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Public Enemy

Public Enemy

Group Members: Chuck D, Flavor Flav, DJ Lord, Professor Griff
Past Members: Terminator X, Sister Souljah
As an Artist
Tracks sampled by Public Enemy [504]
Tracks that sampled Public Enemy [1151]
As a Producer
Tracks produced by Public Enemy using samples [1]
Tracks that sampled music produced by Public Enemy [1]

Tracks Sampled by Public Enemy

[504]
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Who Stole the Soul? Who Stole the Soul? (1990) sampled
Bring the Noise by Public Enemy (1987)
How to Kill a Radio Consultant How to Kill a Radio Consultant (1991) sampled
Cold Sweat by James Brown (1967)
I Can't Live Without My Radio by LL Cool J (1985)
Beats to the Rhyme by Run-DMC (1988)
Death Penalty by Robin Harris (1989)
By the Time I Get to Arizona By the Time I Get to Arizona (1991) sampled
Walk On by The Jackson 5 (1971)
Two Sisters of Mystery by Mandrill (1973)
Can't Truss It Can't Truss It (1991) sampled
Sing a Simple Song by Sly & the Family Stone (1968)
Get Up, Get Into It, Get Involved by James Brown (1970)
Hihache by Lafayette Afro Rock Band (1973)
Bicentennial Nigger by Richard Pryor (1976)
Slide by Slave (1977)
It's Yours by T La Rock and Jazzy Jay (1984)
Im Nin'Alu by Ofra Haza (1985)
Dumb Girl by Run-DMC (1986)
Move! Move! (1991) sampled
Fly Me to the Moon by Lyn Collins (1972)
Shut 'Em Down Shut 'Em Down (1991) sampled
The Rainmaker by The 5th Dimension (1971)
Rock Steady by Aretha Franklin (1971)
Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos by Public Enemy (1988)
Eat Em Up L Chill by LL Cool J (1990)
Nighttrain Nighttrain (1991) sampled
Night Train by James Brown (1962)
Spinning Wheel by Blood, Sweat & Tears (1968)
1 Million Bottlebags 1 Million Bottlebags (1991) sampled
Make It Good to Yourself by James Brown (1973)
Take Me to the Mardi Gras by Bob James (1975)
More Bounce to the Ounce by Zapp (1980)

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Discussion

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anthole said on Sunday, 17 June 2012:
In the case of Public Enemy, "Bring the Noise" and "Rebel Without a Pause" were put out as singles before the album even came out so they were finished before the other tracks on "Nation" were.

C.R. Brown said on Sunday, 17 June 2012:
I notice how songs from "It Takes a Nation of Millions to Hold Us Back" use samples from both "Rebel Without a Pause" and "Bring the Noise" while both songs were on that album, and "Bring the Noise" was not only sampled more often on the album, but in general on this database, why is that? There are lots of artist's on this database with that one song that has pages and pages of other songs it was sampled in. Besides the Ultimate Breaks and Beats, even rap songs like "La Di Da Di" or "Top Billin" were also sampled by the original artists. Is there something substantial about these songs, or a certain reason why they're used much more often then other songs on their page?

MrBlondNYC said on Friday, 07 January 2011:
True but to be fair the reason why PE was able to sample so many songs was because it was before sampling laws. Those albums would cost millions to make today. Rapping over an instrumental is more a matter of cost than non-creativity.

7JEDIACEN said on Thursday, 06 January 2011:
This is Hip Hop! Public Enemy, Terminator X and the Bomb Squad. Sampled, cut, remixed and made the Bomb! Not just play the whole instrumental version of a song and rap over it like many others.

DJ Anubis said on Thursday, 27 May 2010:
I think it all got started as "ain't no party like an east/west coast party cos a e/w coast party don't stop"... but who was first? :D

tick said on Thursday, 27 May 2010:
There ain't no party like a Liz Lemon party, coz a Liz Lemon party is Mandatory!

Sorry, I dunno, Ain't no party like a Alkaholik party is my best guess, From Likwit - 1993... sure it's not the first though heh

DJ Anubis said on Thursday, 08 April 2010:
Does anyone know who started this: "there ain't no party like a *** *** party"? Sorry to be spamming Public Enemy, but I'm getting the feeling it's these guys?

edkoccornell said on Friday, 24 July 2009:
Is it just me or is the bassline in "Fight the Power" by Public Enemy the same as in "100 Miles and Runnin'" By N.W.A?

 
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