Flames Dot Malik just dropped The Other Side of the Spoon, and it feels like one of those projects you don’t skip around — you let it play.
The album officially released March 27, 2026, coming in with 14 tracks and just over 30 minutes of music. It’s tight, focused, and doesn’t waste time trying to be anything it’s not.
Right away, the tone is clear. This isn’t a commercial reach. It’s grounded. The production leans into that gritty, underground sound, and it leaves room for the verses to carry the weight. Nothing feels overdone. Everything feels placed.

Flames sounds locked in across the whole project. The delivery is steady. The writing feels direct. No extra layers, no distractions. Just straight rapping with intention behind it.
The pacing helps too. Fourteen tracks, no filler, no long stretches that drag. It moves clean from start to finish, and that’s something a lot of albums miss right now. It feels like it was built to be heard all the way through, not chopped into moments.
There’s also consistency in the theme. You can tell this isn’t just a collection of songs. It feels like a mindset. Reflection, pressure, and staying grounded all run through the project without it getting repetitive.
At the end of the day, The Other Side of the Spoon doesn’t try to compete with what’s trending. It stays in its lane. And because of that, it hits a little different.