March 2330, 2000
disc quicks|hip-hop
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V.I.P.
(Gee Street/V2)
The Jungle Brothers, fathers of the Native Tongues movement, have always been among hip-hops finest musical instigators. They stretched the genre, becoming the first hip-hop group to rhyme over house music with 1988s "Ill House You," which still garners heavy club rotation. But the JBeezs fifth album, V.I.P., produced by Alex Gifford of British big-beaters Propellerheads, doesnt continue their graceful nudging of hip-hops boundaries. Instead, it takes clumsy stabs at artistic license. On the title track, the tune from TVs I Dream of Jeannie loops over the chorus. The cuts instrumentation gives it, and the humdrum "Freakin You," a Beach Boys taint. Even with two appearances by the bluesy Holmes Brothers, very few songs on V.I.P. inspire more than a reach for the FF button. The exceptions are "I Remember" and "Strictly Dedicated," which spark Mike Gs and Afrika Baby Bams classic, conscious rhymes. Guests Black Eyed Peas douse "Down With The JBeez" flavorably, but the song runs almost nine minutes. Thats a problem with many of the songs: running longer than the average attention span. V.I.P.s song tempos are either breakneck-fast or molasses-slow, making the JBeezs fifth release a scarcely victorious attempt at capturing both house and hip-hop audiences, and jeopardizing their firmament in the hip-hop jungle.