Pink Siifu - NEGRO DELUXE Vinyl LP
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Album Facts
Pink Siifu - NEGRO DELUXE Vinyl LP
More punk than soulful rap, fueled by spiritual jazz & poetry
Price $36.00
Format 3xLP
Label Pink Siifu
UPC 754003284423
Color Black
Year November 24 2023
Condition
Media condition
New/Mint
Sleeve condition
New/Mint
Album Facts
More punk than soulful rap, fueled by spiritual jazz & poetry
Price $36.00
Format 3xLP
Label Pink Siifu
UPC 754003284423
Color Black
Year November 24 2023
Condition
Media condition
New/Mint
Sleeve condition
New/Mint
On his album NEGRO DELUXE Siifu trades in soulful rap for punk, fueled by the Black experience in America followed by spiritual jazz and poetry. A beautiful chaotic collage of sounds that reflect the black manâs thoughts on the day-to-day. It doesnât take long to reach the heart of NEGRO, Pink Siifuâs new album. Itâs an aggressive collection of hardcore punk and free jazz, with bold lyrics that encourage shooting back at trigger-happy law enforcement. This album profoundly communicated the anger of an African-American community beset by police violence a month before the murder of George Floyd lit the streets on fire. In April 2021, he revisited the project with NEGRO DELUXE, which doubled the length of the original.
Pink Siifu tells Bomb Magazine âafter we were done mastering and mixing, Zeroh was like, âYo, NEGRO is like fire, and NEGRO DELUXE is like smokeâŚ.So I would characterize NEGRO DELUXE as, like, after youâre angry, after youâve punched a wall, after you beat somebody up, whatever, how do I channel that into something else? How do I just let it go? I feel like NEGRO DELUXE is that, for real, in a nutshell. Itâs like the chaos calmed down after all the fireâs gone and the smoke is in the air.â
It isnât anything like ensley, Siifuâs breakthrough 2018 LP. Where that record used mid-tempo soul and hip-hop to score his upbringing, NEGRO is a riotous mix calling for Black revolution. Itâs also the most fearless project in his growing discography. NEGRO harkens back to 1992, to Ice-Tâs thrash metal band Body Count, song âCop Killerâ.
This album is meant to remind us of Rodney King, Racist Cops, The Black Panther Party, and Christopher Dorner, the ex-L.A. police officer who, in 2013, went on a violent shooting spree against his former colleagues and their family members due to seeing his own policeman violate the people there supposed to be protecting. âItâs about America, Itâs about the trauma that comes from the flag. Itâs about understanding that itâs okay to be angry.â
In the album, originally titled âTo Be Angryâ, Siifu started crafting NEGRO after listening to old Afrocentric jazz and watching clips of novelist and poet Amiri Baraka and civil rights activist Stokely Carmichael, reading Sun Raâs sci-fi poetry book, The Planet Is Doomed, and started studying Bad Brains, June Tyson, Death, Ras G, and many others.
Pink Siifu tells Bomb Magazine âafter we were done mastering and mixing, Zeroh was like, âYo, NEGRO is like fire, and NEGRO DELUXE is like smokeâŚ.So I would characterize NEGRO DELUXE as, like, after youâre angry, after youâve punched a wall, after you beat somebody up, whatever, how do I channel that into something else? How do I just let it go? I feel like NEGRO DELUXE is that, for real, in a nutshell. Itâs like the chaos calmed down after all the fireâs gone and the smoke is in the air.â
It isnât anything like ensley, Siifuâs breakthrough 2018 LP. Where that record used mid-tempo soul and hip-hop to score his upbringing, NEGRO is a riotous mix calling for Black revolution. Itâs also the most fearless project in his growing discography. NEGRO harkens back to 1992, to Ice-Tâs thrash metal band Body Count, song âCop Killerâ.
This album is meant to remind us of Rodney King, Racist Cops, The Black Panther Party, and Christopher Dorner, the ex-L.A. police officer who, in 2013, went on a violent shooting spree against his former colleagues and their family members due to seeing his own policeman violate the people there supposed to be protecting. âItâs about America, Itâs about the trauma that comes from the flag. Itâs about understanding that itâs okay to be angry.â
In the album, originally titled âTo Be Angryâ, Siifu started crafting NEGRO after listening to old Afrocentric jazz and watching clips of novelist and poet Amiri Baraka and civil rights activist Stokely Carmichael, reading Sun Raâs sci-fi poetry book, The Planet Is Doomed, and started studying Bad Brains, June Tyson, Death, Ras G, and many others.