Dark and serious as storm clouds,
Chain Reaction rolls across the otherwise blue, frivolous skies of Latin hip-hop and reggaeton.
Cuban Link emerges as a more mature, authoritative voice than both his counterpoints in the genre and himself on previous releases. The subject matter is threatening and dangerous, without the adolescent quality so often associated with hip-hop posturing.
Link's low-rumbling voice trips a visceral reaction like a lion's rolling growl. His lyricism is deft and poetic, while avoiding any "easy way out" cleverness. The aim seems to be maintaining intimidation at all times, which he does quite successfully. Even when the subject material is sexual in nature, the sense of inner fire is never once sacrificed.
Ken Lewis' production has the hypnotic, sparse quality of uncompromising, uncut hip-hop. Featured artists like
Don Omar and
Jadakiss don't lend credibility, but instead hint at
Link's future. With
Chain Reaction,
Cuban Link steps into his own -- no longer a former member of
Fat Joe's crew,
Terror Squad, but a voice strong and real enough to make it all on his own. [A clean version of the album appeared in 2005 as well.] ~ Evan C. Gutierrez