"Bagmanden" <zillyink@hotmail.com> writes:
> nope, det er ikke 911.
> Nummeret starter med: "The future holds nothing else, but
> confrontation"
> I nummeret rapper Flavor noget i stil med: Its Flavor - lifesaver
> adskillige gange i træk og nummeret slutter med Public enemy no.
> 1. - (jeg har et endet nummer der hedder sådan, så jeg gætter
> at det ikke er titlen på dette nummer)
Bingo:
Public Enemy - Apocalyse 91... The Enemy Strikes Black
(Def Jam 1991)
Not the classic LP for many aficionados - the complexity of Fear Of A
Black Panet will probably get most people's votes - but on this
underrated follow-up, PE's sound is pared back down to its raw
essentials to go to war against everything from gangsta rap's low
inspirations to American States refusing to mark Martin Luther King's
birthday. As conventional world views and even the zeitgeist of rap
seemed to move against them, PE never sounded louder.
The LP opens with the proclamation: "The future holds nothing else but
confrontation", before launching into the sirens and tornado scratching
of "Lost At Birth",
where the build-up seems to go on forever until Chuck D's Old
Testament roar soars out of the mix: "Clear the way for the prophets of
rage". It isn't all this spine-clenchingly thrilling, but the church
choirs and swampy boogie riff of "By The Time I Get To Arizona" and the
sparse brutality of "Shut 'Em Down" are among PE's greatest moments. MSh
--
M.v.h. Peter.
http://musicbrainz.org/
http://www.last.fm/group/dk-kultur-musik