Run A Train
by J. Cole (featuring Future)

Album: The Fall-Off (2026)
Charted: 33
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Songfacts®:

  • "Run a Train" captures J. Cole driving through the streets of Fayetteville, grasping for a reason to stay connected the place that raised him. He wrestles with the idea that the "Jermaine" remembered by hometown friends may now exist mostly as a historical exhibit. It's a theme he's flirted with before - the reflective success-versus-roots tug-of-war heard on songs like "Love Yourz" - but here it feels more like a late-night reckoning conducted from the driver's seat.
  • The track appears as the fourth cut on The Fall-Off and directly continues the storyline from "SAFETY," where Cole channels the perspective of hometown friends who feel alienated by his success. "Run a Train" responds to those sentiments from Cole's viewpoint, capturing the disorienting realization that time alters everything: relationships, priorities, and even the romantic mythology of street life. The song is followed by "Poor Thang," which digs further into hometown tension, making "Run a Train" function as the emotional hinge; the moment where pride, guilt, and growth collide, and Cole recognizes that moving forward sometimes means accepting distances that no reunion tour can fully erase.
  • The song's title works as a metaphor for the unrelenting pace of life and the music industry, which Cole portrays as something that barrels forward regardless of who manages to stay aboard.
  • Tryna to make a legal dollar seem harder than guarding Wemby
    When you're hardly six feet tall, if somehow I could ball


    Cole compares the challenge for a regular guy in the slums of building a legitimate financial future to guarding the 7' 4" basketball player Victor Wembanyama, an almost comically unfair assignment.
  • Cole contrasts his present circumstances with memories of Fayetteville adolescence, echoing the hometown self-interrogation he later deepens on "Bunce Road Blues," where the streets function less like a birthplace and more like a psychological boomerang.
  • Future largely handles the hook, offering a melodic, fog-drenched counterbalance to Cole's tightly packed verses. His chorus leans heavily into the train imagery, delivering lines with the woozy inevitability of someone narrating events that feel simultaneously glamorous and exhausting.
  • Before this track, Cole and Future appeared together on "Red Leather," a seven-minute track on Future and Metro Boomin's 2024 album We Still Don't Trust You, where Cole delivers a long guest verse. On The Fall Off, Future also features alongside Tems on the track "Bunce Road Blues."
  • The beat comes from JUN TETRA & GLDY JR, a low-profile production duo who also handle the Fall-Off track "Drum n Bass." Canadian hitmaker T-Minus (Drake, Kendrick Lamar, The Weeknd) adds his signature melodic thump. Together they give Cole and Future a warm, cruising backdrop.
  • "Run A Train" samples Cole's own 2018 song "Black Friday," weaving elements from that track into the beat. The self-sampling of "Black Friday" adds a meta layer: Cole is literally reusing his own catalog as raw material to talk about how far he's come and how much hasn't changed underneath.

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