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Old 02.08.2007, 02:41 PM   #13
truncated
invito al cielo
 
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Join Date: Mar 2006
Posts: 3,607
truncated kicks all y'all's assestruncated kicks all y'all's assestruncated kicks all y'all's assestruncated kicks all y'all's assestruncated kicks all y'all's assestruncated kicks all y'all's assestruncated kicks all y'all's assestruncated kicks all y'all's assestruncated kicks all y'all's assestruncated kicks all y'all's assestruncated kicks all y'all's asses
Quote:
Originally Posted by Rob Instigator
Public Enemy is the pinnacle, the high water mark of Hip hop. Nothing has ever reached it since and likely nothing ever will. from their umitigated Uber-sampling created by the Bomb Squad (chuck D and several others) crafted from half second samples and noise and sirens and just intended to make your blood boil and agitate you, to the bombastic rhymes of the hard rhymer himself, to the anarchic freakout of Flava Flav, Public Enemy will always remain the benchmark for the kidn of revolutionary conscious rap that is deep underground these days.
LL Cool J can go fucking suck a fat nutsac with his bullshit party rhymes and dipshit boasts, and ridiculous raps dissing Kool Moe Dee.

Public Enemy were ahead of their time and beyond their time. The trifecta of It takes A Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back, Fear of a Black Planet and Apocalypse 91: the Enemy Strikes Black are the holy trinity of political hip hop.

P.E. spoke about the real deal without bragging about their money, without braging about their "ho's" without having to get into stupid diss wars with other rappers. They transcended the personal and spoke the universal.

Long Live PE

That was almost poetic. Has made me reconsider my reluctance to attend.
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