Muse Sick-N-Hour Mess Age by Public Enemy

Muse Sick-N-Hour Mess Age

Public Enemy

1994

Muse Sick-N-Hour Mess Age is a Hip-Hop album by Public Enemy, originally released in 1994. On Gatefold: 53 pressings tracked, owned by 9 collectors.

Sound DNA

  • Hip-Hop
  • Alternative Hip-Hop
  • dense
  • aggressive
  • political

About

A long-misunderstood entry in Public Enemy’s decades-spanning catalog, <i>Muse Sick-N-Hour Mess Age</i> captures the band’s brilliant hybridization of organic instruments and hip-hop production. The result? A groove machine that rages like a raised fist, but funks like the Mothership. Chuck D and Flavor Flav are at their confrontational best on the back-to-back shot of “What Side You On?” and “Bedlam 13:13” (“Good enough to know no indo/Threw it out the window along with the Super Nintendo”). But the real stars are the gang vocals—equal parts Panther party and house party—and the propulsive, heavy-footed live drums of Nathaniel Townsley III. “Hitler Day,” a scathing takedown of the Columbus holiday, is a rap-rock rager that emerged right at the dawn of nu metal, while “Give It Up”—built off a shimmering piece of 1960s Stax soul—became the band’s first and only Top 40 pop hit. But the real pleasure of <i>Muse Sick-N-Hour Mess Age</i> is hearing Public Enemy getting loose and almost <i>jammy</i> at times—this is the album that finds the hardest working punk band in hip-hop getting closer to the funk breaks they once sampled. “What Kind of Power We Got?” is a long and strong hip-hop remake of James Brown’s “Soul Power,” with Chuck D playing Bobby Byrd to the always irrepressible Flavor Flav. And “Live and Undrugged, Pt. 1 & 2” takes the form of one of Brown’s own 45s: The first three-and-half minutes consist of hard rhyming before the track turns into a dizzying swarm of ad-libs, vamps, and Terminator X scratch flurries. The sounds on <i>Mess Age</i> predicted the success of “alternative hip-hop” groups like the Fugees and the Black Eyed Peas. And its bold anti-gangsta-rap stance—as evidence by songs like “So Whatcha Gone Do Now?”—would later be picked up by true-school-minded underground rappers of the late 1990s. <i>Muse Sick-N-Hour Mess Age</i> was panned in its day by music critics expecting more scattergun samples and hard-nosed fury, but time has revealed what the P.E. faithful have known all along: The funkiest Public Enemy record is a slept-on classic.

via Apple Music

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Tracklist

  1. 1Whole Lotta Love Goin On In the Middle of Hell3:11
  2. 2Theatrical Parts0:28
  3. 3Give It Up4:31
  4. 4What Side You On?4:07
  5. 5Bedlam 13:134:06
  6. 6Stop In the Name...1:21
  7. 7What Kind Of Power We Got?5:30
  8. 8So Whatcha Gone Do Now?4:41
  9. 9White Heaven/Black Hell1:06
  10. 10Race Against Time3:20
  11. 11They Used To Call It Dope0:29
  12. 12Aintnuttin Buttersong4:23
  13. 13Live and Undrugged, Pt. 1 & 25:54
  14. 14Thin Line Between Law & Rape4:45
  15. 15I Ain't Mad At All3:24
  16. 16Death of a Carjacka2:00
  17. 17I Stand Accused3:56
  18. 18Godd Complexx3:40
  19. 19Hitler Day4:27
  20. 20Harry Allen's Interactive Super Highway Phone Call To Chuck D2:52
  21. 21Living In a Zoo3:38

Credits

Performers

9 collectors on Gatefold own this · 53 pressings tracked on Gatefold