You've Never Heard Public Enemy's 'It Takes A Nation Of Millions To Hold Us Back'?! : All Songs Considered Blog : NPR

We had an intern review this album, which he had never heard before and here is a highlight from his piece:

Although my experience with hip-hop is definitely limited in scope, I’d still call myself a fan. I remember the first time I really cared about a rap song. It was the spring of 2010 and “Over” by Drake had just come out.

I’ll pause while you take that in. *hums*

OK, another highlight:

Ultimately, I have no regrets leaving It Takes A Nation on what is now an entirely metaphorical shelf. I’ll gladly say thank you, but given the choice, I’m going to blast Drake’s infectiously triumphant mp3s every time.

Some readers were unhappy with the intern’s assessment of the album and went in on him in the comments. 

However, one reader comment stands out for two reasons — who the reader is and what the reader says: 

Ahmir Thompson (Questlove) wrote:

Austin. I’m sure this entire response thread is brow beating you to no end. so I’m taking a different approach. i too had a hard time swallowing records that were deemed “classic” just because some adult told me so. i find its best to take in music when you have the proper context. i too found Epitaph, On The Corner, Blood On The Tracks, Exile On Main Street, & Horses “boring” and “not as good as…..(name something that was banging when i was a kid)—-but hopefully you will realize it is your duty to discover the beauty of acclaimed art and why it was so. take Springsteen’s “Nebraska” for instance an acclaimed record that was hard for an inner city hip hop fan to swallow without a backstory. so i spent an entire weekend reading every story about this album so that i could have a better grasp on what the times were like and that helped me understand (and eventually agree) why this is Springsteen’s magnum opus. i mean no one here is expecting you to be the next Lester Bangs or Rob Christgau but i do expect this generation (born some 20 years after me) with its advantages in technology to put real effort into the information it processes. there is no question Nation is one of THE greatest recordings ever. ur job is to find out why

And that, my friends, is our lesson for today. 

07/16/12 at 11:17am
119 notes
  1. moreleftthannot reblogged this from eddietg
  2. christinaxli reblogged this from eddietg and added:
    this is awesome because it’s awesome but ALSO because it cites “rob christgau” who’s an adjunct professor at my school....
  3. sirscratchewan reblogged this from panasonicyouth
  4. eddietg reblogged this from fuckyeahdiomedes
  5. searchingforknowledge reblogged this from xoxogossipgita
  6. xoxogossipgita reblogged this from panasonicyouth and added:
    pure beauty
  7. penandpocketknife reblogged this from panasonicyouth and added:
    Your daily lesson is brought to you by these eloquent and outstanding words by Questlove
  8. spiralstreesandcupsoftea reblogged this from panasonicyouth
  9. fuckyeahdiomedes reblogged this from them-witches
  10. missbananafish reblogged this from ipomoeaj and added:
    That is spot on. I wish ?uestlove was my cool neighbor.
  11. hotdogsngiggles reblogged this from panasonicyouth and added:
    Sometimes, on a good day, I love people.
  12. wicked-grin reblogged this from panasonicyouth and added:
    holy shit yes
  13. them-witches reblogged this from panasonicyouth and added:
    yes yes yes
  14. profanefame reblogged this from panasonicyouth
  15. shinobivsdragon reblogged this from panasonicyouth
  16. heidi8 reblogged this from panasonicyouth and added:
    Context is vital, context is everything. Without context you can appreciate and respect an album like “It Takes a...
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  18. arteris reblogged this from agooddaytowhy
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