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Album Review: Flee Lord – Everything I Never Said

Gritty production, sharp features, and relentless bars make Flee Lord’s latest a top-tier contender

Text design featuring the phrase 'By Obie Trice Kenobi' alongside a small illustrated portrait of a man wearing a cap.
A man in a gray hoodie squatting with a joyful expression, surrounded by various birds in flight, with the text 'Everything I Never Said - Free Lord' at the bottom right corner.

Released April 15th 2026

I’ve been tuning into Flee Lord for a while now, but when he dropped last year, I was still doing one review a day and RocAmerikkka 3 slipped out of my hands as far as a write-up. Well, in 2026, Flee Lord delivers Everything I Never Said. I haven’t heard everything Flee Lord has dropped, but from what I have heard, this might be my favorite project yet.

To start, the production all across this album is really good. It’s murky and gritty, but able to shift with the mood of the songs as well. “I Can Dig It,” “40 Shots,” “It Ain’t Safe,” and “Floor Seats” all have really great beats. The features on Everything I Never Said may not be as well-known as some on Flee Lord’s past projects, but I thought everyone showed up and delivered strong verses.

Flee Lord himself is spitting flames all over. “Coolness” is a great start, where Flee asks, “How you know it all and you coinless?” It goes right into one of my favorite songs, “I Can Dig It.” That beat is just so cold, and Flee Lord and Eto leave it scorched. The 1-2 punch of “Stress Turns into Cancer” and “Floor Seats” is such a great combo. “Stress Turns into Cancer” is the shortest track on the album, but it has a beat that sings out as Flee digs deep, acknowledging that the stress he carries has to go. Meanwhile, “Floor Seats” reflects on what drives us to do better and get more than we are presented with—going from “pissy hallways and pissy elevators” to cribs that “came with a lake, floor seats watching the Lakers.” He’s always striving for more for himself and his family.

Like I said, this might be my favorite Flee Lord album, but for the moment, I’m gonna sit with things more and see how I feel in a few months. That said, Flee Lord delivered another dope album, keeping the streets and the underground fed. He’s one of the frontrunners in the underground, and rightfully so.

Album Rating: 👑👑👑👑👑👑👑👑 (8.5/10)

Standout Tracks: “Coolness,” “Honoring The Greats,” “It Ain’t Safe,” “Stress Turns Into Cancer,” & “Floor Seats”

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