Artist interviews, music reviews: Ink Blot Magazine

about

archives

contact

links

A Tribe Called Quest
A Tribe Called Quest

A Tribe Called Quest: The Low End Theory

Listen To Real Audio
A Tribe Called Quest,
"Luck Of Lucien"

A Tribe Called Quest at a glance...

Hometown: Queens, NY
Formed: circa 1988

Members:
Q-Tip (Jonathan Davis) -MC
Phife (Malik Taylor) -MC
Jarobi White -MC
Ali Shaheed Muhammed -DJ

Related Artists :
Jungle Brothers, De La Soul, Beastie Boys, Leaders of the New School, Flipmode Squad, Black Star, Dee-Lite, Mos Def

Notes:
Part of the Native Tongue collective along with De La Soul and the Jungle Brothers, Tribe defined a left-of-center movement of positive, thoughtful hip hop amid the growing popularity of gangster rap in the early '90s. With the "sound provider," Ali Shaheed Muhammed, on the turntables, MCs Q-Tip, Phife and the often-MIA Jarobi steadily tightened and developed their lyrical interplay over five albums. Debut People's Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm, featured the hits "Can I Kick It" and "Bonita Applebum" and sold 500,000 copies. The group released The Low End Theory in 1991, marking a move to more bass-heavy beats, with samples from the Average White Band and Funkadelic, and a tighter lyrical approach. Midnight Marauders came out two years later amid the height of gangster rap, and the album was laced with verbal fronts on gun toting but still reached platinum. By 1993, the Questers and De La Soul had made significant crossovers into the collegiate and non-traditional hip-hop audience, marked by Tribe's 1994 appearance on the Lollapalooza tour. Beats, Rhymes & Life didn't quite meet the enormous expectations placed upon it, but nevertheless contained some subtle, lyrically complex tracks. The band's fifth release, The Love Movement, continued Tribe's minimalist approach to beats and rhymes, and marked the finale for one of hip-hop music's truly innovative groups.

A Tribe Called Quest

A Tribe Called Quest
People's Instinctive Travels and
the Paths of Rhythm

Zomba, Released 1990
A Tribe Called Quest
A Tribe Called Quest

One of the most unique hip-hop groups ever made their first record their most unique. A Tribe Called Quest followed up Native Tongue-mates, De La Soul's Three Feet High & Rising with their own blend of Afro-centric positivity, and this album is a perfect display of the playfulness present during the early years of the Native Tongue collective.

The first single off the album, the subtle diatribe against spousal abuse, "Description of a Fool," squarely positioned Q-Tip, Phife and Ali Shaheed Muhammed as icons of hip-hop righteousness without being self-righteous. Throughout People's Instinctive Travels, they substitute a soapbox mentality with a giddy, playful approach that doesn't let consciousness take the fun out of the music (see the vegan jam "Ham 'n' Eggs"). These aren't just party jams, but you'll definitely be bobbing your head by mid-opening-verse of the first track, "Push It Along." "Can I Kick It" takes a walk on the wild side and opened the floodgates for Lou Reed hooks in hip hop, while "Bonita Applebum" showcases the nasaly, prepubescent Q-Tip's ode to a real-life, high school love interest. Tribe's loose, lengthy (70 minutes plus) debut is as innovative a record as the hip hop genre has produced.

If you like People's Instinctive Travels, check out:
A Tribe Called Quest The Low End Theory
A Tribe Called Quest Midnight Marauders
Q-Tip Amplified
De La Soul Three Feet High & Rising
The Roots Do You Want More?
Jungle Brothers Done By The Forces Of Nature
A Tribe Called Quest

-- Jim Welte

Ink Blot Home
about | archives | contact | links
A Tribe Called Quest


join our free newsletter!

Copyright © 1997-2002 Ink Blot Magazine. All rights reserved.