From
Korn and
Limp Bizkit to
Rage Against the Machine and Fat, numerous alternative-rock outfits heavily incorporated rap into their music during the 1990s. For those acts, rap wasn't just something to flirt with on occasion -- a real hip-hop sensibility pervaded their work. Hip-hop is an integral part of
Shootyz Groove's sound on
Jammin' in Vicious Environments. Excellent cuts like "Soulfreak," "El Sol," and "Respect" might favor loud alternative-rock/metal guitars instead of technology, but the rapping has a genuine hip-hop sensibility in lieu of coming across as the work of dilettantes. Had the rock musicianship been replaced with electronic hip-hop tracks, it's quite possible that retailers would have placed
Jammin' in Vicious Environments in the rap section instead of the rock section. When this album came out in 1994, a generation of young rockers had been holding rock and hip-hop in equally high regards -- so things sound quite cohesive and organic when the New York band merges the two on this album.
Jammin' in Vicious Environments makes it clear that
Shootyz Groove had a lot of potential. ~ Alex Henderson