The Scotsman

Classic hip of the genre

- DAVID POLLOCK

and De La Soul – the trio were clearly graded in terms of size and audience appeal during the show. Long Island, New York trio De La Soul are crowdpleas­ing f avourites whose 1989 debut album 3 Feet High and Rising (“thank you for a beautiful long 30 years,” they offered gratefully here) has brought a number of enduring classics to the pop canon.

Although the simple twomcs and one DJ/ MC set- up here didn’t quite do justice to their critical stature, a set full of selfdescri­bed “classic shit” including Me, Myself & I and Ring Ring Ring ( Ha Ha Hey) created a thrilling opening sequence for those in attendance early.

In the event, it was Public Enemy – one of the most regimented and profession­al live hip hop groups you’re ever likely to see – who appeared in diminished form, although you wouldn’t have known it by the power of their set. Despite the absence of the clowning Flavor Flav and f ormer f ulcrum Terminator X, polemicist- in- chief Chuck D is all that’s required to bring the spirit of PE to a room.

With regular deck cont roll er DJ Lord ( whose demonstrat­ion of solo mixing was as breathtaki­ng as any drum solo) and dance troupe/ militia Security of the First World onstage, Chuck and rap accomplice Jahi made sure there was no fat on this rebranded Public Enemy Radio greatest hits set. They powered their way through protest anthems like Don’t Believe the Hype, Rebel Without a Pause and Black Steel in the Hour of Chaos – with Chuck pausing to tear strips off Theresa May, Donald Trump and sectarian bigotry – in a way which left us wondering whether any group has done this better.

If the answer is yes, it’s Wu- Tang Clan who make it so. With more volume and s creens t han t heir support crews, an eightstron­g contingent includi ng founders RZA, GZA and Raekwon were able to bring together a bona fide arena- level show of classics including Protect Ya Neck, Wu Tang: 7th Chamber and the crossover hit Gravel Pit, with solo excursions including the late Ol’ Dirty Bastard’s son on his dad’s hits Shimmy Shimmy Ya and Got Your Money. Between- set onscreen clips promised Gods of Rap II very soon, an obvious evolution from this successful outing.

 ??  ?? 2 Chuck D of Public Enemy had plenty to say about politics and sectariani­sm besides providing a powerful set
2 Chuck D of Public Enemy had plenty to say about politics and sectariani­sm besides providing a powerful set

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