William "Willie D" Dennis leaves the Geto Boys and releases his sophomore for Rap-A-Lot Records with production provided by the label's beatmakers. The Houston, Texas rapper maintains a raw rapping style and gangsta arguments that result in sexism, misogyny and homophobia.
The musical choice of the various Crazy C, Goldfinger, Bido and Big Ro is simplistic, they bring a hard dirty and funky sound to this album, with several decent samples and some stylistic variations, including the intro rockin' and the ballad ("Die"), in addition to the reggae-style delivery he presents in the commercial attempt "U Still a aggiN", with K Rino uncredited.
"Yo P My D" is a vicious and misogynist piece, with annoying skit, simplistic rhythm, then there's one that says "meow" looped in the background or something, that "meow" in the background is ridiculous. In the midst of all these poor frenzied beats, hard heavy drums and urgent hardcore deliveries by Willie D, the rapper only manages to shake listeners with the controversial "Rodney K" ("F*** Rodney King"). The rest is in the '92 average, including the "Pass Da Plote" posse with four uncredited guests (Icy Hott, Klondike Kat, Rasir X & Sho): a sophomore clearly lower than the debut, maybe fans could appreciate a few passages.
Rating: 6/10.

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