OMB Peezy Drops Raw New Single “Fall Down” – Southern Truth Meets West Coast Flow

OMB Peezy Unleashes Gritty New Anthem “Fall Down” – Southern Truth Meets Coast-to-Coast Flow

The streets have a new heartbeat. Mobile, Alabama’s OMB Peezy – the raw-voiced truth-teller bridging Southern soul and West Coast grit – has dropped his fiercely anticipated single “Fall Down”. Following a trail of critically acclaimed mixtapes and viral collaborations, Peezy’s latest track reaffirms why he’s one of hip-hop’s most compelling voices.

From Alabama Blocks to Industry Co-Signs

Peezy’s journey reads like a rap odyssey. Discovered by hip-hop legend E-40 (who signed him to Wid It Records), his breakthrough came with 2017’s “Lay Down” and the Humble Beginnings EP. Since then, he’s:

  • Amassed 20M+ streams with NBA YoungBoy collab “Doin Bad”

  • Dropped cult-classic projects like Preacher of the Streets (2018)

  • Earned features from T.I., G-Eazy, Lil Durk & Boosie Badazz

  • Released debut album Too Deep For Tears (2021) w/ King Von & Jackboy

  • Landed co-signs from Kodak Black, NLE Choppa, and Rod Wave

Why “Fall Down” Hits Different

While details remain under wraps, “Fall Down” promises Peezy’s signature cocktail: unflinching storytelling over heavy-hitting production. True to form, he transforms street narratives into visceral anthems – a skill that’s drawn comparisons to legends like Boosie and T.I.

“I spit the only thing that matters – the truth.”
– OMB Peezy

The track follows his recent In The Meantime mixtape series (produced by Drum Dummie) and pensive 2021 single “Die Young” ft. Omeretta. If those releases are any indication, “Fall Down” will balance vulnerability with the relentless hustle that defines Peezy’s catalog.

The Road Ahead

2024 finds Peezy building momentum:

  • Fresh off collaborations with T.K. Kravitz and T.I.

  • Gearing up for In The Meantime 2

  • Rumored festival appearances after his Rod Wave tour was cut short by COVID

With “Fall Down,” OMB Peezy isn’t just dropping a song – he’s cementing his legacy as hip-hop’s southern prophet. The grind don’t stop, and neither does the truth.