Not that
Bow Wow wasn't gradually working his way toward it, but on
New Jack City II, the MC, now 22 years old, makes like a younger and slightly cleaner
T.I. However,
Bow Wow doesn't merely project the kind of smooth toughness/tough smoothness exuded by his obvious inspiration. There are moments where the album sounds exactly like an attempted cloning, as heard in the kicked-back yet insolent flow throughout the opening "Get That Paper," and it even appears that way, as seen in the video for "You Can Get It All," from the mannerisms to choice of eyewear. Though
Bow Wow drops a litany of curses from track to track and has transitioned from "Hey Little Momma" to "Pole in My Basement,"
New Jack City II is nonetheless within the domain of pop-rap, laced with candy-coated hooks and beats that are easy on the ears.
Jermaine Dupri's long-running tradition of supplying
Bow Wow with productions built on very easily identifiable sources continues (
Rick James' "Big Time,"
TLC's "Baby-Baby-Baby,"
Nancy Sinatra's "These Boots Are Made for Walking,"
Slick Rick's "La Di Da Di,"
Bobby Brown's "Roni"), and
Swizz Beatz, oddly credited as "Swizz Beatsz," provides a typically noisy and purposefully obnoxious production for the closer, one of
Bow Wow's toughest tracks yet. Some of these developments come off a little forced, but
Bow Wow knew he had to abandon the PG material or risk irrelevance. It should pay off, yet it has no apparent effect on his output's quality level.