Scott Ian from Anthrax loved Public Enemy so he convinced the band to try to do a song with them! Public Enemy loved the idea and this happened! pure magic!
PE referenced Anthrax before this remix of the original song. "Wax is for Anthrax, still they can rock bells" which also referenced LL Cool J. That played a role in Anthrax suggesting a remix. And both groups are from Long Island.
@Phx_Phreak for real, honest. Drove from 9th street to,144 to a mall. None of the stores in my hood had it. Public Enemy, De La Soul, these guys, House of Pain.
The sociopolitical aspect of Public Enemy's music cannot be understated. They always delivered with statement songs.... Fight The Power, Don't Believe The Hype, Can't Truss It, Welcome to the Terrordome, Burn Hollywood Burn, Louder Than A Bomb, Shut Em Down, Black Steel In the hour of Chaos.... So many great songs you should know, listen to it.... They were at the pinnacle of social conscious Rap.
Rap and Rock go together like PB&J. A match made in musical heaven. Colabs like this prove all musicians listen to each others genres and borrow ideas, tracks, sounds and beats and put their own spin on it. This is 2 LEGENDARY groups. I recall hearing RUN DMC and Aerosmith colab on their Walk This Way song as the first Rap and Rock colab. And that video was earth shattering and groundbreaking. The song and videos impact to this day can't be denied.
Wanna mindblower? Hope I'm not assuming you've never seen the video for the song Rapture, by Blondie? If not, see if you can spot one of Flavor Flaves style inspirations 😊
This was dropped in 1991. Anthrax was an early player in combining rap and metal with their song "I'm The Man". When Public Enemy first released this song, they gave Anthrax a shout out, so when the movie Judgement Night wanted to do a bunch of rap and metal hybrid songs, this one was one of the ones that was obvious.
When this dropped back in the day, I was convinced that I was listening to a whole new genre. Metal Rap does not get enough love. Also, this song is probably responsible for much of my hearing damage.
I got to see this tour in Oakland, it was a frkn blast, Anthrax, Public Enemy, Primus, decided to tour together as a way to bridge musical cliques, and get the fans to meet eachother, was hella cool ❤
Public Enemy is from NYC. One of the most important hip-hop groups in history and well worth listening to if you like hip-hop. Anthrax is from NYC. One of the most important bands in metal history and well worth listening to if you like metal. This collaboration came about because Chuck D mentions Anthrax in this song when when original came out in 1988. And Scott Ian from Anthrax, their rhythm guitar player and guy that rapped a verse here, would often wear a Public Enemy t-shirt while performing on tour. So they were both aware of each other and respected each other, and eventually they got together to do a remake of this song together and made this video. They also went on tour together, along with Primus and Young Black Teenagers, after this got released. I caught that tour in Vancouver and it was awesome! I don’t have a lot to say about YBT other than they didn’t stay together very long. But all three of the other bands are legendary in their genres. I’m sure you’ll like a lot of Public Enemy songs, and you should definitely check out the ones where Flavor Flav is the main rapper for them. Like one called 911 Is A Joke, which has a funny official video to go along with it. Or one called Can’t Do Nuttin’ For Ya Man. PE has a lot of good songs. Here’s a handful I’d say you should put on the list, but man, they have a ton of good songs. Public Enemy No. 1 She Watch Channel Zero (which uses a Slayer sample) Brothers Gonna Work It Out Welcome To The Terrordome Fight The Power Can’t Truss It
@@rich1223 Hehe, ok. It's something like 15 miles from Queens, which is on Long Island just like that is. And Anthrax is from Queens. They all call themselves New Yorkers, and given the proximity I wouldn't say this is simply because they're also in New York state. Kinda like someone in Richmond, BC might say they're from Vancouver, even though that's not technically Vancouver. YVR is basically in Richmond, and yet, that's called Vancouver International Airport. When you're talking about very large cities, something that is basically on the outskirts tends to be considered part-of, even though it technically isn't. It's considered part of the Greater Vancouver Area, so when talking to someone that is from a great distance away you would probably just say Vancouver because that'd be very recognizable. It's not like they're in Montauk. In other words, it's close enough. ;)
"Run DMC first said a DJ could BE a band." Run DMC always had a hard rock element in their beats served up by Jam Master Jay (RIP). The original recording of Bring The Noise was first released on the Less Than Zero soundtrack. Then released again on Public Enemy's album: It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back. Later they collaborated with Anthrax and put out the rap/metal version in 1991. I was already into Public Enemy but I didn't have the album It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back yet. I hadn't heard the original Bring the Noise yet either. One of my hesher buddies lent me the EP: Attack of the Killer B's by Anthrax and I heard the metal version of Bring the Noise. I was instantly hooked. Still love it to this day 33 years later.
Their '91 tour together is one of the highlights of my ongoing concert-attending career. Saw them at Lehigh University and it was absolutely off the hook. That was also the first time I saw Primus, which began a journey that continues to this day....
Aw man, I wish we could go back. We had FUN!!!! I met Chuck D at LaGuardia Airport in NYC. His voice is like sexual chocolate for real! This is Hip Hop FUSION with Heavy Metal. Run DMC did similar with Aerosmith with Walk This Way. Good times!
I remember going to a show on their tour together in Irvine, CA with Primus and YBT. That was wild. At the time, I was a teenage metalhead, and it was my first experience hanging out and having a great time with a hip hop crowd.
This was part of the revolution in Rap and Metal music, along with Aerosmith and Run DMC, this showed that Rap could be metal and metal could be rap. A lot of the issues that metal did not stay away from rap also did not stay away from. A lot of metal songs, if you look into their lyrics and read into what they are talking about are about real issues facing them at the time they were written. Same for Rap. I loved this combo and a lot of the music it spawned was great too.
@@kikiki4592 Blondie's song Rapture had a rap / hip-hop verse, calling out Grandmaster Flash and Fab 5 Freddy.. and Fab 5 Freddy appeared in the music video. 1981.
Oh!! You NEED more Public Enemy. One of the greats of the 80s. “Fight The Power”!! ‘Welcome to The Terrordome”!! “Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos”!! “Shut em Down”’!! “Fear of a Black Planet”!! “burn Hollywood Burn”!! Just toname a few
This was p.e answer to Aerosmith run dmc. Antthrax just hits different. First concert ever saw as 13 year old white kid was taking a bus to philly to see P.E., in 87
This was absolutely mind blowing when it came out. This was years before all the rap metal stuff that came along a few years later. Aerosmith/Run DMC came first, but this just hits so much harder
This is how we used to roll back then. We all were closer than we have ever been, but today everyone is raysist (spelled wrong intentionally). It was a good time to grow up. -Gen X Gma
Public Enemy track to check out: Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos, By the Time I Get to Arizona, Brothers gonna work it out.. I mean, you really can't go wrong.. but Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos is an all time favorite of mine.
One thing that really needs to be understood about metal heads is there is such a huge crazy amount of respect for rap and hip-hop!!! In my humble opinion, they go together like pb&j. 💜🤘
There was a whole album of rock rap fusion. Might have been inspired my Iron man from metal church and mixalot. Body Count debut album was also contemporary.
This style was really big in the early 90s, alot of metal n hip hop mixes then. Check out the soundtrack to the movie 'Judgement night' the entire soundtrack is metal n hip hop mixes...fantastic!
Back in the day there was a lot of battle rap aka "Beef", unlike today. There were many, one to mention was LL Cool J and Kool Moe Dee. So artists spoke it as it was.
Ok ok ok... i humbly wanna suggest you react to a song called ROCK AND ROLL COULD NEVER HIP HOP LIKE THIS Pt.2..By Handsome Boy Modeling School feat. Chester Bennington and Mike shinoda... 🤘🏽✊🏽
The white guy rapping is actually the guitarist of Anthrax Scott Ian , the singer of Anthrax is actually the guy by the turntables Joey Belladonna who is Native American
That album dropped in 1991. ‘Apocalypse ‘91: The Enemy Strikes Black’. Actually had it on cassette tape if I recall right. And that makes me feel pretty dang old. Not ‘cause of the year, but owning a cassette. Yet it’s alwayz gonna be one of my fave rap albums.
Scott Ian the white dude rapping was a huge Public Enemy fan and would were P.E. shirts playing their concerts, got a hold of them for this collab and they toured together. And yes, the shows were this wild
Look, if you're playing music of my generation and we rocked, kicked screamed and played our music LOUD - no head phones for us, if we were listening so where you! RIGHT GENX?
you need to check out more Public Enemy, where as a lot of Rap of the day and age was about the hard thug life or living around it, PE is in your face militant protest music about the state of Civil Rights and Chuck D has absolutely no problem calling people out while Flavor Flav is getting the crowd riled up and active. PE is beyond important in the scene and still is today
Aw ya I remember getting this at Tower Records tues at midnight...fresh cd plastic. fat bowl and enjoyed it on ride home aw ya boy. RAP METAL ..the original hype man. 1991 , and I was jamming it on the way to sacremento to catch this new band deftones... god I loved the 90s
Public enemy went on tour with anthrax and this is a remix of a Public enemy song with the heavy metal band doing the music this time. It was one of the earliest Hard Rock / metal rap remixes
1991 in Chicago under the Howard Avenue L train turn around. Tried my damnedest to go to this, but they filmed late on a school night, so no sneakin' out for me.
Public Enemy made their tour debut on the end (US leg) of the BEASTIE BOYSs license to ill tour. Madonna toured with them in Europe and Japan. HIP HOP IS ROCK.. Jazz is rock. Country is rock, and all of those and big band music are ALL BLUES. ALL MODERN MUSIC is derived from the blues, and it is only this latest generation that has a propensity to want to LABEL EVERYTHING. Music doesn't care what you think of it, or call it. It does not have specific pronouns, or polite language. Music is a growing tree, evolving, into other directions toward the sun. It is all one. Don't try to label it so much. It's music.
Gen X metalheads didn't care for hip hop, until Straight Outta' Compton by NWA dropped. Suburban white kids who were into metal, punk and hardcore could appreciate NWA, because that was the hardcore for all the black kids, urban as well as suburban. Gangsta' rap gained a bit of popularity with metal fans and metal bands. Anthrax did this mashup with Public enemy. Aerosmith would do a mashup with Run DMC. Ice T would actually start his own metal band called Body Count. By the time the 90's came around, Nu-Metal was born which incorporated elements of rap and hip hop into metal. There was also a bunch of one-offs with metal/rap/techno mashups for the movie soundtracks for Judgement Night and Spawn. It was a crazy era of music, just before Napster arrived to lay waste to record stores and usher in the age of digital downloads and streaming services. Fun reaction!
Anthrax is Thrash metal and Public Enemy is of course hip hop/rap, this was a collaboration and one of the songs that gave birth to the sub genre Nu Metal
This is a remake of Public Enemy's song that was originally released in 1988. This video came out in 1991 when Anthrax released Attack if the Killer B's, a collection of B sides. Anthrax released an EP in 1987 called I'm the Man and it featured the title cut which is their version of a rap song.
Nice jacket boss!! Ey just give the gal who asked for money a 100 dollar monopoly money bill! 😸 Greetz from the Netherlands. Public Enemy was huge before NWA came out.
This remix is cool and it put PE in front of a bigger set of eyes and ears, but the original version from PE's second album, It Takes A nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back, from a couple years before this Anthrax collab, is a classic in its own right. The whole record is.
Great reaction dude! If you enjoyed that, you should do a reaction to "There goes the neighbourhood" by Bodycount. One of the greatest rap metal tracks of all time! Keep up the good work brother!
So if you liked that, some bands from that era you should check out are Stuck Mojo, Bad Brains, Body Count and The Goats. And the entire Judgement Night soundtrack. If you want to check out some real vintage calling out, check out Country Joe and the Fish, Feel Like I'm Fixin' To Die Rag (Live at Woodstock version) How Do You Sleep is John Lennon's dis track for Paul McCartney
The big catch phrase even before Flavor flav, was "What's the time?" "Do you know what time it is?" Flavor took that to fashion sense. This was around 1991.
Ny girl who was lucky enough to cut schoo (9th grade)l and go see PE and the Beastie Boys play at a local college.. At 50 I can still sing this song word for word! And the original version is 100% rap
Aerosmith and RUN DMC with Walk this Way collab was the planting the seed of Nu Metal, Anthrax and Public Enemy doing a metal version of PE's Bring the Noise basically birthed nu-metal. Rage Against the Machine took it a little further. FWIW, this song was never on the Judgement Night soundtrack, it debuted on Anthtax's Attack of the Killer Bs and then was on PE's Apocalypse '91, the Enemy Strikes Black.
Scott Ian from Anthrax loved Public Enemy so he convinced the band to try to do a song with them! Public Enemy loved the idea and this happened! pure magic!
PE referenced Anthrax before this remix of the original song. "Wax is for Anthrax, still they can rock bells" which also referenced LL Cool J. That played a role in Anthrax suggesting a remix. And both groups are from Long Island.
I was an 80s metal head. this song introduced me to PE which then turned me into a hip hop head just in time for the golden age of NY hip hop-
Other way for me, I was an 808 Hip Hop head that was introduced to Anthrax and metal through this collab.
Ok guys. I'm a boomer who hates metal and hip hop. Until I got into rap in the 2010's. 😅
Now I'm a student moving backwards.
I'm 54, white, Omaha Nebraska, this is part of the "Judgement Night" soundtrack. I drove 7 miles to buy this as a cassette tape
Uphill both ways in the snow I'm guessing...
I fight the sarcastic urge, really I do... 😎
@Phx_Phreak for real, honest. Drove from 9th street to,144 to a mall. None of the stores in my hood had it. Public Enemy, De La Soul, these guys, House of Pain.
@Phx_Phreak and for real I drove that far for the tape
This song isn't on Judgement Night, but that soundtrack rules!
Hey, you got me on the song, my bad but I own my mistakes. But honestly I did drive 7 miles for that soundtrack. It hit hard when I was younger.
The sociopolitical aspect of Public Enemy's music cannot be understated. They always delivered with statement songs.... Fight The Power, Don't Believe The Hype, Can't Truss It, Welcome to the Terrordome, Burn Hollywood Burn, Louder Than A Bomb, Shut Em Down, Black Steel In the hour of Chaos.... So many great songs you should know, listen to it.... They were at the pinnacle of social conscious Rap.
Rap and Rock go together like PB&J. A match made in musical heaven. Colabs like this prove all musicians listen to each others genres and borrow ideas, tracks, sounds and beats and put their own spin on it. This is 2 LEGENDARY groups. I recall hearing RUN DMC and Aerosmith colab on their Walk This Way song as the first Rap and Rock colab. And that video was earth shattering and groundbreaking. The song and videos impact to this day can't be denied.
Wanna mindblower? Hope I'm not assuming you've never seen the video for the song Rapture, by Blondie? If not, see if you can spot one of Flavor Flaves style inspirations 😊
This was dropped in 1991. Anthrax was an early player in combining rap and metal with their song "I'm The Man". When Public Enemy first released this song, they gave Anthrax a shout out, so when the movie Judgement Night wanted to do a bunch of rap and metal hybrid songs, this one was one of the ones that was obvious.
Judgment Night soundtrack IS tha ground-breaker between barriers. Bar none! \m/
This is not on the soundtrack en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Judgment_Night_(soundtrack)
This is not part of the Judgment Night soundtrack.
This predated the JN soundtrack by at least 2-3 years.
I’m thinking closer to ‘89.
@@toddburris4311 1991... JN - 1993
When this dropped back in the day, I was convinced that I was listening to a whole new genre. Metal Rap does not get enough love. Also, this song is probably responsible for much of my hearing damage.
I got to see this tour in Oakland, it was a frkn blast,
Anthrax, Public Enemy, Primus, decided to tour together as a way to bridge musical cliques, and get the fans to meet eachother, was hella cool ❤
Good lord! That must have been an amazing show.
A lot of us Thrashers were listening to Public Enemy and NWA back then.
Flava Flav #1 Hype man in the biz!
The clock is siimple: Wherever Flav goes, you know what time it is.
Anthrax Attack of the Killer B's 🤘
Love this collab!!! Chuck Ds voice is unparalleled
THe voice, the flow.. He is in my opinion the most under-rated emcee in the game. He belongs up there with Rakim and them as one of the greats.
Public Enemy is from NYC. One of the most important hip-hop groups in history and well worth listening to if you like hip-hop. Anthrax is from NYC. One of the most important bands in metal history and well worth listening to if you like metal. This collaboration came about because Chuck D mentions Anthrax in this song when when original came out in 1988. And Scott Ian from Anthrax, their rhythm guitar player and guy that rapped a verse here, would often wear a Public Enemy t-shirt while performing on tour. So they were both aware of each other and respected each other, and eventually they got together to do a remake of this song together and made this video. They also went on tour together, along with Primus and Young Black Teenagers, after this got released. I caught that tour in Vancouver and it was awesome! I don’t have a lot to say about YBT other than they didn’t stay together very long. But all three of the other bands are legendary in their genres. I’m sure you’ll like a lot of Public Enemy songs, and you should definitely check out the ones where Flavor Flav is the main rapper for them. Like one called 911 Is A Joke, which has a funny official video to go along with it. Or one called Can’t Do Nuttin’ For Ya Man. PE has a lot of good songs. Here’s a handful I’d say you should put on the list, but man, they have a ton of good songs.
Public Enemy No. 1
She Watch Channel Zero (which uses a Slayer sample)
Brothers Gonna Work It Out
Welcome To The Terrordome
Fight The Power
Can’t Truss It
This is everything I would have said 👍
All good but they are from Roosevelt and Freeport Nassau County Long Island NY not one of the 5 Borough's of NYC!!
@@rich1223 Hehe, ok. It's something like 15 miles from Queens, which is on Long Island just like that is. And Anthrax is from Queens. They all call themselves New Yorkers, and given the proximity I wouldn't say this is simply because they're also in New York state. Kinda like someone in Richmond, BC might say they're from Vancouver, even though that's not technically Vancouver. YVR is basically in Richmond, and yet, that's called Vancouver International Airport. When you're talking about very large cities, something that is basically on the outskirts tends to be considered part-of, even though it technically isn't. It's considered part of the Greater Vancouver Area, so when talking to someone that is from a great distance away you would probably just say Vancouver because that'd be very recognizable. It's not like they're in Montauk. In other words, it's close enough. ;)
This song was originally on Public Enemy's album, It Takes A Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back from 1988. This collab was done with Anthrax in 1991
This is to different sounds mashing into one fantastic track.
"Run DMC first said a DJ could BE a band." Run DMC always had a hard rock element in their beats served up by Jam Master Jay (RIP).
The original recording of Bring The Noise was first released on the Less Than Zero soundtrack. Then released again on Public Enemy's album: It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back. Later they collaborated with Anthrax and put out the rap/metal version in 1991.
I was already into Public Enemy but I didn't have the album It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back yet. I hadn't heard the original Bring the Noise yet either. One of my hesher buddies lent me the EP: Attack of the Killer B's by Anthrax and I heard the metal version of Bring the Noise. I was instantly hooked. Still love it to this day 33 years later.
Their '91 tour together is one of the highlights of my ongoing concert-attending career. Saw them at Lehigh University and it was absolutely off the hook. That was also the first time I saw Primus, which began a journey that continues to this day....
Aw man, I wish we could go back. We had FUN!!!! I met Chuck D at LaGuardia Airport in NYC. His voice is like sexual chocolate for real! This is Hip Hop FUSION with Heavy Metal. Run DMC did similar with Aerosmith with Walk This Way. Good times!
Public Enemy were a force to be reckoned with such a powerful hip hop group
I remember going to a show on their tour together in Irvine, CA with Primus and YBT. That was wild. At the time, I was a teenage metalhead, and it was my first experience hanging out and having a great time with a hip hop crowd.
All day!!!!!!!!!!!🤘✌✌
This was a big deal when it came out! Brought so many of us together and opened doors for others. Awesome reaction.💪🔥
This was part of the revolution in Rap and Metal music, along with Aerosmith and Run DMC, this showed that Rap could be metal and metal could be rap. A lot of the issues that metal did not stay away from rap also did not stay away from. A lot of metal songs, if you look into their lyrics and read into what they are talking about are about real issues facing them at the time they were written. Same for Rap. I loved this combo and a lot of the music it spawned was great too.
This is unified musical magic. It works so well.
Thanks to Run DMC and the Beasties for bringing the hip hop/rock mash ups back in the days!
Don't you mean Rick Rubin :)
@@jasonpirok BINGO
UTFO and Anthrax were the first, way before this one.
@@kikiki4592 Blondie's song Rapture had a rap / hip-hop verse, calling out Grandmaster Flash and Fab 5 Freddy.. and Fab 5 Freddy appeared in the music video. 1981.
@@kikiki4592 don't think I know about this one...gotta go check it out!
love your reactions bro
I'm 55 and revisiting the golden seminal year of 1989
Wilmington NC in a small bar called The Mad Monk..Public Enemy.Good Times!
This was a "back of the bus" JAM!!!
Clock = Time! It’s time! Go from there! It’s time for? You name it! Flavor brought time to relevance!
Chuck D.....🔥🔥🔥🔥🔥
It’s heavy metal, rap coalition. It works quite well.
Oh!! You NEED more Public Enemy. One of the greats of the 80s. “Fight The Power”!! ‘Welcome to The Terrordome”!! “Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos”!! “Shut em Down”’!! “Fear of a Black Planet”!! “burn Hollywood Burn”!! Just toname a few
Public Enemy is old-school early 90s rap and Anthrax is pure heavy metal.
This was p.e answer to Aerosmith run dmc. Antthrax just hits different.
First concert ever saw as 13 year old white kid was taking a bus to philly to see P.E., in 87
This was absolutely mind blowing when it came out. This was years before all the rap metal stuff that came along a few years later. Aerosmith/Run DMC came first, but this just hits so much harder
This is how we used to roll back then. We all were closer than we have ever been, but today everyone is raysist (spelled wrong intentionally). It was a good time to grow up.
-Gen X Gma
I've always loved this song. You should do a reaction to Run DMC and Aerosmith doing Walk This Way next.
Flav wears the clock so he can always tell you what time it is.
Yeah boy.
No. He wore the clock to remind white folk you time is coming to an end.
@@jeeveswinston2545 Unfortunately the clock is broke. It's the other way around.
MAGA.
The whole "Judgement Night" soundtrack is worth reacting to. So many good collabs!
This was a collab from the 80s. Judgement Night was 90s.
@@carloalcos Bring Tha Noise w/ Anthrax was released in the early 90s, but the original P.E. song was from the 80s.
Correct, my bad. It was 91. Point though was that it was not on the judgement night soundtrack.
Public Enemy track to check out: Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos, By the Time I Get to Arizona, Brothers gonna work it out.. I mean, you really can't go wrong.. but Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos is an all time favorite of mine.
Hell Yeah. This ones a classic man.
One thing that really needs to be understood about metal heads is there is such a huge crazy amount of respect for rap and hip-hop!!! In my humble opinion, they go together like pb&j. 💜🤘
This is from 1991. And it was a HUGE hit at the time. Still a jam. Adding: it was a 'remake' (mashup?) of Public Enemy's 1988 hit of the same name.
There was a whole album of rock rap fusion. Might have been inspired my Iron man from metal church and mixalot. Body Count debut album was also contemporary.
In '91 this was a fckin banger!!! I jus started my senior year that fall.
Biohazard and Onyx did a badass lick on that judgment night soundtrack too. Judgment night is the name of it.
This style was really big in the early 90s, alot of metal n hip hop mixes then. Check out the soundtrack to the movie 'Judgement night' the entire soundtrack is metal n hip hop mixes...fantastic!
Public Enemy, one of the absolute best bands ever
I wish I could give this a million likes!!! You took me back to the year I graduated high school. Greatest time to be alive!
Please do more Public Enemy. The Bob Dylan of Rap. Such an important group
Back in the day there was a lot of battle rap aka "Beef", unlike today. There were many, one to mention was LL Cool J and Kool Moe Dee. So artists spoke it as it was.
And Flavor Flav is an awesome drummer
Ok ok ok... i humbly wanna suggest you react to a song called ROCK AND ROLL COULD NEVER HIP HOP LIKE THIS Pt.2..By Handsome Boy Modeling School feat. Chester Bennington and Mike shinoda... 🤘🏽✊🏽
The white guy rapping is actually the guitarist of Anthrax Scott Ian , the singer of Anthrax is actually the guy by the turntables Joey Belladonna who is Native American
Congratulations 🎉 10k before Christmas definitely ❤️🔥
Knew you would love the "in your face" of this. Anything, and I do mean ANYTHING from The Judgement Night soundtrack. Great Rap/Rock mash-ups.
Bro its time to bring on some Limp Bizkit!!
That album dropped in 1991. ‘Apocalypse ‘91: The Enemy Strikes Black’. Actually had it on cassette tape if I recall right. And that makes me feel pretty dang old. Not ‘cause of the year, but owning a cassette. Yet it’s alwayz gonna be one of my fave rap albums.
Scott Ian the white dude rapping was a huge Public Enemy fan and would were P.E. shirts playing their concerts, got a hold of them for this collab and they toured together. And yes, the shows were this wild
Look, if you're playing music of my generation and we rocked, kicked screamed and played our music LOUD - no head phones for us, if we were listening so where you! RIGHT GENX?
I don't always listen to "Bring The Noize" but when I do, so does my neighborhood.
I enjoy your reactions man.... keep it up!
you need to check out more Public Enemy, where as a lot of Rap of the day and age was about the hard thug life or living around it, PE is in your face militant protest music about the state of Civil Rights and Chuck D has absolutely no problem calling people out while Flavor Flav is getting the crowd riled up and active. PE is beyond important in the scene and still is today
It’s a collab, period
You know what time it is.
Aw ya I remember getting this at Tower Records tues at midnight...fresh cd plastic. fat bowl and enjoyed it on ride home aw ya boy. RAP METAL ..the original hype man. 1991 , and I was jamming it on the way to sacremento to catch this new band deftones... god I loved the 90s
Anthrax is a heavy metal band that crossed over into various music types. Anthrax did a song called "I'm the man" check it out...
Time to make you a metalhead!
Public enemy went on tour with anthrax and this is a remix of a Public enemy song with the heavy metal band doing the music this time. It was one of the earliest Hard Rock / metal rap remixes
THIS is the one that turned a metal kid into a hip hop fan...
Like ME! 💯😎
I waited my whole life to hear Chuck D.
Rhythm and blues gave birth to rock and roll hip hop and rock and roll are at least first cousins
Back then this didn't have a genre. Like Aerosmith and Run DMC, it was a beautiful freak of nature. Public Enemy #1!
1991 in Chicago under the Howard Avenue L train turn around. Tried my damnedest to go to this, but they filmed late on a school night, so no sneakin' out for me.
Public Enemy made their tour debut on the end (US leg) of the BEASTIE BOYSs license to ill tour. Madonna toured with them in Europe and Japan. HIP HOP IS ROCK.. Jazz is rock. Country is rock, and all of those and big band music are ALL BLUES. ALL MODERN MUSIC is derived from the blues, and it is only this latest generation that has a propensity to want to LABEL EVERYTHING. Music doesn't care what you think of it, or call it. It does not have specific pronouns, or polite language. Music is a growing tree, evolving, into other directions toward the sun. It is all one. Don't try to label it so much. It's music.
Got to do “Public Enemy Number 1”.
The whole PE Album is fire!! It Takes A Nation Of Millions to Hold Us Back.......Please react!!!
I remember there was a pretty big divide between Rap and Rock/metal. This was pretty groundbreaking. Along with Aerosmith and Run DMC.
Gen X metalheads didn't care for hip hop, until Straight Outta' Compton by NWA dropped. Suburban white kids who were into metal, punk and hardcore could appreciate NWA, because that was the hardcore for all the black kids, urban as well as suburban. Gangsta' rap gained a bit of popularity with metal fans and metal bands. Anthrax did this mashup with Public enemy. Aerosmith would do a mashup with Run DMC. Ice T would actually start his own metal band called Body Count. By the time the 90's came around, Nu-Metal was born which incorporated elements of rap and hip hop into metal. There was also a bunch of one-offs with metal/rap/techno mashups for the movie soundtracks for Judgement Night and Spawn. It was a crazy era of music, just before Napster arrived to lay waste to record stores and usher in the age of digital downloads and streaming services. Fun reaction!
Anthrax is Thrash metal and Public Enemy is of course hip hop/rap, this was a collaboration and one of the songs that gave birth to the sub genre Nu Metal
This is a remake of Public Enemy's song that was originally released in 1988. This video came out in 1991 when Anthrax released Attack if the Killer B's, a collection of B sides. Anthrax released an EP in 1987 called I'm the Man and it featured the title cut which is their version of a rap song.
I love when a young'n hears this for the first time. Impossible not to jam out.great song.
Hey can I get a hundred bto😂
🤣🤣
Nice jacket boss!! Ey just give the gal who asked for money a 100 dollar monopoly money bill! 😸 Greetz from the Netherlands. Public Enemy was huge before NWA came out.
😆🤑
This remix is cool and it put PE in front of a bigger set of eyes and ears, but the original version from PE's second album, It Takes A nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back, from a couple years before this Anthrax collab, is a classic in its own right. The whole record is.
Great reaction dude! If you enjoyed that, you should do a reaction to "There goes the neighbourhood" by Bodycount. One of the greatest rap metal tracks of all time! Keep up the good work brother!
Be sure to listen to By The Time I Get To Arizona... love your channel and watching you discover music I grew up on as a 51 y.o.
That track is an absolute banger. It just has so much soul. Still listen to it now and then.
No ma'am, no ham, no turkey. AWESOME.
yeah, stealing that too.
This whole album is insane
So if you liked that, some bands from that era you should check out are Stuck Mojo, Bad Brains, Body Count and The Goats. And the entire Judgement Night soundtrack.
If you want to check out some real vintage calling out, check out Country Joe and the Fish, Feel Like I'm Fixin' To Die Rag (Live at Woodstock version)
How Do You Sleep is John Lennon's dis track for Paul McCartney
Oh shit this group is savage
The big catch phrase even before Flavor flav, was "What's the time?" "Do you know what time it is?" Flavor took that to fashion sense. This was around 1991.
Anthrax is a Thrash Metal band. Thrash Metal is a sub genre of Heavy Metal. 🤘🏻
Flavor Flavor is proficient in fifteen instruments
proficient being an understatement. dude's a right prodigy.
There's a vid out there somewhere where he killed singing the National Anthem at a basketball game. So he's got that too...
R A K I M .........The G O D MC........
Congrats on 7k Temu Chris Tucker!
Congrats on 7k MUTHALUVA!!✌️
Good stuff bro. Great team up.
Man, you’re getting into it now, good on you.
one thing about Anthrax, they are NYC band, so they was on tap with the music happening in their burrow
This was good bro! Do more rock,get more people
Ny girl who was lucky enough to cut schoo (9th grade)l and go see PE and the Beastie Boys play at a local college..
At 50 I can still sing this song word for word! And the original version is 100% rap
Aerosmith and RUN DMC with Walk this Way collab was the planting the seed of Nu Metal, Anthrax and Public Enemy doing a metal version of PE's Bring the Noise basically birthed nu-metal. Rage Against the Machine took it a little further. FWIW, this song was never on the Judgement Night soundtrack, it debuted on Anthtax's Attack of the Killer Bs and then was on PE's Apocalypse '91, the Enemy Strikes Black.