The multi-platinum success of Eves debut, Ruff Ryders First Lady, was proof that women could thrive in hardcore rap without spending all their mic time talking about their asses and simulating orgasms. Its not that Eve doesnt have an ass worth talking about; its just thats shes got more important things on her mind. Scorpion bests her debut, backing Eves bold wordplay with production thats more diverse and more memorable than First Ladys. Whether its the tight, crisp beats on the kiss-off anthem You Had Me, You Lost Me or the intoxicating reggae backbone Stephen Marley provides as she croons a cover of Dawn Penns No, No, No, Eve shows a musical confidence thats rare for a young artist. She even mends fences with her old boss Dr. Dre, inviting him to bring some slippery, sliding grooves to the funk creeper Let Me Blow Ya Mind. Her only misstep is occasionally ceding too much space to guest MCs with nothing new to say (as in Thug In The Street), but even that hardly blunts Scorpions impressive sting.