ALBUM REVIEWS / POP
- Share via
** Eazy-E “Str8 Off Tha Streetz of . . . Compton,” Relativity.
This posthumous album represents everything Eazy-E (who died of AIDS last March) was known for: reckless violence, irresponsible sex, gleeful misogyny and, raunchy, off-kilter humor. After a series of tracks that feature the N.W.A. co-founder at the top of his skill level, the album starts a quick descent into the nasty and the ironic.
There’s the misogyny so happily played out in the Naughty by Nature-penned “Hit the Hooker.” In “My Baby’s Mama,” he attacks some of the mothers of his seven children. Only “Eternal E,” where Eazy-E does a spoken-word recitation over a Roger Troutman/Yella track, saves the second half from being a complete waste.
With more tracks in the vault and the four most important members of N.W.A. still around, it’s conceivable that Eazy-E could live again, via a “Free as a Bird”-style studio reunion. “Str8 Off Tha Streetz,” like a Ringo Starr solo album, makes one yearn for that reunion with a vengeance.
*
** 1/2 Kris Kross, “Young, Rich and Dangerous,” Ruffhouse/Columbia. It’s rare that a 16- and a 17-year-old can claim to have a “comeback” album, but Kris Kross, of “Jump” fame, does exactly that. The title song and “Money, Power and Fame” find Chris Kelly and Chris Smith less precocious and more mendacious--and producer Jermaine Dupri makes sure that their soothing sound reflects their newfound maturity in a manner that will appeal to hip-hop fans young and old.
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.