
Vince Staples has officially thrown a brick through the window of the rap establishment, and he did it on the very first day of his fully independent era. Cry Baby is the seventh studio album from the Long Beach mastermind, officially released June 5, 2026, under Loma Vista Recordings and his own Section Eight Arthouse imprint following his departure from Def Jam after 2024’s Dark Times. Clocking in at 10 tracks and a blistering 35 minutes, Cry Baby lands with the force of an opening salvo, announced with a classic, deadpan Vince statement: “As the world burns, I have decided to release this album.”
If you thought Vince rapping over experimental SOPHIE beats on Big Fish Theory was a wild pivot, Cry Baby completely redefines his boundaries. Moving entirely away from traditional West Coast trap or the melancholic rap of his classic 2015 debut Summertime ’06 or that of Ramona Park Broke My Heart, Vince builds this album around scuzzy noise rock, live instrumentation, and jagged post-punk distortion. Sonically, it draws comparisons to the early, genre-blending alternative energy of Santigold or the fierce rap-rock bluster of Denzel Curry and Rage Against The Machine. But make no mistake: this isn’t an indie-rock record. Underneath the blistering guitars are deep, bone-rattling basslines and remarkably complex rhythm structures that keep the foundation grounded in Hip Hop.
For the better part of a decade, Vince Staples has operated as Hip Hop’s premier ghost in the machine. He was the nihilistic savant who could look at the absolute worst components of American structural violence, urban isolation, and commodified Black trauma, and give you a shrug so cold it felt like a winter breeze off the Long Beach coast. From the clinical, icy techno-minimalism of Big Fish Theory to the gorgeous, cemetery-adjacent nostalgia of Ramona Park Broke My Heart, Vince’s greatest weapon was his distance. He was a writer who refused to let you see him sweat, viewing his own life and the world around him through the bulletproof glass of a supreme, intellectual detachment.

Then came Cry Baby.
Marking his first full-length declaration of total creative independence, Cry Baby is the sound of that bulletproof glass shattering from the inside out. Across 10 tracks and a breathless 35 minutes, Staples completely abandons the safe, predictable confines of modern rap production, trading his electronic ice and West Coast basslines for a sweat-soaked, jagged, and confrontational wall of live instrumentation. Production architects Mike Hector, Saint Mino, and Oh Gosh Leotus have built an analog war room. The album breathes with the dirty, distorted air of late-70s post-punk, skeletal noise-rock, and muscular, grease-stained funk-rock.
Lyrically, Vince is at his most cynical, political, and unsparing. The album acts as a scathing, front-row critique of American tumult, institutional violence, and digital media detachment. The opener, “Blackberry Marmalade,” serves as the perfect ideological entry point. Built on a driving, repetitive guitar riff that feels pulled directly from an old British post-punk basement, Vince skips the standard intro bravado and jumps straight into the throat of the state. His flow is tighter, faster, and more frantic than we’ve heard it in years. When he drops the central chant—”Promise me you won’t gun me down”—it sounds like an indictment of an unkept social contract.
“Go! Go! Gorilla” is a chaotic, breathless standout where Vince addresses police brutality head-on, wondering, “Why do I live in fear of a gun and a badge?” before recounting a deeply personal memory of being choke-slammed by law enforcement at just 12 years old. The production here strips itself down to a skeletal rhythm section, forcing Vince to push his vocal range and match pace with his live players. It results in some of the most fleet-footed, aggressive rapping of his entire career, punctuated by a harrowing, real-life memory of childhood state violence.
“Only In America” is a brilliant, cutting piece of satire where Vince juxtaposes images of white picket fences and Friday night fireworks against the dark realities of historical exploitation, dryly rapping: “Stole me and they brought me to the USA / Thank you, I guess.” It is the thematic center of the entire record, a cutting, bass-heavy piece of satire that acts as the album’s definitive thesis statement delivered with that classic, dry Staples delivery carrying the weight of a multi-generational sigh.
“TV Guide” is a paranoid, relentless attack on the 24-hour news cycle and the way corporate media feeds off societal doom, programming violence directly into our subconscious minds. The noisy, distorted guitars on “TV Guide” are meant to mimic the claustrophobic, anxious feeling of staring at a 24-hour news broadcast while the world falls apart. The music is designed to feel uncomfortable because the reality it describes is fundamentally broken.
“The Big Bad Wolf” is a frenetic, high-octane highlight built around a brilliant sample flip of Slick Rick’s classic “Children’s Story.” Vince loops an iconic Slick Rick vocal sample, mutating a classic Hip Hop storytelling trope into a frantic, high-octane exercise in survival. It is an exhausting, brilliant piece of technical rap that provides the record with its highest dose of pure adrenaline.
“Cotton” is the album’s final, smooth yet subversive funk-leaning single, gorgeous and late-night, but underneath the shimmering instrumentation is a deeply pensive, isolated look into his own psyche. “7 In The Morning” is a grim closing track where modern warfare is treated as casual entertainment, bringing the curtain down on a slow-burning, haunting note.
The album moves with an intense, breathless velocity, featuring zero bloat and a hyper-focused solo exhibition from Vince. There are no features, no guest verses, no dilution of the message. The visual rollout was handled entirely on Vince’s own terms, with music videos for “Blackberry Marmalade,” “White Flag,” and “Cotton” released without comment, letting the imagery speak for itself.
The “Blackberry Marmalade” visual particularly turned heads, styled entirely like a gritty, first-person shooter video game that ends with a heavy, sobering quote from Martin Luther King Jr. regarding the necessity of becoming “extremists for love and justice.”
By the time the grim, slow-burning closer “7 In The Morning” brings down the curtain, you realize that Vince Staples hasn’t just tuned up a rock band: he has successfully delivered his most vocal, emotionally raw, and politically vital record to date. It is a brilliant, fearless, and utterly uncompromising masterclass in independent artistry. He isn’t sitting back and watching the world burn anymore; he is standing in the ashes, documenting the fire with an urgency that demands your complete, undivided attention.
One minor complaint is that we wish the album had been a little bit longer than the tight 35 minutes so that the weight and depth of the album had more room to breathe. Some of these ideas feel like they could expand into even richer territory, and a few extra tracks would have allowed the sonic landscape to settle more fully. But as it stands, Cry Baby is a brilliant, necessary middle finger to complacency, proving that on the independent circuit, Vince Staples answers to absolutely no one. It confirms that, free from major-label constraints, Vince Staples remains one of the most unpredictable storytellers and vital cultural mirrors in modern music.
8.5/10
Also read: The Best Hip Hop Albums Of 2026
