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Professor Griff Talks New Album, Performing With The Roots

 

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  • Professor Griff Talks New Album, Performing With The Roots

     




     





    A Righteous Way To Go ,Mistachuck,Professor Griff visiting the great Curtis Mayfield at his ATL home in 1996

     


    April 17th, 2009 | Author: Jake Paine


    Public Enemy member Professor Griff is a busy man as of late. The Long Island-born emcee and activist is preparing his latest album, with band 7th Octave, titled A God Damage. The work is the latest in a discography for Griff, who, outside of P.E., has been releasing material dating back to 1990's Pawns In The Game. "The first one was real a real heavy, Metal-like Rock sort of thing. It was a fusion. This one's gonna be a lot more funkier [sic]," Griff said to HipHopDX Tuesday of the progression between 2004's The Se7enth Degree, released on P.E. partner Chuck D's Slam Jamz imprint.


    "It's not really a change of direction. When you talk about changing directions, you're talking about driving to the west coast, then turning around and going North. [Laughs] I'm not changing directions; I'm bringing out certain flavors that were already there, because the formula that we use was Funk - we pride ourselves on the old Sly & The Family Stone, James Brown [sound]. That, of course, was the formula that Hip Hop borrowed from, in its breakbeats and that kind of thing," he explained. "This time, we're gonna blend it a lot better, and bring out the funkier aspects of it. As we performed, we saw less women [laughing], and we want people to vibe to it. The main ingredients will appeal to women."


    With songs like the thematic "Why You Want To Kill God?" already recorded, Griff says he's hurrying to finish the album, without compromising quality. "Me and a brother of mine from Uniondale, New York, Society, who's been with me since my first solo album as a writer, we're writing like every other day," said Griff. "I don't just want to put songs on the album. I want to do something very conceptual - even the title of the album, A God Damage, I don't define it. People hear it and ask me what it means. You tell me. That's what it means, whatever it means to you. I'm tryin' to be artistic with it, bro."


    Outside of music, Professor Griff is also very involved in the Black History 101 Mobile Museum [click to read]. With museum touring season upon us, Griff stated, "I would really like to take it a lot deeper, man, and start talking about some of those black, historical facts, that we don't get a chance to talk about in the classroom and in the lecture hall and over the dinner table in black homes. The only way other races and cultures are going to appreciate it, is if we, black people, bring it to the damn table." Specifically, Griff is hoping to educate this season's visitors on the creation of Rock music, with an emphasis on black women Rock pioneers, as well as teachings on the black role colonial America and education initiatives.


    On June 6, Public Enemy will join The Roots [click to read] at their annual picnic in Philadelphia [click to read], to perform the seminal 1988 album It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back, an album that Professor Griff worked on. Excited about the concert, he said, "From a historical perspective, performing and doing [It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back] with The Roots is going to be monumental to me personally. [This is] in line with what other groups have come together and done. Hip Hop needs to do that at this particular time, and I'm sure you will agree with me. We can [talk] for an hour on all the reasons why Hip Hop needs to do it. [Laughs] For The Roots, who have maintained the whole concept of a live band, to do it with a Public Enemy, is very, very, very important." There may be a deeper message here too. "We need to show young kids, we need to show Hip Hop heads that yes, you have to perfect your art - and yes, you can be a musician and be in the game. You don't only have to be an emcee, deejay or producer. Yes, you can play the flute, trombone, percussion, whatever you do. Then, as a group - I want to see groups again, man! I want that whole concept of people working together, and to be in harmony, to be in sync, and to be on time...we need that."


    The concert was announced shortly after a latenight network performance, which affected Griff's own contemporary music. "When we, Public Enemy and The Roots, performed 'Bring Tha Noize' on The Jimmy Fallon Show, man, it brought chills! Whew! If you pick apart what each instrument is doing, it's like 'Damn!' It made me go back to the drawing board with The 7th Octave, like, 'Man, we need to do that! A cover or somethin'!'"


    This event may be historical to Hip Hop, and to the 20-plus Hip Hop veteran that's made history books. "I told Chuck, I just want to open up and do a couple songs. I want to be a part of the whole experience, so when we look back, and read the history, we can [all] look back and say, 'Damn, I was there!'"


    A God Damage is intended for summer release

  • PE Brings Noise To 10th Year Coachella Festival

     

     

     

    Hip-hop revolutionaries Public Enemy mixed DJs and live musicians into a powerful new sound. The election of the first African-American president has not softened their approach, though vocalist Flava Flav brought out his toddler son, Karma, to meet the crowd, before diving back into such late-80s classics of agitation as "She Watch Channel Zero!?" and "Rebel Without a Pause."


    Before launching into its late '80s smash "Rebel Without a Pause," Public Enemy's frontman Chuck D became conscious of a certain ageism in the air, cautioning the Coachella crowd: "This is from 1987, before some of you were born." Before launching into the song, though, he thought better of it, adding: "But you was here for Paul McCartney, which is before everybody was born!"

    With acts such as McCartney, Morrissey, the Cure and Leonard Cohen accounting for this year's surfeit of "dad rock" at the festival, it fell to the Strong Island firebrands of Public Enemy to be the token "dad rap" booking of this year's event.

    The group understood that expectation, however, and performed its 1988 opus "It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back" for an appreciative crowd.

    Minus DJ Terminator X, who has not performed with Public Enemy in years, the original lineup was intact: Minister of Information Professor Griff made repeated references to the "Obama deception," hype man Flavor Flav appeared bouyant in a jester hat and signature giant clock necklace; he executed no fewer than four stage dives (to the chagrin of fans, no doubt, by going in feet first). And Chuck D, in New York Knicks shorts and a New York Mets cap, has lost none of his stentorian rhyme-spitting ability in the 21 years since the group's epochal album debuted. All of them (accompanied by PE's onstage security detail, the S1Ws, DJ Lord and a three-piece band) rocked the house even while some of the Cure's lugubrious guitar wash bled into their set.

    By the time Public Enemy performed its Slayer-sampling anti-TV screed "She Watch Channel Zero," the audience exploded into a paroxyism of rap-metal jubilation. By reputation, Coachellans are looking for any excuse to rage against the proverbial machine. This time, they were collectively fighting the power.

    -- Chris Lee

    Additional Quotes

    Believe the hype: This was THE best show I saw during all three days of Coachella (and I never expected to be typing that). First, it a welcome reminder that Flavor Flav is the "greatest hype man in the game" (as pointed out by Chuck D), and not just some trainwrecky Celebreality TV star. Flav stagedove twice, he brought his baby son Karma out onstage, and he had the crowd eating out of his blinged-out hand. Second, PE's music still sounded so fresh, so relevant--if only today's hip-hop artists sounded like this. It's no wonder Chuck D told the audience, "The record business is OVER." It's because no rappers today are making music as important as It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back.

    Public Enemy brought their chaos to the outdoor theater at Coachella on Sunday for a set that was sometimes awkwardly tailored to Flavor Flav's status as a reality TV star, but that didn't stop the militant rap collective from running through hits that have become firmly entrenched in the American music lexicon, including 'Public Enemy Number One,' 'Welcome to the Terrordome' and 'Don't Believe the Hype.' But fans did believe the hype alright, agreeing not to drop Flavor Flav through a series of stage dives as he leaped over the barricade to crowd surf for a few moments before Chuck D. commanded the audience to "bring him back." After his third leap, however, Chuck joked, "You can keep him."

    Of course, it wouldn't be Public Enemy without, in addition to hype and braggadocio, political commentary as well. Chuck warned the audience to "pay attention" even with President Obama in office. "Pay attention, pay attention, pay attention -- that's the cheapest price we can pay in America."

    Continue reading Public Enemy Takes on Politics, Encourages Downloading at Coachella

  • Public Enemy Perform Full "It Takes a Nation of Millions" at Flavor Flav's Birthday Bash



    We know him variously as a hip-hop pioneer, a hyperactive court jester, a cringe-worthy reality TV star and a future talk show host, but last night, Flavor Flav wore all his hats for a 50th birthday bash to remember at BB Kings in Times Square, New York. To mark the occasion, Public Enemy elected to play the entirety of their seminal 1988 album It Takes A Nation Of Million To Hold Us Back for the first time in New York.

    A host of hip-hop luminaries turned out to pay their respects to Flavor's colorful career, including DJ Kool Herc (whose Bronx house parties in the 1970s are frequently cited as being the birth of hip-hop), Eric B, and a particularly sharply dressed Melle Mel of Rock and Roll Hall Of Fame inductees the Furious Five, who duetted with Flav on a verse of the legendary 1982 single "The Message." Original gangster rapper turned Law And Order: Special Victims Unit star Ice T also tossed out some of his own lyrics over an interlude of Flavor's drumming before adding his vocal input to PE tracks such as "Night Of The Living Bassheads." Flav also added his heartfelt gratitude to Ice T for not beating him up when the Public Enemy man crashed the OG's Ferrari in the late 1980s. It was quite the family affair too, as Flavor took several opportunities during the night to French kiss his very pregnant wife Liz onstage, much to Chuck D's obvious befuddlement.

    After powering through Nation of Millions, Number 48 on Rolling Stone's list of the 500 Greatest Albums of All Time, Public Enemy's set concluded with a run through of classics such as "Shut ‘Em Down," "Public Enemy No.1″ and "Fight The Power" before Flav rounded off the thoroughly entertaining two-and-a-half-hour show with a list of thank yous that would have dwarfed even the most overwrought of Oscar acceptance speeches.

    Public Enemy are set to appear on Late Night With Jimmy Fallon tonight, where they will play "Bring the Noise" with house band the Roots. The Philly hip-hop group are also set to back PE later in the year when they embark on further U.S. dates to perform the entirety of It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back, including the Roots' June 6th picnic.

  • Watch Flav's B-Day Celebration/PE Concert

    http://www.publicenemy.com/stream.html

  • Public Enemy Live On Jimmy Fallon Monday March 16th

    Public Enemy will "Bring The Noise" this monday on the Jimmy Fallon Show. Check you local listing for time & channel.

  • Sellaband And Chuck D Bring Music Revolution To USA


    SELLABAND AND CHUCK D BRING MUSIC REVOLUTION TO USA

    New York, NY: March 10, 2009: SellaBand (www.sellaband.com), the leading platform for fan funded music, today announces its expansion into the US market. The move reflects SellaBand's rapid growth and success in Europe, since its inception in 2006, and is the next phase in its long term global business development strategy. The Netherlands-based company has contracted BTN Eastlink, a multi-platform entertainment and digital media company, to run its North American operation, to be based in New York City, as well as appointing BTN Eastlink Principal, music icon and Public Enemy co-founder and frontman Chuck D as Ambassador for the company.

    "SellaBand's business model takes music to a whole new level by linking fans directly to musicians and leveraging those relationships for the creation of new music," said Chuck D. "It's an 'everyone wins' solution and is the new, new frontier and will completely redefine the way the music business operates." In his role as Ambassador, Chuck D will serve as an advisor to SellaBand in their continued development of their revolutionary business model and will help position the SellaBand brand in the North American marketplace.

    BTN Eastlink will serve as the first point of contact for all SellaBand business in North America, handling day to day support for the stateside operations, serving as the exclusive agent in developing strategic partnerships and sponsorship opportunities, consulting on SellaBand's partnership in the upcoming ArenaFest summer tour as well as other tours and festivals, and coordinating strategic marketing and promotion for SellaBand.

    Dan Lugo, Principal, BTN Eastlink, said: "BTN Eastlink is extremely excited to partner with SellaBand, and is uniquely equipped to launch the company and concept in North America. Once again, Chuck D is at the forefront of a new digital music movement, and BTN Eastlink's multi-platform structure can fulfill every service that SellaBand needs. We've been the first over the fence at every paradigm shift in the music business over the past 15 years - from MP3s to online digital distribution to peer-to-peer. Now with SellaBand, we could not be more excited about the opportunity to work with Johan Vosmeijer and the entire SellaBand team to promote the next music industry breakthrough. SellaBand has started a revolution and we're honored to help lead it."

    "SellaBand is at an exciting crossroads in its growth," said Johan Vosmeijer, CEO SellaBand. "By working with BTN Eastlink and Chuck D we believe their insight will help take SellaBand to the ‘next level' and prove invaluable. An integral part of expanding into the US market is building a world class team and together, this is what we are doing."

    SellaBand offers a revolutionary way for fans, referred to as "Believers," to directly fund the recording of a professional album by investing in their favorite artists via the SellaBand website, which is also a social network for music fans. SellaBand's corporate partners include AOL Europe, Amazon.co.uk and Amazon.de, and is the exclusive independent music partner for ArenaFest. Two SellaBand artists will perform at each of ArenaWorks' ArenaFest concerts this summer, including venues such as American Airlines Center in Dallas, Texas, and the Honda Center in Anaheim, California.

    About SellaBand:

    SellaBand is an innovative online music platform based in Amsterdam, the creative capital of Europe. SellaBand unites artists and fans in an independent movement that aims to level the playing field in the global music industry. Since its launch in August 2006, SellaBand has welcomed 29 recording artists who had their albums funded by their fans. Over $2,500,000 has been invested in up-and-coming bands on www.sellaband.com

     



    About BTN Eastlink:
    BTN Eastlink is a multi-platform entertainment and digital media company, offering artist management, a record label, a licensing and placement division for film, television and video games, digital media consulting, web development, merchandising and urban market consulting and a film and television production unit. Founding Partner Chuck D has been a longstanding supporter for artists rights, digital music and culture, and through his work with BTN Eastlink continues to be at the forefront of entertainment technology by incorporating several different facets of the business into one centralized company with streamlined communication and unlimited synergy opportunities to meet the 360 degree needs of entertainment and technology clients in the ever shifting digital world.

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