N.O.R.E. On Creating The Biggest Reggaeton Record Of His Time: “I Believed In My People”

By Marjua Estevez

New York City’s history of producing seminal hip-hop artists is an illustrious one. It would be remiss of us to not call N.O.R.E., né Victor Santiago Jr., an indispensable component of that.

A product of the school-to-prison pipeline, N.O.R.E. would rise to prominence as one half of the East Coast mafioso duo Capone-N-Noreaga in an era during which hip-hop was at a commercial tipping point.

This summer marked 20 years of The War Report, Capone-N-Noreaga’s landmark debut album. A lot has changed since CNN’s epic introduction to the game; hip-hop has evolved many times since. The same can be said about Noreaga, who went from rapper to producer to A&R to podcast personality to traveling chef (shhh—wait for it) and back again.

MG_2809-1506447303
MG_2809-1506447303

Credit: Jessica Xie / VIBE

Following the anniversary of his foray into the music industry, Santiago visited the VIBE headquarters to talk all things music, from his new deal with Mass Appeal and bridging gaps with fellow Queens rapper Nasir Jones, to recording N.O.R.E. y la Familia…Ya Tú Sabe before latinidad was the wave, and putting on for Southern acts like Cash Money and Pharrell before their respective glow-ups.

Watch as N.O.R.E. talks creating one of the biggest reggaeton records of all time, his new food show and the legacy he wants to leave behind.

This post N.O.R.E. On Creating The Biggest Reggaeton Record Of His Time: “I Believed In My People” first appeared on Vibe.