That's Hip-Hop
We're 3 high school friends who share a common passion for Hip Hop. Each of us have created our own albums, performed or started our own channels, but this time, we are collaborating together to share our common bond over our love for hip hop. We are taking a journey into the music. Going album by album to dissect and share our experiences with the tracks. We release a new episode every Monday. Check us out and let us know what albums we should review next!
That's Hip-Hop
#150 N.O.R.E. ALBUM REVIEW - N.O.R.E.
N.O.R.E.’s 1998 solo debut wasn’t just an album — it was a snapshot of New York hip-hop caught between chaos and charm, and Mark, Ali and Isaiah in this episode revive that energy with contagious excitement. They break down how N.O.R.E., fresh off the success of Capone-N-Noreaga, carved out his own lane by leaning into pure charisma: off-the-cuff bars, unpredictable humor, and a voice that sounded like it came straight from the block. The hosts paint the era vividly — The Neptunes still ascending, DJ Clue crafting the streets’ soundtrack, features from giants like Nas and Big Pun — and they remind listeners that this album wasn’t just popular, it was a commercial knockout. By weaving in personal stories and the album’s chart history, the episode makes you feel like you’re stepping back into the summer of ’98, when every car window blasted “Super Thug.”
As they dig into tracks like “Banned From TV,” “Super Thug,” and “Body in the Trunk,” the hosts highlight what made N.O.R.E. so magnetic: not meticulous technicality, but a raw, larger-than-life personality that you couldn’t ignore. They talk about bar-counting with “what what what,” storytelling that plays like a crime flick, and production choices that—almost accidentally—became iconic. And in the process, they connect the dots to the N.O.R.E. we know today, the culture-shaping voice behind Drink Champs. The review becomes an invitation: if you think you know N.O.R.E. from podcasting alone, listening to this album — and this breakdown — will give you a whole new appreciation for the man who helped soundtrack an era.