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Headless Heroes Of The Apocalypse Limited, 50th Anniversary Purple Vinyl edition
Eugene Mcdaniels
Headless Heroes Of The Apocalypse Limited, 50th Anniversary Purple Vinyl edition
Eugene Mcdaniels
"It was a black man in open, conscious resistance of
the power that was trying to keep him enslaved--that
was me... At last I had a chance to say what I believed in
my deepest heart about politics, slavery, and about the
genocide of Indians."--Eugene McDaniels a/k/a the left
rev mc d. talking about his album, Headless Heroes of the
Apocalypse, Pitch Magazine 2002
The Nixon administration tanked the album, Questlove
called him a genius, Prince put his music on his Paisley
Park party playlist, Aloe Blacc compared him to Gil-Scott
Heron and Marvin Gaye, but, as he said, "the lyrics are 10
times more potent", Beastie Boys, A Tribe Called Quest,
Pete Rock, Gravediggaz, Busta Rhymes and De La Soul,
among others, sampled tracks from this album, yet most
people have never heard of this psychedelic soul jazz
underground cult classic or of Eugene McDaniels himself.
Now, 50 years after its release, Headless Heroes of
the Apocalypse makes a timely and triumphant return in
a special anniversary edition curated by Eugene's widow,
Karen McDaniels. Inside the newly-created gatefold jacket
are artwork from Eugene's private collection and unseen
writings, while a 4-page insert features handwritten
lyrics, the original lyric sheet, quotes from such admirers
as Vernon Reid, Adrian Younge, Chicano Batman, and
Alphonse Mouzon (who played on the record along with
his Weather Report band-mate Miroslav Vitous) and new
liner notes by Mark Anthony Neal, Professor of African
and African American Studies, Duke University, Author,
and host of Left of Black podcast. Neal's essay gets to the
heart of Headless Heroes: "Years after its release, Headless
Heroes of the Apocalypse remains one of the most blatantly
political musical tomes ever released commercially by a
major label. The album contained critiques of blue-eyed
soul ("Jagger the Dagger"), examined the phenomenon
of "shopping while black" ("Supermarket Blues")--years
before "racial profiling" entered into the national lexicon--
and the futility of race hatred ("Headless Heroes"). "The
Parasite" was McDaniels' most stinging critique though, as he gets at the root of American
Imperialism and its relationship to the genocide of America's native populations."
Real Gone Music's deluxe, 50th anniversary release of Headless Heroes of the Apocalypse is limited
to 1750 copies pressed in purple vinyl, and cut from the original LP master. It's an album whose relevance--
and prescience--reverberate ever more loudly. To quote the title track: "Better get it together, Better
get it together, And see what's happening, To you and you and you"
.. HEROES OF THE APOCALYPSE / 50TH ANN. / PURPLE VINYL
Media | Music VINYL LP (Vinyl) |
Number of records | 1 |
Released | July 16, 2021 |
EAN/UPC | 0848064012009 |
Label | REAL GONE MUSIC USA LP-RGM-1200LE |
Genre | Soul / R&B Soul |
Dimensions | 300 g (Weight (estimated)) |
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