"Strictly 'ardcore, ready or not," Dr. Israel warns from the opening salvo "Steady Shot," and from there it's straight-up Manhattan in all its dirty, vibrating glory. Like other turntable trailblazers Grandmaster Flash, early Beastie Boys and the Wu-Tang Clan, Ming & FS manage to capture the heart and soul of the East's biggest beast with a deft ear for the underground rhythm fueling this megalopolis. The DJs have time to pay homage to old-skool b-boy style, particularly with the powerful and soulful cut "The Most Dangerous Drip"; dis record-industry politics on the ironically catchy "Jingle Hell"; and bask in a beautifully reverberating bridge with "Retrace." After the critical beating they took when Human Condition dropped (too much experimentation, not enough substance), Ming & FS have decided to scale back on the testing and stick to the snap-crackling drum and bass that made their name. With loopy spaced-out whistling, soothing trumpet refrains over acoustic guitar samples and cameo raps by the likes of Churchill and Nafis, Subway keeps a delicate balance in check while furthering the reaches of hip-hop.
The beauty of Ming & FS is their innate ability to be hard-core and not resort to lame gangster bravado or inflated pimp egos (OK, they do bless the ganja on "Dope Dance," but even that's not a crime in some states). Today anyone with raspy vocal cords can spew rhymes debasing women and glorifying violence, but to stay true to the street roots takes more skill than your average puff fad. As the track "The Answer" closes, a feeling-it woman begs for more and swears to "break two teeth out yo mouth" if she ain't satisfied. Subway Series comes through with the junk goods and spares Ming & FS any grill damage. Ready or not, New York is back in a big way.