The year 2003 wasn't a good one for
Ja Rule, who had been blasted over and over that year by
50 Cent, the rap industry's latest upstart darling.
50 had blasted
Ja Rule for blasphemously impersonating
2Pac and for making pseudo-gangsta pop-rap music -- and by and large,
Ja was left speechless. It was simply a matter of fact:
Ja Rule had indeed aped
2Pac's persona to an extent, he had indeed made pop-rap duets with
Ashanti his stock-in-trade, and he was thus an easy target who was bound to be clapped at some point. So by late 2003, the year of
50 Cent (who had sold millions and millions of records, racked up hit after hit, and saturated the media with his omnipresence),
Ja Rule and his camp, Murder Inc, were in a desperate state of damage control. They kept quiet throughout most of the year, waiting for
50 Cent's moment in the sun to pass, yet by the end of the year
Ja Rule had readied his inevitable return,
Blood in My Eye -- a rushed 45-minute release with a pair of good singles ("Clap Back," "The Crown") and a lot of vengeful return shots at
50 Cent and his camp (notably including
Eminem among the targeted). Relative to what
Ja Rule had been doing the past couple years,
Blood in My Eye is a very focused and heartfelt album, and certainly much more gangsta than anything he'd done since his
DMX-modeled debut album,
Venni Vetti Vecci, although
Ja is much better making catchy pop-rap tracks with grimy posturing and singalong hooks. Still, there's something to be said for pride, particularly in the rap world, so perhaps it was best that
Ja Rule vent his frustration here and put this predicament behind him so that he could move on with his career and once again start making the sort of pop-rap singles that he'd experienced so much success with. ~ Jason Birchmeier