Rating:
Genre:
Rap
Release Date: 07/06/1993
Run Time: 41:40
Along with
OutKast's
Southernplayalisticadillacmuzik (1994) and
Goodie Mob's
Soul Food (1995),
Eightball & MJG's debut,
Comin' Out Hard, is one of the most influential
rap albums to come out of the South. It wasn't as widely heard as those others albums, nor was it as professional-sounding; however, its independent release by
Suave Records, based in Houston, and its basement-level production were influential in their own way. A generation of
underground Southern rappers would arise by the end of the '90s, many of them following the template of
Comin' Out Hard:
underground hardcore rap modeled after
West Coast gangsta rap yet delivered in a distinctly
Southern manner, released via an indie label with major ambitions. Even the cover artwork of
Comin' Out Hard, courtesy of Pen & Pixel Graphics, was influential, as the company would go on to design all the bling-blinging
No Limit and
Cash Money albums of the late '90s. Unfortunately,
Comin' Out Hard is more historically significant than it is impressive from a strictly musical point of view. The production is admittedly
lo-fi, credited to the rappers themselves, and while the raps are effective, the hooks leave room for improvement.
Eightball & MJG would indeed improve in the years that followed, ultimately releasing a classic at the end of the decade,
In Our Lifetime, Vol. 1 (1999).
Comin' Out Hard pales in comparison, yet it's an interesting album to hear from a historical perspective and is certainly noteworthy for its widespread influence, especially throughout the South.
~Jason Birchmeier, All Music Guide