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Good God, Don't You Guys Miss Public Enemy? My brother was cutting my hair on Saturday afternoon and we got to talking about how horrible hip hop is today. I and some of the other guys there agreed that so much is lacking. I had my bro pop in some old P.E. in order to put an exclamation point on the topic. It was a pleasant and head-nodding reminder of how much I loved me some Public Enemy back in the day. Chuck D's voice was just killer. You'd sound like a fool trying to imitate him. Flav was the perfect comic foil and hype man. Chuck's lyrics were so picturesque at times it was almost frightening. Add to that Terminator X. WHAT!
When they dropped these albums, Ahh, nobody could touch them!!!! Where are all the hip hop groups/artists out there who have something to say? They sure aren't on the radio. I remember Chris Rock commenting about this in Rolling Stone. He said something like: "We're in the middle of a war, and all folks have to say on a record is 'everybody in the club gettin' tipsy'. Art sucks right now". When I read that, I found myself nodding my head in agreement, then shaking it in disappointment. In order for everyone to get a feel for what I'm saying (especially folks who need some P.E. 101) check out the first verse of Welcome To The Terrordome. Tell me this did not get you hyped! I got so much trouble on my mind Refuse to lose Here's your ticket Hear the drummer get wicked The crew to you to push the back to Black Attack so I sat and japped Then slapped the Mac(Intosh) Now I'm ready to mike it (You know I like it) huh Hear my favoritism roll "Oh" Never be a brother like to go solo Lazer anastasia maze ya Ways to blaze your brain and train ya The way I'm livin', forgiven' What I'm givin' up X on the flex hit me now I don't know about later As for now I know how to avoid the paranoid Man I've had it up to here Gear I wear got 'em goin' in fear Rhetoric said Read just a bit ago Not quittin' though Signed the hard rhymer Work to keep from gettin' jerked Changin' some ways To way back in the better days Raw metaphysically bold Never followed a code Still dropped a load Never question what I am God knows Cause it's comin' from the heart What I got better get some (Get on up) hustler of culture Snakebitten Been spit in the face But the rhymes keep fittin' Respects been givin' how's ya livin' Now I can't protect a pad off defect Check the record An reckon an intentional wreck Played off as some intellect Made the call, took the fall Broke the laws Not my fault they're fallin' off Known as fair square Throughout my years So I growl at the livin' foul Black to the bone my home is your home So welcome to the Terrordome | |
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I feel ya. The best thing groups like PE can do is get all their stuff re-issued and show the new generation how it's done. I already got my 16 year old son bobbin' his head to It Takes A Nation of Millions.....Today's hip-hop is a joke and I don't know how many times we gotta say that. | |
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OdysseyMiles said: This is one of my favorite albums of all time. I should've added it to my top 20 list come to think of it. the oh my God is that Bob Ross in your avatar??! edit [This message was edited Mon Aug 2 12:16:37 2004 by minneapolisgenius] "I saw a woman with major Hammer pants on the subway a few weeks ago and totally thought of you." - sextonseven | |
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minneapolisgenius said: oh my God is that Bob Ross in your avatar??!
You better believe it, babe. | |
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TheOrgerFormerlyKnownAs said: I feel ya. The best thing groups like PE can do is get all their stuff re-issued and show the new generation how it's done. I already got my 16 year old son bobbin' his head to It Takes A Nation of Millions.....Today's hip-hop is a joke and I don't know how many times we gotta say that.
YES. You are teaching him the real deal right there. I got a letter from the government/the other day... | |
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OdysseyMiles said: minneapolisgenius said: oh my God is that Bob Ross in your avatar??!
You better believe it, babe. "I saw a woman with major Hammer pants on the subway a few weeks ago and totally thought of you." - sextonseven | |
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I don't care what anybody says; nobody in hip hop ever had the artistic and social impact of Public Enemy. They were Gil Scott Heron and The Last Poets set to hard Funk and just some whirlwind sonic chaos that could never be categorized. Yet, non-Blacks in sometimes the least integrated areas still showed up at their gigs.
The Bomb Squad many times took obscure elements to make sonic collages from well-known records and a lot of people couldn't place it, although they knew they'd heard it SOMEWHERE before. Chuck's voice cut thru it all while his flow was as consistent as melted butta, and Flava Flav's songs were the contrast of comic relief. And how 'bout them S1W's? They were like the Black Panthers as dancers doing military drills. During the late '80s-very early '90s Hip Hop as a whole showed growth, later on that growth was stunted by gangsta rap, "bling bling", etc... This post not for the wimp contingent. All whiny wusses avert your eyes. | |
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Supernova said: I don't care what anybody says; nobody in hip hop ever had the artistic and social impact of Public Enemy. They were Gil Scott Heron and The Last Poets set to hard Funk and just some whirlwind sonic chaos that could never be categorized. Yet, non-Blacks in sometimes the least integrated areas still showed up at their gigs.
The Bomb Squad many times took obscure elements to make sonic collages from well-known records and a lot of people couldn't place it, although they knew they'd heard it SOMEWHERE before. Chuck's voice cut thru it all while his flow was as consistent as melted butta, and Flava Flav's songs were the contrast of comic relief. And how 'bout them S1W's? They were like the Black Panthers as dancers doing military drills. During the late '80s-very early '90s Hip Hop as a whole showed growth, later on that growth was stunted by gangsta rap, "bling bling", etc... | |
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strange...today on MTV I saw a video from PE with Moby....anyone else in Europe see it?
I'm sure the shit is too controversal for the Amercian audience. Has alot to do with the war and the governement. by the way...Odyssey..I love your avvie!!! I love Bob Ross..in the land of happy little trees!!! | |
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They have a best of coming in September, along w/ a DVD of ALL their videos, with commentary by Chuck!!!
Then, later on is a reissue of Nation of Millions with a DVD (possibly 2 cds, but not sure, it's coming as Uni's Sound + Vision, which is usually 2cd's and a dvd. Can't wait!!! | |
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Supernova said: They were Gil Scott Heron and The Last Poets set to hard Funk and just some whirlwind sonic chaos that could never be categorized.
I love that description. It's perfect. PE is just the best at what they do. Period. The minute they see me, fear me I'm the epitome - a public enemy tA Tribal Disorder http://www.soundclick.com...rmusic.htm "Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all." | |
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minneapolisgenius said: OdysseyMiles said: This is one of my favorite albums of all time. I should've added it to my top 20 list come to think of it. It Takes A Nation.. was actually in my list. | |
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for me, it's all about THIS ALBUM RIGHT HERE:
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But PE are still about, right?!
98's 'He Got Game', although slept on by most, is absolutely brilliant! 'There's a Poison' wasn't too bad either. "London, i've adopted a name that has no pronounciation.... is that cool with you?"
"YEAH!!!" "Yeah, well then fuck those other fools!" | |
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CinisterCee said: minneapolisgenius said: This is one of my favorite albums of all time. I should've added it to my top 20 list come to think of it. It Takes A Nation.. was actually in my list. Show-off! "I saw a woman with major Hammer pants on the subway a few weeks ago and totally thought of you." - sextonseven | |
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FiveFootNine said: strange...today on MTV I saw a video from PE with Moby....anyone else in Europe see it?
I'm sure the shit is too controversal for the Amercian audience. Has alot to do with the war and the governement. by the way...Odyssey..I love your avvie!!! I love Bob Ross..in the land of happy little trees!!! Seen it too, it's called MKLVFKWR (make love fuck war). Moby did the music and PE the lyrics. btw whatever happened to Terminator X? when PE played Amsterdam last year (awesome gig) he wasn't there. has he left the band? WHAT IF THERE IS NO TOMORROW? THERE WASN'T ONE TODAY! | |
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FiveFootNine said: strange...today on MTV I saw a video from PE with Moby....anyone else in Europe see it?
I'm sure the shit is too controversal for the Amercian audience. Has alot to do with the war and the governement. by the way...Odyssey..I love your avvie!!! I love Bob Ross..in the land of happy little trees!!! Thank you. Wow, it's good to see 'ol Bob gettin' some love in here. [This message was edited Tue Aug 3 8:53:45 2004 by OdysseyMiles] | |
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Anxiety said: for me, it's all about THIS ALBUM RIGHT HERE:
This album had some stellar cuts. Can't Truss It, By The Time I Get To Arizona and Shut 'Em Down to name a few. I think the lyrics to Can't Truss It are some of the most impressive words ever put together by a hip hop artist. The last verse is just ill: I can only guess what's happ'nin' Years ago he woulda been The ships captain Gettin' me bruised on a cruise What I got to lose, lost all contact Got me layin' on my back Rollin' in my own leftover When I roll over, I roll over in somebody else's 90 F--kin' days on a slave ship Count 'em fallin' off 2, 3, 4 hun'ed at a time Blood in the wood and it's mine I'm chokin' on spit feelin' pain Like my brain bein' chained Still gotta give it what I got But it's hot in the day, cold in the night But I thrive to survive, I pray to god to stay alive Attitude boils up inside And that ain't it (think I'll every quit) Still I pray to get my hands 'round The neck of the man wit' the whip 3 months pass, they brand a label on my ass To signify Owned I'm on the microphone Sayin' 1555 How I'm livin' We been livin' here Livin' ain't the word I been givin' Haven't got Classify us in the have-nots Fightin' haves 'Cause it's all about money When it comes to Armageddon Mean I'm getting mine Here I am turn it over Sam 427 to the year Do you understand That's why it's hard For the black to love the land Once again Bass in your face Not an eight track Gettin' it good to the wood So the people Give you some a dat Reactin' to the fax That I kick and it stick And it stay around Pointin' to the joint, put the Buddha down Goin', goin', gettin' to the roots Ain't givin' it up So turn me loose But then again I got a story That's harder than the hardcore Cost of the holocaust I'm talkin' 'bout the one still goin' on I know Where I'm from, not dum diddie dum From the base motherland The place of the drum Invaded by the wack diddie wack Fooled the black, left us faded King and chief probably had a big beef Because of dat now I grit my teeth So here's a song to the strong 'Bout a shake of a snake And the smile went along wit dat Can't truss it | |
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OdysseyMiles said: TheOrgerFormerlyKnownAs said: I feel ya. The best thing groups like PE can do is get all their stuff re-issued and show the new generation how it's done. I already got my 16 year old son bobbin' his head to It Takes A Nation of Millions.....Today's hip-hop is a joke and I don't know how many times we gotta say that.
YES. You are teaching him the real deal right there. I got a letter from the government/the other day... i open and read it, it said they was suckas, they wanted me for the army or whatever.....ahhhhh, man you are so right.....that is the goods right there. Kirk: "KHAAANNNN! KHAAANNNN!" | |
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I never was a big fan of Public Enemy so I don't miss them. But I do agree that it would be nice to see a bit more variety in the lyrics of today's rap. How many times can a guy rap about bitches and money? | |
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Co-sign O-Miles and 'Nova and er'body else.
"Nation of Millions" was the Nevermind and Sgt. Pepper's of hip-hop, and its signature track, "Rebel without a Pause," is one of the most influential pop music tracks of the last 20 years. With an enlightened, fiery MC, the ultimate "hype man," a devastating DJ and a groundbreaking production team, PE (and several other legends) took hip-hop from fad to art form. But unlike other great acts of the time -- Boogie Down Productions, De La Soul, A Tribe Called Quest -- Nation of Millions was hip-hop's declaration of independence. It showed that true hip-hop artists could take rhyming and scratching to artistic heights. It is one of the most important albums of the last 2 or 3 decades, IMHO. And Fear was more than a worthy follow-up. With tight production, great, topical lyrics, it managed to be militant and unifying at the same time. While it spoke on controversial issues like racial violence, race politics, the persecution of black celebrities and the negative images emanating from Hollywood, it also called for the elimination of race and pled for unity. Few acts other than PE could speak so fervently for black power AND integration at the same time, with the same force. "Fight The Power" could very well be Hip-Hop's anthem. These 2 records alone establish a rich legacy for hip-hop that many of today's neo-minstrels have squandered by perpetrating every negative stereotype PE fought to erase. Some of that work has its place in the genre, but imagine if everybody on the East Coast emulated NWA and Too Short in the late 80's and early 90's? Had that happened, hip-hop would have died a long time ago. Thankfully, from the late 80's to the mid-90's, many artists built the foundation for the hip-hop that, lord willing, will survive this current haze. PE was one of those legends. Good thread! Good night, sweet Prince | 7 June 1958 - 21 April 2016
Props will be withheld until the showing and proving has commenced. -- Aaron McGruder | |
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