Fear Of A Black Planet by Public Enemy

Fear Of A Black Planet

Public Enemy

1990

Fear Of A Black Planet is a Hip-Hop album by Public Enemy, originally released in 1990. On Gatefold: 114 pressings tracked, owned by 39 collectors.

Sound DNA

  • Hip-Hop
  • East Coast
  • gritty
  • intense
  • political

About

The third album from Public Enemy is a dispatch from chaos: A portrait of a fraying band at the height of its influence and infamy, and an aural bombast that reflected not only the tumult of their organization, but the tumult of America. If <i>Fear of a Black Planet</i> was nothing more than a venue for closing track “Fight the Power”—easily the greatest protest song in rap history, arguably the greatest protest song in the history of popular music itself—it would go down as a historic moment, the place where the voices of a hip-hop generation brought their noisy, corrosive collage-work to the bleeding edge. But there’s so much more going on with <i>Fear of a Black Planet</i>, both on <i>and</i> off the record. Not long before its 1990 release, Professor Griff, the group’s Minister of Information, made anti-Semitic comments to <i>The Washington Times</i>, resulting in months of press scrutiny, and enough turmoil to cause the group to briefly disband. Griff was eventually ousted from Public Enemy, a situation Chuck D addresses on “Welcome to the Terrordome.” But the disorder that had become a normal part of Public Enemy’s world is best captured by the Bomb Squad, the production team that turned <i>Fear of a Black Planet</i> into a 63-minute hailstorm of colliding samples and media snippets. On claustrophobically dense songs like “Terrordome,” “Brothers Gonna Work It Out,” and the Flavor Flav classic “911 Is a Joke,” barbed shards of funk and soul elbow for space, packed tighter than ever before (or would ever be again). Songs like “Power to the People” and “War at 33 1/3” blur by at tempos better suited for mosh pits than dance floors. Elsewhere on <i>Fear of a Black Planet</i>, Chuck rages under walls of noise like a hip-hop Sonic Youth, waging war on America’s racist institutions. He rages against stereotypical portrayals in movies (“Burn Hollywood Burn”), exploitative record labels (“Who Stole the Soul?”), the police (“Anti-N****r Machine”), and the deeply embedded hatred that keeps it all spinning (“Fear of a Black Planet”). And while Flavor Flav provides his famed comic relief on “Can’t Do Nuttin’ For Ya Man,” his solo turn on “911 Is a Joke”—a commentary of the emergency hotline’s response time in Black areas—is as cutting as any of Chuck’s more stern critiques. Chuck D had wanted the “pro-Black radical mix” of 1988’s <i>It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back</i> to be the group’s version of Marvin Gaye’s <i>What’s Going On</i>. And with <i>Fear of a Black Planet</i>, he aimed for the heights of the Beatles’ <i>Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band</i>. The result is an absolute high-water mark for furious rhyming, a defining moment for the nexus of pop and politics, and a frenzied peak for sampledelic experimentalism.

via Apple Music

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Tracklist

  1. A-90
  2. B-91

Side A

  1. A1Contract On The World Love Jam (Instrumental)1:44
  2. A2Brothers Gonna Work It Out5:05
  3. A3911 Is A Joke3:17
  4. A4Incident At 66.6 FM (Instrumental)1:37
  5. A5Welcome To The Terrordome5:24
  6. A6Meet The G That Killed Me0:44
  7. A7Pollywanacraka3:52
  8. A8Anti-Nigger Machine3:17
  9. A9Burn Hollywood Burn2:46
  10. A10Power To The People4:49

Side B

  1. B1Who Stole The Soul?3:52
  2. B2Fear Of A Black Planet3:40
  3. B3Revolutionary Generation5:43
  4. B4Can't Do Nuttin' For Ya Man2:45
  5. B5Reggie Jax1:35
  6. B6Leave This Off Your Fu✩kin Charts (Instrumental)2:32
  7. B7B Side Wins Again3:39
  8. B8War At 33 1/32:13
  9. B9Final Count Of The Collision Between Us And The Damned (Instrumental)0:48
  10. B10Fight The Power4:42

Credits

39 collectors on Gatefold own this · 114 pressings tracked on Gatefold