Fetty Wap’s new album Zavier feels like both a homecoming and a reset, giving us the melodic hitmaker we remember while opening up about everything he’s been through since his time away.

A comeback with something to say

Recorded after his release from prison earlier this year, Zavier plays like a reintroduction: the hooks are big, the energy is bright, but there’s a newly focused sense of purpose running underneath. Across 17 tracks, Fetty blends the sing‑rap style that made “Trap Queen” a phenomenon with more mature reflections on family, loss, and starting over.

Sound, standout tracks, and features

The production leans melodic and glossy, bouncing between trap, R&B, and rap ballads that showcase Fetty’s still-intact, instantly recognizable voice. Standouts like “Never Tell” (a piano-driven confessional), “Like a Taylor” with Wiz Khalifa, and love‑soaked cuts like “Real Love” and “Favorite Girl” remind you how effortlessly he can craft earworms. Features from Max B, G Herbo, Honey Bxby, Tink, Monty, and others round out the project, making Zavier feel like a real statement album rather than just a quick post‑prison drop.

Final thoughts

If you came up on Fetty’s 2015 run, Zavier will hit like nostalgia with an upgrade: same catchy melodies, more depth, and a clearer sense of who he is now. It’s not just a “welcome home” project; it sounds like the start of a new chapter that could put Fetty Wap back in regular rotation for a lot of listeners.