The Professional

Rate It! Avg: 5.0 (1 ratings)
The Professional album cover
Album Information
EXPLICIT

Total Tracks: 22   Total Length: 74:07

eMusic Features

0

eMusic Guide to Def Jam Records

By eMusic Editorial Staff, eMusic Contributor

Started in Rick Rubin's humble NYU dorm room, Def Jam became a proper force when the shaggy-haired college student was introduced to a young, hustling entrepreneur. In less than a year, the duo had released T La Rock and Jazzy Jay's epochal single, "It's Yours," and 12"s from some nascent icons: LL Cool J and Beastie Boys. By the time the decade was out, Def Jam had established itself, with artists like Public Enemy, LL,… more »

They Say All Music Guide

Now rolling with Roc-A-Fella y’all, Clue?’s days of slinging tapes on your neighborhood corner are all but over. Recognized worldwide for reinventing the art of the mixtape, Clue? enlisted some of hip-hop’s biggest guns for his major-label debut. Aiding Clue? in his quest for the Clueminati, Nas revisits his Illmatic roots with “Queensfinest.” The pairing of Cam’Ron, Big Pun, Noreaga, and Canibus on “Fantastic Four” is worth mentioning solely for the hypnotic verse Canibus delivers. Jayhovah touches down, lending his labelmate a hand, combining forces with Ja-Rule for some “Gangsta Shit.” Mobb Deep and Big Noyd are at it once again on “The Professional,” as they are merciless on a fiery, violin-laced number from Vic. Meanwhile, EPMD and the Def Squad play hot potato on “It’s My Thang ’99″ and Raekwon lends his lyrical swordmanship to “Brown Paper Bag Thoughts.” Like any mixtape or soundtrack, you have to accept the good and bad with a grain of salt. Clue? makes feeble attempts to refresh cuts like “That’s the Way” featuring Mase, Foxy, and Fabolous Sport and “I Like Control” featuring Missy, Mocha, and Nicole Wray, leaving them virtually untouched. Clue? definitely knows how to move the crowd and does serve up another installment of exclusive material, but he implements little of the turntable manipulation that makes DJs so vital to the art of hip-hop. As Pete Rock stated ever so eloquently, “This I dedicate to those mixtapes I hate/Exclusive sh*t/It holds no weight/Put your skills on the plate/Backspin to ’88.” – Matt Conaway

more »