Sponsored Resources

Public Enemy, Revolverlution CD cover artwork

Public Enemy, Revolverlution

Audio CD

Disk ID: 342547

Disk length: 1h 14m 7s (21 Tracks)

Original Release Date: 2002

Label: Unknown

View all albums by Public Enemy...

Tracks & Durations

1. Gotta Give The Peeps What They Need 3:34
2. Revolverlution 3:01
3. Miuzi Weigths A Ton 1:47
4. Put It Up 3:11
5. Can A Woman Make A Man Lose His Mind 3:34
6. Pesa #1 0:21
7. Fight The Power 3:55
8. By The Time I Get To Arizona 3:57
9. Post Concert Arizona Interview 1:03
10. Son Of A Bush 5:50
11. Get Your Shit Together 4:45
12. Welcome To The Terrordome 3:37
13. B Side Wins Again 4:54
14. 54321 Boom 3:37
15. Pesa #2 0:29
16. Now A Daze 5:28
17. Shut Em Down 3:25
18. Public Enemy #1 4:49
19. The Making Of Burn Hollywood Burn 2:47
20. Give The Peeps What They Need 3:34
21. What Good Is A Bomb 6:17

Note: The information about this album is acquired from the publicly available resources and we are not responsible for their accuracy.

Review

If rap music is still CNN for African Americans, then Chuck D is still the lead anchor. While most rabid rap fans abandoned PE's revolution in the mid-1990s--once the group stopped utilizing the noisy, Bomb Squad-style of production--hip-hop is now in a clear state of emergency. The return of Chuck D is warranted. On this 15th-anniversary CD, he wastes no time launching into anti-jiggy tirades on "Put It Up," where he skewers today's emcees: "Tycoons, damn I'm tired of these coons / Rappin' in circles, words can either help you or hurt you." In fact, some of the new material on the album is as thought-provoking as any of PE's older material. "Son of a Bush," produced by Professor Griff, dissects two generations of flawed Bush presidencies. However, the willingness to take creative risks can also have its downside. Contest-winning fans got to remix four Public Enemy hits, including "Shut 'Em Down" (Austria's DJ Functionist) and "Public Enemy No. 1" (Jeronimo Punx). While the interactive nature of the project is admirable, DJ Functionist is no Pete Rock and Jeronimo Punx's postmodern twist on "Public Enemy No. 1" only makes you crave to hear the original version again. In the end, the live cuts (such as "Welcome to the Terrordome") and the so-so remixes bog down what would have otherwise been a tighter project. The often eloquent Revolverlution is no It Takes a Nation of Millions, but then again, what is? --Dalton Higgins

Other Versions

Albums are mined from the various public resources and can be actually the same but different in the tracks length only. We are keeping all versions now.

Revolverlution

Tracks: 21, Disk length: 1h 14m 3s (-1m 56s)

Revolverlution

Tracks: 22 (+1 tracks), Disk length: 1h 17m 56s (+3m 49s)

Revolverlution

Tracks: 20 (-1 tracks), Disk length: 1h 8m 26s (-6m 19s)

Revolverlution

Tracks: 20 (-1 tracks), Disk length: 1h 8m 25s (-6m 18s)

Please note: we do not provide any Public Enemy music downloads, have no any mp3 music including music samples and music ringtones, and can not assist you where to buy music CDs and used CDs. You can search for it on music sites all over the Internet or visit one of our advertisers. We appreciate any ideas and comments about this experimental music database.