

Enjoyment of this monotony requires a low standard for loverman R R&B, unless it is approached as comedy. Even when disregarding the words, the songs don't leave much of an impression - they're functional without much in the way of memorable features. The press bio describes the group as "borderline raunchy," but who knows where that line exists when "There's a stripper pole in my bedroom, and it's calling for you" is the album's warmest sweet nothing? "Leave that p*ssy purple like Barney" and "Slice you like Freddy Krueger, don't need no Kama Sutra" are much more representative. As narrow-minded as ever, the group's lyrics are split between conveying what they are going to do to their prospective conquests and what those prospective conquests are going to do for them. Officially the group’s third album, following the leaked and subsequently shelved Eighties Babies, Pretty Ricky does not offer much in the way of development or maturity. The album was supported by three singles: 'Grind with Me', 'Your Body', and 'Nothing but a Number'. The record serves as their second release under their record label, called Bluestar Entertainment. It was released on by Atlantic Records and Bluestar Entertainment. Now featuring Lingerie, a former superfan who replaces the gone-solo Pleasure P, Pretty Ricky take another step toward autonomy on their self-titled album, produced entirely by member Diamond Blue. Bluestars is the debut studio album by American R&B group Pretty Ricky.
