Public Enemy: ‘It’s all turntables baby!

T-shirts decorated with a lone gunman behind a militaristic cross-hair were among the crowd as an overwhelming sense of foreboding spread across the joyous, synthesized dance music that had dominated Movement 2012 for the previous three days

Many fans wandered around Hart Plaza, seeing these shirts and fearing violence. They knew it would be musical, but it would not be so blissful, so ignorantly gleeful for much longer.

Hype man, Flavor Flav, enticed the crowd with dance at Movement 2012. (Adrian Hedden/The Washtenaw Voice)

Hype man, Flavor Flav, enticed the crowd with dance at Movement 2012. (Adrian Hedden/The Washtenaw Voice)

At 11 p.m., Public Enemy and the S1-Ws took the stage and took over Detroit. Thousands of fans piled at the foot of the main stage, hoping to be engulfed in the riot they hoped the apolitical rap group would create.

It seemed strange for a classic hip-hop group to headline the electronic music festival, but as Chuck D pointed out mid-set: “Techno, hip-hop, it’s all turntables baby!” This sentiment was reflected in the set, albeit with a more socially conscience tone than the festival has ever embodied.

The energy at which the duo had narrated the political injustices of the 1980s with was retained at its signature rebellious rate of assault for a whole new generation of concert-goers.

They erupted from the stage, spouting lyrics and rhymes from some of their most classic and socially abrasive tracks at their inception. Techno and electronica fans were blind-sided by the proof of injustice Public Enemy laid before them along with their danceable beat as had been since the 80s.

Absent from the classic energy that defined Public Enemy in its heyday was the innovatively sample-heavy wax work from icon DJ: Terminator X. In place was the devastatingly accurate and pop-sensible DJ Lord. Backed by a live drummer, Lord was left to bring out only the most infectious beats and samples when given pause between Chuck and Flavs stinging rhetoric.

Lord memorably took the opportunity during a break in the rhymes to treat the audience to a well-received White Stripes and Nirvana rock-medley. He flawlessly spun the classic samples that had defined P.E., along with his own catchy flair.

Even more unexpected and applause-generating was the presence of hip-hop superstar and prime-time actor, Ice T. Stated to be the godfather of Public Enemy, T was on hand to double up on key syllables and even took a verse of his own amid the political and dance-heavy fervor.

Public Enemy, Chuck D and Flavor Flav were as monstrously opinionated and scathingly political as they were upon their debut. Their energy and lyrical fortitude was as strong as ever. Movement 2012 got a wakeup call from the political rappers, and just as soon it was shut down.

No act at Movement could compare to Public Enemy’s sonic aggression and lyrically ruthless attack on mainstream music. No performance interacted with the crowd as passionately as P.E.

 

  • Amit Kshirsagar

    The Cultural Impact of Sherman Hemsley on Mainstream American Society
    Opinion by amost1972 posted 1 year ago

    fan of it?
    save

    My main purpose in writing this article is to convey to readers in India, who have not even heard of Sherman Hemsley, of his monumental cultural impact upon Mainstream American Society.

    Television programs that were created by Norman Lear and Bud Yorkin, that is their “new comedies”, that were produced in the 1970s radically altered the boundaries of permissible expression in American television. African Americans in television comedy entered what might be called the Age of the New Minstrelsy. The coon character, that rascal-ish, loud, pushy, and conniving stereotype, strongly achieved in types such as Sherman Hemsley’s boisterous George Jefferson. It was a bold gesture by the two producers. And its success restructured the content of situation comedy and redefined the medium as the vehicle of family entertainment. African-American viewers particularly enjoyed the Lear-Yorkin comedy product. George Jefferson was crusty, but benign as well. Although Lance Morrow in Time magazine described Sherman Hemsley’s character more specifically – “entrepreneur, black bigot, a splenetic little whip of a man who bullies like a demented overseer, seldom speaks below a shriek and worships at the church of ostentation” (Blacks and White TV, African Americans in Television since 1948, Second Edition, J. Fred MacDonald, Nelson-Hall Publishers/Chicago 1992).

    Hemsley was the exact opposite of George Jefferson’s short-tempered personality; he was the reserved type. Producer Don Nicholl said, “Sherman is the gentlest actor I’ve ever met. But, when we feed him these very harsh lines, he becomes a feisty bantam rooster.” Hemsley’s personal fashion tastes were also completely different from his character. A 1975 photo of Hemsley showed him in a finely tailored suit. He got along just fine with the cast. Mike Evans, who had played Lionel Jefferson, said, “It’s not like we’re real close, but I like him a lot. I know when he needs to talk and when he needs to be left alone. He’s a good human being. And the relationship between Isabel Sanford and Hemsley was also normally cordial” (The Sitcoms of Norman Lear, Sean Campbell, McFarland & Company, Inc., Publishers, 1989).

    The Jeffersons’ cast members had appeared on the cover of t.v. guide during the following years: (1.) June 21st, 1975, with Sherman Hemsley, Isabel Sanford and Mike Evans. (TV GUIDE FIFTY YEARS OF TELEVISION, Introduction by Mary Tyler Moore, Afterward by William Shatner, Preface by Steven Reddicliffe, Text by Mark Lasswell, Crown Publishers Nwe York, 2002). (2.) August 5th, 1978 with Sherman Hemsley, Paul Benedict and Isabel Sanford. (3.) May 17th, 1980, with Franklin Cover, Isabel Sanford, Roxie Roker. and Sherman Hemsley. (4.) February 6th, 1982, with Sherman Hemsley. (5.) July 30th, 1983, with Isabel Sanford and Sherman Hemsley. (6.) January 17, 1987, Clifton Davis and Sherman Hemsley of “Amen”. (7.) August 29th, 1987, Sherman Hemsley and Anna Maria Horsford of “Amen”. (TV GUIDE, The Official Collectors Guide, Over 50 Years of TV GUIDE, Covers and Features, Celebrating An Icon, Over 50 Years of TV GUIDE, Covering TV History).

    Sherman Hemsley, who played pushy, egotistical George Jefferson on The Jeffersons for ten years, played a similar character on “Amen”, as an insufferable deacon (and lawyer) whose father had founded the First Community Church of Philadelphia, and who intended to keep it under his thumb. Unfortunately the new minister, Reverend Reuben Gregory, played by actor Clifton Davis,had other ideas and every week, he quietly deflated the strutting deacon. Both, of course, really had the church’s best interests at heart. In the series, “Goode Behavior”, Sherman Hemsley played Willie Goode, who was a paroled con artist whose freedom was contingent on his living with Franklin, the son he had not seen in fifteen years, who was played by Dorien Wilson. Willie moved in under house arrest-complete with ankle bracelet-and forced a reluctant Franklin to convert his cherished and newly refurbished study into a bedroom for his dad. (The Complete Directory to Prime Time Network and Cable TV Shows, 1946-Present, Tim Brooks and Earle Marsh, Ballantine Books, New York, 2007).