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
#154 MOOD MUZIK ALBUM REVIEW - #JOE BUDDEN
In this lively episode, the hosts dial into the career of Joe Budden with genuine reverence, acknowledging his shift from the radio-friendly “Pump It Up” to the deeply introspective mixtape lane. They frame him as the kind of MC whose lyrical armour is stripped down—“journal entry unfiltered”—highlighting how albums like the Mood Muzik 2: Can It Get Any Worse? (2006) served as watershed moments in which Budden laid bare frustration, addiction and ambition with surgical precision. Their commentary emphasizes that this was less about chasing trends and more about owning vulnerability, and that Budden’s legacy extends beyond punchlines into enduring authenticity.
As the conversation unfolds, the hosts chart his journey—from mainstream exposure to becoming an underground fixture whose mixtape series ignited waves in hip-hop culture, and finally to his pivot into podcasting and media commentary. They underline how Mood Muzik became an event in itself for fans, a creative system through which Budden articulated his frustrations with the label system and the industry at large. The spirited tone of the review captures how his introspective storytelling, razor-sharp bars and emotional candour collectively forged a blueprint for a more confessional rap era—one that many later artists would explore in different forms.