Studio album number 11 and Public Enemy
are still strong in the game. In fact, with this
collaboration project with one of hip-hop’s
most revolutionary voices—the West Coast’s
reigning Black Panther Party representative Paris—Chuck
D and Flavor Flav capture
the essence and strength of their debut Yo!
Bum Rush The Show. Now, with ghetto funk provided
by Paris, who produces the entirety of this sonic
onslaught, social commentary can once again take
its place among relevant rap music.
And this is no accident, as references to the
Golden-era PE are evident throughout Rebirth
of a Nation. Also, you have more
give-and-take between Chuck and Flav than in later
PE records. Here, Flava’s solo contribution
“They Call Me Flavor” harkens back
to the brashness of his still hot “Too Much
Posse,” while “Plastic Nation”
is reminiscent of “Sophisticated Bitch,”
addressing the phenomenon of paid flesh reconstruction
that has become so popular these days. “Invisible
Man,” one of the nicest cuts on the album,
has an understated Chuck playing the part of a
black man in the inner city, a Mr. Wendell everyman
lost in his own neighborhood.
These gems are made all the more effective with
the aid of some of hip-hop’s staunchest
revolutionary voices. Appearances are made by
Kam, Immortal Technique,
Dead Prez, and the original Paris
collaborators The Conscious Daughters.
Even MC Ren gives a scathing performance on the
album’s opening track “Raw Shit,”
helping to bring an urgency that has seemingly
been missing from the music for a while.
The Curtis Mayfield-inspired first single “Can’t
Hold Us Back” is as powerful as anything
that PE has done previously; even the Jesse Jackson
speech inserted into the proceedings is raw. While
“Rise” shows that PE’s staple
messages of self-empowerment and self-sufficiency
are still as important as ever. Other tracks like
the Paris helmed “Hard Truth Soldiers,”
the critical “Hell No (We Ain’t Alright),”
and the title track, as well as the instrumental
“Pump The Music, Pump The Sound,”
only serves to reinforce this idea.
It’s a mystery why it took so long for
Chuck D and Paris to get together, considering
their like mindedness, but this project shows
that it was well worth the wait. The only complaint
is that one of the most underrated lyricists of
our time and one of the strongest don’t
appear on more tracks together, resulting in the
album playing more like a compilation than collaboration.
Still, don’t you dare miss this rebirth
(available March 7); a nation of millions depends
on it.