- Performer A Tribe Called Quest
- Title The Low End Theory
- Date of release 1991
- Style Conscious
- Other formats AC3 APE VOC DMF MP4 RA MPC
- Genre Hip-hop & RAP
- Size MP3 1456 mb
- Size FLAC 1883 mb
- Rating: 4.5
- Votes: 860
Any 30-second snippet of The Low End Theory will go further to convince of the album's greatness than anything I can write. I could easily write an entire book on this one album and still feel like I've hardly said anything. Still, I could do worse things with my time than try to capture even an iota of the enthusiasm I feel each time I play this album. The Low End Theory is a remarkable experience, as aesthetically and emotionally rewarding as any work of music I can think o. .The album was rated: 5 Mic Album award from The Source (1991). Midnight Marauders remains A Tribe Called Quest's fastest-selling album; it was certified platinum on January 11, 1995, less than two years after its release. The album's success allowed the group a greater financial freedom and the members took a short break before the recording of their next album.
The Low End Theory is A Tribe Called Quests’s sophomore studio album, which cemented the rap group as one of the most influential rap artists of all time. After their debut album People’s Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm failed to put up the sales numbers the Tribe expected, the group decided to revamp their style on the second album. Phife Dawg takes on an expanded role on the rhyming side of things, and Q-Tip is as sharp as ever while dropping knowledge about positivity and black pride, but it is the production of this album that establishes it as a classic
Album · 1991 · 14 Songs. A Tribe Called Quest’s second album honors the jazz aesthetic and pushes it into new frontiers. On Verses from the Abstract, Q-Tip freestyles as Ron Carter plucks a loping yet sturdy bass rhythm. Check the Rhime evokes a bebop sound, while Jazz (We’ve Got) cribs a Grant Green guitar melody. Q-Tip’s and Phife’s voices are remarkably different-the former sounds casual and thoughtful, the latter bracingly direct-yet they blend harmoniously. It all ends with "Scenario," a boisterous soundclash between Tribe and Leaders of the New School. The Low End Theory A Tribe Called Quest
While most of the players in the jazz-rap movement never quite escaped the pasted-on qualities of their vintage samples, with The Low End Theory, A Tribe Called Quest created one of the closest and most brilliant fusions of jazz atmosphere and hip-hop attitude ever recorded. The rapping by Q-Tip and Phife Dawg could be the smoothest of any rap record ever heard; the pair are so in tune with each other, they sound like flip sides of the same personality, fluidly trading off on rhymes, with the former earning his nickname (the Abstract) and Phife concerning himself with the more concrete issues.
Yet The Low End Theory took Tribe to that fabled "next level" hip hop acts always bang on about by performing the trick every d artist most dearly wants to execute. They crossed over without selling out - in fact, they crossed over while retrenching. Contrary to what Weiss and colleagues thought at the time,. is harder-edged, darker, and, in terms of its adherence to established hip hop codes, actually a little bit conservative. Not that that's a bad thing, of course
All through the album the beats are deep and the bass is funky without being overbearing. There are a few tracks that are less than superb, but the album is still a classic. Buggin' Out," "Butter," "Rap Promoter," "Rhymes and Stuff," "Jazz," and "Scenario" are all perfect. All the tracks on this album either have your head nodding, hips shaking, or mind working. All in all, this is a classic album. What De La Soul started, A Tribe Called Quest perfected. The Low End Theory ranked in Rolling Stone's list of the 500 greatest albums of all time, ranked in Spin Magazine's "90 Greatest Albums of the '90s", and was the album of the year for Spex magazine (also on the 100 Albums of the Century). It also made it onto the 100 Essential Albums of the 20th Century (Vibe magazine) and Essential Recordings of the 90s (Rolling Stone).
If A Tribe Called Quest had stopped with their first album, People's Instinctive Travels And The Paths Of Rhythm, they’d still be regarded as a seminal hip hop act. For one summer in 1990, alongside the strains of Madchester, the streets resounded to the sound of Can I Kick It? and I Left My Wallet In El Segundo. The laid back style of Q-Tip and Phife Dawg over the jazz sampleology of Ali Shaheed Muhammad, along with the daisy age raps of De La Soul, almost single-handedly defined the alternative rap scene, where intelligence and musical nouse replaced guns, hos and bragging. Acclaimed as one of the best 100 albums of all time by Rolling Stone, The Low End Theory remains one of hip hop’s defining moments and deserves to be in everyone’s record collection. Probably now more than eve. his work is licensed under a Creative Commons Licence.
A Tribe Called Quest - Check The Rhime / Award Tour download flac
The Jackson 5 / A Tribe Called Quest feat. Faith Evans - Back Again (Drum & Bass Mix) / Stressed Out (Tribed Out Mix) download flac
A Tribe Called Quest - Beats, Rhymes And Life download flac
A Tribe Called Quest - People's Instinctive Travels And The Paths Of Rhythm download flac
A Tribe Called Quest - Rare And Unreleased Instrumentals Vol.2 download flac
A Tribe Called Quest - Untitled download flac
A Tribe Called Quest - Midnight Marauders download flac
Fu-Schnickens - Greatest Hits download flac
A Tribe Called Quest - Oh My God download flac
Various - New School Vs. Old School Vol. 2 download flac