Following up his troubled 2006 release The Big Bang, Back on My B.S. -- or B.O.M.B.S. -- is guided by the &return to form& template, sometimes to a fault. &Give Em What They Askin For& is an exercise in yelling, kicking, and screaming &I'm back& as loud as you can, and while fans will likely cheer, Busta and producer Ron Brownz are just preaching to the converted and should have left this hookless monster on a mixtape. A handful of similar tracks suffer from this same problem of ambition over inspiration, but for every miss, there's a hit, and you don't have to look any further than the other Busta and Brownz team-up, &Arab Money,& which acts as an Arabic-sampling alternative to its equally infectious older brother, &Mundian to Bach Ke.& The Jelly Roll production &Sugar& is the wild sound of Kraftwerk with an Isley Brother in their ranks, while Pharrell gives &Kill Dem& a Neptunes-styled version of dancehall, allowing Busta to turn on the patois and let his Jamaican heritage take control. Odd that a comeback album would put unsurprising Akon and John Legend collaborations in the fourth quarter, but even odder is the successful closing bit of Euro-disco called &World Go Round& which falls somewhere between a Flo Rida single and a new wave club classic. That's more highlights than last time out, and even if B.O.M.B.S. fails to put Busta back on top, it is certainly a step in the right direction.