Available six months prior to the two-CD version as a quadruple vinyl set -- evidently the label still takes "Servicing DJs since 1984" seriously --
Def Jam 25: Bring That Beat Back is designed like a sampler, not a definitive overview of hip-hop's greatest label. At least five more volumes of this size, if well-chosen, would be as strong as this. Just over half the tracks overlap with the five-disc 25th Anniversary box, released the same year, so it is not quite complementary to the mother ship release of the label's 2009 celebration, but it should be useful to relatively casual followers of rap and R&B who need to plug some gaps in their collections. Running in (mostly) reverse chronological order, it does not play favorites with any one faction or era of the label's existence; the contrasting presence of
Oran "Juice" Jones and
Rihanna,
Public Enemy and
Rick Ross, and
Ashanti and
Boss says plenty about the range of the back catalog. With its otherwise generalist approach, the compilation's inclusion of three
LL Cool J songs ("I Need a Beat," "I Need Love," and "I Can't Live Without My Radio"), at the expense of unrepresented Def Jam artists like
EPMD,
Warren G,
Scarface, and
Ghostface Killah, is its biggest flaw. ~ Andy Kellman