The song's incisive Timbaland-style verses are brilliant, a tease for what can be achieved with a more liberal mind on production but he's gone too far on being benevolent. More unfittingly, Jones selflessly gives away one of Lyrics' 13 songs to Breeze - he isn't even present on You Can Burn ("I usually don't do this but I got to introduce y'all to Breeze). What's Next, for example, sounds like the trajectory Usher should've followed - and the production is warm and luxurious. Jones' impressively suave soft touch, soulful backing and bedroom vocals don't require these self-justificatory mixtape-style intros. Jones / The rebirth of hip hop and RnB" foreword. The spoken pre-ambles recur too, but less humorously - it's entirely unnecessary to introduce the album with a "Yo, it's your boy D. But that's comforting rather than not, apart from when Jones' mother introduces Your Place with the immortal words "Give them some of that Chicago-style RnB I brought you up on" - before the chorus strikes with its "Can we do it in your place baby" refrain. Subject-wise, it doesn't stray too far from blush-inducing, unadulterated filth. The signature silky vocals are consistently come-hither, and the subject is so elementarily sex-focused - but rather than a soulless recreation of what he's been doing since late-90s hit U Know What's Up, it's an enticing and still-current LP. Donell Jones's self-produced sixth album, Lyrics, has a lot to treasure.
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