There’s no denying 
DJ Jazzy Jeff's indelible impact on hip-hop -- he earned rap’s first-ever Grammy award and sold over 5.5 million records in the U.S. alongside the 
Fresh Prince. Years removed from his heyday, 
Jeff has since faded from the mainstream but has continued carving out his own solo career, releasing a number of mixtapes and solo projects and becoming a prominent R&B/neo-soul producer. 
The Return of the Magnificent, the follow-up to 2002’s 
The Magnificent, is vindicating proof that 
Jeff is more than a mere relic of hip-hop’s golden era, and marks his first official release in five years. For the occasion, he enlists a range of hip-hop heavyweights (household names like 
Big Daddy Kane and 
Method Man), underground mainstays (
J-Live and 
Jean Grae), and hometown talents (
Eshon Burgundy and 
Peedi Peedi) to cover vocal duties. While guest artists are at the fore, 
Jeff interjects plenty of hip-hop breaks, and scratches and adorns each track with a sprawling palette of sonic tapestries, heavily embedded in jazz (“Practice” borrows from 
Donald Byrd's famed and frequently sampled “Think Twice”), ‘70s soul (“My Soul Ain’t for Sale” beautifully incorporates 
Bobby Caldwell's cut “What You Won’t Do for Love” with 
Raheem DeVaughn's vocal harmonies), and ‘60s funk (“Jeff N Fess” loops an insistent sample of 
James Brown's “Bring It Up”). 
The Return is, at its core, a hip-hop album, but 
Jeff acclimates to R&B tracks as well -- much like on 
The Magnificent -- employing singer 
Raheem DeVaughn on the melodic “My Soul Ain’t for Sale,” and 
Chinah Blac for the sensual “Touch Me wit Ur Hands,” though, 
Chinah Blac’s hushed vocals feel like a deficient substitute for an emcee’s flow over the song’s possessive rhythm and its infectious, sampled loop of 
Floetry's “Say Yes." The album rounds out with a fun rehash of the 
DJ Jazzy Jeff & the Fresh Prince hit “Brand New Funk,” featuring rapper 
Peedi Peedi (of 
State Property fame) in place of 
Will Smith. The conclusion connects 
Jeff’s past with his present, encapsulating his evolution over time as a producer and DJ, and marking 
The Return a cohesive, definitive body of work. ~ Andre Barnes