This Is Madness is the second album released by The Last Poets in 1971. With their politically charged raps, taut rhythms, and dedication to raising African-American consciousness, the Last Poets almost single-handedly laid the groundwork for the emergence of hip-hop. The group arose out of the prison experiences of Jalal Mansur Nuriddin, a U.S. Army paratrooper who chose jail as an alternative to fighting in Vietnam; while incarcerated, he converted to Islam, learned to "spiel" (an early form of rapping), and befriended fellow inmates Omar Ben Hassan and Abiodun Oyewole.
A legendary set featuring a group of extremely controversial street poets. The Last Poets used offensive language brilliantly, talked in graphic detail about America's social and racial failures, and helped expose a wider audience to the sentiments of the '70s black nationalists. They were the forerunners of today's Afrocentric rappers, and also showed the way to a jazz/rap union now being explored on both sides of the Atlantic.
Tracklist
A1 | True Blues | 2:00 |
A2 | Related To What Chant | 1:08 |
A3 | Related To What | 3:09 |
A4 | Black Is Chant | 0:56 |
A5 | Black Is | 2:29 |
A6 | Time | 1:39 |
A7 | Mean Machine Chant | 1:22 |
A8 | Mean Machine | 4:03 |
B1 | White Man's Got A God Complex | 3:35 |
B2 | Opposites | 1:43 |
B3 | Black People What Y'All Gon' Do Chant | 0:46 |
B4 | Black People What Y'All Gon' Do | 3:20 |
B5 | O.D. | 3:06 |
B6 | This Is Madness Chant | 1:04 |
B7 | This Is Madness | 4:50 |
The Last Poets - This Is Madness (1971)
(320 kbps, cover art included)
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