Logic – VINYL DAYS is the seventh studio album from Maryland-born rapper and producer Logic, released on Def Jam Recordings with catalog number BOO 3592901. Hosted by Funk Flex and built around samples drawn from the vinyl collection of Egon, the longtime MadLib collaborator and record archivist, this LP arrives as one of the more deliberately constructed hip-hop records in Logic’s catalog. The concept is rooted in crate culture from the ground up, and the format it lands on is exactly the one it was made for.
About Logic – VINYL DAYS
Logic built his following through prolific output and a vocal dedication to the craft of rap, accumulating GRAMMY nominations and multiplatinum certifications across a run that started in the early 2010s. He stepped away from music in 2020 before returning, and this album represents a focused statement on his return to form. Rather than chasing a contemporary sound, he leans into boom-bap sensibility and live-sample energy, framing the whole project around the physical ritual of digging through records. Egon’s collection provides the raw material, and Logic builds on top of it with intent.
A Record Built Around Records
The guest list here is not filler. Wiz Khalifa, The Game, RZA, Action Bronson, and Earl Sweatshirt all appear alongside more unexpected presences: Morgan Freeman, music critic Anthony Fantano, and legendary interviewer Nardwaur. Funk Flex hosts throughout, threading the album together in a way that gives it the feeling of a curated listening session rather than a standard tracklist. That structural choice pays off on vinyl, where side breaks and sequencing actually matter. Spinning this record rather than streaming it makes the format feel like a deliberate part of the experience, not an afterthought.
The Pressing and Format Details
This is an LP pressing on Def Jam, catalog BOO 3592901. For collectors, the appeal here goes beyond nostalgia. An album this explicitly built around vinyl culture, sampling from a respected archivist’s personal collection and hosted by one of New York radio’s defining voices, belongs in a physical collection. The concept does not fully translate through a phone speaker or a streaming queue. It translates here, on a turntable, with the record itself as the medium. If you care about hip-hop that engages seriously with its own history, this pressing is the correct way to own it.

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