Episode #171 | 04.23.24
Public Enemy: Revolution, Scandal, and a Message Louder than a Bomb
Listen free:
Apple Podcasts | Spotify | iHeart | Pandora | Amazon Music | TuneIn
In this episode
Public Enemy were revolutionaries – both in their message and their music. In the 1980s and 1990s, they elevated hip-hop to an art form. They did this with Chuck D's booming voice, Flavor Flav's comic levity, and the auditory assault of the Bomb Squad's production. But with that revolution came scandal. Their hype man allegedly tried to shoot his neighbor while high on crack cocaine. Their self-described "Minister of Information" was so controversial that his words alone nearly derailed the group's success. They performed at a prison – after just releasing a song about a prison break. And in the summer of 1989, Public Enemy released a song that was so powerful, it put them in the middle of the cultural zeitgeist at the very moment that it seemed they were splintering apart.
Sources
Public Enemy: Inside the Terrordome, by Tim Grierson
Can’t Stop Won’t Stop: A History of the Hip-Hop Generation, by Jeff Chang
Check the Technique: Liner Notes for Hip-Hop Junkies, by Brian Coleman
People’s Party with Talib Kweli: Chuck D
Episode 357 w/ Chuck D (Drink Champs)
Public Enemy at Rikers: An Oral History (Red Bull Music Academy)
Miss Chesimard Flees Jersey Prison, Helped by 3 Armed ‘Visitors’ (NY Times)
False Confessions and the Jogger Case (NY Times)
Riot on the Set: How Public Enemy Crafted the Anthem ‘Fight the Power’ (Rolling Stone)
Flavor Flav blew $5 million on drugs in a six-year stretch (LA Times)
Hip-hop, you don’t stop (The Guardian)
Rapper ‘Flavor Flav’ arrested for attempted murder (UPI)
Guns N’ Rappers: 3 Arrested in Shootings (Washington Post)
Flavor Flav is guilty in gun rap (NY Daily News)
Credits
Hosted by Jake Brennan.
Written by Zeth Lundy.
Copy edited by James Sullivan.
Scored and mixed by Sean Cahalin.
Additional music and score elements by Ryan Spraker.
DISGRACELAND theme song, “Crenshaw Space Boogie,” written and produced by Jake Brennan. Performed by Jake Brennan, Bryce Kanzer, Jay Cannava, and Evan Kenney. Mixed and engineered by Adam Taylor.
*illustrations by Avi Spivak @avispivak