The second solo album by
Mathematics features guest appearances from the entire current membership of
the Wu-Tang Clan. On a basic level,
The Problem is a concept album against black-on-black violence, but there's an admirable restraint here, a relative lack of "can't we all get along?" naïveté and only the bare minimum of preachiness. Instead, songs like "Bullet Scar," "Can I Rise," and "Tommy" are no-punches-pulled rap parables, stories that end badly for everyone involved with a subtle implied moral. Elsewhere, new versions of familiar
Wu-Tang tracks like "John 3:16" (featuring
Method Man) and "Strawberries & Cream" (a new slower and more effective version of "Strawberry" from
Ghostface Killah's 2001 album,
Bulletproof Wallets) are enhanced by
Mathematics' skillful mix of samples and original riffs, and the '70s-inspired "Two Shots of Henny" echoes back to the party rap vibe of the old days: five MCs passing the mike over a flexible funk beat with the album's most insistently catchy chorus in between. The album is filled with typical
Wu-Tang Clan loopiness -- songs are continually interrupted by a sample threateningly intoning "If you got something to say, why don't you just say it?" -- but as one of the first major
Wu-Tang-related releases since the sudden death of
Ol' Dirty Bastard,
The Problem shows that the collective's core remains strong.