

Over 26 tracks, Max’s voice carries an unmistakable and inimitable melodic pull, while French wields a well-established knack for crafting club-ready anthems. If Coke Wave 3.5: Narcos—the 2026 tape that marked Max B’s return to releasing album-length collections of music with one-time partner-in-rhyme and now global superstar French Montana—proved anything, it was that despite 16 years of Max’s incarceration, the pair’s chemistry never wavered. Their return to the studio, marked by the KC and the Sunshine Band-sampling “Ever Since U Left Me,” affirmed their ability to create NYC-standard club bangers at will. And as Wave Gods 2: Cosmos Brothers proves, that will is ironclad. Across the project’s 26 songs, they’ve opened their studios doors to a mere six guests. Rick Ross, who may have inadvertently enlisted the pair for his own comeback single, “Minks in Miami,” helps kick things off with boisterous flair on “Smoking Pt. 2.” Ye (fka Kanye West) comes off as something of a stunt casting at first listen of “Unlocked,” but is less a distraction than vibe-amplifier by song end. The Isley Brothers-assisted “Addictive” serves to show how truly limitless the pair’s reach (and appreciation for timeless soul voices) can be, and a posthumous feature from late Queens MC and one-time affiliate Chinx feels both commemorative and essential on “Who Do You Love.” The guest list is rounded out by NY-bred newcomer Chase Belly (“Bet It All”) and LA hitmaker Ty Dolla $ign, who in each instance mold to the Wave God sound without compromising it. At the center of it all, though, are French and the Boss Don sharpening their respective strengths over masterfully curated, feel-good samples—Strafe’s “Set It Off,” 2Pac’s “Cant C Me,” Afrika Bambaataa and The Soulsonic Force’s “Planet Rock,” to name but a few. Max’s voice carries an unmistakable and inimitable melodic pull, while French wields a well-established knack for crafting club-ready anthems. “This isn’t just a comeback, it’s a realignment of the universe,” a husky narrator’s voice proclaims on the project’s “Cosmos Skit.” It’s a statement that echoes the impact of Max’s absence and the weight it carried for fans of both MCs.