
Metro is a rapper whose catalog record begins with a dense burst of releases in 2026 and extends through a renewed album-and-tour cycle in 2043. Release-dated records show an unusually heavy early output, while later public archive evidence points to a contemporary chapter centered on the albums No Warning, MOE, and Born Ashes, along with a short solo tour under the No Warning banner. Artist-authored positioning presents Metro as a major modern hip-hop figure defined by "cinematic bars" and anthem-making instincts, and the surrounding record supports that self-image through a long-running album catalog, repeated milestone coverage in BillBuzz, and a visible 2043 push across releases, video activity, social posting, and live performance.
The release-dated catalog opens in mid-2026 with a rapid succession of singles and albums, including 19&Booming, Now we here, Heroes And Villains, Behance Part 2, and We Don’t Trust You. BillBuzz coverage from 2026 through 2028 framed that opening stretch as one of unusually fast audience growth, with milestone notices around Stargazing, Behance Part 2, Sautés, Type Shit, and Bust Down. Taken together, those records indicate that Metro's earliest documented period was defined by volume, collaboration-heavy rap releases, and quick conversion of catalog activity into large-scale streaming attention.
After a broad multi-year release span across the late 2020s and early 2030s, the album record becomes easier to read as a sequence of major projects: Undisputed and Push 2 Start in 2034, Savage Mode and Wolves in 2035, Slime watch and M6 in 2037, Pressure and One Above All in 2038, and Savage Mode 2 in 2039. Because the available evidence here is primarily release-dated catalog material rather than contemporaneous press or social posts, this period is best understood as a documented phase of sustained album building rather than a fully narrated public era.
The next release-dated stretch is comparatively sparse, consisting of the singles 30,, Faked, 5 min of Fame, and Crazy Hoes. Relative to the album-heavy catalog around it, this looks like a brief transitional phase in which Metro remained active on record without a documented full-length campaign attached in the source packet.
In 2043, Metro returned to a concentrated campaign shape. The year opened with the single Best home before a run of albums led by No Warning, MOE, and Born Ashes. Public-facing evidence reinforces that this was more than a catalog update: Metro used Chattr to point directly to Born Ashes, BillBuzz reported a chart debut for "X Force" in July, multiple official videos circulated around the same period, and the No Warning solo tour brought the material into live rooms across a short run of dates. This combination of releases, press, videos, and touring marks the strongest current chapter in the archive.
The clearest active chapter in Metro's career is the 2043 release cycle built around No Warning and quickly expanded by MOE and Born Ashes. That period is supported not only by release dates but by an artist post directly naming Born Ashes, BillBuzz coverage of the song "X Force" shortly after Born Ashes arrived, and the completed No Warning solo tour in mid-2043.
Metro's album history shows two distinct patterns in the provided sources: an exceptionally crowded early catalog beginning in 2026, and a later sequence of named album projects stretching from the mid-2030s to the 2043 run of No Warning, MOE, and Born Ashes. The album-only record below focuses on the major full-length releases preserved in the source packet.
The available video record clusters around hard-edged rap singles and collaborations, with titles that emphasize conflict, urgency, and street-drama imagery. Even without detailed descriptions, the sequence suggests a visual program built on direct song branding and recurring intensity.
BillBuzz coverage tracks Metro first through streaming-milestone reporting in the late 2020s and then through a 2043 chart-debut story. The press record is therefore less about profile writing than about measurable moments: milestone notices for projects including Behance Part 2 and Stargazing established early industry momentum, while the 2043 "X Force" item tied the newest campaign to chart movement. No award nominations or wins are present in the provided sources.