Modern hipâhop and R&B music can both arguably be divided into preâ and postâA Tribe Called Quest, and the musical efforts of its lead MC and producer Kamaal Ibn John Fareedâbetter known to the world as QâTip. Consider the jazzy sampling, laidâback tempos and bohoâchic vibe he introduced, then mull over the bohemian posturing and sounds of the neoâsoul movement, plus any rap music that shies away from hardcore posturing. All roads lead back to ATCQ and the beats, rhymes and life of one man: QâTip. And now the time is ripe for The Renaissance, the Abstract MCâs first solo album in nine years.
Back when rap production was all about James Brown samples and dense, agitated sonic collages, QâTip was digging deeper into the record crates for snatches of standâup bass and obscure jazz. The influence of that first sonic renaissance is still being heard. âI see the Tribe legacy as one of the strongest in modern music,â QâTip admits. âFrom us came so many artists, like Common, Mos Def, Talib Kweli, the Fugees and Kanye West. I feel very honored to have been able to contribute in such a way that, 20 years later, it still is a reference point.â Produced primarily by QâTip with plenty of live instrumentation and a love fixation, The Renaissance is a stark portrait of the artist as an elder statesman.
One listen to the frenetic drumming and strutting live bassline of a track like âManWomanBoogieâ reveals that QâTip is on a mission to create original music as timeless as the tracks he used to sample once upon a time. Itâs also obvious that the title of his latest album is no accident. âThe Renaissance is significant because for some time now people have questioned the integrity of hipâhop,â he reveals. âI feel like the time is ideal for something that has a revisionist spirit to it.â
Taking the same type of nonconformist risks as Stevie Wonder, John Lennon and the mavericks of other music genres, QâTip has always gone left when it comes to his position in hipâhop culture. Peopleâs Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm, the 1990 debut of A Tribe Called Quest, introduced QâTipâs iconoclast stance. The 20âyearâold emceed about vegetarianism, French expatriates and domestic violence at a time when (then as now) other more standard rappersâ topics were marching lockstep in comparison. Yet he always made absolutely sure to charm the Bonita Applebums and practice the art of moving butts. The Renaissance goes to show that the more things change, the more they stay the same.
On âLife Is Better,â singer Norah Jones helps QâTip give a unique spin on the hipâhop love song: a love of hipâhop itself, that is. âThe state of hipâhop is in conception now,â he says, discussing the regeneration and renaissance of the culture. âSomething else is happening to it and thereâs a new approach, a rebirth thatâs going on. One of the many cool things about the digital world is that it has grown the appetite for good music. Now people can find an obscure Beatles song or an EPMD remix online, so everyone is becoming more hip.â QâTipâs love of hipâhop only rivals his love for the opposite sex, an adoration thatâs clear and evident on tracks like âBelieveâ featuring DâAngelo, or The Renaissanceâs first single, âGettinâ Upâ: âI like to watch everybody gravitate towards you/Your magnetic presences make them come through/The same way you got them, you got me too.â
Love talk is all around The Renaissance, but QâTip remains as characteristically diverse as ever. âFight/Loveâ with Raphael Saadiq, for example, alludes to the everâpresent realities of the Iraq War. The sole track handled by a producer other than QâTip himself is âMove,â a hyperâkinetic pastiche of dicedâup Jackson 5âs âDancing Machineâ courtesy of the late, great J. Dilla. âA Tribe Called Quest is no more,â says QâTip, putting a cap on rumors sparked by their recent reunion shows on the recent Rock the Bells Tour. Yet hardcore fans will still recall J. Dillaâs participation in The Ummah, the production team (also including QâTip and DJ Ali Shaheed Muhammad) that handled full chores on the final two ATCQ albums. âMoveâ comes closest to reviving the headânodding kick of A Tribe Called Quest, a fitting testament to the funky skills of James âJ. Dillaâ Yancey.
QâTip is in his own extremely capable hands for the remainder of The Renaissance. Long known as a grand talent behind recordingâstudio mixing boards, QâTip has blessed a number of diverse artists with beats throughout his 20âyear career: Nas, Mariah Carey, Mobb Deep, Whitney Houston. Since his start on the Jungle Brothersâ 1988 âBlack Is Black,â music fans have waited on solo QâTip in one form or another. His 1999 Amplified debut albumâproduced largely by J. Dilla and featuring the careerâdefining hipâpop hits âVivrant Thingâ and âBreathe and Stopââstill left many wondering how QâTip would sound without commercial constraints. His nineâyear time delay (Kamaal the Abstract was recorded but went unreleased in the interim) may bring to mind other missingâinâaction masters of the hipâhop craft, but QâTip insists itâs all good. âThere hasnât been a delay,â he says, âand I think I can speak for myself, Lauryn Hill, Erykah Badu and DâAngelo when I say that we make music when the spirit is with us. We are a lot who are very observant as well as introspective. We paint intense, colorful pictures, so it takes time.â
Some of that time has been spent chasing the acting jones QâTip established locking lips with Janet Jackson in director John Singletonâs 1993 Poetic Justice. In films like Disappearing Acts (2000), Prison Song (2001) and Spike Leeâs She Hate Me (2004), QâTip expresses another side of his renaissanceâman persona, holding his own against actors like Sanaa Lathan and Anthony Mackie.
âWhen I recorded my first album, I was 19,â QâTip says. âSo I was very much in the moment and did not think about my career past the following year. I knew I loved what I did and had big fun, but I never imagined this.â The Renaissance marks the return of one of the most recognizable voices and individualist figures in all of hipâhop. At this moment for change in the hipâhop nation and the nation at large, The Renaissance could not have come at a more appropriate moment. Leave it to QâTip to be right on time.




2 Comments
Q-Tip - Renaissance Rap remix (feat. Busta Rhymes, Raekwon and Lil Wayne) | nialler9 Music Blog | MP3s | Videos | Reviews
February 1, 2009 @ 10:17 pm
[...] Q-Tip makes his debut Irish performance (with a full live band) on the 13th of March in the Button Factory. Go. [...]
Q-Tip - Renaissance Rap remix (feat. Busta Rhymes, Raekwon and Lil Wayne) | Wiz Kid Reports
February 2, 2009 @ 2:03 am
[...] Q-Tip makes his debut Irish performance (with a full live band) on the 13th of March in the Button Factory. Go. [...]