Bill Coleman from
Billboard magazine wrote, "Thanks to a healthy buzz generated via underground import attention, this hypnotic, street-
soul jam should have no trouble duplicating its smash U.K. success. Expect big crossover action." Ernest Hardy from
Cash Box noted that the song is "set against a basic
hip-hop beat, but all sorts of computer-generated enhancements are added, as well as a great bassline, soul-drenched female vocals, a male rap that sounds a bit like
Heavy D, and, depending on the mix, elements of
house. Yet none of it seems forced or contrived, and it doesn't sound quite like anything else that's out there right now. This one will be huge."
Complex magazine described it as "a more
industrial take on the
hip-house scene that blew up" at that time the song was released. Tom Ewing of
Freaky Trigger remarked that the song "juggles aggression and melancholy, and makes both immediately appealing – the juddering riff which opens "The Power" set against the slow pace and lonesome spaciousness of the production and Pennye Ford's vocals. The riff is more distinctive than the singing, to be honest, but the contrast works." Pan-European magazine
Music & Media commented that a "funky hip-hop rhythm, sampled from
Doug Lazy's '
Let It Roll' has been matched with some forceful rapping by
Turbo B and inspired
gospel vocals on the chorus. Excellent warm production by Benito Benites, John Garrett III and Snap. Could be the next big thing from the Continent." A reviewer from
The Network Forty described it as "a very hip and cool" rap song, "with a modern edge". The magazine also added that the "power charged rap-dance" does "crackles and pops with enough irresistible energy". ==Chart performance==