Cole salutes his Fayette-nam stomping grounds with an intense live set composed of 2014 Forest Hills Drive cuts played front to back.
At this moment, I begin to realize that the ominous overtones of his sophomore album, Born Sinner, resurface as subtleties throughout the film. Cole’s 2015 tour found him rocking the Crown Coliseum in his hometown of Fayetteville, North Carolinaa moment captured in an HBO documentary. The social dichotomy between the two friends seems like it leaves Cole feeling a bit of survivor's guilt. Smith High School, while Cole went to the suburban, predominantly white, Terry Sanford High School. Craig spent most of his adolescence in the inner-city, attending E.E. Jermaine feels like his friend was a prisoner of circumstance. Craig was arrested for drug-trafficking and at 14-years-old took a plea bargain to serve 19 years in prison. Mid-way through the doc', while shooting around in a gymnasium, the viewers are introduced to a friend of Cole's named Craig (who is mentioned on the song "Roll Call" off of Any Given Sunday vol. But, the name has taken up another meaning: a description of Fayetteville's war on drugs and crime. Cole's 2015 was a huge success, thanks in large part to his third studio album 2014 Forest Hills Drive.Earlier this month, Cole’s Forest Hills Drive: Homecoming Concert documentary premiered. Depiction of Rapper J Coles 2014 Forest Hills Drive album cover. The moniker is originated from the city being a military-town more specifically during the Vietnam Era a lot of soldiers were being rotated through the Fort Bragg military installation that borders the city. Cole - 2014 Forest Hill Drive (Homecoming Live for Fayetteville).zip. On the other side of the city's monotony is Fayettenam a portmanteau of Fayetteville and Vietnam. Things could've turned out very differently for J.