Disappointed because
Garden of Love wasn't as well-received as it should have been,
Rick James made a triumphant return to defiant, in-your-face
funk with the triple-platinum
Street Songs. This was not only his best-selling album ever, it was also his best period, and certainly the most exciting album released in 1981. The gloves came all the way off this time, and
James is as loud and proud as ever on such arresting hits as
"Super Freak," "Give It to Me, Baby," and
"Ghetto Life." Ballads aren't a high priority, but those he does offer (including his stunning duet with
Teena Marie,
"Fire and Desire,") are first-rate. One song that's questionable (to say the least) is the inflammatory
"Mr. Policeman," a commentary on police misconduct that condemns law enforcement in general instead of simply indicting those who abuse their authority. But then, the thing that makes this hot-headed diatribe extreme is what makes the album on the whole so arresting -- honest, gut-level emotion.
James simply follows what's in his gut and lets it rip. Even the world's most casual funksters shouldn't be without this pearl of an album. [The reissue of
Street Songs adds 12" mixes of
"Give It to Me Baby" and
"Super Freak" as bonus tracks.] ~ Alex Henderson