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Public Enemy - Rebirth of a Nation PDF Print E-mail
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Written by Soopa Starr   
Monday, 08 May 2006
Image Artist: Publich Enemy
Album: Rebirth of a Nation
Label: Guerrilla Funk
Rating: 4/5

Public Enemy ruled Hip-Hop airwaves in the late 80’s/early 90’s. With messages as powerful as songs entitled“911 is a Joke,” and “Fear of a Black Planet,” Chuck D, Flavor Flav, Terminator X, Professor Griff and Bill Stephney created the new school version of black power. Fast-forward about 10-15 years and you will find a new edition to the Public Enemy discography ― Rebirth of a Nation. If the title of their eleventh studio album sounds familiar, remember their 1988 classic, It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold us Back? ― Rebirth of a Nation is a modern day reference to that album and other old school PE joints.

A collaboration with Paris (who did the production), you may remember him from his song “Bush Killer” (from many Bush administrations ago), “Rebirth” not only makes references to golden-era PE, it’s also an updated version of what they have always been about, “power to the people.” While staying true to their original sound yet making it clear that they have also evolved, Rebirth of a Nation is an impressive and powerful comeback.

The opening track “Raw S**t,” featuring MC Ren (of NWA) and Paris is a hardcore intro. The beat bangs with a sense of urgency as they all let you know that Hip-Hop continues. Either you’re with them or against them. “Hard Truth Soldiers,” featuring Dead Prez, MC Ren and The Conscious Daughters has a Hip-Hop rock edge, like a lot of the album. Chuck D spits in the first verse, “It’s the COINTEL killer black hard truth silver back/ still checking to see just who set to come along rebirth and revive that movement back /we’re bringing the balance back…” It’s not like he was known for supreme lyrical skills, it was more about his gangsta and fearlessness in terms of what he said. In a generation who probably knows nothing about COINTELPRO, but all about buffoonery and bling bling propaganda fed to the masses by greedy corporations, bringing balance back to the game is not such a bad idea. Dead Prez, MC Ren, and the Conscious daughters are nice additions to the song and of course, Flavor Flav fulfilled his hypeman duties by adding the appropriate “yeah’s,” “word’s,” and other sound effects. “Pump the Music, Pump the Sound” is reminiscent of “Show ‘Em Whatcha Got” (It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold us Back). A blend of jazz and Hip-Hop, the song consists of the hook, “pump the music, pump the sound” and Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. speech snippets telling people we must rise up above the evils of war ― and it’s still dope, showing that they don’t always have to have a whole song of rapping revolutionary style. Music and snippets blended only in the signature way that PE can, does the trick just as effectively.

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