Music Review

Music Review: 'Mo' Money' (1992)

EW's GRADE
C-

Details Lead Performance: Various Artists; Genres: Hip-Hop/Rap, R&B, Soundtracks

It's the battle of the R&B titans! In this corner, Mo' Money's Jimmy Jam and Terry Lewis, the team that has produced Janet Jackson and half of the Top 100. In the other, Boomerang's L.A. Reid and Babyface, the juice behind TLC and the other half of the charts. Big budgets! Big stars! Big hype! But like the B-ball matchups between the Dream Team and its opponents, this ain't even close.

The soundtrack for Boomerang is brilliantly assembled state-of-the-art R&B, '92-style, but the Mo' Money album comes off like a new-jack ad campaign for the film (almost every track has somebody yelling ''Mo' Money!'' and intrusive film dialogue segueing the cuts). With more stars than the sky (Bell Biv DeVoe, Flavor Flav of Public Enemy, and Johnny Gill, who's on both Boomerang and Mo' Money), how did Jam and Lewis screw this one up? Bad moves. Check out the hit single ''The Best Things in Life Are Free.'' While the combo of Janet Jackson and Luther Vandross may be a marketing dream, artistically it blows. The trademark busy groove that defines Janet buries Luther, who doesn't need a crutch and who, when free of misguided arrangements, eats singers like Janet for lunch. Here, as elsewhere, Jam and Lewis never make their artists work for the money.

Originally posted Jul 31, 1992 Published in issue #129 Jul 31, 1992 Order article reprints

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