Chuck D., the Bomb Squad, Flava Flav and the rest of the P.E. posse couldn't possibly have expected that their golden-era hip hop albums would sow the seeds for countless Public Enemy sleeper cells, one that would emerge nearly three decades later in Austin, Texas. Greg Gonzalez (bass) remembers a kid back in junior high hipped him to the fact that Public Enemy's "Bring the Noise" is built on James Brown samples, while a teenaged Beto Martinez (guitar) alternated between metal and hip-hop in his walk-man, and Adrian Quesada (guitar/keys) remembers falling in love with Public Enemy's sound at an early age. "When I got into Hip hop, I was looking for this aggressive outlet . . . and I didn't even understand what they were pissed off about, because I was twelve and lived in Laredo . . . but I loved it and I felt angry along with them."
A1 | Louder Than A Bomb | |
A2 | Shut Em Down | |
A3 | Fight The Power | |
A4 | Trackstar The DJ To The Edge Of Panic | |
A5 | By The Time I Get To Arizona | |
A6 | Welcome To The Terrordome | |
B1 | My Uzi Weighs A Ton | |
B2 | Don't Believe The Hype | |
B3 | I Don't Wanna Be Called Yo Ni**a | |
B4 | Is A Joke | |
B5 | Bring The Noise | |
B6 | Prophets Of Rage |
Schnellsuche BROWNOUT