"As so often in this late period, Davis's playing is beguiling in bursts. "Rubberband of Life" is a remake of the original title track - also present, with its scalding Mike Stern guitar break - and though the new mix's promisingly D'Angelo-like vibe could valuably have been extended on the album, its polyphonic soul-vocal choruses are ethereally compelling as the delicate muted trumpet line picks its way through. Davis is quick and fluent on the Prince/James Brownish "Give It Up", Lalah Hathaway is powerful and precise on the neo-soulful "So Emotional", and the ballad "See I See" - the standout, with its zigzagging runs and suspenseful pacing - glows with the pure-Miles light that this cut-and-paste job needs about twice as much of to really justify his name as its author. Rubberband is better than 1991's Doo-Bop, the star's final attempt at pop glamour (...), but as a career-twilight curio it's nothing like as interesting as its fusion-powered 1985 predecessor You're Under Arrest, nor a memorable successor such as Marcus Miller's thoughtful, compositionally integrated production of Amandla at the end of that decade".