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As the founder of Public Enemy, Chuck D. is one of the most colossal figures
in the history of hip-hop,
not to mention its most respected intellectual. He redefined hip-hop as music
with a message, and his strident radicalism ushered in an era when rap was
closely scrutinized for its content; although rap's primary concerns have
changed over the years, its status as America's most controversial art form has
only gotten stronger since Public Enemy hit the scene. Chuck D. was born Carlton
Douglas Ridenhour in Roosevelt, Long Island, on August 1, 1960. His parents were
both political activists, and he was a highly intelligent student, turning down
an architecture scholarship to study graphic design at Long Island's Adelphi
University. While in school, he put his talents to use making promotional flyers
for hip-hop events, and went on to co-host a hip-hop mix show on the campus
radio station with two future Public Enemy cohorts, Bill Stephney and Hank
Shocklee. Under the name Chuckie D, he rapped on Shocklee's demo recording,
"Public Enemy No. 1," which caught the interest of Rick Rubin at Def Jam. In
response, the now simply named Chuck D. assembled Public Enemy, a group designed
to support the force of his rhetoric with noisy, nearly avant-garde soundscapes.
Public Enemy debuted in 1987 with Yo! Bum Rush the Show, a dry run for one of
the greatest three-album spans in hip-hop history. Released in 1988, It Takes a
Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back was acclaimed by many critics as the greatest
hip-hop album of all time, and was instrumental in breaking rap music to white,
alternative rock audiences. Fear of a Black Planet (1990) and its follow-up,
Apocalypse '91...The Enemy Strikes Black, consolidated Public Enemy's position
as the most important rap group of its time. There were storms of controversy
along the way, most notably Chuck D.'s endorsement of the polarizing Muslim
minister Louis Farrakhan, and group member Professor Griff's highly publicized
anti-Semitic slurs. But on the whole, Public Enemy's groundbreaking body of work
established Chuck D. as one of the most intelligent, articulate spokesmen for
the black community. He became an in-demand speaker on the college lecture
circuit (much like his peer KRS-One), and was frequently invited to provide
commentary on TV news programs.
Muse Sick-N-Hour Mess Age (1994) found the group's status slipping, and the
following year Chuck put PE on hiatus while planning its next move. In the
meantime, he released his first solo album, The Autobiography of Mistachuck, in
1996, and published the book version of his autobiography the following year. He
reconvened Public Enemy for the soundtrack to Spike Lee's 1998 film, He Got
Game, and the following year left Def Jam over the label's refusal to allow him
to distribute Public Enemy music via free Internet downloads. Signing with the
web-based Atomic Pop label, Chuck became an outspoken advocate of MP3
technology, and made 1999's There's a Poison Goin' On... the first full-length
album by a major artist to be made available over the Internet (it was later
released on CD as well). He continued his lecturing into the new millennium and
made regular appearances on the Fox News Channel as a commentator. Even if
Public Enemy never recaptures the popularity or vitality of its glory years,
Chuck D.'s legacy is secure enough to keep him a respected voice on the American
cultural landscape.
Credit: vh1.com
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