KRS-One, Sound of da Police episode artwork

EPISODE · Apr 29, 2026 · 58 MIN

KRS-One, Sound of da Police

from Music and Revolution: Songs That Changed the World

Most of us think we know “Sound of da Police.”But for many listeners, it lands as a hook before it lands as an argument.In this episode of Music and Revolution, host Rolf Straubhaar takes us back to 1993, in the aftermath of the Rodney King beating and the Los Angeles uprisings, when debates about policing, race, and power were boiling over across the United States. In that moment, Bronx MC KRS-One released a track that didn’t just protest police violence—it offered a historical explanation for it.Drawing on KRS-One’s evolution from battle rapper to self-described “Teacher,” this episode traces how “Sound of da Police” emerged from the worlds of hip-hop, Black political thought, and street-level experience. From the early days of Boogie Down Productions to the rise of “conscious rap,” we follow how KRS built a platform that treated music as education—turning songs into classrooms and verses into arguments.Verse by verse, we break down the song’s central claim: that modern policing in the United States cannot be understood apart from its historical roots in slave patrols and systems of racial control. Through its now-iconic “overseer/officer” comparison, the track compresses centuries of history into a few lines, challenging listeners to hear continuity where they might otherwise see isolated incidents.Along the way, we connect KRS-One’s work to broader conversations about policing, from the War on Drugs to mass incarceration, and trace how the song has been taken up across decades—from the 1990s to the present era of viral video and protest movements.This is not just a song about police brutality.It’s a song about history, and about the systems that make certain kinds of violence possible.In this episode:Who KRS-One is, and how he became “The Teacher” of hip-hopHow “Sound of da Police” connects modern policing to slavery and historical systems of controlThe influence of Rodney King, the LA uprisings, and 1990s policing debatesThe song’s deeper argument about power, surveillance, and structural inequalityHow hip-hop became a form of public education and political critiqueThe afterlife of the song—from protest anthem to pop culture referenceSometimes, the most uncomfortable songs are the ones that explain the most.Subscribe to Music and Revolution for weekly episodes exploring the songs that didn’t just reflect history—they helped shape it.KeywordsKRS-OneSound of da Policehip hop historyconscious rappolice brutalityRodney KingLA riots 1992mass incarcerationprotest songspolitical hip hopBlack historyAmerican history podcastmusic and social change

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KRS-One, Sound of da Police

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This episode was published on April 29, 2026.

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Most of us think we know “Sound of da Police.”But for many listeners, it lands as a hook before it lands as an argument.In this episode of Music and Revolution, host Rolf Straubhaar takes us back to 1993, in the aftermath of the Rodney King beating...

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