Four years after his debut album,
The RBX Files,
RBX resurfaced on Street Solid with his sophomore effort, No Mercy, No Remorse/The X-Factor. While a four-year wait between albums wouldn't be as big of a deal in jazz, blues, pop, or country, it's an eternity in hip-hop -- a genre in which trends and tastes can change radically in the course of a few years. And when you consider that the release of
The RBX Files was delayed a few years because of
RBX's problems with
Dr. Dre in the early 1990s, you're really talking more than a four-year gap between albums. But delays and all,
RBX's rapping style still sounds quite fresh on this 1999 CD. Quirky and hardcore at the same time,
RBX is a very recognizable rapper -- he came out of the
Dr. Dre/
Snoop Dogg school of Los Angeles gangsta rap, but
RBX reminds listeners that he's very much his own man on tunes like "Ambush & Torture," "Oh, No," and "Make My Day," which features Treach of
Naughty by Nature. Taken as a whole, the album doesn't make a single, cohesive statement -- essentially, it serves as a vehicle for
RBX's interesting rhyming technique. With Solid Entertainment founder Jay Warsinske serving as executive producer, No Mercy, No Remorse/The X-Factor is a respectable, long overdue follow-up from an MC who should have recorded a lot more often in the 1990s. ~ Alex Henderson