2 Live Crew's infamous -- record store clerks were actually arrested for selling the album -- and double platinum -- a great example of how being banned can increase sales --
As Nasty As They Wanna Be may be more talked about than listened to, but it's actually a thoroughly entertaining effort and as solid a album as the trashy party
rap genre could have hoped for. In the first moments a sampled voice asks, "What do we get for ten dollars?." In a sleazy slow tone that might make
Ron Jeremy blush, a hooker answers, "Everything you want" as the album begins to deliver on this street corner promise with the legendary
"Me So Horny" ("me love you long time"). With a sample of
Full Metal Jacket's Vietnamese hooker, a cheap drum machine, a fat bassline, and a simple set of rhymes that are filled with every cuss word, innuendo, and misogynist, knuckle-dragging reference to women imaginable,
"Me So Horny" is the reason
2 Live Crew should exist. Nothing they or their leader
Luke (Luther) Campbell recorded afterwards sounded as lean, as hook filled, and so instantly grabbing as the single. From the inner city strip clubs to the headphones of teenagers in the suburbs, the track was a massive guilty pleasure, one that could also fill the dancefloor in a second. The album that follows repeats and repeats this cheap and silly porno formula and miraculously stretches it as far as it can go. Divided into four sides -- one for each member, the only reason anyone remembers their names --
Nasty keeps it rolling with tracks that capture
"Horny"'s energy, (
"Put Her in the Buck"), its cleverness (
"Dirty Nursery Rhymes"), and a whole bunch that are just as hooky.
"The F**k Shop" is the best example of the latter with its easy to grasp chorus and wicked use of a loop from
Van Halen's
"Ain't Talkin' 'Bout Love." Other smart samples like
Kraftwerk for
"Dick Almighty" and
Jimi Hendrix for
"My Seven Bizzos" keep the album alive, while interludes lifted from
Andrew Dice Clay,
Rudy Ray Moore,
Eddie Murphy, and
Richard Pryor give away its true inspirations. A couple amusing left turns -- the 12-bar
"2 Live Blues" and the
dancehall party
"Reggae Joint" -- round out the album, and suddenly the full-length that doesn't seem like it could ever suffer an injustice gets sold short by history, at least when it comes to remembering what a grand porno achievement
Luke and his crew created. ~ David Jeffries