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After nearly a decade hiatus from the debut of his first and only released solo album, Q-Tip has come back to the forefront of rap with a revival and rebirth in the hip-hop community he calls, “The Renaissance.”
Q-Tip's 2003 solo album, "Kamaal the Abstract," was never released by Arista, which doubted its commercial appeal. That decision touched off a period in which the Queens, N.Y., native jumped from label to label in the middle of creating new work. Now he returns with his second official solo album, "The Renaissance," a casually complex, brilliantly executed work of neo-soul made for the street
After a ridiculously long and convoluted voyage, the former Tribe MC finally releases his first solo album in nine years-- and it's a tight refining of both classic boom-bap and fusion experimentalism. read more
T-Pain Thr33 Ringz *** The public face of Auto-Tune extremism (a pitch correction software program), Florida native T-Pain has cashed in with a vengeance, riding the robotic vocal effect to multi-platinum success via singles like Buy U a Drank . His third studio album, saddled with a wholly appropriate circus theme, is rife with superstars Ludacris, Ciara, Mary J. Blige, Diddy, T.I., Lil
Remember Gomez? Bluesy, Beck-y Brits, possibly the biggest underdogs to win the Mercury Music Prize? If my hype files aren't missing any RAM, I believe they were promoted as the "band that could do a set between Phish and Pavement." This was -- as is the nature of hype -- a generalization.
Q-Tip "The Renaissance" Universal Motown Oh Q-Tip, how hip-hop fans have missed you so. The Abstract Poet is back with his second released solo effort, "The Renaissance," and it could not have dropped at a better time. The album is a rush of originality in a ringtone rap world, taking hip-hop back to its soulful, jazz origins.
Q-Tip is back with his first solo release of the decade, and “The Renaissance” is aptly named. “Johnny is Dead” establishes its ingenuity and fresh feel, “Johnny” being a reference to Q’s birth name, replaced during his mid-1990s conversion to Islam. Lines like, “what good is an ear if a q-tip isn’t in it?” assure you the clever lyricist has not lost much through the years. As comfortable as