Despite the best efforts of 
DJ Muggs, 
Cypress Hill ran out of gas fairly quickly, entering a tailspin as soon as their third album. Back at full strength with the return of 
Sen Dog, 
Cypress Hill devised a full-scale comeback with their fifth album, 
Skull & Bones. The idea behind the album was to divide it into two -- a hip-hop disc ("Skull") and a rock disc ("Bones"). This would guarantee some publicity, at the very least, and, hopefully, it would win over the new generation of adolescents who flipped for rap-metal acts like 
Kid Rock and 
Limp Bizkit. On paper, it's a sound theory, but there was a slight flaw -- the group is kind of lame when they rock. Their band is competent enough, and 
B Real's voice does sound good with overdriven guitars, but their rock songs utterly fall apart, since they have no hooks, no catchy riffs, and no character. If rap-metal was all there was to 
Skull & Bones, it would be a bit of an embarrassment. Fortunately, the "Skulls" disc is their finest effort since 
Black Sunday. 
Muggs is in prime form, creating funky, ominous, evocative soundscapes, which 
B Real makes the most of with fluid rhymes. At times, 
B Real does descend into tastelessness ("Stank Ass Hoe"), and neither he nor 
Sen Dog really find any new lyrical ground, but sonically, "Skulls" is a blast; 
B Real's whine and 
Sen Dog's gruff, blunt style are the perfect match for 
Muggs' darkly cinematic soundscapes, and, on a purely sonic level, it's quite intoxicating. At their best, 
Cypress Hill are a hip-hop experience unlike any other, and, ignoring the "Bones" disc, this is the best they've been in a long, long time. [
Skull & Bones was also issued in a "clean" version, containing no vulgarities or explicit lyrics.] ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine