Albums by A Tribe Called Quest
ALBUMWe Got It from Here... Thank You 4 Your ServiceA Tribe Called Quest
ALBUMThe Love Movement (Deluxe Edition)A Tribe Called Quest
ALBUMBeats, Rhymes & LifeA Tribe Called Quest
ALBUMMidnight MaraudersA Tribe Called Quest
ALBUMThe Low End TheoryA Tribe Called Quest
ALBUMPeople's Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm (25th Anniversary Edition)A Tribe Called Quest
A Tribe Called Quest's Popular Music Videos
The Space Program
A Tribe Called Quest
Electric Relaxation
A Tribe Called Quest
Scenario
A Tribe Called Quest
Check the Rhime
A Tribe Called Quest
Award Tour
A Tribe Called Quest
Can I Kick It? (J. Cole Remix)
A Tribe Called Quest
Can I Kick It?
A Tribe Called Quest
We the People....
A Tribe Called Quest
Oh My God
A Tribe Called Quest
Jazz (We've Got) Buggin' Out
A Tribe Called Quest
Artist Playlists
A Tribe Called Quest Essentials
You can't talk about “real hip-hop” without mentioning A Tribe Called Quest.
Q-Tip’s Playlist
Inspired by A Tribe Called Quest
Their kinetic, jazz-influenced hip-hop inspired a generation of rappers and producers.
Artist Biography
With their lush production, inventive rhymes, and quirky personalities, A Tribe Called Quest rewrote the rules for hip-hop with their legendary run in the 1990s—and created a template that artists have followed decades later. Queens-bred childhood friends Q-Tip, Phife Dawg, Ali Shaheed Muhammad, and Jarobi White formed the group in the late '80s, and later teamed up with Afrocentric acts like Queen Latifah, Jungle Brothers, and De La Soul to create the Native Tongues collective. A Tribe Called Quest crafted diasporic music that warmly connected different generations of Blackness by merging jazz, soul, and funk samples—from artists like Grover Washington Jr., Stevie Wonder, and Sly & The Family Stone—and righteous rhymes that depicted contemporary life with playful sophistication. Songs like "Bonita Applebum," "Check the Rhime," and "Scenario" challenged the hypermasculinity of gangsta rap, produced with live instruments, and groomed electric lyrical chemistry. Albums The Low End Theory and Midnight Marauders paved a new lane for alternative rap, with musicians like Kanye West, Pharrell, and The Roots citing the group's influence to draw outside of hip-hop's pre-established lines. Tribe enlisted Detroit rap luminary J Dilla for their next two projects before disbanding in 1998 to focus on solo endeavors. But nearly 20 years later, Phife Dawg died, reuniting the remaining members for another LP, We got it from Here... Thank You 4 Your service. The timely comeback was crafted amid the budding Black Lives Matter movement and released the week Donald Trump was elected president in 2016, addressing xenophobia and personal loss while seizing the joy they had left—a fitting eulogy for their multidimensional legacy.
Hometown
Queens, NY, United States
Genre
Hip-Hop/Rap