His other projects are Called to Be Corny Side A and Called to Be Corny Side B. “That album was actually called Days of Noah in 2011.” It was a 22-song album, but for 2017 he has divided it into two separate projects.
He wanted to give his album this new title to address how people think Christian hip-hop is corny. “Aw, you’re still doing the old way. You’ve got all these bible verses and stuff in your music. The world won’t understand that. You can’t do outreach with that. Nobody’s going to listen to that because it’s corny.”
Young Noah believes that people will listen to his music, regardless of whether or not it can be considered corny, because if God wants a person to hear it, they will hear it, and only the Holy Spirit can change a person’s heart.
“I’ve had drug dealers get their hands on my CD, put it in their radio, hear that its Christian rap, take it out, and say, ‘Woah, I don’t want to hear this,’ [then] have a friend say, ‘Naw, this is Young Noah. You should really listen to it,’ [then they would] listen to my Christian rap CD for two weeks straight. After the two weeks he goes to a church, gives his life to the Lord, gets baptized, stops selling drugs. I’ve seen this happen time and time again.”
“When you get beats from producers a lot of times they’ll leave the name of their company in the beat. What the blessing is, in a lot of the old songs, I left those tags in the beats, so people could know who the producer was.”