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A baby wearing a chain and holding a fork in the album artwork for Errol Eats Everything.
Errol Eats Everything by Errol Eats Everything (Big Chune Media)

Music

Errol Eats Everything Album Still Hits a Year Later

TLDR: Almost a year after its release, Errol Eats Everything stands as a defining album in Errol’s catalogue as we look ahead to what he does next.


One year on, the self-titled album released by Canadian-bred Errol Eats Everything still plays like a debut with veteran posture. It’s the kind of album that doesn’t beg for attention, it earns it. Released in February 2025, Errol Eats Everything is a 17-song catalog-starter that doubles as a mission statement: grown-man bars, clear-eyed purpose, and beats that move like they’ve been crate-digging for decades but refuse to live in the past.

We’re working to line up an interview with Errol in the near future, and before we do, it’s worth getting our readers up to speed on the bigger pieces in this growing universe; especially with how the Errol Eats Everything album uses craft as its loudest flex. The production is handled by Furious Evans, and you can feel the discipline in the sequencing: dusty swing, melodic touches, and pockets that invite long-form writing instead of algorithm-friendly hooks. Features from Cla’ence Jo, K-Riz, and Isaac Sawyer slide in like supporting characters who understand the plot.

SHIFTER Magazine framed the project’s origin story with the kind of detail most press skips, noting it was “originally envisioned to be three EPs that were eventually released as one body of work,” and citing the artist’s trust in the producer: Furious Evans is really responsible for the soundscape and backdrop of the album.”

That trust shows up in the album’s confidence. The writing leans introspective without turning preachy, grounded in real-world stakes and a North Star that’s bigger than streaming stats. There’s also the geography in the voice — Jamaica to Toronto to New York — not as a branding exercise, but as lived texture, the kind that makes a verse feel like a passport stamp.

If you missed it last winter, now’s the time. Run it back on Spotify, sit with the full 17, and you’ll hear why the Errol Eats Everything album is still gaining weight in the conversation.

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