Track Listing 1. Contract on the World Love Jam 2. Brothers Gonna Work It Out 3. 911 Is a Joke 4. Incident at 66.6 F. M. 5. Welcome to the Terrordome 6. Meet the G That Killed Me 7. Pollywanacraka 8. Anti-Nigger Machine 9. Burn Hollywood Burn 10. Power to the People 11. Who Stole the Soul? 12. Fear of a Black Planet 13. Revolutioary Generation 14. Can't Do Nuttin For Ya Man 15. Reggie Jax 16. Leave This Off Your Fu*Kin Charts 17. B Side Wins Again 18. War at 33 1/3 19. Final Count of the Collision Between Us and the Damned - (TRUE instrumental) 20. Fight the Power
| Details | | Playing Time: | 63 min. | | Contributing Artists: | Big Daddy Kane, Branford Marsalis, Ice Cube, Stats.1 | | Producer: | The Bomb Squad | | Distributor: | Universal Distribution | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Recording Mode: | Stereo | | SPAR Code: | AAD |
Album Notes Public Enemy: Chuck D [Carlton Ridenhour]; Flavor Flav (vocals); Terminator X (scratches); Professor Griff, Brother James I, Agent Attitude, James Bomb, Brother Mike. Additional personnel: Ice Cube, Big Daddy Kane (vocals); Branford Marsalis (saxophone); Paul Shabazz (programming); Wizard K-Jee (scratches). Engineers include: Rod Hui, Chris Shaw, Kirk Yano. Recorded at Greene Street Recording, New York, New York; The Music Palace, West Hempstead and Spectrum City Studios, Long Island, New York. If Public Enemy's two previous albums had ruffled feathers, Fear Of A Black Planet set out its stall to exploit mainstream fears. Again, the title spoke volumes. This time they raged just as hard, but their political consciousness had grown. Professor Griff had been ejected from the band for his anti-Semitic stance, and much of the album's atmosphere is created by the bunker mentality of resultant clashes with the press. The siege mentality only underscores the group's hard-nosed, cut-and-paste sample technique and the eloquence of Chuck D. 'Fight The Power' still bites harder than just about any other track in rap's history.
Editorial Reviews Included in Rolling Stone's Essential Recordings of the 90's. Rolling Stone (05/13/1999)
...most powerful rap group... - Rating: A Entertainment Weekly
Included in Q Magazine's 90 Best Albums Of The 1990s. Q (12/01/1999)
10 (out of 10) - ...where do you go once you've made the greatest hip-hop album ever? Unbelievably, you consolidate that with an equally splendid follow-up....This time the sounds were softened slightly with flashes of `real' instrumentation but the content remained as astonishingly tough and intelligent as before... NME (07/15/1995)
Bloody Essential - ...slower, denser...funky. And it was a masterpiece....It's beyond perfect, built like a platinum beehive and stuffed with cordite--The Bomb Squad's last hands-on job for PE before they took on the task of...Ice Cube... Melody Maker (07/22/1995)
4 Stars - Excellent - ...Public Enemy has never aimed for anything less than a comprehensive view of contemporary black America...FEAR OF A BLACK PLANET complements this ambition with stunning maturity and sophistication... Rolling Stone (05/17/1990)
Ranked #37 in NME's list of the `Greatest Albums Of All Time.' NME (10/02/1993)
5 Stars - ...achieved the near impossible by being every bit as good as its predecessor. The music was Public Enemy's now-familiar scream but was augmented with a percussive tinge that reflected the ever greater Afrocentricity... Q (09/01/1995)
4 Stars - Excellent - Recommended by Q as one of the five best rap albums of 1990 and ranked as one of the Fifty Best Albums of 1990. - ...scalding attack on white supremacy... Q (02/01/1991)
Ranked #2 in Spin Magazine's 90 Greatest Albums of the '90s. Spin (09/01/1999)
10 (out of 10) - ...where do you go once you've made the greatest hip-hop album ever? Unbelievably, you consolidate that with an equally splendid follow-up....This time the sounds were softened slightly with flashes of `real' instrumentation but the content remained as astonishingly tough and intelligent as before... NME (07/15/1995)
Bloody Essential - ...slower, denser...funky. And it was a masterpiece....It's beyond perfect, built like a platinum beehive and stuffed with cordite--The Bomb Squad's last hands-on job for PE before they took on the task of...Ice Cube... Melody Maker (07/22/1995)
5 Stars - ...achieved the near impossible by being every bit as good as its predecessor. The music was Public Enemy's now-familiar scream but was augmented with a percussive tinge that reflected the ever greater Afrocentricity... Q (09/01/1995)
Entertainment Weekly ...most powerful rap group... - Rating: A
| See an error? Submit a change request |