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, โ€œBlack Sky Over the Projects: Apartment 2025,โ€ a defiant, 12-track collection that fuses the groupโ€™s signature social commentary with a fresh dose of old-school fire. 

Released without advance notice, the record was released on a โ€œpay-what-you-wantโ€ basis for 72 hours, giving fans unprecedented access to the groupโ€™s most urgent work in years.

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

From the opening bars of โ€œCโ€™mon Get Down,โ€ 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.ย 

Cuts like โ€œEvil Wayโ€ call out performative gangsterism โ€” โ€œYou got to change your evil way/What goes up comes back downโ€ โ€” while โ€œSexagenarian Vapeโ€ 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 โ€œMarch Madness,โ€ the group takes aim at lawmakersโ€™ inaction over gun violence in schools: โ€œGrade One to Twelve/Even kindergarten/Need security from this sick trend started.โ€

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

The album doesnโ€™t shy away from humor and swagger. โ€œMessy Hensโ€ finds Flavor Flav taunting gossipers: โ€œAinโ€™t worried bout another sucker / Talkinโ€™ โ€˜bout Messy Hens on Hennessy.โ€

โ€œPublic Enemy Comin Throoooo,โ€ meanwhile, celebrates the groupโ€™s longevity and their place in hip-hopโ€™s pantheon, referencing the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, Lollapalooza, and decades of tours.

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

Veteran drummer Trรฉ Cool (Green Day) contributes live percussion on โ€œFools Fool Fools,โ€ while C-Doc and JP Hesserโ€™s engineering brings a raw immediacy to the record.

On โ€œAgeism,โ€ Chuck D delivers one of the albumโ€™s most personal performances, confronting stereotypes about aging artists: โ€œBeen their age, they ainโ€™t never been mineโ€ฆ Ageism stuck in the bitterverse.โ€

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

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

On the groupโ€™s X post announcing the album, social media user Ben took to X, formerly known as Twitter, writing: โ€œFlav elevating his game to a whole new level on this one,โ€ adding flame emojis on X, formerly known as Twitter.

In a nod to a title of one of the tracks on the album, social media user Old Skool Muzik commented, saying: โ€œThe Hits Just Keep On Comin!โ€

The album is now available at www.publicenemy.com.

Stacy M. Brown is a senior writer for The Washington 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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