| 
					 ![[Blood in My Eye]](../coverart/ja_blood.jpg)  
					Ja Rule :: Blood in My Eye 
 Label: Def Jam 
					Author: Steve 'Flash' Juon
					 
					 
 
Lift up your nose and get a good whiff of what's in the air around you.  
It's musty.  Like someone wearing a t-shirt full of flop sweat who hasn't 
had a shower in days to boot.  Like someone taking a crap in their pants 
when put in a life or death situation.  Like a body that's been left out 
in the open, with soft skin involuntarily peeling off.  Does it stink?  
Does it make you want to wretch?  Welcome to Ja Rule's world.  After a 
year plus of being called out by 50 Cent for imitating 2Pac, torn apart 
by Eminem in hilarious freestyles, and a general inability to effectively 
respond to their one, there's another thing you can smell in his air - 
DESPERATION.  The once proud king of crossover thug 
rappers is now looking down the barrel of career oblivion, and the well 
documented legal troubles of his label cohorts certainly aren't helping.  
It's not just that Ja needs another hit duet with Ashanti, he needs 
CREDIBILITY to get his respect back in the rap world.
 
The most dangerous animal is usually one that gets backed into a corner 
with nowhere to go, and with "Blood in My Eye" Ja Rule definitely comes 
out swinging.  The response track "Clap Back," which has been making the 
file-swapping and mixtape-making circuits for a while now, is the response 
most people have been waiting for.  Of course, this is Ja Rule we're 
talking about, so clever lyrical potshots full of double entendre and 
sarcasm are highly unlikely.  What Ja can do though is use his gruff 
voice to threaten people menacingly, and he gives it his best shot here:
 
"Like Bush and Saddam, I'm a find out 
Where Em Laden's hiding and bomb him first 
It could be much - worse, I could be hotter than yo scrubs 
Mask and gloves, I'm hot to burn that ass up 
I'd rather be bossed up, with a bunch of broads 
The preacher's daughter screamin out 'Fuck the law!' 
I probably struck a chord, with the Christians 
But y'all got the freakiest bitches out of all the religions 
And God gave me his blessin to handle my business 
On these +Wanksta+ snitches, let the nina blow kisses 
If she somehow misses, he gon' meet the mistress 
And +Clap That Boy+ like Birdman and Clipse 
I got these niggaz all over my dick, like hoes 
I'm the star at these shows, I must be as hot as they come 
What's the procedure with a gun in your face, when you got one in your waist 
Let's cock back nigga, air out the space!"
 
To Ja's credit, it's not that bad of a salvo, although it's still not 
going to win the war.  In fact, it's going to be hard to convince listeners 
that 50 wasn't right about him ripping off 'Pac when he's rapping with 
Hussein Fatal on four of the album's tracks, quipping "like 'Pac said, 
keep ya head up man" on "The INC is Back" and on "Race Against Time II" 
he even sings "la-da-di-da-de-dahh" in the hook a la "Hail Mary."  The irony 
won't be lost on listeners up to date with the 50/Ja feud, since the best 
diss of the war to date came on Eminem's remake of the Tupac original, 
replacing 'Pac and the Outlawz with 50 Cent and Busta Rhymes.  It also 
doesn't help when your idea of a cute skit between songs to get even is 
to parody a Snickers commercial - apparently, 50's bulletproof Hummer 
only comes in gunmetal or black.  Ha, ha, ha.
 
The real problem though isn't whether or not Ja wins the verbal war.  He 
had to know from the start that trying to take out Shady/Aftermath verbally 
was like sending Hurricane McNeely out to take down Mike Tyson.  Yes, every 
now and then a Buster Douglas pops up out of the woodwork, but that's not 
happening on "Blood in My Eye."  In fact, it's Ja's singlemindedness about 
throwing 'bows and blows that's his problem.  "Blood in My Eye" toughens 
up Ja Rule's image, but the majority of his CURRENT fanbase 
could care less.  While rappers like DMX cling to their hood credibility 
and wrap themselves in it like a blanket, Ja traded in and traded up ever 
since "Holla Holla" first went mainstream.  Love him or hate him, you 
can't deny that songs like "Always on Time" and "Between Me and You" were 
the template other rap/R&B duets tried (often unsuccessfully) to emulate 
and achieve his platinum selling success.  As a gangster rapper Ja is 
only mediocre, but put him with Ashanti and give him a little leeway to 
sing-song a few bars a la Nelly and he rules (no pun) the radio e'ry time.
 
Musically, the beats are passable.  Jimi Kendrix, Chink Santana, Rebel, 
Irv Gotti and even Ja himself handle the shit.  Lead single "The Crown" 
featuring Sizzla has the kind of melodically menacing piano keys that 
will push it up despite having no females on the hook.  "Niggas & 
Bitches" is BlackOut's imitation of The Neptunes, while Ja's hook is 
an imitation of Junior M.A.F.I.A., but you won't be mad at either.  The 
title track is tight, and the bonus track "It's Murda" reuses an old 
Ja beat with a new Fatal contribution to good effect; while "The Wrap" 
borrows from Mobb Deep and gets another Hussein boost.  It's ironic 
that although given as throwaways, these songs show the most potential 
of the whole album.  Fatal and Ja seem to have a natural chemistry 
(perhaps because they both idolize Tupac) and should work together 
more often.  All things considered though, this short 45 minute album 
will not solve Ja's problems, nor will it restore him to chart dominance.  
As hard as it may be to swallow, Ja should stop telling 50 to pull his skirt 
down and bring a few skirts IN to the studio to do what he does 
best - make pop music.  The best kind of credibility Ja can get nowadays 
is not what the streets say, but how many times MTV shows his video.  
Without a good remix, none of these songs will stay in rotation long.
 
Music Vibes: 6 of 10
Lyric Vibes: 5 of 10
TOTAL Vibes: 5.5 of 10
 
Originally posted: November 4, 2003 
source: www.RapReviews.com
 
 
 |