Born Sinner
Born Sinner – Hunger, Defiance, and the Making of a King There’s a particular kind of fire that only exists in artists who feel like they still have something to prove. Not the polished confidence of superstardom, but the restless, almost confrontational hunger of someone staring at the throne and deciding—publicly—that they belong there. Born Sinner is Jermaine Cole in that exact moment. This wasn’t just an album rollout—it was a statement of intent. Releasing on the same day as Kanye West’s Yeezus wasn’t coincidence; it was confrontation. Cole wasn’t ducking smoke—he was walking straight into it. And while Yeezus arrived like a disruptive lightning bolt, jagged and industrial, Born Sinner was something more enduring: a slow-burning fire that kept climbing until it couldn’t be ignored. It didn’t debut at number one—but it became number one. That distinction matters. It reflects an album that people lived with, returned to, and ultimately crowned. The Sound...