Album Reviews : Snow Shows Off Dancehall Talent on ‘Love’
- Share via
***, SNOW, “Murder Love”, EastWest Comparisons to rapper Vanilla Ice were inevitable in ’93 when Canadian-born Snow held the No. 1 spot on the nation’s singles chart with his tongue-twisting dancehall reggae hit “Informer.” But, aside from being white artists working in black-music genres, the similarities end there.
It’s clear from both his first album, “12 Inches of Snow,” and this new one that, unlike Ice, Snow really is a skilled performer and an exceptional dancehall talent. That’s evident on songs like “Anything for You,” a buoyant duet with Nadine Sutherland, “Things to Say”--a Bob Marley tribute sampling Bill Withers’ “Use Me”--and “Rivertown,” a look at a Jamaican ghetto through the eyes of its young residents.
*
* 1/2 Various Artists, “Bad Boys” soundtrack, Work Group/Columbia. Listening to some of the bad writing on the “Bad Boys” soundtrack makes you wonder yet again--where are the great R&B; songwriters? “Someone to Love,” the Jon B.-Babyface duet, is another woefully wimpy songwriting effort by Babyface. Keith Martin’s “Never Find Someone Like You” is a completely banal ballad in the Boyz II Men vein. One of the three original tracks is Xscape’s racy but routine “Work Me Slow.”
The album isn’t a total loss though, since 2Pac, Warren G, Ini Kamoze and alterna-funkers Juster contribute first-rate material. But all these tracks can be found on their own albums.
*
** Various artists, “Street Fighter” soundtrack, Priority. Solid contributions such as Ice Cube’s title track and Nas’ call to disarm, “One on One,” are neutralized by rap-by-numbers bumblers from LL Cool J and Craig Mack. Biggest fumble comes from football star Deion Sanders, who proves alarmingly unoriginal. New albums are rated on a scale of one star (poor), two stars (fair), three stars (good) and four stars (excellent).
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.