Reaction to the album at the time was mixed, with some former fans disappointed at the new commercial direction. In the UK, Gavin Martin of
NME complained that "there's a feeling of going through the motions on many of the songs, playing out scenes and sending up manners and mores in an almost identikit fashion. Perhaps the most disappointing thing about this LP is the lack of vision and imagination in Darnell's songwriting ...
Tropical Gangsters doesn't exactly stink, but there is a mighty stale whiff about it." However, in
Melody Maker Paolo Hewitt was more positive, saying, "Gone is the musical exotica of
Fresh Fruit ..., the last LP, to be replaced by a leaner, harder sound, characterised by an emphasis on percussion and rhythm guitar ... Far from being a collection of 'dull, insipid disco songs', as
Sounds would have it, this album is packed with wit, humour, tunes and a clear sense of direction." In
The Guardian,
Robin Denselow noted that there were fewer influences from Latin or Caribbean music than on the band's previous album
Fresh Fruit in Foreign Places, and instead more emphasis on "straightforforward R&B and jangling funk". He stated, "A few tracks like the jangling, lumbering 'Stool Pigeon' do seem to have been included with the commercial disco market in mind but thankfully most tracks echo just a little of Darnell's gloriously eclectic taste and wit." He concluded, "It's an enjoyable album but it doesn't show what The Kid is capable of." More recent reviews have been kinder to the album: Sharon Mawer of
AllMusic said the songs on the album were "totally irresistible, danceable, easy to sing along to, and guaranteed to bring a smile to the face of pop dominated at the time by synthesizers and good-looking young men who looked more like girls".
Accolades In the UK
Tropical Gangsters was placed at number 12 in the
NME critics' list of the best albums of 1982, and also included as one of
Sounds' top twenty albums of the year. In 1989
Record Mirror placed the album at number 48 in their list of the 'Top 100 Albums of the Decade'. ==Track listing==