Its title hearkens back to a line in
Public Enemy's incendiary 1989 anthem "Fight the Power," recalling the band's glory days but cutting deeper, exposing an ugly truth: 20-plus years and a black president in the White House later, things still haven't changed all that much in America. That lingering inequality nags at
Chuck D throughout
Most of My Heroes Still Don't Appear On No Stamp,
PE's twelfth album and their first released after the election of Barack Obama, a development that would perhaps seem to the casual observer a vindication of everything
Public Enemy represents -- famously, the Obamas' first date was at a showing of
Spike Lee's
Do The Right Thing where "Fight the Power" plays a crucial role -- but
Public Enemy seems angrier than ever here. And deservedly so, as so much of what
PE stands for -- sonically, politically, culturally -- is submerged in 2012, obscured by a marginalization of radicalization and imagination.
Public Enemy fights against the dying light of Black Power and counterculture throughout
Most of My Heroes Still Don't Appear On No Stamp, the phrase not only providing a title but a motif (it appears repeatedly throughout the record's 11 songs), the band deliberately evoking their past by sampling earlier records and tossing off allusions to older lyrics, staying true to the template created by the
Bomb Squad in the late '80s yet avoiding a meticulous re-creation of that sonic onslaught. The music here isn't as dense as
It Takes a Nation of Millions or
Fear of a Black Planet -- it's nimble and spare, a steely reduction of
the J.B.'s relentless groove, augmented by cacophonic flourishes of guitar and white noise. It's all the better to push the spotlight onto
Chuck D, who is in full-blown preacher/teacher mode here, intent on tying the past into the present and doing a pretty effective job, too.
Chuck doesn't much care if he comes across as an indignant professor here, and that's part of the charm of not just this, but all latter-day
Public Enemy: this is the sound of true believers who give not a damn about fashion, they remain true to the sounds and sensibilities they laid out back in the late '80s. And the music remains vital and vibrant, possibly because, despite some progress, things still haven't changed all that much and, in some respects, have gotten worse...and as long as
Public Enemy's heroes remain consigned to the margins, they'll still make music as dynamic as this. ~ Stephen Thomas Erlewine