Rating:
Genre:
Rap
Release Date: 09/18/2001
Politically controversial in their time,
Brand Nubian doesn't sound like the dangerous, Afrocentric militants they were originally made out to be in some quarters. Maybe it's because their jazzy, post-
Native Tongues music is so ingratiating; maybe it's because
Grand Puba has such a playful, easygoing presence on the mic; maybe it's just that, in the new millennium, politics are no longer the way
rap groups ruffle feathers. Whatever the case,
Rhino's
The Very Best of Brand Nubian is an essential summation of the uncompromisingly pro-black, often very positive group's career.
Grand Puba, clearly their most inventive lyricist, departed after their excellent debut,
One for All, and was definitely missed on subsequent albums. So instead of trying to balance the picture, the compilation wisely leans heavily on
One for All, from whence come seven of the 16 tracks (eight if you count the
Pete Rock remix of
"Slow Down"). We also get two
Grand Puba solo singles and one track from the group's latter-day reunion with
Puba,
"Don't Let It Go to Your Head." That leaves three tracks from
In God We Trust, just one from the coolly received
Everything Is Everything, and another hard-to-find remix (of
"Punks Jump up to Get Beat Down"). One could make the case that
"Step to the Rear" and
"Who Can Get Busy Like This Man" should also have made the cut from the debut, instead of the two remixes, but then again, there had to be a decent reason to buy this comp, even if all the post-
One for All material included here is worth rescuing. As for the group's politics, the "white devil" fixation on
"Drop the Bomb" and
"Wake Up (Reprise in the Sunshine)" can sound paranoid to non-believers. But really, it shouldn't detract from the group's numerous strengths, which make
The Very Best of Brand Nubian an extremely high-quality listen.
~Steve Huey, All Music Guide