| ![[Tough Luv]](../coverart/yg_toughluv.jpg)  Young Gunz :: Tough Luv   Label: Roc-A-Fella Records
 Author: Steve 'Flash' Juon
 
 
 
Love him or hate him, you have to give Shawn 'Jay-Z' Carter credit.  Ever since 
announcing his "retirement" from rap with "The Black Album," his label Roc-A-Fella Records has been working non-stop to 
push the next wave of stars to come after him.  Memphis Bleek, Kanye West, and now the 
Young Gunz have all released albums in the last few months.  In fact, if you were 
only hitting the record store once a month, you'd probably feel like there was a 
new Roc release every time you turned around.  Memphis is already established as a 
rapper though, and Kanye at least as a producer, so the only one of the three to 
be the next NEW thing from the Roc is the Gunnaz.
 
Chris and Neef have been running this rap shit for a minute themselves.  Even 
before their solo album, they were being big-upped verbally by Jigga on "Takeover" 
and playing prominent rap roles on both "State Property" compilations.  The song 
that garnered them the most acclaim was one the second comp, and appropriately 
titled "Can't Stop, Won't Stop."  Despite their age (neither is legally old 
enough to purchase alcohol) the song had a vintage old school 1980's feel, 
with a bare bones track made up of only beats and breakdowns that Rick Rubin would 
be proud of.  Since then, they've released a Chingy remix of the track and a new 
single "No Better Love," both of which appear on their debut album "Tough Luv."  
The latter is clearly the opposite of the former; it's a syrupy ballad with Rell 
singing the hook and both members (particularly Chris) expressing their devotion:
 
Chris: "I think I might wife herYou know, powder blue Roc-A-Wear suit, white Nike her
 My niggaz like her
 She been with me through the grind
 Girl you put in that time like been lifers
 You got tight used to hooky and chill
 Twat tight plus she cook up a meal
 Had the hook up for real
 More headaches and stress cause a child involved
 It's all good cause our sex be my tylenol
 Best baby doll of all
 Shit the rest of you childish broads
 Give me the sex then I'm tired of y'all
 So find a next to provide for y'all
 I got my baby girl, plus she bout to drop my baby girl"
 
Lest you think that Chris and Neef have gone soft, the album is still full of 
jump-offs.  The Just Blaze produced "Friday Night" is another stripped down track 
with a hook that's vintage early 80's, and a beat from the mid-to-late.  "$$$ 
Girlz" does for Hall & Oates what M.O.P.'s "Cold as Ice" did for Foreigner - 
make them fly-ass hip-hop.  Scott Storch continues to increase his reputation 
outside The Roots with the banging "Never Take Me Alive" featuring Jay-Z, 
although even it can't hold a candle to Just Blaze's work on the title track.  
It's all about the formative experiences that made him into MC's:
 
"Think back, I never left the premisesTwenty-four seven the corner, now let's remember this
 After school you wrote your rhymes while I sat in your crib
 One of the first niggaz you let in your crib
 Moms treated me like a son since day one
 Think about how she talk about she can't wait 'til that day come
 To think about that, I wasn't even thinkin bout rap
 Until I met you, and thank you for that
 And now you got us lookin like Jaz and Jay
 T. Mac and Carter, Neef; you gotta work harder, Neef
 Shit we runnin with S. Carter, Neef
 Dame and Biggs, get on your game my nig
 The whole clique feel the same my nig
 So don't think cause I'm ahead of you I changed my nig"
 
A lot of the tracks on "Tough Luv" are produced by Chad Hamilton, such as 
the somber piano laced "North of Death" and "Parade" featuring Freeway, among 
others.  Despite not being one of the best known names on the Roc production 
team to this point, his consistancy keeps the Young Gunz album ON point.  
Very few tracks on this 70+ minute album are mediocre, at least musically.  
It starts out hot with the anthemic Bink! track "Future of the Roc" and continues 
until the soulful songs "Time" and "Life We Chose" - both by Chad Hamilton.  
It doesn't stop there though, since two bonus tracks follow the official end.  
On the whole there's nothing wrong with "Tough Luv" as an album.  Chris has 
a distinctive voice musically, not too deep but still having some grit to it 
when he spits.  Neef compliments him well by being a little more pimpish, 
something akin to Slick Rick minus the British accent.  Still and all this 
reviewer still feels a little non-plussed having listened to it.  The Gunz 
certainly have all the requisite elements for success - the right producers, 
the right guest stars, and the right label to be signed to for promotional 
purposes.  In the end that may be the problem - their debut seems a little 
TOO contrived at times.  Groomed and managed for success by their 
older Roc-A-Fella peers, the Young Gunz carefully avoid whackness but also 
seem a little timid about taking changes musically and lyrically.  They stick 
to tried and true themes about growing up poor, hustling to survive, making 
money and attracting fly women, and it just seems so cliche.  Without the 
dominant voice and personality of a Jay-Z spitting these ideas, it doesn't 
leave a lasting impression.  "Tough Luv" is a worthwhile purchase, but the 
Young Gunz still need to get a little older and find their own identity.
 
Music Vibes: 7 of 10
Lyric Vibes: 7 of 10
TOTAL Vibes: 7 of 10
 
Originally posted: February 24, 2004source: www.RapReviews.com
 
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