RECORD LABEL; Mass Appeal
RELEASE DATE; 21 November, 2025
De La Soul’s Cabin In The Sky arrives like a bittersweet street parade celebratory, reflective and stubbornly sunlit. This 20-track record is their first full-length since 2016 and the first made after the 2023 death of founding member Trugoy the Dove; that absence shapes the album’s heartbeat, turning grooves into elegy without losing the trio’s sly humor.
Musically, the group leans into their classic plunderphonics — bright horn stabs, warm basslines and sample-rich tapestries while allowing modern collaborators to color outside the lines. Pete Rock’s production on lead single “The Package” plants a dignified boom-bap flag, and guests from Killer Mike to Yukimi Nagano and Black Thought add texture rather than distraction.
Lyrically the album negotiates grief and gratitude. Posdnuos and Maseo balance playful turn-of-phrase with surprisingly direct meditations on loss; moments that might have once been whims now carry weight, especially when Trugoy’s voice appears in fragments that feel like found poetry. The sequencing skits, interludes and full songs — nods to their golden-era playfulness while committing to emotional clarity.
There are tiny missteps: at 70 minutes some tracks overstay their welcome, and the abundance of features sometimes diffuses the trio’s center of gravity. Still, highlights such as the sun-soaked “Day In The Sun” and the bittersweet closer (which samples Roy Ayers) remind you why De La Soul’s approach to hip-hop — curious, inclusive, humane remains vital.
Cabin In The Sky isn’t a museum piece; it’s family footage made into a hymn. It mourns, it dances, and in doing both it restores a small kind of hope: that memory, when arranged with care and funk, can sound like celebration. Playful, patient and precise, this album is both a worthy coda and a bridge to listeners who are discovering De La Soul now.