Power (1988)

Hey!

Welcome to We love the Eighties Community!

Thanks for visiting our 80s paradise. At We Love the Eighties we celebrate everything that made the 1980s unforgettable, from classic music and blockbuster movies to retro TV shows, vintage video games, pop culture icons, and bold fashion trends. Take a trip down memory lane with our Retro Rewind flashbacks, join in on nostalgic forum discussions, and share your favorite memories from the greatest decade ever. Guests can browse a few threads, but full access requires registration. Ready to relive the magic of the 80s? Sign up today and become part of our passionate eighties community.
  • 0
  • 0
  • 0
Title: Power
Artist: Ice-T
Genre: Hip-Hop
Released: 1988

Tracks:
1 - Intro - 1:11
2 - Power - 4:25
3 - Drama - 4:15
4 - Heartbeat - 4:08
5 - The Syndicate - 3:31
6 - Radio Suckers - 4:23
7 - I'm Your Pusher - 5:34
8 - Personal - 3:43
9 - Girls L.G.B.N.A.F. - 2:58
10 - High Rollers - 4:36
11 - Grand Larceny - 3:50
12 - Soul on Ice - 4:41
13 - Outro - 0:39

Overview:
As riveting as Rhyme Pays was, Ice-T did hold back a little and avoided being too consistently sociopolitical. But with the outstanding Power, the gloves came all the way off, and Ice didn't hesitate to speak his mind about the harsh realities of inner-city life. On "Drama," "Soul on Ice" (an homage to his idol Iceberg Slim), "High Rollers," and other gangsta rap gems, Ice embraces a first-person format and raps with brutal honesty about the lives of gang members, players, and hustlers. Ice's detractors took the songs out of context, arguing that he was glorifying crime. But he countered that, in fact, he was sending out an anti-crime message in a subliminal fashion and stressed that the criminals he portrayed ended up dead or behind bars. Another track that some misconstrued was "I'm Your Pusher," an interpretation of Curtis Mayfield's "Pusherman" that doesn't promote the use of drugs, but uses double entendres to make an anti-drug statement. (Ice has always been vehemently outspoken in his opposition to drugs.) In the next few years, gangsta rap would degenerate into nothing more than cheap exploitation and empty clichés, but in Ice's hands, it was as informative as it was captivating.
Music information in first post provided by The AudioDB
Back
Top