Notes & Personnel Info |  | H.N.I.C. is an acronym for HEAD NIGGA IN CHARGE. |  | Personnel includes: Prodigy, N.O.R.E., Havoc, Cormega, BG, Bars & Hooks. |  | Producers include: Alchemist, Nashiem Myrick, Rockwilder, E.Z. Elpee, Bink. |  | Recorded at Soundtrack Studios, Electric Lady, and The Hit Factory, New York, New York; Kejuan Entertainment Studios, Long Island, New York. |  | H.N.I.C. is an acronym for HEAD NIGGA IN CHARGE. |  | Personnel includes: Prodigy, Noreaga, Havoc, Cormega, BG, Bars & Hooks. |  | Producers include: Alchemist, Nashiem Myrick, Rockwilder, E.Z. Elpee, Bink. |  | Recorded at Soundtrack Studios, Electric Lady, and The Hit Factory, New York, New York; Kejuan Entertainment Studios, Long Island, New York. |  | On H.N.I.C., his first solo venture outside of Mobb Deep, Prodigy collaborates with a long list of featured guest rappers, many of them from his Queensbridge stomping ground, and he also works with a variety of producers, most notable among them the Alchemist and Rockwilder. Prodigy's Mobb Deep partner, Havoc, makes only two appearances over the course of the 22-track album. Despite the number of outside contributors, H.N.I.C. isn't much of a departure for Prodigy, who remains true to his style lyrically and raps over an assortment of productions that are reminiscent of Mobb Deep. All of this should please Mobb Deep fans, as this album is simply a twist on the legendary Queensbridge duo's usual approach. ~ Jason Birchmeier |  | As half of the infamous hip-hop duo Mobb Deep, with four albums and many guest appearances to his credit, Prodigy (the rapper, not the UK techno fiend) has been responsible for some of the best New York-flavored underground rap. On his debut solo effort H.N.I.C., he delivers more of that raw hardcore. |  | While his partner Havoc's strength lays in his production skills (illustrated here on tracks "Live Through It" and "Wanna Be Thugs," on which he's also featured), Prodigy is, without a doubt, lyrically superior. Every verse here highlights his vivid rhyming talent, particularly in the autobiographical "You Can Never Feel My Pain," which details his struggle with sickle cell anemia. The beats are well-arranged and infectious, giving Prodigy the right backdrop to rip, which he does best on the title track "H.N.I.C." and first single "Keep it Thoro." | Musical Guests |  | N.O.R.E. |  | Havoc |  | B.G. |  | Chinky |  | Twin Gambino |  | Big Noyd |  | Cormega |  | B.K. |  | Mike Delorean |  | Bars & Hooks |
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| Spin (11/00, p.212) - 7 out of 10 - "...Titillating; its rugged beats and brooding rhymes rival some of the best in the [Mobb] Deep canon....it is the work of a thug shoving his steel...down your throat..."Entertainment Weekly (11/24/00, p.83) - "...[He] still rocks the hardcore rhymes like no other..." - Rating: B- Muzik (2/01, p.58) - 4 out of 5 - "...Prodigy just keeps getting better....We can't feel his pain, but we're feeling this." Vibe (12/00, p.196) - 4 stars out of 5 - "...An outstanding combination of diverse sounds and complex themes....a vivid portrait of P as an artist..." The Source (1/01, p.190) - 4 mics out of 5 - "...Infectious....retaining its fluidity throughout..." NME (Magazine) (12/2/00, p.50) - 7 out of 10 - "...It's just dark, grimy, gritty stuff. Hard demonstrations of machismo disguised as rhymes; casual misogyny and a studied disregard for human life; and verbal grenades that all tumble over bright and shiny beat surfaces, in a supremely nonchalant manner..." |
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