Fannypack is the nom de rap of three precocious Brooklyn girls, Cat, Belinda and Jessibel, all between the ages of 16 and 22, who are prodded to share their fantasies and frustrations by producers Matt Goias and Fancy. Mixing the girlish vocals of '80s rappers JJ Fad, the bounce of Tom Tom Club and retro booty-meets-electro low-end beats, these girls are in it just for fun, which is why So Stylistic may just be the throwaway party album of the summer.
Songs such as the guy-bashing "Hey Mami" and the naughty nursery rhyme "Things" ("I like things that make me glad/I don't like things that make me sad") mix infantile lyrics with disses that slap and tickle but likely won't inspire rap battles of UTFO vs. Roxanne Shante proportions. Though they keep it light, the music is bumpin' enough to save Fannypack from dropping straight into the novelty bin, and you have to give them props for sampling fellow New York degenerates the Yeah Yeah Yeahs on "Things."
Sometimes it's hard to know if these girls are mocking booty music or trying to beat the fellas at their own game. They ridicule each other and their producers in a few funny-then-irritating between-song vignettes (one of which features Jessibel on the phone with her mom trying to lamely explain why she can't possibly make it to first bell). Their energies, however, are better spent on moronic dance-floor anthems like "Sugar Daddy," whose entire lyric is "Sugar/Daddy."