
Legit and Rex Seshunz just dropped the kind of record underground heads live for. Born Inside A Dream is a full-length statement: sharp writing from Legit, and immersive, dust-kissed soundscapes built entirely from Beats by Rex Seshunz.
Released December 11, 2025, Born Inside A Dream is billed as a full-length studio album from the Canadian underground MC/producer duo, all songs written by Legit, all songs produced by Rex Seshunz, with mixing and mastering handled by Fresh Kils.
From the opener “Born Inside A Dream (Intro)” into “Dreamz On Reset,” the tone is immediate: reflective but not sleepy, gritty but not stuck in nostalgia. Rex Seshunz’s production feels like it’s designed for late-night drives and headphone rewinds, layered drums, smoky loops, and pockets that give Legit room to talk heavy without racing the beat. If you’re searching for a Legit album that plays like a cohesive film instead of a playlist, this one is built that way.
One of the strongest pulls here is how the project balances personal presence with culture talk. “Raising The Culture pt.3” lands like a mission statement, an underground Hip-Hop value system in music form, while tracks like “Water’s Course” stretch the mood with texture and movement. (Amazon’s listing even credits extra instrumentation like cello on “Water’s Course,” adding another layer to the atmosphere.)
The feature list reads like a cypher with purpose, not filler. Theo 3 shows up on “Cauterize,” and the album brings in Daniel Son & Gene One on “The Drought.” Later, Solomon Childs & Jinnahcide join the math on “Do The Math,” and KDB & Unknown Mizery close out the record on “Set It Free.” The cuts matter too: DJ Uncle Fester handles scratches across the project, with DJ Lando taking over on tracks 7 and 9—a detail that’ll make turntable lovers smile because it’s not just “added flavor,” it’s part of the build.
If you track new underground Hip-Hop albums 2025, Born Inside A Dream deserves a slot because it understands the fundamentals: bars, pockets, and identity. It’s not chasing trends; it’s reinforcing why the underground stays undefeated when it comes to longevity.
If you’re in “album mode” right now, you might also run up SpitFireHipHop’s recent underground picks like J. Sands’ No Hooks and Mr. Ripley’s Just Add Water for the same no-gimmicks energy.




