Nota Critiques Mochen’s ‘North Vol 1: The Prophecy’: “Album Was Unnecessary.” In a candid breakdown that has sparked fresh debate in South African hip-hop circles, music executive Nota has delivered a measured but pointed assessment of Mochen’s latest project, North Vol 1: The Prophecy.

Speaking after giving the album a full listen, Nota acknowledged that the project is “okay” but stopped far short of praise. He argued that Mochen’s sound arrives at an awkward moment, arriving too closely on the heels of fellow Pretoria talent Thato Saul.
“I listened to the Mochen album. Yeah, it’s okay,” Nota began. “I think that after we had Thato Saul, we don’t need Mochen to sound so similar to Thato Saul.”
Nota highlighted a key stylistic contrast between the two artists. While praising Mochen’s more descriptive approach to storytelling and narrative focus, he noted shortcomings in delivery. “Even though his storytelling is a little more descriptive than Thato Saul… Thato Saul defaults to the rhyme scheme, the punchline… Mochen doesn’t adhere as much to the rhyme scheme and the punchline, but adheres more to the narrative.”
The critique deepened as Nota turned to the project’s commercial and artistic timing. He singled out the album’s closing track, “Legendary Status,” as a missed opportunity that could have been far bigger.
“That track he did — the last track on the album, which is ‘Legendary Status’ — I think the album was unnecessary,” Nota stated. “You put a proper singer on that song… just as a single. That gets you such a platinum level. That’s what Loatinover Pounds had before his album dropped.”
Nota’s central thesis is one familiar to industry watchers: not every artist is album-ready when they decide to drop a full body of work. “Sometimes you just need a hot single. It’s not about having the hot album. You’re not album-ready,” he said. “Some artists are not album-ready, and they’re dropping albums when they’re not album-ready. That’s what I feel about Mochen in this regard.”
He pointed to broader market realities in the Pretoria rap scene, suggesting the appetite for full projects from the region remains limited. “There’s no appetite to hear Pretoria rappers enough for him to have a whole body of work out,” Nota explained. “And especially when it sounds so similar to other Pretoria rappers that we’ve heard… there’s nothing distinctively different about it. It doesn’t stand out.”
Nota’s central thesis is one familiar to industry watchers: not every artist is album-ready when they decide to drop a full body of work. “Sometimes you just need a hot single. It’s not about having the hot album. You’re not album-ready,” he said. “Some artists are not album-ready, and they’re dropping albums when they’re not album-ready. That’s what I feel about Mochen in this regard.”
He pointed to broader market realities in the Pretoria rap scene, suggesting the appetite for full projects from the region remains limited. “There’s no appetite to hear Pretoria rappers enough for him to have a whole body of work out,” Nota explained. “And especially when it sounds so similar to other Pretoria rappers that we’ve heard… there’s nothing distinctively different about it. It doesn’t stand out.”
















