Following up on their 2013 EP The Burgundy, this full-length collaboration between rappers 
MED and 
Blu plus producer 
Madlib suggests the trio should come up with a group name ASAP. There's so much good chemistry and a sense of purpose on 
Bad Neighbor that it's easy to see why this crew reunited, and while this is a loose posse effort and not the artistically weighty material fans usually get from the members individually, both 
MED and 
Blu's discographies get one their tightest releases to date. 
Madlib gets the opportunity to jump between the commercial ("Burgundy Whip" from the EP returns with all its smooth soul and sweet singing from 
Jimetta Rose) and barely harnessed cacophony ("Streets" with 
Oh No and 
DJ Romes offers wave after wave of compressed percussion, while the broken beat box called "Birds" sounds like a screwed and chopped remix of 
the Art of Noise). Their guests effortlessly latch on to the light vibe of the album as 
Aloe Blacc does his best 
Charlie Wilson on the so-cool "Drive In," while 
MF Doom bounces across the '80s-flavored "Knock Knock" and gets at the heart of the middle age b-boy problem with "Fresh new kicks, I would put 'em on, but/Those shoes always hurt my corn." Still, the biggest surprise is when veteran "Bitch Betta Have My Money" MC 
AMG shows up for "The Stroll" and the crew comes up with a bent and beautiful swagger session that doubles as a strip-club track for alien territories. 
Bad Neighbor is as if the 
Ruff Ryders albums were reimagined by this trio and all the avant heads get to party, but it is also worth mentioning that the often slept-on 
MED and 
Blu seem to steer this beast as much as the beloved 
Madlib. Consider them all equals here, and as much a "group" as 
Madvillain, or even more so when considering past projects like 
Strong Arm Steady. ~ David Jeffries