Nu Blaxploitation is an album by the American musician Don Byron, released in 1998.[3][4] He is credited with his band, Existential Dred.[5] Byron supported the album with a North American tour.[6]
Time called the album "overtly political funk and rap" full of "dark, fertile electric grooves."[19] The Chicago Reader deemed it "an incisive collection of loose-limbed funk, acerbic spoken word."[10]Stereo Review considered Nu Blaxploitation "a mix of old-school groove, social protest, and surrealistic asides—just the kind of ambitious sprawl you'd expect from someone who dedicates his album to both Latin/funk purveyors Mandrill and classical composer Arnold Schoenberg (among others)."[20]
Jazziz wrote that the album "unfolds like a series of existential concerns set to a backbeat—a churlish, unapologetic bit of brilliance that vamps, grooves, strolls, and riffs on several levels at once."[21]Newsday labeled it "a one-of-a-kind testimony on what it's like to be a caring, daring African-American intellectual-bohemian at the tail end of the 20th Century."[22]The Washington Post stated that "Byron has writer Sadiq tiresomely spell out his points with words that recall the sophomoric scribblings of punk poet Henry Rollins."[23]
AllMusic praised the "somber, chamber jazz arrangements and a bevy of funky, swinging charts."[16]