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Yo! Bum Rush the Show

Yo! Bum Rush the Show is the debut studio album by American hip hop group Public Enemy. It was released in March 1987 through Def Jam Recordings. It was recorded at Spectrum City Studios in Hempstead, New York, and became one of the fastest-selling hip hop records, but was controversial among radio stations and critics, in part due to lead rapper Chuck D's black nationalist politics. The album is regarded as one of hip hop's greatest and most influential records.

Musical style
Yo! Bum Rush the Show featured the Bomb Squad's sample-heavy production style, also prominent on the group's later work. Joe Brown of The Washington Post described the album's music as "a more serious brand of inner-city aggression", in comparison to Licensed to Ill (1986) by Def Jam label-mates the Beastie Boys. On its musical style, Brown wrote "Public Enemy's mean and minimalist rap is marked by an absolute absence of melody – the scary sound is just a throbbing pulse, hard drums and a designed-to-irritate electronic whine, like a dentist's drill or a persistent mosquito". Chicago Tribune writer Daniel Brogan described Public Enemy's style on the album as "raw and confrontational", writing that the group "doesn't aim to – or have a chance at – crossing over". ==Title and packaging==
Title and packaging
According to music journalist Jeff Chang, Public Enemy embodied the "bumrush aesthetic" of underground black radicalism and used their debut album's cover to illustrate a resurgence in the spirit of militancy. The cover features the group in a poorly lit basement, "readying themselves to bring black militancy back into the high noon of the Reagan day", as Chang described and compared to the 1987 Boogie Down Productions album Criminal Minded that followed. Chuck D is shown dressed in white Islamic clothing, Professor Griff is on the far right wearing a red beret, and Flavor Flav has his hand reaching out over a turntable, which Chang interpreted as him blessing the vinyl record. A second black hand is shown reaching at the play button to "begin the revolution", in Chang's words. A line of repeated text is printed at the bottom of the photo, described by Chang as a punchline, and reading: "THE GOVERNMENT'S RESPONSIBLE . . . THE GOVERNMENT'S RESPONSIBLE . . . THE GOVERNMENT'S RESPONSIBLE . . ." The cover marked the first appearance of Public Enemy's logo, a silhouette of a black man in a rifle's crosshairs. ==Release and promotion==
Release and promotion
Yo! Bum Rush the Show was released in March 1987 through Def Jam Recordings and Columbia Records. It was promoted with the release of two singles that year: "Public Enemy No. 1" in March and "You're Gonna Get Yours" in May. The album was largely ignored by radio programmers, Jon Pareles reported in May 1987, however, that it had become one of hip hop's fastest selling records. and 400,000 by 1989. On October 3, 1994, the album was certified Gold by the Recording Industry Association of America, indicating 500,000 units moved. ==Critical reception==
Critical reception
According to Robert Hilburn in 1988, Yo! Bum Rush the Show was widely acclaimed by critics. Pareles was more enthusiastic in The New York Times, hailing Yo! Bum Rush the Show as rap's "grittiest" full-length record. While still finding Public Enemy plagued by the "adolescent macho" he deemed prevalent in the genre, he said its songs are "far more convincing - and unsettling - when [Chuck] D takes on money and power", and concluded: "At a time when most rappers typecast themselves as comedy acts or party bands, Public Enemy's best moments promise something far more dangerous and subversive: realism." According to Chang, the album fared better among critics in the United Kingdom, where music publications ranked it as one of the year's best records. In NME magazine's critics poll, it was named the best album of 1987. The single "You're Gonna Get Yours" was also listed at number 25 on their list of Top 50 tracks of the year. In subsequent years, Yo! Bum Rush the Show has been considered a classic and one of hip hop's most influential records. In 1998, it was selected as one of The Sources 100 Best Rap Albums. In 2003, Rolling Stone ranked it number 497 on a list of the 500 greatest albums of all time, although the album was removed in the 2012 version of the list. ==Track listing==
Track listing
• Ridenhour • William "Flavor Flav" Drayton • Shocklee }} • Ridenhour • Shocklee }} • Ridenhour • Shocklee }} • Ridenhour • Drayton • Shocklee }} • Ridenhour • Shocklee }} }} • Ridenhour • Drayton • Shocklee }} • Ridenhour • Drayton • Shocklee }} • Ridenhour • Eric "Vietnam" Sadler • Shocklee }} • Ridenhour • Drayton • Shocklee }} • Ridenhour • Drayton • Sadler • Shocklee }} }} ==Personnel==
Personnel
Chuck D – vocals, co-producer • Flavor Flav – vocals • Terminator X – lead scratch • Hank Shocklee – co-producer, mixing, drum programming, synth programming • Eric Sadler – co-producer, mixing, drum programming, synth programming • Stephen Linsley – bass, recording & mixing • Bill Stephney – bass, guitars, co-producer, mixing • Vernon Reid – guitars • Johnny "Juice" Rosado – rhythm scratch • Rick Rubin – executive producer, mixing • Glen E. Friedman – photography • Steve Ett – mixing ==Charts==
Charts
Weekly charts Year-end charts ==Certifications==
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