Album Reviews : BONE THUGS-N-HARMONY *** 1/2, “E.1999 Eternal” <i> Relativity</i>
- Share via
This Cleveland-based quartet has raised the stakes of the gangsta rap game, not only in terms of pure, gritty excess, but also in rhyme-style, cadence and delivery.
Bone isn’t content to just shoot at that next emcee or punk in their neighborhood; they’ll harmonize about it too, mixing graphic imagery with old-fashioned street-corner crooning.
Essentially, this is a West Coast-style dancehall record, complete with heavy-looped bass lines, electronic gunshots, warped-out dub sounds and fast-paced rhyming style mixed with harmonizing that the Jamaicans call sing-jeh . No change in subject matter: just bloody shoot-’em braggadocio, laced with ominous piano samples.
This is the kind of album that starts out good and gets better with repeated listenings--as the dark, subliminal references clear up. Easily one of the most worthwhile rap purchases of the year.
More to Read
The biggest entertainment stories
Get our big stories about Hollywood, film, television, music, arts, culture and more right in your inbox as soon as they publish.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Los Angeles Times.