Rehab's 2000 debut, Southern Discomfort, was a disturbing and often bleakly funny depiction of the world of drug abuse; like
Eminem, to whom the two white Atlanta rappers were most often compared, Danny Boone and
Brooks Buford used hip-hop as the form to exorcise some personal demons, but unlike
Eminem, there was little sense of persona or deliberate distancing on that album, which felt harrowingly real and personal. Also unlike
Eminem, the album didn't sell squat, so
Rehab were soon bounced from Sony and took nearly five years to create their D.I.Y. follow-up.
Graffiti the World is much more live-sounding than their sample-heavy debut, with a greater use of live guitar, bass, and drums, and Boone and
Buford sing at least as much as they rap. The album is also much less lyrically heavy than the debut, with some songs that actually have a glimmer of hope in them. The results at times recall a much less annoying version of the rap-rock of groups like
Limp Bizkit. However, that style of music was so thoroughly past its sell-by date by the summer of 2005 that even good songs like the opening "WHT Do U WNT FRM Me" (which features the album's strongest chorus) sound unfortunately dated. It took so long for
Rehab to follow up their first album that it seems like their moment has passed them by. [In 2008, after the track "Sittin' at a Bar" from the band's 2000 album had become a popular jukebox cut, the Universal label reissued
Graffiti the World with a re-recording of the hit. Now called "Bartender Song," it appears along with two other new recordings plus a reshuffled track listing. "WHT Do U WNT FRM Me" has been dropped from the album.] ~ Stewart Mason