand that doubles as both a territorial badge and a mindset. One widely repeated explanation traces the phrase to Cumberland County, which was the 26th county formed in the state, with "twenty-six" naturally trimmed down into the punchier "two-six."

    In everyday use, the phrase works like a hometown pride tag, much the same way residents use nicknames like "The Ville" or "Fayettenam." Saying you're "from the 2-6" signals not just geography but cultural identity, and local artists - most notably J. Cole - have embraced it as a shorthand for the city's atmosphere, struggles, and loyalty.
  • The hook where he whispers "Two six n---as wild, bitch" flips the chant-like energy of Southern street records. It's a proud, slightly menacing roll-call for Cole's section, positioning the 2-6 as unpredictable, loyal, and dangerous, even as he raps from Rolls-Royces and presidential suites. It interpolates Alabama rapper Mr. Bigg's 1999 song "Trial Time," in which Bigg chants:

    Take that s--t to trial, bitch
  • The outro performs one of Cole's signature tonal handbrake turns, abandoning the chant energy for somber spoken-word imagery that describes Fayetteville as simultaneously a stone's throw from hardship and "a thousand miles from Heaven."
  • "Two Six" slots neatly into Cole's long-running Fayetteville travelogue, joining hometown reflections like "Ville Mentality" and "4 Your Eyez Only," both of which treat the city as equal parts birthplace, moral obstacle course, and spiritual proving ground. Like those earlier tracks, "Two Six" paints the Ville as a place where ambition and survival often share the same cramped apartment.
  • Cole's longtime collaborators Omen and T-Minus produced the track with Ron Gilmore Jr. credited as composer-lyricist and additional producer. Their beat is lean and percussive, leaving space for Cole's voice to sit on top.
  • "Two Six" appears as the first main track on Cole's 2026 double-album The Fall-Off. It functions as the loud territorial statement before more introspective tracks such as "Poor Thang" and "SAFETY" zoom in on specific stories and moral questions, so it sets the stakes and the geography for what follows.
  • The album has a dual-timeline structure; the first disc examines Cole at 29 and the second revisits him at 39. "Two Six" belongs firmly to the younger, louder, more combustible half. It establishes the geography, emotional stakes, and lingering gravitational pull of Fayetteville before the record gradually moves from hometown war cries to middle-aged philosophical sighs.
  • Even the release date carries a wink to the concept. The album dropped on February 6, 2026 (02/06) quietly embedding the numbers "2" and "6" into the project's calendar, as if Cole couldn't resist turning his rollout schedule into one last hometown Easter egg.

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