Everything is big with 
Rick Ross. Triumphs, blunders, singles, videos, and everything else he does is huge, but having the audacity to call his third effort 
Deeper Than Rap is extra risky, especially since it's his first effort since being "exposed" as a former corrections officer. That's poison in the gangsta rap game, and while there's little here to sway the haters -- and certainly nothing "deep" -- the rapper's ability to steamroll over all of his shortcomings, along with all of our preconceived notions, is simply remarkable. In a sure trilogy of albums, 
Deeper Than Rap is the surest, kicking off with a decent 
50 Cent diss and closing with a "Run with me or run from me" ultimatum that's gutsy enough to feature harps and castanets. While that's enough fuel for the haters to burn the whole place down, anyone willing to ignore 
Ross' iffy relationship with street cred and his incredibly narrow subject matter (money, women, victory) will find 
Deeper is the superstar, gangster weekend album done right. Boss of them all is the grand "Maybach Music" with 
T-Pain, 
Kanye West, and 
Lil Wayne all in top form. Same goes for the cut's production team, the J.U.S.T.I.C.E. League, who are also in charge of the slippery and swaggering "Magnificent" with 
John Legend, plus the Caribbean-flavored highlight "Yacht Club." "Face," with 
Trina, is the street cut of note, and "Usual Suspects" places in the album's top five, although 
Nas' loyal fanbase will find his contribution rather ordinary. Redundancy is an unsurprising and ignorable issue thanks to all the hooks and slick beats, including a batch from the returning Runners. Even if this isn't much "
Deeper" than the average 
Three 6 Mafia album, the glitz and guts of 
Deeper are a big step up, making 
Ross sound like a Miami-fied version of 
Young Jeezy. ~ David Jeffries