Fire In The Hole [PA]Brand Nubian
Release Date: 08/10/2004
Original Release:
2004
# of Discs:
1
J&R Item # 524717_CD
UPC # 823979003229
Label: Babygrande Records
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Disc: 1
8.
Coming Years
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Performer: Brand Nubian
Engineer: Lord Jamar Allah Producer: Grand Puba; Sadat X; DJ Alamo; Lord Jamar Allah Distributor: E1 Distribution (USA) Notes: Brand Nubian: Grand Puba, Lord Jamar, Sadat X. Personnel: Bernard Grobman (guitar). Audio Mixer: Chris Conway. Recording information: State Street Studios, Brooklyn, NY. Photographers: Dennis Edwards; Seth Kushner. Six years since Foundation, Brand Nubian settle on Babygrande -- home of Canibus and Jean Grae -- and return with Fire in the Hole. Lord Jamar and DJ Alamo remain on production duties, as ever, while Grand Puba chips in on one track. While plenty of MCs who thrived in the early '90s have attempted with great desperation to remain relevant, each member of this crew has remained true to himself, consistently refining the skills without hopelessly retracing old steps. Despite all the changes mainstream rap has gone through during the past several years, Brand Nubian have remained well outside of it all -- and they still do here, 15 years on, with a fifth album that will sit proudly next to the previous four. Few will ever refer to this as a classic, though even fewer will ever think of this as a poor showing. Graying veterans of the golden age and younger hip-hop junkies should be pleased to hear that the group is still active and in such good form. ~ Andy Kellman
Spin (p.120) - "[With] tight, R&B-dipped beats..." - Grade: B-
Formed in the early 1990s, Bronx-based rap act Brand Nubian were one of the first groups to fully embrace the teachings of the Nation of Islam and integrate the organization's beliefs into their music. The group's founding member, Grand Puba Maxwell, left Nubian to pursue a solo career in 1991 prior to the release of the group's biggest and most controversial release, the 1992 single "Punks Jump Up to Get Beat Down," which contained blatantly homophobic lyrics. Though members Sadat X and Lord Jamar remained loyal to the 5% Nation, and thus remained relatively controversial, subsequent releases of the track had the offending lines removed. Following solo albums from all members, the original line-up reunited for 1998's FOUNDATION.
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Influences:
Bambaataa, Afrika Boogie Down Productions Cold Crush Brothers J, LL Cool Kane, Big Daddy Kool Moe Dee Last Poets (The) N.W.A. Public Enemy Run-D.M.C. Stetsasonic
Similar Genres:
East Coast Rap |