The Low End Theory
This article is about the influential
alternative hip hop album by
A Tribe Called Quest. There is also a
rock band named
The Low End Theory.
In animation, the low end theory is is technique in which tools ordinarily used for making 3 dimensional video games are used to make movies.
The Low End Theory is the critically acclaimed
alternative hip hop sophomore album by
A Tribe Called Quest, released on
September 24,
1991 (see
1991 in music) on
Jive Records. A pairing of Q-Tip and Phife Dawg's lyrics, at turns socially charged, abstract and concretely grounded in reality, with groovy
jazz samples,
The Low End Theory became a watershed album in the history of
hip hop. The album established
alternative rap as a definable genre, distinguished by aware, often abstract or political lyrics, and a light-hearted sense of humor, along with jazz and other unusual sampling sources.
The Low End Theory transformed alternative hip hop, leading the way from the jazzy pioneers like
De La Soul towards future artists like
Common and
The Roots. The album includes guests
De La Soul (fellow members of the
Native Tongues Posse) and
Leaders of the New School.
The beats are widely different from the-then about-to-explode G funk sound being pioneered on the West Coast, and shares more of an influence with East Coast artists like Public Enemy. With dominant basslines and sampled jazz horn solos, The Low End Theory has a distinctive sound that met the high expectations after their critically acclaimed debut People's Instinctive Travels and Paths of Rhythm.
The Low End Theory includes instrumental work from several pioneering musicians, including upright bassist Ron Carter ("Verses from the Abstract").
Topics include the music industry's exploitation of musicians ("Rap Promoter", "Show Business"), music ("Excursions"), date rape ("The Infamous Date Rape"), violence in hip hop ("Vibes and Stuff") and the beauty of jazz ("Jazz (We've Got)").
The song "Scenario" helped break future hip hop star Busta Rhymes into the mainstream, partially as a result of its popular music video on MTV.
The Low End Theory was the album of the year for Spex magazine (also #10 on the 100 Albums of the Century). more awards. It was #32 on Spin magazine's Top 90 Albums of the Nineties. It also made it onto the unorderd Top 100 Best Rap Albums of All Time (The Source), 100 Essential Albums of the 20th Century (Vibe magazine) and Essential Recordings of the 90s (Rolling Stone).
Track listing
- "Excursions" (Q Tip) (samples the Last Poets) - 3:53
- "Buggin' Out" (Muhammed/Phife Dawg/Q Tip) - 3:38
- "Rap Promoter" (Muhammed/Q Tip) - 2:13
- "Butter" (Muhammad/Q Tip) - 3:39
- "Verses from the Abstract" (Q Tip) - 3:59
- "Show Business" (Ali/Anselm/Dechalus/Kirkland/Murphy/Q Tip) (with Lord Jammer and Sadat X) - 3:53
- "Vibes and Stuff" (Phife Dawg/Q Tip) (samples Grant Green's "Let's Take It to the People") - 4:18
- "The Infamous Date Rape" (Muhammad/Phife Dawg/Q Tip) - 2:54
- "Check the Rhime" (Ali/Phife Dawg/Q Tip) (samples Average White Band) - 3:36
- "Everything Is Fair" (Ali/Anselm/Phife Dawg/Q Tip) (samples Funkadelic) - 2:59
- "Jazz (We've Got)" (Ali/Phife Dawg/Q Tip) - 4:09
- "Skypager" (Ali/Phife Dawg/Q Tip) - 2:13
- "What?" (Q Tip) - 2:29
- "Scenario" (Higgins/Jackson/Muhammad/Phife Dawg/Q Tip/Smith) (with Leaders of the New School) - 4:10
Personnel
- Ron Carter - Bass
- A Tribe Called Quest - Arranger, Producer, Mixing
- Skeff Anselm - Producer
- Charlie Brown
- Busta Rhymes
- Pete Christensen - Engineer
- Diamond D
- Eric Gast - Engineer
- Joe Grant - Photography
- Rod Hui - Engineer
- Gerard Julien - Engineer
- Tim Latham - Engineer
- Ali Shaheed Muhammad - DJ
- Bob Power - Engineer, Mixing
- Q-Tip - Vocals
- Anthony Saunders - Engineer
- Jamey Staub - Engineer
- Sadat X
- Lord Jamar
- Tom Coyne - Mastering
- Jim Kvoriac - Engineer
- Dan Wood - Engineer
- Dinco D.
- Marc Singleton - Engineer
- Zombart JK - Design
- Phife Dawg - Vocals
- Christopher Shaw - Engineer
Chart positions
Billboard Music Charts (North America) - album
1991 The Billboard 200 No. 45
1991 Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums No. 13
Billboard (North America) - singles
1991 Check The Rhime Hot Rap Singles No. 1
1991 Check The Rhime Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks No. 59
1991 Check The Rhime Hot Dance Music/Maxi-Singles Sales No. 28
1992 Scenario The Billboard Hot 100 No. 57
1992 Jazz (We ve Got) Hot Rap Singles No. 19
1992 Scenario Hot Rap Singles No. 6
1992 Scenario Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Trackd No. 42
1997 Scenario Hot Dance Music/Maxi-Singles Sales No. 34
External links