It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back

Message Bookmarked
Bookmark Removed
Not all messages are displayed: show all messages (469 of them)
hehe indie

electric sound of jim (electricsound), Thursday, 10 April 2003 06:24 (twenty-one years ago) link

Mr. Diamond: are you talking about hip-hop in general or Public Enemy? Coz my whole point is that it sounds different -- like the hip-hop beat has been pulled into straight four time, the same rhythmic rules don't apply. Like did you notice where I said "third rather than the first"?

And how fucking dumb do you have to be to read "no continuity" as "nothing in common"?

(ps i'm mainly pissed here coz yr. fucking with my man st for no good fucking reason)

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Thursday, 10 April 2003 06:26 (twenty-one years ago) link

st, I'm not hateful or sneering at all! Please say something though! Or why bother? Please don't call me indie though. Everybody knows I'm way into Zeppelin and Foghat and Fat Boys and UTFO and shit.

Sterling, again, no offense intended but yr post is problematic that's all. No big deal, I do it all the time. You say Chuck D took the classic Run-DMC flow about as far as it could go (disagree - Beasties advanced it more on Paul's Boutique if anything; *gasp* white people shockah) then go on to say the doubling of the spoken line to the beat was pretty unique to PE: that was Run-DMC whole fucking thing!

Anyway I would like to contribute more myself, and I'm certainly not trying to come off like some expert on this shit. Specifically I really wanted to go back and listen to my X-Clan and Brand Nubian cds to directly address the political/lyrical bent of this thread, but i just haven't had time tonight.

Mr. Diamond (diamond), Thursday, 10 April 2003 06:43 (twenty-one years ago) link

Actually, I'm listening to ITaNoMtHUB again 'cuz of this thread, and you know what? This Bomb Squad stuff? Jesus, it's just a sample over a break 75% of the time. i.e. what EVERY OTHER FUCKING rap person was doing at the time. I'm listening to "Terminator X to the Edge of Panic", and it strikes me as a Maceo Parker lick sampled over a - what is it it, "Substitution"? - breakbeat. IOW, hip-hop circa late 80's.

I think the real headfuck really was Fear of a Black Planet, and thinking of that, I think this thread gets it.

Mr. Diamond (diamond), Thursday, 10 April 2003 07:24 (twenty-one years ago) link

Scratch that, the layering on "Caught, Can we get a Witness" is pretty fucking reet. But the bottom line is that such production techniques don't necessarily dominate this record as history would have you believe - I think it was much more of a (alienating?) factor on FoaBP.

Also, "She Watch Channel Zero" - nice conceit for the white kids (er, white critics) but why? Why is this cut on this record?

Mr. Diamond (diamond), Thursday, 10 April 2003 07:36 (twenty-one years ago) link

okay so seriously samples over breaks are lots and lots of rap music -- what made the bomb squad's production different *anyway*? Like I'm arguing that there's way more going on than just layering, and if I'm getting it wrong I want to hear *how* in particular.

And that race baiting about the beasties is just petty. I find their stuff dull for the most part, and don't have any albums to refer to but all I know is that if they took it further then they forgot again by their later stuff.

I'll get back to you on the run-DMC stuff later (I actually sold my albums to a dj friend since she wanted the vinyl & i never rebought the cds, so I haven't listened properly in a while)

Sterling Clover (s_clover), Thursday, 10 April 2003 15:26 (twenty-one years ago) link

Mr. Diamond re: your second to last post here, I've been saying that to my friends for years: Fear is a better record than Nation. I think I had one person ever agree w/me. Now, maybe the lyrical content was more groundbreaking, perhaps even just plain better, on Nation but I pay little attention to lyrics. The sonics of Fear are a quantum leap from Nation.

oops (Oops), Thursday, 10 April 2003 15:33 (twenty-one years ago) link

i agree! PE was my favorite band throughout most of junior high (well, them and GnR), but i ALWAYS preferred fear to nation.

okay here's a question which i was talking about with alex last night...

so PE, along with Eric B, Pete Rock, Premier, BDP to some extent on the later stuff - just listing the Big Names now, mind - is hailed as being among the first hip-hop acts to link the genre with "soul" or "funk" mostly through the sampled breaks, supposedly engendering some sort of continuity between "Black Music" which wasn't there before (total bullshit of course, since it's mostly just that classical black musicians didn't want to be linked with guys shouting and out of tune drum machines going off, so they didn't - even begrudgingly acknowledge hip-hop - until you could drop a sax sample over a gently swining break recorded 25 years earlier.) but PE sounds so ANTI-soul now, mostly because of time and influence: the pounding looped breaks and squealing sirens/brass being turned into ahuman rave, techno-rock, whatever. PE NEVER sounded "funky" to me (one of the things i liked/hated most about "fear..." at age 12 was trying to play it to my mother - who is a big funk/soul/disco fan - and saying "look ma, they're talking about respecting women...hip-hop isnt all bad!" and her just not being able to get past the harshness of the production.) but could their "Datedness" also stem from the fact that the looped-break-and-Maceo-sample aesthetic mr. diamond talks about above has actually been revealed on only be a blip in the history of hip-hop rather than the Way, The Light, The Truth (cf. Sugarhill disco, early Def Jam drum machine rock, electro, booty, bass, bounce, the dancehall influence, right up to today with tim and the neptunes, etc etc.)

jess (dubplatestyle), Thursday, 10 April 2003 15:50 (twenty-one years ago) link

Proposal: PE was first and last of its kind. They influenced (sorry) more people outside of their genre than within it.
Any truth there?

oops (Oops), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:13 (twenty-one years ago) link

i think that's what we're finding on this thread, yeah.

so can we move on to my old question as to why people think this is the greatest hip-hop album of all time? cuz, y'know, it's not.

jess (dubplatestyle), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:17 (twenty-one years ago) link

Putting it in context (which is particularly important here, because Nation of Millions got canonical status almost immediately, as I recall--extra-evidenced by PE getting a shout in EVERY hip-hop album liner note for the following 5 years...), Nation of Millions was one of those albums that people saw as a completely-formed realization of what was going on in hip-hop at the time.

You've got Chuck's politically / socially / historically conscious lyrics, bolstered by samples of black-power-themed oration; you've got the chopped and shredded and layered JB, funk and soul samples pushing the boundaries of the SP1200 as a compositional tool (and, as noted above, an explicit connection to a source-body of music that had fallen into relative obscurity at that point); plus there was Flav clowing on the sterotypes and realities of black performance simultaneously--his persona as complementary and contradictory to Chuck's kinda sealed the breadth complexity of what PE represented.

All these things were percolating in hip-hip at the time, and with Nation of Millions are presented at arguably the most fully-realized, well-formed degree up until then. I'm not suprised that the result wasn't emulated too much--who else could assemble such a complex package by design? Who would want to? PE were a group that was canonical not because they created a model or template for others to work with, but because they created something (of which music was just a part) that perfectly expressed and tied together what was happening at a particular moment in time.

Whether their work holds up for you now, particularly if you weren't following them back when Nation was released, is a different matter--but I think it still validates their inclusion in some kind of canon.

arch Ibog (arch Ibog), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:22 (twenty-one years ago) link

the only time PE approached 'funk' was on Apocalypse 91; I'll haveta side with Nations over Fear still, although more to do with it coming out when I was thirteen whereas Fear came out when I was fifteen ie. it's just the followup to my ears. Sonically Fear trumps it but it has too many moments that lag - "Pollywanacraka", "Meet the G that Killed Me" - in comparison to Nations. Nations had already blown my mind, Fear wasn't so much of an upgrade (Chemical Brothers always seemed to me the inheritors of the Bomb Squad sound - I know that's why I loved Exit Planet Dust). As to why PE became historically deleted, part of it's just the moment passed - remember all the PE knockoffs (X-Clan, Def Jef - Delicious Vinyl's entree into the concious rap market), part of it's that Apocalypse was a really really preachy record ('put down them Nikes and that malt liquor' ain't much of a party starter), and most of it (like 90%) is The Chronic. Even if Muse Sick N Hour Mess Age (which came out THREE YEARS after Apocalypse 91 - eons in hip-hop at the time) had been great it still woulda been the hip hop equivalent of Dog Eat Dog or Native Tongue.


Greatest hip-hop album all time argument more to do with history than the music (not to say I still won't put Nations and 3 Feet High 1-2 on my list)

James Blount (James Blount), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:23 (twenty-one years ago) link

ie. it's hip-hops Sgt. Peppers - the moment when critics HAD to take the genre seriously

James Blount (James Blount), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:24 (twenty-one years ago) link

maybe cuz it was the first great hip hop album and the great ones that followed didn't appeal to rockists as much, ie they didn't have revolutionary (read:punk) rhetoric that critics are enamored with?

(didn't read any posts since Jess's but I will now)

oops (Oops), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:25 (twenty-one years ago) link

I should add that I don't think PE designed or even realized all of the things that made their existance around the time of Nation so significant, and that when they tried to get more deliberate and consistent with their identity (I'm thinking Fear of A Black Planet and beyond), they diminished their impact, at least for me.

arch Ibog (arch Ibog), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:26 (twenty-one years ago) link

agreed - I remember a criticism leveled at Fear was that they were playing to their white audience (!). Opening for U2 didn't help (great show though).

James Blount (James Blount), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:27 (twenty-one years ago) link

also as popular as they were in the 'hip-hop community' at the time - definitive jeep music (remember that term?) - they weren't nearly as highly beheld as Rakim. Remember Kool Moe Dee's grade sheet?

James Blount (James Blount), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:30 (twenty-one years ago) link

ha - this is another 'hey - remember the 80s?' thread

James Blount (James Blount), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:31 (twenty-one years ago) link

I do seem to recall a Greg Tate piece (reprinted in his book) talking about how Nation trax going over like gangbusters in hip-hop clubs when they were still new, because they were funkier than the first album, so I'm not sure I buy their being "funkless." (I always heard plenty of funk in them myself as well.) Just something that came to mind, not a blanket refutation of Jess's point (different ears hear differently). (BTW, what is your favorite hip-hop album, Jess? Mine's either Nation or Mama Said Knock You Out, I think.)

M Matos (M Matos), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:31 (twenty-one years ago) link

What was it about a) their particular strand of Black Nationalism that fell out of favor and b) the idea of making in your face uncompromising radical music (whether they did or not isn't the question) that virtually no subsequent black hip hop act has even tried to follow in those footsteps?

Because people, musicians, especially hip-hop musicians, want to BE THEMSELVES.

nickalicious (nickalicious), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:34 (twenty-one years ago) link

they weren't nearly as highly beheld as Rakim. Remember Kool Moe Dee's grade sheet?

Yeah, well I recall that was for MC's--PE's rating as a total package has to be higher cause there was no love for Eric B.'s turntable skills back in those days (and probaly even less since!)

arch Ibog (arch Ibog), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:35 (twenty-one years ago) link

yeah nation... def has that "we've got nothing to lose" feeling that makes a "masterpiece", whereas fear... has the "we're on top of the world" feeling ("incident at 66.6", the first few songs on the second side - hah, i'm dating myself - "fight the power" even) which can also make a masterpiece (people like to feel as if they are being taken under the wing of something bigger than themselves as much as they like to identify) but which is much harder to navigate.

i dunno really know what my favorite is. in a pinch it'd be fear..., but it might actually be illmatic or 36 chambers.

jess (dubplatestyle), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:36 (twenty-one years ago) link

The Source has been mentioning PE lately like crazy for what it's worth (Harry Allen no doubt, but still...)

James Blount (James Blount), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:40 (twenty-one years ago) link

ha - 'when is Rakim gonna drop Eric B?' was the eternal question back then!

James Blount (James Blount), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:42 (twenty-one years ago) link

hah...if only the british had been paying attention!

jess (dubplatestyle), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:44 (twenty-one years ago) link

Flavor Flav was awful.

Ben Williams, Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:48 (twenty-one years ago) link

b-b-but's he's got the third best song on Fear!

James Blount (James Blount), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:49 (twenty-one years ago) link

I think Nation is stronger overall but I totally understand why people like Fear better--it's broader, more of a tour-de-force, takes more chances, risks more, more kaleidoscopic (near psychedelic almost at times). see also: Stankonia vs. Aquemini. there's also a matter w/Fear of it being easier to let seep into your everyday life in some ways--Nation pretty much demands all of your attention at all times in order for it to work totally, while Fear has parts you can sort of let slide by and then go back to or whatever, it's more of an everyday album, and I think its kaleidoscopicness helps in that regard, more moods help make it more user-friendly as opposed to white-heat concentration. this has more to do with the way those records work for me personally (and I imagine others by extension) than w/its "place in the culture" or whatever at the time of release. the quote I recall from the Pazz & Jop when Nation won in '88 was (quoted freely) "nobody bought the tape, or turned it on, it was just always on," and I think that's helped work against it in the long run: it's an album so culturally oversaturated during its peak that in some ways you never need hear it again (i.e. James's Sgt. Pepper point)

M Matos (M Matos), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:50 (twenty-one years ago) link

I still like Flavor Flav but he's probably aged less well than anything on those records

M Matos (M Matos), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:50 (twenty-one years ago) link

c'mon man - "Cold Lampin"! "COLD LAMPIN"!

James Blount (James Blount), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:52 (twenty-one years ago) link

I agree w/all you said M. (except Stankonia v Aquemini perhaps)

oops (Oops), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:53 (twenty-one years ago) link

...when he's egging Chuck on. by himself he's pretty great

oops, what do you disagree with? I'm curious.

M Matos (M Matos), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:54 (twenty-one years ago) link

(sorry about that hedge, I sort of realized it right after I wrote what I did and then Blount convinced me)

M Matos (M Matos), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:55 (twenty-one years ago) link

Not funny at all. Whiny voice. Never shuts up. Stupid catchphrases. I understand the need for a counterpoint to Chuck D, but I think I would listen to those records much more if it wasn't for Flav.

Ben Williams, Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:55 (twenty-one years ago) link

is "cold lampin" the "being for the benefit of mr. kite" of nation?

jess (dubplatestyle), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:55 (twenty-one years ago) link

the facetious part of me wants to say it's the "She's Leaving Home"

M Matos (M Matos), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:56 (twenty-one years ago) link

Some hip-hop traditions that weren't traditions before Public Enemy:

*the one-MC-with-a-lot-to-say/another-hype-guy-rowdy-MC dynamic
*among the first to use disonance and harsh overtones in their beats
*"conspiracy theory" obsessed lyrics

nickalicious (nickalicious), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:57 (twenty-one years ago) link

heh - the oldies station in Atlanta got bought out and became a hip-hop station - Atlanta's third, fourth if you count the top 40 station, which plays 80% hip-hop (in five years there'll be like two stations in Atlanta that aren't country or hip-hop ie. Atlanta'll be heaven). Anyhow, one thing that distinguishes them from the others is that they'll mix in hip-hop oldies - LOTS of PE.

James Blount (James Blount), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:57 (twenty-one years ago) link

James, how does it sound mixed w/the other stuff? does it stand out or fit in or a little of both or what?

M Matos (M Matos), Thursday, 10 April 2003 16:59 (twenty-one years ago) link

I think the real headfuck really was Fear of a Black Planet, and thinking of that, I think this thread gets it.
I Takes a Nation of Millions... == Licenced to Ill
Fear of a Black Planet == Paul's Boutique

Lord Custos Epsilon (Lord Custos Epsilon), Thursday, 10 April 2003 17:01 (twenty-one years ago) link

Hey, I was wondering (after thinking back to when Professor Griff made his anti-semetic comments back in the day) if anyone wondered if their followup to ITaNoM2HUB was going to have to be called:
"It Takes a Nation of Islam to Hold us Back"
Ho ho ho.
(*ducks...runs away*)

Lord Custos Epsilon (Lord Custos Epsilon), Thursday, 10 April 2003 17:04 (twenty-one years ago) link

M, I think it's just that I prefer Fear over Nation and Aquemini over Stankonia, ie I'm not really saying that you weren't right for making the comparison. However, my initial reaction was that Aquemini vs ATLiens should have been the comparison, but I can't really back that up other than the fact that there was a similar sonic leap from ATLiens to Aquemini as from Nation to Fear. I'd compare Stankonia w/Apocalypse (both are their fourth album so I must be right!)(Stankonia's better though, comparatively)

oops (Oops), Thursday, 10 April 2003 17:04 (twenty-one years ago) link

I'd say a little of both - they tend to focus on strictly eighties PE I guess - I've never heard anything after "Terrordome" for instance, but "Don't Believe the Hype" into "Wanksta" wasn't too jarring, actually come to think of it the only thing off of Bum Rush I've heard was "You're Gonna Get Yours" (once), so really when I say they play PE I mean they play Nations 95% of the time. De La slides in alot more smoothly, any Miami bass stuff more smoothly still (it is Atlanta ie. bounce is the order of the day). I'll have to listen more and it occurs to me that just now becoming a hip-hop station means music library ain't fully grown just yet ie. hip-hop oldies may be temporary, but I don't know.


oops fairly OTM there. Stankonia is Outkast's 'on top of the world' album though.

James Blount (James Blount), Thursday, 10 April 2003 17:13 (twenty-one years ago) link

I still prefer Nation over Fear, but I'm not sure if that's due to the fact that I bought Nation went it came out, it was my first hip-hop record, and I love it more for nostalgic reasons.

The "funny" thing about Professor Griff is that his solo album was produced by a white friend of mine.

hstencil, Thursday, 10 April 2003 17:27 (twenty-one years ago) link

it wasn't an exact comparison--I like Stankonia and Nation more myself--but I think it holds water. point taken, though

M Matos (M Matos), Thursday, 10 April 2003 17:33 (twenty-one years ago) link

The most enduring element of PE in hip hop is that of Flavor Flav's comic jester figure

Has anyone responded to this claim from the original post yet? I'm not sure I agree...supporting evidence?

arch Ibog (arch Ibog), Thursday, 10 April 2003 17:37 (twenty-one years ago) link

Ol' Dirty

James Blount (James Blount), Thursday, 10 April 2003 17:42 (twenty-one years ago) link

ja rule.

jess (dubplatestyle), Thursday, 10 April 2003 17:48 (twenty-one years ago) link

jess, where's your Mase photo?

oops (Oops), Thursday, 10 April 2003 17:50 (twenty-one years ago) link

http://members.aol.com/dubplatestyle/mase.jpg

ask and ye etc (dubplatestyle), Thursday, 10 April 2003 17:52 (twenty-one years ago) link


You must be logged in to post. Please either login here, or if you are not registered, you may register here.