Chuck D really taught me a lot about sequencing a record, how to put an album together. Were there any lessons you learned from making that album that you've held on to over the past 25 years? and why they were so big and influential. But can you put the knowledge with it? And can you make street people listen to it? And can you make politicians understand what's going on in the streets by listening to it and think? That's kind of how we saw P.E. You got the street stuff, you can always do that, that's always there. So that's how I came up with the concept of street knowledge. made us put the street stuff we were going through in perspective. They were like what we were kinda striving in a lot of ways to aspire to as locals in L.A. Why was it important for you to cross that divide?Īt the time they were my favorite producers, because Public Enemy records were the most dynamic records in hip-hop. One of the biggest surprises on this album was that it was almost entirely produced by Public Enemy's production team The Bomb Squad. Back when you were recording AmeriKKKa's Most Wanted, the East Coast and West Coast were very different, stylistically.
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