Nuriddin joined the first version of The Last Poets, with members
Gylan Kain,
David Nelson, and
Felipe Luciano, but left before the trio recorded and released their only album,
Right On, in 1967, the soundtrack to a documentary movie of the same name. As he informed them of the intention to form his own group called
The Last Poets, the
Right On album was released under the name The Original Last Poets. Together with
Umar Bin Hassan and the late
Nilja, their percussionist, he released in 1969 the self-titled first album
The Last Poets, followed in 1970 by
This Is Madness. In 1971, that follow-up album landed the group on President
Richard Nixon's
Cointelpro radicals list targeted for surveillance by the
FBI. At the time, his name was still credited as
Alafia Pudim, but he later changed it to the Islamic name (Jalaluddin – The Glory of the Faith, Mansur – Victorious, Nuriddin – The Light of the Faith) by which he is known today. Nuriddin's fellow poet and friend the late
Suleiman El-Hadi replaced Nilja on the third album,
Chastisement, and also recorded 1974's
At Last (the only recording to include Nuriddin, Bin Hassan, and El-Hadi together). Altogether, there were six albums released by the Nuriddin / El-Hadi "mach two" edition of the Poets, culminating with 1993's
Scatterap/Home. Later members included
Kenyatte Abdur-Rahman, composer and vibraphonist (who died in November 2015) on the album
Scatterap/Home, and Abu Mustafa (also deceased). "Lightnin' Rod" was the pseudonym of Nuriddin when he released his seminal 1973
Hustlers Convention LP, featuring tracks including "Sport" and "Spoon" and "Coppin' Some Fronts for the Set". The album was released on United Artists and featured
Tina Turner and
The Ikettes,
Bernard Purdie,
Billy Preston,
Cornell Dupree, and
Kool and the Gang. Most of the lyrics deal with the way of life in ghettos, i.e. hustling, drugs, gambling and money with the outcome being a shoot out with the cops followed by jail where the hustlers learn "The whole truth". A sequel,
The Hustlers Detention is purportedly in the pipeline with the final part being "The Hustlers Ascension".
Hustlers Convention has been sampled by many hip-hop artists; producer
Ron Saint Germain had declared it to be "one of the most stolen and sampled albums ever made". In April 2008, Nuriddin reunited and reconciled with fellow Last Poets Umar Bin Hassan and Abiodun Oyewole, along with David Nelson and Felipe Luciano, all of whom appear in
Made in Amerikkka, a documentary by French film-maker Claude Santiago. Bin Hassan recalled in a
Billboard article how the fiery and passionate Last Poets in the 1970s said things they should not have said: "we were all young men, 19, 20 years old. What do we know, really, about the world, about ourselves, America, race relations?" Nuriddin made an album for
Adrian Sherwood. and the single "Mankind, Pt. 2", produced by
Skip McDonald and released on Sherwood's label
On-U Sound, can be heard over the closing credits of the film
187. Nuriddin and the Last Poets also had a cameo appearance in
John Singleton's 1993 film
Poetic Justice, starring
Janet Jackson and
Tupac Shakur. ==2004–2018==