ARTS The Michigan Daily - Tuesday, June 1, 2004 - 11 Method Man underwhelms on Tical 0 By Evan MGarvey Daily Arts Writer CorteyDryie-.Thru Tool, tool, loser, tool, tool ... Catalyst lacks hooks By Hussain Rahim Daily Arts Writer Mus ic R EVI EW *'I F Menace is so fleeting a quality that, once lost, is impossible to regain. At the dawn of his career, Method Man loomed as a bold, powerful and Method Man almost sinister member of the TicalIO: TheI Wu-Tang clan. His Prequele verses on that Def Jam group's ground- breaking debut, Enter the Wu-Tang..., felt like the musings of a playfully grimy street demon. His solo ventures have given little more than haunting glimpses into a talent either too complacent or too dis- tracted by a passion for weed to put together a disc with any sort of vigor. Tical 0: The Prequel is so long delayed that one has to wonder if per- haps Meth's obsession with Mary Jane hasn't thrown him irreparably off course. Swollen with top-shelf guests such as Ludacris, Busta Rhymes and Missy Elliot, Method Man feels more like a visitor than the marquee name. No hooks really catch; no verses have any memorable devices or punch- lines. "Rodeo" has a tired Method and a Ludacris cameo that's raunchy even for Luda. Possessor of a timeless flow, Method Man can tether himself to any beat thrown his way. The vowels and syllables spill from his mouth and sink into each rise and fall of the beat. His voice and the music pull together in a patchwork of rhythmic cascades. The endurance of his flow never lets any one song plummet into complete inanity, even when it probably should. "The Turn" and "Afterparty" have Raekwon and Ghostface reviving their comrade's palate for growling danger. Such moments of ashy fire are snuffed out under the weight of too many other cast-offs. On a larger scale, this album reiter- ates a trend spreading through so many charismatic and commercially prominent MCs. With success in movies, male hygiene products and a soon-to-be-short-lived sitcom starting this summer, Method Man just does- n't seem to have time for rap songs. His upward mobility and name- brand recognition notwithstanding, MM may have just spent too much time around his better (and even more blunted) half Redman to keep his swagger. When they team with Snoop Dogg on "We Some Dogs," these three sublimely talented rap- pers all toss out redundant canine analogies and sniff around for roaches. The clanking danger of the early Method Man slips further and fur- ther away and nothing seems to be radiating from him except a stoner's spare tire.