On her second album, recently reissued for its 20th anniversary, the lone woman of Ruff Ryders took the reins and made the loudest statement of her career.
When Eve debuted in 1999, she surprised many as one of the few female rappers capable of attaining both popularity and respect without having to take on a sleazy role or sacrifice any of her muscle. In fact, her muscle seemed to be what impressed the rap community most. If anything, Eve brings even more muscle to her follow-up album, Scorpion. Her rhymes flow just as smoothly here as they did on her debut, and she sounds even more confident than before. Given her ensemble cast of producers and guest rappers, she probably should sound confident. When you have Swizz Beatz and Dr. Dre handling the better part of your album, along with a few other tracks handled by Ruff Ryder producers Teflon and DJ Shok, there isn't need to worry -- you know the beats are going to be cutting-edge. In terms of guests, the Ruff Ryders (DMX, Drag-On, and LOX) make their expected cameos. On paper, everything looks great -- more muscle, top producers, and top rappers. And the results are just that: great. A few songs really stand out here: the lead-off single "Who's That Girl?," a Teflon track with a quick tempo and an extremely catchy chorus; "Let Me Blow Ya Mind," a Dr. Dre/Scott Storch track with an unmistakable 2001 sound and a smooth R&B chorus featuring Gwen Stefani on backup vocals; and "Life Is Hard," a unique soulful moment late in the album with Teena Marie contributing a diva chorus and Eve dropping some heartfelt lyrics.
A1 | Eve (2) - Cowboy |
A2 | Eve (2) - Who's That Girl? |
A3 | Eve (2), Gwen Stefani - Let Me Blow Ya Mind |
B1 | Eve (2) - You Had Me, You Lost Me |
B2 | Eve (2) - Got What You Need |
B3 | Eve (2) - Gangsta B****** |
C1 | Eve (2) - That's What It Is |
C2 | Eve (2) - Scream Double R |
C3 | Eve (2) - Thug In The Street |
D1 | Eve (2) - No, No, No |
D2 | Eve (2) - You Ain't Gettin None |
D3 | Eve (2) - Life Is So Hard |
D4 | Eve (2) - Be Me |