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Amazon.com's Price: $12.98 as of 09/03/2010 13:41 EDT
Availability: Usually ships in 24 hours
This item ships for FREE with Super Saver Shipping.
Binding: Audio CD
Brand: PRODIGY OF MOBB DEEP
EAN: 0088561187323
Format: Explicit Lyrics
Item Dimensions: 20
Label: Relativity
Manufacturer: Relativity
Number Of Discs: 1
Publisher: Relativity
Release Date: November 14, 2000
Studio: Relativity
Disc 1:- Bars & Hooks (Intro) - Prodigy,
- Genesis - Prodigy,
- Rock Dat - Prodigy, Harrell, R
- What U Rep - Prodigy, Bynol, J
- Keep It Thoro - Prodigy, Johnson, A
- Can't Complain - Prodigy, Evans, S
- Infamous Minded - Prodigy, Johnson, A
- Wanna Be Thugs - Prodigy, Johnson, A
- Three - Prodigy, Johnson, A
- Delt w/ The Bull - Prodigy, Johnson, A
- Trials of Love - Prodigy, Bond, L
- H.N.I.C. - Prodigy, Johnson, A
- Veteran's Memorial - Prodigy, Johnson, A
- Do It - Prodigy, Alston, M
- Littles (Skit) - Prodigy,
- Y.B.E. - Prodigy, Dorcey, C
- Diamond - Prodigy, Alston, M
- Gun Play - Prodigy, Pitts, Clay
- You Can Never Feel My Pain - Prodigy, Alexander, E
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Editorial Review:
Product Description: No Description Available. Genre: Rap, Hip-Hop Media Format: Compact Disk Rating: PA Release Date: 14-NOV-2000
Amazon.com: Although H.N.I.C. is billed as Prodigy's solo debut, it's liberally peppered with guest appearances. Mobb Deep's infamous one chose, with the exception of Cash Money Millionaire B.G., to rely on folks of Queens pedigree. His borough loyalty gives H.N.I.C. a polished yet organic-sounding edge on today's crop of industry-endorsed thugs. The bulk of H.N.I.C's subject matter scores few points for originality, but no one speaks to corner-hustling shorty rocks as clearly as P. Standout tracks in the Mobbphonic vein include "Infamous Minded." Featuring Big Noyd, the song references BDP's "Criminal Minded" and is pushed over the top by a badass reggae-tinged beat. Havoc contributes both lyrical and rhythmic support; his beat on "Wanna Be Thugs" proves why he's the production don of Queensbridge. Getting past the gun talk and guest appearances, "You Never Feel My Pain," which unflinchingly details P's battle with sickle cell anemia, is a hardcore analysis of the artist's frame of reference for daily living. That alone is worth the price of admission. --Rebecca Levine END
Average Rating: 
Rating: -
"THIS ONE OF THE BEST HARDCORE ALBUMS EVER IN HIP HOP!". Every cut on this album is drenched in thug-dun culture straight from queens and if you from the street you can totally relate and bang this out in your whip everyday. Prodigy put his soul in this project and you can hear it all of the tracks. From the beginning to the end. This album was slept on for real!
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I LOVE THIS CD. HAD TO BUY ANOTHER B/C SOMEONE STOLE MINE. I HIGHLY RECOMMEND IT!!
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H.N.I.C. is Prodigy of Mobb Deeps solo LP, he delivers hard hitting tracks....nothing less. His reply back to Jay Z's diss "Keep it thoro" is a track to bang all day, HOV has nothing on the MOBB. Another powerful track is "never feel my pain" where Pee talks about his Sickle Cell Anemia disease, and gives you a deep visual of what he went through growing up. For all the MOBB fans out there, you MUST have this in your collection.....or you're not a MOBB fan.
"Heavy air play all day with ... Read More
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Prodigy was always nice but on this solo album you would hear a side of P that shows that he can make a suspect album just like the rest of them. His flow got sloppy and he got outrapped by Noriega on his own s***(What U Rep). To add insult to injury he gets outstaged by B.G.(no offence to B.G. but come on now!) on Y.B.E. Even Cormega(this one is understandable) floors him on Three. The guest spots with Havoc are nothing to brag about either and the way that Prodigy fumbled in that freestyle with his ... Read More
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Before there was Hollywood P, there was Prodigy aka the H.N.I.C, aka the most rugged, vicious and nihilistic voice coming out of Queensbridge.
As the most lyrical half of the infamous mobb deep, P always revolved around that sacred gangsta trinity of gunz, drugs and sex, and if anything, with this solo album, P endulges in that gangsta sound, evolving from thug to superthug, with more hood tales of everyday hustle, getting bent and pushing weight.
The surprise is the actually decent production, ... Read More
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