Fear Of A Black Planet Bismarck ND

Coming off one of the last perceived, "dangerous" albums in the last 20 years, It Takes A Nation of Millions To Hold Us Back, Public Enemy had to an ...

Local Companies

Wesco Distribution Inc
(701) 255-3370
901 S 9th St
Bismarck, ND
Border States Electric Supply Co
(701) 258-6060
3205 E Thayer Ave
Bismarck, ND
Hagemeyer North America
(701) 222-3005
410 S 22nd St
Bismarck, ND
Bo Do's Tv & Appliance
(701) 572-7881
1520 2nd Ave W
Williston, ND
Design Solutions and Integration
(701) 232-7670
650 2nd Ave NW
West Fargo, ND
Border States Electric Supply Co
(701) 225-4466
1917 I94 Business Loop E
Dickinson, ND
Border States Electric Supply
(701) 837-1130
4600 N Broadway
Minot, ND
Dakota Supply Group Inc
(701) 852-4466
3400 N Broadway
Minot, ND
Dakota Supply Group
(701) 572-2177
2615 University Ave Ste C
Williston, ND

Provided by: 

Fear Of A Black Planet

Public Enemy

Def Jam / Columbia Records, 1989

REVIEW BY: Sean McCarthy

ORIGINALLY PUBLISHED: 10/15/1999

Coming off one of the last perceived, "dangerous" albums in thelast 20 years, It Takes A Nation of Millions To Hold Us Back, Public Enemyhad to answer a lot of questions as the ninties were born.Professor Griff, a key member of the band, was kicked out of theband, reluctantly, after making anti-Semitic remarks. Gangsta rapwas quickly bum rushing suburban areas, threatening to dispelPublic Enemy's claim to be the "toughest" rap act alive. Andfinally, could they have the artistic clout to follow up one of themost heralded albums of the eighties?

The stakes were high and Fear Of A Black Planet more than lived up to its pre-releasehype. More importantly, it established itself as being one of themusical cornerstones of this decade. Public Enemy's musical versionof a B-2 bomber, The Bomb Squad layers guitar wails and recordscratches over the rally cry, "Brothers Gonna Work It Out," aperfect introduction for the next 50 minutes.

Playing out rap's version of Mick Jagger and Keith Richards,Flavor Flav and Chuck D take turns dominating an album full ofangry social commentary mixed with beats so slamming, you swear thealbum was a party along the lines of Funkadelic's Maggot Brain.

Flav's humor and Chuck D's assault-rifle style of lyricalbombast intersect often throughout "Fear." Ambulance service in theinner-cities gets fragged on "911 Is A Joke," and Hollywood getsrailed for it's portrait of minorities in "Burn Hollywood Burn."Both are hilarious, but the humor does not soften the hard hittingmessage.


Click here to read complete Review
Related Articles
Related Articles

Rss   Delicious   Digg   Add To My Yahoo   Add To My Google   Bookmark   Search Plugin

Topics:
Advertising Family Home Services Real Estate Resources
Business Services Fashion Industrial Goods & Services Retail & Consumer Services
Career Financial Services Insurance Software
Cars Food & Beverage Internet Technology
Computer Hardware Franchise Legal Telecommunications
Construction Health Miscellaneous Trade Shows
Education Holidays Nightlife Travel
Entertainment Home Appliances Online Database Weddings
Environmental Home Electronics Pets World History