Jae Hussle & Rai Shinobi Drop “Come Along”

Jae Hussle Come Along Cover Art

Rochester emcee Jae Hussle returns with “Come Along,” a new single produced by Rai Shinobi that feels built for underground heads who care about bars, mood, and long-term catalog growth.

If you’ve been following Jae Hussle singles for a minute, you know he’s not new to this. The Rochester, NY spitter has been delivering street-level insight and reflective storytelling for years, from “The Streets Raised Me” and “Time After Time” to the gritty “Talk To Em.”

On SpitFireHipHop alone, Hussle’s name pops up alongside some serious underground company. Records like “The Streets Raised Me” (with Curt Laisi and El Ay) and “Talk To Em” framed him as a voice for people surviving poverty, pressure, and bad options without losing their code. Later collabs like “ILL Gelato” with Euphony Bars and Azariah and “The Oath” with Young Black And Gifted reinforced his lane: sharp writing, moral backbone, and unapologetic boom-bap. On December 5, 2025, be sure to engage wih his new album, “The Impact.”

“Come Along” feels like the next chapter in that story, a Jae Hussle single that invites listeners deeper into his world instead of chasing algorithms. It plays like an open-door policy for fans who’ve discovered him through joints like “ILL Gelato,” “Family First (Remix),” “Victory Lap,” or “P.O.P” and want to move from features to a focused solo statement.

On the production side, Beats by Rai Shinobi brings a different kind of texture to Jae Hussle’s catalog. Shinobi is a beat producer based in Kurseong, India, known on Bandcamp for cinematic, spy-film-ready instrumentals like his 2022 project Spy Hunt In Kathmandu, whose intro even features Jae Hussle.

Rai Shinobi’s résumé stretches from South Asian artists to rugged underground rap, with his name appearing on projects for collectives like Grenade Rap Records and collaborations praised for heavy drums and moody sample work. Pairing that global sound palette with Hussle’s Rochester realism gives “Come Along” the kind of cross-border energy that defines new underground Hip-Hop singles 2025—organic, collaborative, and built for fans who dig into liner notes.

On “Come Along,” you can hear that chemistry: Hussle’s measured cadence cutting through Shinobi’s layered beat, turning the title into a challenge and an invitation. It’s the kind of record you can imagine sliding into a Spit Fire Radio mix between Young Black And Gifted’s “The Oath” and Jae’s earlier solo cuts.

In a year where playlist-friendly hooks dominate, “Come Along” stands out as a new underground Hip-Hop single that leans on craft and connection. It rewards listeners who’ve been following Hussle from Reflections: A Story Of My Lifetime Vol. 1 up through his recent features, and it introduces Rai Shinobi to a wider circle of boom-bap obsessives who still care who produced the record.

For fans who treat SpitFireHipHop.com as a hub to know who’s next first, “Come Along” is a signal: pay attention to the continued link-up between Rochester lyricists and global beat architects. If you’re digging this record, run back through our coverage of Jae Hussle, “The Streets Raised Me,” “Time After Time,” “Talk To Em,” “ILL Gelato,” “The Oath,” “Family First (Remix),” “Victory Lap,” and “P.O.P”—and hear how this new single fits into a longer grind.

“Come Along” isn’t just another drop; it’s an invitation to invest in an artist-producer pairing that’s building something brick by brick in the underground.

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