If there’s still a part of you that reminisces about the sound artists like Destroy Lonely brought to the underground back in the day, Rambo Stallone is set to be your new favourite artist. His recent album F.U.N almost feels like a callback to Lone’s </3 era, especially on the tracks built around a soft, laid-back bounce. But with the depth of his vocals and his loose, off-kilter flows, he brings a unique catchiness to 808-heavy music that’s already built for the speaker.
A spotlight here is “Friends N Foes”, with his SahBabii and Swapa type delivery in full effect. He glides over the playful loop in the backdrop by stretching out his end-rhymes, giving them a liquid feel. The falsetto adlibs will literally send you to another dimension, and then bring you right back as he drops a punchy bar. It’s easy to catch how much fun he’s having with his flow, and that energy is infectious.
Rambo Stallone is adding vocal crunch to a weightless bounce…
That same free-range quality even shows up in Rambo’s vocals, which you hear smoothly tuned up on “Circus Ole”, paired with a melodic pocket right before the beat drops. The voice change lands so subtly, almost in high-definition because of the bass-coated backdrop, that you find yourself sinking into the lowkey vibe he builds through the sonics.
A dip into Rambo’s discography, though, shows just how addictive his beat experimentation is - he’s gone from wilding out trap-style to still wilding out, just over a mellow indie beat with that defining crunch in his voice. It’s crazy to see how he’s evolved over the years, and it only proves the passionate versatility he’s bringing to the game.
Go stream F.U.N out now!
If you’re a fan, check it out with the links below. Love y’all.
Myra | Mar 18. 2026