As with practically every successive
Three 6 Mafia album,
Most Known Unknown is more of the same, executed a little bit better than before. That means a parade of first-rate productions by
Juicy J and
DJ Paul, the group's primary members, and plenty of street-level rhymes of the most hardcore variety. "Stay Fly" stands out -- not only amid the rest of the album, but amid the entire
Three 6 catalog -- with its propulsive intensity and crafty hook.
Juicy and
Paul sample an old
Willie Hutch song here, and the result is striking. Sure,
Three 6 has always had a knack for roof-raisers like this, going back to similarly styled anthems like "Tear da Club Up" and "Hit a Muthafucka," but none have had such crossover potential. Features by
Eightball,
MJG, and
Young Buck -- who are also from Memphis -- make the song even more dizzying, as the verses come quickly and hit hard. Nothing else on
Most Known Unknown comes close to matching the excellence of "Stay Fly," unfortunately, though there are plenty of good songs here. "Swervin'" and "When I Pull Up at the Club" are two such instances, while "Side 2 Side" shows off
Juicy and
Paul's ability to import concurrent trends, in this case the "we-don't-dance dance" of
Terror Squad's "Lean Back." And of course, you'll find all kinds of gratuitous profanity, sex talk, and drug references, along with over-the-top showboating aggression -- everything that has come to be expected from
Three 6. Clocking in at 20-plus songs in roughly 80 minutes
Most Known Unknown is indeed more of the same, plus a little extra quality, so if you're a fan, you won't be disappointed. On the other hand, if you're new to the group, likely introduced to them via "Stay Fly," you should expect over-the-top hardcore Southern rap. The beats are all done in-house and are the main draw. The rapping is not bad, though what the guys lack in technique and invention, they compensate for with lyrical excess.
Three 6 Mafia is the hardcore of the hardcore, and not for the faint of heart. [Columbia released a screwed and chopped edition, which had become par for the course for Southern rap releases by the mid-2000s.] ~ Jason Birchmeier