With so many faceless, sound-alike albums having come out of the "new jack swing" hybrid in the late '80s and early to mid-'90s, it's important to give credit to the form's more creative and imaginative figures. Along with
Guy and
Bobby Brown,
Bell Biv DeVoe (a
New Edition spin-off trio comprised of
Ricky Bell,
Michael Bivins, and
Ronnie DeVoe) delivered some of new jack swing's most worthwhile material. A hard-edged, tough-minded blend of R&B/funk and hip-hop,
Poison was (like
Brown's
Don't Be Cruel) a radical departure from
the Jackson 5-influenced "bubblegum soul"
New Edition was originally known for. Defined by their urgency, rawness, and vitality, "Poison," "B.B.D. (I Thought It Was Me)?," "Dope!," and "Do Me!" are considered new jack swing classics and are indeed among the best the style has to offer. Taking a break from the CD's overall aggression,
BBD moves closer to
New Edition's sound with the decent, though far from outstanding, ballads "When Will I See You Again?" and "I Do Need You." While other "new jacks" were content to simply emulate
Guy, the distinctive
BBD deserves applause for daring to stake out its own territory. ~ Alex Henderson