joyfull REBELLION

Friday, August 11, 2006

One of my Favourite Groups of ALL time! I just wanted to keep the LOVE movement ALIVE~!

























































ithout question the most intelligent,
artistic rap group during the '90s, A Tribe Called
Quest jump-started and perfected the hip-hop
alternative to hardcore and gangsta-rap. In essence,
they abandoned the macho posturing which rap music
had been constructed upon, and focused instead on
abstract philosophy and message tracks.
The "sucka MC" theme had never been completely
ignored in hip-hop, but Tribe confronted numerous
black issues — date rape, use of the word nigger, the
trials and tribulations of the rap industry — all of
which overpowered the occasional game of the dozens.
Just as powerful musically, Quest built upon
De La Soul's jazz-rap revolution, basing tracks
around laidback samples instead of the played-out
James Brown-fests which many rappers had made
a cottage industry by the late '80s. Comprised of
Q-Tip, Ali Shaheed Muhammad, and Phife,
A Tribe Called Quest debuted in 1989 and released
their first album People's Instinctive Travels and
the Paths of Rhythm
one year later. Their second
album The Low End Theory was, quite simply,
the most consistent and flowing hip-hop album
ever recorded, though the trio moved closer to
their harder contemporaries on 1993's Midnight
Marauders
. A spot on the 1993 Lollapalooza
Tour
showed their influence with the alternative
crowd — always a bedrock of A Tribe Called Quest's
support — but the group kept it real on 1996's
Beats, Rhymes and Life, a dedication to the streets
and the hip-hop underground.

Tribe Called Quest was formed in 1988,
both Q-Tip (b. Jonathan Davis) and Phife
(b. Malik Taylor) had grown up together in
Queens. Q-Tip met DJ Ali Shaheed Muhammad
while at high school and, after being named by
the Jungle Brothers (who attended the same school),
the trio began performing. A Tribe Called
Quest's recording debut came in August 1989,
when their single "Description of a Fool"
appeared on a tiny area label (though Q-Tip
had previously guested on several tracks from
De La Soul's 3 Feet High and Rising and later
appeared on Deee-Lite's "Groove Is in the Heart").
Signed to Jive Records by 1989, A Tribe Called Quest
released their first album, People's Instinctive
Travels and the Paths of Rhythm
, one year later.
Much like De La Soul, Tribe looked more to jazz
as well as '70s rock for their sample base —
"Can I Kick It?" plundered Lou Reed's classic
"Walk on the Wild Side" and made it viable in
a hip-hop context. No matter how solid their debut
was, second album The Low End Theory outdid all
expectations and has held up as perhaps the
best hip-hop LP of all time.
















he Low End Theory had included several
tracks with props to hip-hop friends, and A Tribe
Called Quest cemented their support of the rap
community with 1993's Midnight Marauders.
The album cover and booklet insert included
the faces of over 50 rappers — including obvious
choices such as De La Soul and the Jungle Brothers
as well as mildsurprises like the Beastie Boys,
Ice-T and Heavy D.
Though impossible to
trump Low End's brilliance, the LP offered
several classics (including Tribe's most infectious
single to date, "Award Tour") and a harder sound
than the first two albums. During the summer
of 1994, A Tribe Called Quest toured as the
obligatory rap act on the Lollapalooza Festival
lineup, and spent a quiet 1995, marked only by
several production jobs for Q-Tip. Returning in
1996 with their fourth LP, Beats, Rhymes and Life,
Tribe showed signs of wear; it was a good album,
but proved less striking than The Low End Theory
or Midnight Marauders. While touring in support
of 1998's The Love Movement , the group announced
their impending break-up. — John Bush For allmusic.com









































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