If the title of
Rebirth of a Nation consciously recalls the title of
Public Enemy's 1988 masterwork,
It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back, that shouldn't be taken as indication that the music on
Rebirth is a revival of the dense sound of
Nation as masterminded by the Bomb Squad. Nevertheless,
Rebirth is certainly a throwback to the sound of the golden age, when hardcore rap was not defined solely by the sonics or subjects of gangsta rap, and that's a deliberate move on
PE's part -- they want to re-create the sound of the time, but not the sound that was identified with them, and in order to do that they've entered into a full-fledged collaboration with
Paris, who produced and wrote all of
Rebirth of a Nation. This is the first time that
Chuck D did not have a hand in writing either the music or the words on a
Public Enemy album (he did write some verses on four songs on the record), which is initially disarming, since he's always been the sound and vision of
PE. But he explains the project clearly in his liner notes, comparing the album to
Muddy Waters' psychedelicized blues on
Electric Mud --
Muddy may have been reluctant to work in a rock setting, but it was an artistic challenge, and
Chuck wanted
Public Enemy to take the same kind of risk. Even if all
PE fans may not be pleased with the results,
Rebirth of a Nation isn't nearly as divisive as
Electric Mud --
Paris to
Public Enemy isn't as big a stretch as Chicago blues to psychedelia, after all, and they have an audience more willing to go along with change, which this certainly is. But change is often welcome for artists, nowhere more so than for
PE, whose last album, New Whirl Odor, was their first to feel truly tired, something that
Rebirth can not be called. Not that it's especially daring sonically --
Paris did construct this as a self-consciously old-school record, dropping in samples of old
PE records and adhering to the sound of 1990 -- but the group, particularly
Chuck D, sounds engaged by the project, which at the very least makes for a listen that's more gripping than its immediate predecessor. And if the sound of the record is a throwback,
Paris' subjects are nervy and politically charged, directly addressing the state of the world in a way few records do in 2006. All of this makes
Rebirth of a Nation an admirable effort -- perhaps the music gets a little monochromatic, but that's merely a byproduct of its narrowly targeted goals, and as a whole, it's an ambitious and successful artistic detour for
PE. Besides, it's hard not to be impressed by a record that sounds like a blast from the past while playing like a news bulletin from today -- not an easy trick to pull off, but
Paris and
Public Enemy manage it with
Rebirth of a Nation. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine