With a major-label contract on the line (not to mention that presumptive presidential nomination),
Murs was obviously ready to put his best foot forward -- and yes,
Murs for President is just as ambitious as the title indicates. With a parade of tracks -- message tracks, lovers tracks, just-hanging tracks, back-in-the-day tracks, treat-her-like-a-queen tracks, political-outrage tracks, comeback tracks (subtitled "Half a Million Dollars and 18 Months Later"), life-on-the-road tracks --
Murs apparently wants to be all things to all rap fans (not a bad quality in someone hungry for higher office). Such a variety of themes isn't new for the underground's most ambitious rapper; it's only appropriate for one of the best tale-spinners in hip-hop, a West Coaster who once looked up to fellow storytellers
E-40 and
Ice Cube. And by including a fair share of tracks produced by
9th Wonder, it's reasonable for fans to hope that
Murs would be able to bring along everything that made him a critical part of the rap underground on his trip to the mainstream. But it's clear from listening that all the rough spots (read: interesting eccentricities) that made
Murs so special in the past have been polished right out of this major-label product. Guest spots for new labelmate
will.i.am and
Snoop Dogg do little to further the album, and the productions, with a few each from
9th Wonder and
DJ Quik associates, don't do much to captivate listeners either. As with politics from the past to the present,
Murs for President is energy without subtlety, clearly lacking a sense of humor as well as the back-and-forth interplay of
Murs' best records -- what you could call shades of gray, as opposed to black and white. ~ John Bush