Tha Row Records resumed operations in 2002, long after its
Dré-
Snoop-
2Pac heyday as Death Row, but the West Coast label didn't get around to releasing anything new of significance until 2003, when they presented the soundtrack to the Eddie Griffin flick Dysfunktional Family. The label's marquee figure, label head
Suge Knight, devotes most of the soundtrack to his roster of up-and-comers:
Crooked I, Eastwood,
Danny Boy, Spider, Ganxsta Ridd, Skippa, and his tha Row Hittas production team. In addition to these relative no-namers, he does bring a few marketable names:
Kurupt, who had been serving a momentary tenure at Tha Row;
Jay-Z, who serves up a
Just Blaze remix of "Hovy Baby" that has little in common with the original version;
Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes, who performs here as N.I.N.A., her long-unheard rap moniker; Ashanti, who turns in a respectable but not very bangin' club-banger; and a pair of has-beens,
Ja Rule and Juvenile, who make passable cameos. The resulting 17-track listen is consistent, as it's mostly produced by tha Row Hittas, but the lack of standout moments makes for long stretches of uneventfulness.
Dysfunktional Family begins fine enough, particularly when it comes to the one-two punch of the "Family Affair"-interpolating title track and
Jay-Z remix, but it's ultimately a front-loaded album, one you'll struggle to not fast forward through or, more likely, cut short. There is some promising talent here on Tha Row's new roster -- granted, nothing on the level of
Snoop or
2Pac but promising nonetheless. Some more highlights, or at least variety, then would have helped
Dysfunktional Family, whether via more
Jay-Zs or more non-tha Row Hittas production. What you get instead is essentially a broad sampler of Tha Row's new sound, and while that's fine for promotional purposes, it makes for a relatively tedious listening experience that has very little in common with the associated film. [The clean version edits moments of profanity.] ~ Jason Birchmeier