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Just as Master P and the Cash Money Millionaires blinged out the Dirty South in the late '90's, Nelly hipped the nation to the twang of his St. Louis Country Grammar and single-handedly established America's heartland as the latest breeding ground for multiplatinum hip-hop talent. Now Nelly fans can experience him as one-sixth of St. Lunatics, the most powerful crew on the STL circuit. On their long-awaited debut disc, Free City, Nelly and his homeys City Spud, Ali, Ky-Juan, Murphy Lee, and Slo-Down give fans more of the singsong rap style that made Grammar such a winner. And while the new album may not have the runaway magnetism of its predecessor, Free City still fires off a couple of blazing shots toward the top of the charts with posse anthems such as the melodic first single, "Midwest Swing," and the bouncy "Jang a Lang." Although much of the album is rife with the glorified ghetto aspirations -- more money, more cash, and more hos -- that tarnish an otherwise innovative musical movement, joints such as the album's stellar spoken-word opener, "Just for You (An Introductory Poem)," which name-drops the conscious rap duo Dead Prez, proves that the St. Lunatics are as much about big thinkin' as they are about big pimpin'. Ron Hart Barnes & Noble