Track Listing 1. How You Sell Soul To A Soulless People Who Sold Their Soul 2. Black Is Back 3. Harder Than You Think 4. Between Hard And A Rock Place 5. Sex Drugs And Violence 6. Amerikan Gangster 7. Can You Hear Me Now 8. Head Wide Shut 9. Flavor Man 10. Enemy Battle Hymn Of The Public 11. Escapism 12. Frankenstar 13. Col Leepin 14. Radiation Of A RADIOTVMOVIE Nation 15. See Something Say Something 16. Long And Whining Road 17. Bridge Of Pain 18. Eve Of Destruction
1. Where There's Smoke (documentary/DVD) 2. PE20 Tour58 (Power Energy Planet Earth Public Enemy) (live/DVD) 3. Live @ BB King's (footage/DVD) 4. Story Of The Public Enemy Comic Book (documentary/DVD) 5. Do You Wanna Go Our Way (video/DVD) 6. Gotta Give The Peeps What They Need (video/DVD) 7. Revolverlution (video/DVD) 8. Son Of A Bush (video/DVD) 9. Bring That Beat Back (video/DVD) 10. Revolution (video/DVD) 11. Superman's Black In The Building (video/DVD) 12. Hot 1 (video/DVD) 13. Unga Bunga Bunga (video/DVD) 14. Who's Your Hero (video/DVD) 15. Air Conditioning (video/DVD) 16. Electric Slave (video/DVD)
| Details | | Number of CDs: | 1 | | Producer: | Flavor Flav, Gary G Wiz, Redman | | Recording Type: | Studio | | Distributor: | Shellshock/SRD | | Recording Mode: | Stereo |
Album Notes Public Enemy: DJ Lord, Pop Diesel, James Bomb, Flavor Flav, Professor Griff, Chuck D.Additional personnel: KRS-One.It's funny to think that Public Enemy was once considered popular--mainstream at a time when rap music was anything but. Once the genre was inducted into pop culture, PE became a pariah, lauded by critics as Jurassic pioneers, but derided by younger generations for their message and shrill ideology. In the year 2007, Chuck D is as lyrically fit as ever and, surrounded by injustice aplenty, the crew's music is rich in relevance for hip-hop fans seeking a break from the hyper-capitalist tone that has overtaken the genre. On the follow-up to their exceptional 2006 release, BEATS & PLACES, Chuck, Flav, and company tackle a range of issues from corporate corruption of hip-hop to religious fanaticism to unchecked materialism to the group's continued struggle for a voice in the industry. As Chuck puts it on the title track, "Too dirty for the Source's Power 30/Too clean for 30-year-olds who wanna be 16," PE's militant stance and calls for social justice just don't fit in. Let's hope this one doesn't go over too many heads.DVD Features:1. Where There's Smoke2. PE20 Tour583. Power Planet Earth, Public Enemy3. Live @ BB King's Foogtage4. The Story Of The Public Enemy Comic Book5. Do You Wanna Go Our Way The Post 1999 PE Video Collection6. Photo Gallery7. Slamjamz Video Jukeboxx
Editorial Reviews 3.5 stars out of 5 -- Public Enemy remain fiercely independent and definitely seem revitalized. Alternative Press
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