Public Enemy founder Chuck D (Kim Metso via Wikimedia Commons)
Public Enemy founder Chuck D (Kim Metso via Wikimedia Commons)

Public Enemy has returned with a blistering new surprise album, Black Sky Over the Projects: Apartment 2025, a defiant, 12-track collection that fuses the groups signature social commentary with a fresh dose of old-school fire. 

Released without advance notice, the record was released on a pay-what-you-want basis for 72 hours, giving fans unprecedented access to the groups most urgent work in years.

These new tracks are for you to get down to at home, said Flavor Flav, who joins Chuck D at the forefront of the release. Pay whatcha want for the next 72 hours.

From the opening bars of Cmon Get Down, the album showcases the enduring power of hip-hop to challenge injustice and unify generations.

Chuck D, credited under his real name Carlton Ridenhour, and Flavor Flav deliver scathing verses over production by Carl Ryder, C-Doc, JP Hesser and Sam Farrar.

Cuts like Evil Way call out performative gangsterism You got to change your evil way/What goes up comes back down while Sexagenarian Vape explores the tension between youth culture and ageism, a recurring theme throughout the record.

Public Enemy also revisits their longtime critique of the American political system. On March Madness, the group takes aim at lawmakers inaction over gun violence in schools: Grade One to Twelve/Even kindergarten/Need security from this sick trend started.

Elsewhere, Fools Fool Fools (Dirty Drums Mixx) rails against climate denial, political corruption, and what the group calls the masquerade parade spinning in webs of charades.

The album doesnt shy away from humor and swagger. Messy Hens finds Flavor Flav taunting gossipers: Aint worried bout another sucker / Talkin bout Messy Hens on Hennessy.

Public Enemy Comin Throoooo, meanwhile, celebrates the groups longevity and their place in hip-hops pantheon, referencing the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, Lollapalooza, and decades of tours.

With production credits spanning California, Pennsylvania, and New York, Black Sky Over the Projects: Apartment 2025 represents a cross-country statement of resilience. 

Veteran drummer Tr辿 Cool (Green Day) contributes live percussion on Fools Fool Fools, while C-Doc and JP Hessers engineering brings a raw immediacy to the record.

On Ageism, Chuck D delivers one of the albums most personal performances, confronting stereotypes about aging artists: Been their age, they aint never been mine Ageism stuck in the bitterverse.

From the percussive stomp of …The Hits Just Keep on Comin… to the confrontational closer March Madness, Public Enemy proves they remain as vital and as unflinching as ever.

Fans are already taking to social media to pour out love for the project.

On the , social media user formerly known as Twitter, writing: Flav elevating his game to a whole new level on this one, adding flame emojis on X, formerly known as Twitter.

In a nod to a title of one of the tracks on the album, social, saying: The Hits Just Keep On Comin!

The album is now available at .

Stacy M. Brown is a senior writer for The 51心頭 Informer and the senior national correspondent for the Black Press of America. Stacy has more than 25 years of journalism experience and has authored...

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