The sheer scale of Michael Jackson’s fame can sometimes overshadow the music itself. From the moment he danced into America’s ...
“Burn Hollywood Burn is a protest song,” the hip hop star’s message began. “Extracted from the Watts Rebellion monikered by the Magnificent Montague in 1965 against inequality when he said ‘burn baby ...
The event ended in riots and fires and the main culprit everyone pointed the finger at was Limp Bizkit; Fred Durst and the ...
Chuck D, the legendary frontman of Public Enemy, has long emphasized the power of visuals in shaping understanding.
The 53-year-old Wu-Tang Clan rapper and The Wire actor, real name Clifford Smith, was allegedly involved in the incident at a ...
Rick Rubin might have had his hand in some of the greatest rock acts of all time, but he felt this band kept making better albums.
Public Enemy’s frontman Chuck D called out fans for misusing his band’s protest song, “Burn Hollywood Burn,” during the Los Angeles fires. The ’90’s hip-hop group’s track, which repeats the line “Burn ...
“What’s Up?” was the 1993 single from the group’s only album before the breakup — the 1992 release “Bigger, Better, Faster, ...
Here (in no particular order) typographers, designers and other industry experts pick their top type of the 1930s. For more ...
Iconic songs by Sam Cooke, Kim Weston, Public Enemy, Nina Simone, Marvin Gaye, Lauryn Hill, Kendrick Lamar and more depict ...
Initially a hardcore punk group, a shift to hip-hop across the mid-1980s saw ... Speaking to Rolling Stone in 2004, Adam ‘MCA’ Yauch singled out one Public Enemy song that made the biggest impression.