Bone Thugs N Harmony – Strength & Loyalty

    Like every Bone release since Art of War, I really
    didn’t expect much from Strength & Loyalty off the Swizz-owned
    Interscope imprint Full Surface Records.
    All of the turmoil and internal struggles Krayzie, Layzie, Wish
    and the rest were having always seemed to be super evident in their music. As a
    result, just about everything they have done in the last decade has been
    scattered and without focus, lacking any sense of unity or direction. To my
    surprise, Strength & Loyalty is actually somewhat focused and
    thankfully, it seems the group really put their hearts into this album and the
    production and management teams were in full support.

    Swizz, Neo, Will.I.Am. Jermaine Dupri, Akon, Toomp, The Individuals
    and Pretty Boy man the production of Strength &
    Loyalty
    . “C-Town,”
    an ode to both Cleveland and the Chi, is a definite album standout. How can you
    not dig a Bone collaboration with former foe Twista?

    I never thought I would say this, but I love two Akon songs,
    and both are on this album! The lead single “I Tried” serves as a nice prelude for the vibe of the entire album and “Never Forget Me” is all
    kinds of ill. Who knew Bone Thugs-N-Harmony would become
    seasoned, grown men in the game, but the maturity and wisdom on this record is
    impossible to ignore. “9mm” is another gem for anyone hoping for a trip back to
    the days Eazy E was in the picture. “Wind Blow” is
    the quintessential “Hate/Love” joint of the album. It’s a little awkward
    sounding relative to the rest of the album, and “The Chain” may have been sampled
    a billion times since Fleetwood Mac released
    it 30 years ago – but I don’t give a shit; it has such a smooth summertime
    feeling and Bone do it justice.

    However, Strength & Loyalty
    definitely has its fair share of missteps. The problem may be, ironically
    enough, that they tried too hard. It seems that in order to compensate for an
    army of scattered songs and collabs in the past, they pushed to make an album
    that appealed to everyone. And with so many people with so many different
    tastes, the record comes off almost too mainstream and formulaic. Sped-up soul
    samples? Check. Gangsta shootings and hustling? Check. Preachy, gospel track
    with Yolanda Adams? Check. Game talking about
    his hood? Jeezy’esque southern beats? Check and Check – Ok,
    that should cover just about every commercial demographic, this has to be
    popular! [Nope.] Oh, and there’s one song called “Lil Love” featuring Mariah
    Carey
    and Lil Bow Wow [see: Making a wrong turn and
    ending up in 2001… the shitty parts of 2001]

    Once upon a time, Bone Thugs-N-Harmony took the Hip Hop
    world by storm thanks to the undisputed classic E. 1999 Eternal. The
    melodic harmonies, light speed flows and potent rhymes the five Cleveland, Ohio
    natives brought to the table was worlds beyond anything the music world had
    scene before. The Grammy-winning single “Crossroads” remains today as one of the
    most loved non-dance Hip Hop records [by those outside of Hip Hop].

    Unfortunately though, somewhere down the road, the impact and praise for the
    quintet-turned-quartet-turned-trio began to slip. Call it label disputes, legal
    problems or internal conflicts, there is no arguing that in the average
    listeners mind, Bone Thugs have almost completely faded away
    into obscurity. Hopefully, their signing to industry juggernaut Interscope
    thanks really is a new beginning. Rarely will you see me thanking or
    praising ol’ Swizzy, but if he’s the man who can end that all
    that political bullshit, the dude gets daps from me. A surprisingly strong
    ‘debut’ release like the new Strength & Loyalty deserves its share
    of praise as well.

    One thought on “Bone Thugs N Harmony – Strength & Loyalty

    1. This was a decent and overall ”fun” album. my only gripe was that they used that Fleetwood mac sample in wind blow. they dident even bother making it different. they just rapped over the song and it sucked.

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