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award tour rap genius

I love this song!!! it's one of my favorites by my favorite undergrround/hip-hop rap group. It's just giving love to everyone in the world! And their lyrics were always clever, and true. It's about how they spread hip-hop love to the world... and I can get with that! Spread the love, ya'll!!!

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this song is boppin', and so good!

no one has commented on this? a tribe called quest is excellent, it's sad man

The last two lines from Phife are just sicknasty!!!

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A Tribe Called Quest: 20 Essential Songs

Through 10 years and a handful of critically adored albums, rappers A Tribe Called Quest  went from spitting fly routines on Linden Boulevard in Queens to mapping out the electrically relaxed blueprint for wave after wave of abstract alterna-rap bohemians — laying the footprints for Digable Planets, the Fugees, Mos Def and Talib Kweli, the Black Eyed Peas, Lupe Fiasco and even superfan Kanye West.

Together, Q-Tip, Phife Dawg, Jarobi and Ali Shaheed Muhammad cemented the link between jazz’s grooves and hip-hop’s future funk, provided a show-stealing scenario to launch their friend Busta Rhymes to fame and incubated a young producer named Jay Dee who would influence a generation of beatmakers on his own. A freewheeling trip of Lou Reed licks, tales of lost wallets, giddy scratching, Ron Carter bass assists and salty punchlines, their body of work was like nothing hip-hop had seen before, or has since.

In remembrance of Phife Dawg, who passed away Tuesday at age 45, here are the pioneering rap group’s 20 essential tracks.

De La Soul, “Buddy (Native Tongue Decision)” feat. Q-Tip, Phife Dawg, Jungle Brothers, Queen Latifah, Monie Love (1989)

Tribe Called Quest; Essential Songs

While Q-Tip had been smoothly making the rounds on Jungle Brothers and De La Soul albums, this all-star posse cut marked the debut appearance of Phife Dawg, combining the talents of both A Tribe Called Quest MCs on one track for the first time. “We was in the studio and just wanted to invite some people on there,” De La Soul’s Dave told Brian Coleman in  Check the Technique . “The closest people to what we was doing at the time was the Jungle Brothers and Tribe. And Latifah was a labelmate on Tommy Boy. It just became a family affair.” The casual session end up giving shape to the Native Tongues crew, a loose group of hip-hop bohemians that would soon define the aesthetic of Nineties rap’s experimental, Afrocentric wing.

Jungle Brothers, “Doin’ Our Own Dang” feat. De La Soul, Monie Love, A Tribe Called Quest, Queen Latifah (1989)

Tribe Called Quest; Essential Songs

Before Tribe dropped their debut album, every Q-Tip appearance on a Native Tongues track was an event, and his contribution to this partying posse cut was no exception. Tip doesn’t jump on the beat like a hungry upstart. Instead, he eases in with his first line — a coolly contemplative “A tree is growing” — then gets faster and fancier as he rhymes. He doesn’t dominate the track, because that’s not what Native Tongues was all about, and in fact, he celebrates his crew rather than himself, ending on a gracious reference to his hosts: “Praise the Lord for the JBs.” But not even the great Monie Love, who boogies into her verse ready for stardom, upstages him here.

“I Left My Wallet in El Segundo” (1990)

Tribe Called Quest; Essential Songs

Though he dubbed himself "The Abstract," Q-Tip had a natural storyteller's gift for concrete lyrical detail from the jump. With a loping beat from the Chamber Brothers' "Funky" setting just the right lazy and comic tone, he precisely  describes every aspect of an ill-fated road trip: the four-foot-high sombrero that Pedro wears, the '74 Dodge Dart, the meal of enchiladas and fruit punch, the wallet's contents of props numbers and jimmy hats, how to drive from the Belt Parkway to the Conduit. Not bad for a kid barely out of his teens rapping about an exotic-sounding place he learned about from its use as a frequent punch line on  Sanford and Son .

“Bonita Applebum” (1990)

Tribe Called Quest; Essential Songs

"This is the song that truly birthed the idea of neo-soul," Questlove told Rolling Stone of People's Instinctive's second single. "It was the coolest love song hip-hop has ever offered us." On the 1990 track, Q-Tip blends the sultry guitars of soul-jazz group RAMP's "Daylight" with the vocals and sitar of Rotary Connection's "Memory Band" for a track that thumps hard enough for the guys but nods to the bedroom for the girls. "I was obsessed with it," Pharrell says in the ATCQ documentary Beats, Rhymes and Life . "I had never heard nothing like that in my whole life." The song exemplified the group's mellow side and turned Q-Tip into a Golden Era sex symbol. Who was Bonita? "Somebody who was refined," Black Thought says in the doc. "But had a fat ass."

“Can I Kick It (Spirit Mix)” (1990)

Tribe Called Quest; Essential Songs

A Tribe Called Quest rode the smooth Herbie Flowers bass line on Lou Reed's 1972 hit "Walk on the Wild Side" to their biggest U.K. hit ever. While the song boosted their profile, it didn't help their bank accounts nearly as much. Said Phife at a London concert in 2011, "Lou Reed, instead of saying no altogether, he was like, 'Yeah, nice! Give me the motherfucking money.' Like Smokey in Friday ." Phife later told Rolling Stone , "to this day, we haven't seen a dime from that song. Still, it helped put the group on the map, and the call-and-response chorus was so instantly indelible that it would end up being chanted everywhere from Jay Z's groundbreaking 1996 debut, Reasonable Doubt , to Robbie Williams' smash single "Rock DJ." The sample-crazed "Spirit Mix" used for the music video raised the funk level to delirious heights.

“If the Papes Come” feat. Afrika Baby Bam (1990)

Tribe Called Quest; Essential Songs

The quintessential A Tribe Called Quest B-side, "If the Papes Come" was the non-LP companion to "Can I Kick It." Borrowing pieces of Slick Rick, Lou Donaldson and some spaced-out dialogue from Axis: Bold as Love by Jimi Hendrix, this track would have a life far beyond flipside status: Listen and imagine where hits like Digable Planets' "Rebirth of Slick (Cool Like Dat)" would be without it.

“Excursions” (1991)

Tribe Called Quest; Essential Songs

The opening track of the jazz-flecked The Low End Theory was one of hip-hop's great statements of purpose, with the crew connecting musical dots between different eras of radical music. Q-Tip took a 6/8 hard-bop lick from Jazz Messengers bassist Mickey Bass and flipped it until it bounced along in hip-hop's funky 4/4. Tribe sample O.G. hip-hop pioneers the Last Poets "("time is running and passing, passing and running") the same way that avowed Tribe fan Kanye West would use Gil-Scott Heron at the end of My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy . In Q-Tip's lyrics, rap is like the bebop that Q-Tip's dad listened to, Bobby Brown is amping like Michael, and the abstract poet is prominent like Shakespeare or Langston Hughes.

"There were a couple of other groups that were sampling jazz at that time," Ali Shaheed Muhammad told Nextbop.com. "Gang Starr, Pete Rock and C.L. Smooth, Main Source … but I think the way that we delivered it was in such a way that had not really been done." As Q-Tip told Brian Coleman in Check the Technique : "At the time, there were some things happening in hip-hop, sonically, that I wanted to expand on, especially with the bottom. … I would always explain how dynamic I wanted things to be by telling Bob [Power, engineer], 'I want this to be more at the bottom, at the low end.' I guess it was a lack of articulation but it got the job done. And that's where the title came from."

“Check the Rhime” (1991)

Tribe Called Quest; Essential Songs

On the first single from ATCQ's seminal The Low End Theory , Q-Tip and Phife Dawg reminisce about their pre-fame days as teenagers spitting in ciphers on Linden Boulevard in the Jamaica neighborhood of Queens. A slightly accelerated looped rhythm from Minnie Riperton's "Baby, This Love I Have" sets a casual, laid-back mood, with Phife spitting verses as if he were lounging in the afternoon sun, swatting away rivals like flies. "A special shout of peace goes out to all my pals, you see/And a middle finger goes to all you punk MCs," he raps. It's also an assertion of Phife's primacy as a rapper. Some doubted his talent after his halting verses on People's Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm , but here, he quickly proves himself Q-Tip's lyrical equal.

“Jazz (We’ve Got)” (1991)

Tribe Called Quest; Essential Songs

The lovely cool-out vibes of "Jazz (We Got)" stem from a tantalizing collaboration between ATCQ and Pete Rock that never came to fruition. One of the potential backing tracks was a Pete Rock arrangement of Jimmy McGriff's "Green Dolphin Street." "Pete had come up with that beat, but the song we were going to do never materialized," Q-Tip told Brian Coleman for the latter's 2005 book Rakim Told Me . "I already had the record he used, but I wanted to get his permission. He was like: ‘Yeah, go ahead.'" Pete Rock isn't mentioned as a co-producer in the Low End Theory credits, but Q-Tip gives him a shout-out at the end of "Jazz." Meanwhile, a lyrical stray shot from Phife Dawg — "Strictly hardcore tracks, not a New Jack Swing" — raised the ire of Teddy Riley protégés Wreckx-n-Effect, best known at the time for the lame pop-rap hit "New Jack Swing" (and, later, the even worse "Rump Shaker"). Wreckx-n-Effect exacted revenge for Phife's diss by surrounding Q-Tip at a 1993 Naughty by Nature concert and punching him in the eye. The Zulu Nation and the Nation of Islam subsequently negotiated a truce between the two.

“Buggin’ Out” (1991)

Tribe Called Quest; Essential Songs

Those familiar with the video for "Jazz (We Got)" — see above —  will recall that the song abruptly ends at the 3:30 mark. Phife Dawg then says, "Yo, check this  out," and the black-and-white A-side shifts into the primary colored B-side, "Buggin' Out." "Microphone check, one-two, what is this?" rhymes the five-foot assassin with the ruffneck business over a live-and-direct Ron Carter bass line. Phife's second "Buggin' Out" verse is even better as he reveals how being in overcrowded New York can get overwhelming "like a migraine pounding," despairs about riding on the train "with no dough" and admits that sometimes he just wants to be alone. "I had a twin brother that died at birth so I was a lonely child sometimes, but that loneliness helped me out a lot," Phife told The Source in 1993. "I'd be in the bathroom showering when I was mad young, and the rhymes would just be coming."

“Scenario” feat. Leaders of the New School (1992)

Tribe

This was the song that kickstarted a brief yet glorious era of rah-rah fast rap: Tribe and Leaders of the New School chanting "so what's so what's so what's the scenario" at the top of their lungs, and then blasting us with one killer verse after another. Phife Dawg was the leadoff batter who sparked the session, and his line "bust a nut inside your eye/To show you where I come from" was so visceral that cable networks eventually censored it from broadcasts of the ensemble's classic video. "My days of paying dues are over/Acknowledge me as in there," he rhymes. Ya goddamn right he's in there.

“Scenario (7 M.C.’s Remix)” feat. Kid Hood, Leaders of the New School (1992)

Tribe Called Quest; Essential Songs

For the B-side of their iconic single, A Tribe Called Quest refitted "Scenario" with a new beat, new lyrics and the same all-star cast. One addition was the debut recording of roughneck MC Kid Hood, whose "pump slugs in your face and dump that ass in the river" style stood in stark contrast to the electrically relaxed Tribe and the cheeky Leaders, but whose gift for rhymes was unquestionable. Days after recording the track, he was shot and killed in Harlem, leaving the "Scenario" remix the lone recorded appearance of this promising MC. "When I first met him, he was rhymin'" Q-Tip told The Source . "He didn't say hello or nothin', he just started rhymin'. … He really seemed like he was sold on coming out and working hard. The day we taped, he went in the studio, took his shirt off, and went in the booth. He did it in one take." Though Kid Hood wouldn't live to make another song, his voice would live on: His "I'm a bad, bad man" quip was sampled extensively on Notorious B.I.G.'s Ready to Die .

“Hot Sex” (1992)

Tribe Called Quest; Essential Songs

As hard as Tribe comes. The first track after The Low End Theory (surfacing originally on the Boomerang soundtrack) ditched bassy semi-acoustic jazz-funk for slamming, stripped down electronics, with a beat that's as nasty as the title suggests, built off a looped sample of Lou Donaldson's "Who's Making Love." Phife and Tip step to suckers with all the nasty swagger they can summon: "I'm not Lawn Doctor so just step off with the ho," Phife spits, while Tip boasts that "the poems that I create are for hookers and the crooks," donning a creepy mask in the video to hide the shiner that Wreckx-n-Effect had just given him for seeming to diss New Jack Swing on "Jazz (We've Got)."

“Award Tour” (1993)

Tribe Called Quest; Essential Songs

The first single on Midnight Marauders is pure celebration, finding Tribe and their buddy Trugoy from De La Soul in a glorious Native Tongues victory lap, from Brooklyn and Queens to London, Tokyo and beyond. Phife Dawg just about bursts out of the speakers — "[sliding] in the place/Buddy, buddy, buddy, all up in your face" — sounding live and lovable even when he's telling the listener to call him “Dyna-Mutt.” "Award Tour" is a high point in the career of a man with a track record longer than a DC-20 aircraft. 

“Sucka Nigga” (1993)

Tribe Called Quest; Essential Songs

With one verse and one chorus, Q-Tip offers one of rap’s deeper looks at the most controversial and volatile word in the English language. “The suckas are those who front. Niggas who be trying to rhyme all hard. I lived that shit, man. That’s something I vowed never to rhyme about,” he told Vibe . “We’ve taken a word that the white man put on us in a derogatory sense and put love in it. But yet — and still — he can’t use it. I know it stems from a bad background, but I’m just representing the street. All the kids in the street know where that shit comes from.”

“Electric Relaxation” (1994)

Tribe Called Quest; Essential Songs

One of A Tribe Called Quest's best-loved songs perfectly encapsulates Q-Tip and Phife Dawg's comparable strengths as MCs. Q-Tip is the street poet funky enough to drop lines like "I wanna pound the poontang until it stinks," yet he also sensitively notes the anguish of unrequited sexual attraction ("I couldn't drop dimes ‘cause you couldn't relate"). Phife Dawg is the corner dude whose command of urban pop ephemera like BBD's failed 1993 single "Above the Rim" and BET Video LP  host Madelyne Woods is only matched by his raunchy punch lines ("Let me save the little man from inside the boat"). Underlining their back-and-forth flows is an inimitably slowed-down loop of Ronnie Foster's "Mystic Brew" and a mumbled Q-Tip chorus that, in the pre-Internet days, had heads struggling to figure out what he says: "Relax yourself, girl … what?"

“Oh My God” feat. Busta Rhymes (1994)

Tribe Called Quest; Essential Songs

A bass line reconfigured from Lee Morgan's "Absolutions" darts underneath a busily horn-stuffed track constructed from Kool & the Gang's "Who's Gonna Take the Weight?" and Busta busts out the title on the chorus like he can't believe he's had to wait so long. But the MCs hold center stage. Tip sums himself up in six words – "I'm a black intellect but unrefined" – and Phife flirts memorably with Dawn Robinson if she happens to be listening. It's not easy to listen to Phife boast "When's the last time you heard a funky diabetic?" now that the disease has taken his life. But that line also sounds fiercer and more defiant than ever.

“1nce Again” (1996)

Tribe Called Quest; Essential Songs

Q-Tip was one of the earliest champions of J Dilla's muted, punchy, sample-distending production. He became enamored with it shortly after P-Funk keyboardist Amp Fiddler introduced him to the producer at a '94 Michigan Lollapalooza tour stop. Tip invited the young beat constructer, then known professionally as Jay Dee, to join the Ummah production squad. The first single from ATCQ's fourth album, "1nce Again," is one of the first major tastes of his sound: rap as a woozy, chopped funhouse mirror. Smarter critics got it, but pulling a dark, moody There's a Riot Goin' On move after the giddy smash of "Award Tour" felt anticlimactic; having R&B singer Tammy Lucas handle the hook was anathema to true-school heads; and ATCQ documentary director Michael Rapaport even calls the track "the beginning of the end." Still, there was very little out there like this at the time, and "1nce Again" predicted some of the most critically adored beatmaking of the next decade.

“Stressed Out” feat. Faith Evans (1996)

Tribe Called Quest; Essential Songs

The highlight of the “Baby Phife Version” of ATCQ’s moody and downbeat “Stressed Out” is Phife Dawg’s closing verse. (The album version of “Stressed Out” doesn’t include Phife, and instead focuses on Q-Tip trading mics with his cousin, newcomer Consequence. Consequence’s outsized presence on ATCQ’s 1996 album didn’t sit well with Phife, and tension lingered  between the two during recording sessions.) Phife often plays the ruffneck counterpart to Q-Tip’s wise-beyond-his-years sage, but here he sounds like the mature one. He kicks a ragamuffin flow, noting how he takes medication for diabetes, and praises his loving wife, Deisha Taylor, and how “she cures me from stress.” His brief words about his marriage — “Lay my head on her breast/Sugar dumpling knows best” — are among the most positive you’ll hear about monogamous relationships in the hip-hop canon. Years later, Deisha was a kidney donor for her husband in 2008, and their relationship was chronicled in the documentary Beats, Rhymes and Life: The Travels of a Tribe Called Quest .    

“Find a Way” (1998)

Tribe Called Quest; Essential Songs

"We pretty much knew before the recording of The Love Movement that this was it. You better get your wind up 'cause this is the last dance," said Phife Dawg of the band's maligned fifth and final album. "It's weird to me that it would be called The Love Movement because we really were not loving that album, we were not loving putting out that album, we didn't even love each other at that time, so to speak. It should have been called The Last Movement ." Still, the group managed one last great single before calling it quits. Over a Dilla-fried Ummah production, the group explored the complications that occur when you leave the friend zone.

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Lyrical Breakdown of Award Tour (feat. Trugoy The Dove) - A Journey through Words and Rhymes

Welcome to the detailed analysis of "Award Tour (feat. Trugoy The Dove)" on Lazyjot. Here, we unravel the lyrical complexity and artistic brilliance that define this iconic song.

  • Lyric Overview : Witness how A Tribe Called Quest weaves words into powerful emotions and vivid imagery. From intricate rhyme schemes to compelling storytelling, every line in "Award Tour (feat. Trugoy The Dove)" is a testament to masterful songwriting.
  • Rhyme and Rhythm Analysis : Our Lazyjot editor highlights the ingenious use of multi-syllabic rhymes and the rhythm pattern that A Tribe Called Quest employs. Understand the construction of each verse and how it contributes to the song's overall impact.
  • Syllable Pattern Insights : Dive deeper into the structural elements of the lyrics. See how the syllable count varies across the song, adding a unique rhythm and flow to A Tribe Called Quest's narrative.

This lyrical analysis of "Award Tour (feat. Trugoy The Dove)" not only celebrates A Tribe Called Quest's artistic prowess but also serves as an educational tool for aspiring songwriters. If this analysis inspires you and you'd like to see your own songs analyzed in this way, join the Lazyjot community. Register at Lazyjot and start exploring the full potential of your lyrical creativity. Turn your thoughts into rhymes and your rhymes into songs with Lazyjot!

A Tribe Called Quest - “Award Tour”

To annotate Award Tour , visit the song page on Rap Genius. Your annotations will also appear here at the Harvard Hiphop Archive!

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award tour rap genius

  • A Tribe Called Quest

Award Tour – Song and Lyrics by A Tribe Called Quest

Discover the poetic beauty in ‘Award Tour’ by A Tribe Called Quest. This lyric breakdown takes you on a journey through the artist’s thoughts, emotions, and the story they aim to tell. From clever metaphors to evocative imagery, we delve into the nuances that make this song a lyrical masterpiece. Whether you’re a fan of A Tribe Called Quest or a lover of well-crafted words, our detailed analysis will give you a deeper understanding and appreciation of this song.

We on Award Tour with Muhammad my man Going each and every place with the mic in their hand New York, NJ, N.C., VA We on Award Tour with Muhammad my man Going each and every place with the mic in their hand Oaktown, L.A., San Fran, St. John

People give your ears so I be sublime It’s enjoyable to know you and the concubine Niggas, take off your coats ladies, act like gems Sit down, Indian style, as we recite these hymns See, lyrically I’m Mario Andretti on the mo-mo Ludicrous, we speedy, or infectious with the slow-mo Heard me in the eighties, J Beez on the promo On my never ending quest to get the paper on the caper But now, let me take it to the Queens side I’m taking it to Brooklyn side All the residential Questers to invade the way Hold up a second son, ’cause we almost there You can be a black man and lose all your soul You can be white and blue but don’t crap the roll See my shit is universal, if you got knowledge and dolo Of delf for self, see there’s no one else Who can drop it on the angle, acute at that So, do that, do that, do do that that that(come on) Do that, do that, do do that that that(OK) Do that, do that, do do that that that I’m bugging out, so let me get back ’cause I’m wettin niggas So run and tell the others ’cause we are the brothas I learned how to build mics in my workshop class So give me this award, and let’s not make it the last

We on Award Tour with Muhammad my man Going each and every place with the mic in their hand Chinatown, Spokane, London, Tokyo We on Award Tour with Muhammad my man Going each and every place with the mic in their hand Houston, Delaware, DC, Dallas

Back in ’89, I simply slid into place Buddy, buddy, buddy all up in your face A lot of kids was busting rhymes but they had no taste Some said Quest was wack, but now is that the case I have a quest to have the mic in my hand Without that, it’s like Kryptonite and Superman So Shaheed come in with the sugar cuts Phife Dawg’s my name, but on stage, call me Dynomutt When was the last time you heard the Phifer sloppy Lyrics anonymous, you’ll never hear me copy Top notch baby, never coming less Sky’s the limit, you gots to believe up in Quest Sit back, relax, get up out the path If not that, here’s the dance floor, come move that ass Non-believers, you can the steps I roll with Shaheed and the brother Abstract Niggas know the time when the Quest is in the jam I never let a statue tell me how nice I am Coming with more hits than the Braves and the Yankees Living mad phat like an over sized Bam-bi The wackest crews try to dis, it makes me laugh When my track record’s longer than a DC-20 aircraft So, next time that you think you want something here Make something deffer, take that garbage to St. Elsewhere

We on Award Tour with Muhammad my man Going each and every place with the mic in their hand S.C., Maryland, New Orleans, Motown We on Award Tour with Muhammad my man Going each and every place with the mic in their hand Chinatown, Spokane, London, Tokyo We on Award Tour with Muhammad my man Going each and every place with the mic in their hand Houston, Delaware, DC, Dallas We on Award Tour with Muhammad my man Going each and every place with the mic in their hand New York, NJ, N.C., VA

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Award Tour (feat. Trugoy the Dove)

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A Tribe Called Quest

Meaning of ‘Award Tour’ by ‘A Tribe Called Quest’ feat. Trugoy The Dove

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Released: 1993 • Features: Trugoy The Dove

“Award Tour” by A Tribe Called Quest, featuring Trugoy The Dove, is an anthem celebrating the group’s success and progression in the hip-hop industry. This tune is a lyrical journey that pays homage to the artists’ roots, highlights their personal growth, and underlines the importance of staying true to oneself while navigating the entertainment industry’s complexities.

The song starts with “We on award tour with Muhammad my man, Goin’ each and every place with the mic in their hand.” This stands as a metaphor for A Tribe Called Quest’s success in the music industry, traveling around the globe showcasing their lyrical prowess. Muhammad is a reference to Q-Tip, whose Muslim name is Kamaal Ibn John Fareed, translated as Muhammad.

“You can be a black man and lose all your soul, You can be white and groove but don’t perp the roll.” The group emphasizes here the importance of authenticity in the hip-hop community. This line is open to different interpretations, but the consensus is about maintaining personal integrity, whether you’re black trying to preserve cultural heritage or white trying to fit into an originally African-American-dominated genre without perpetrating stereotypes.

“Hold up a second son, ‘cuz we almost there” – this line might refer to the group nearing the pinnacle of their success and letting their fans know that they’re about to reach new heights of creative genius.

A Tribe Called Quest also addresses their critiques directly: “A lot of kids was bustin’ rhymes, but they had no taste, Some said Quest was wack, but now is that the case.” They demonstrate their resilience against critics who doubted their talents and potential in the early stages of their careers.

The lines, “I never let a statue tell me how nice I am, Comin’ with more hits than the Braves and the Yankees”, express A Tribe Called Quest’s belief in their talent, not relying on awards or external validation to define their worth. They are confident in their ability to “hit it out of the park” with their music, just like MLB teams, the Braves and the Yankees, are known for their talented hitters.

Finally, the repeated refrain, “We on award tour with Muhammad my man, Goin’ each and every place with the mic in their hand” underlines the song’s essence: This is A Tribe Called Quest’s celebration of their journey, achievements, and place in the hip-hop landscape, staying authentic and grounded throughout the process.

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Meaning of ‘Oh My God’ by ‘A Tribe Called Quest’ feat. Busta Rhymes

A Tribe Called Quest

Meaning of the song ‘Luck of Lucien’ by ‘A Tribe Called Quest’

award tour rap genius

A Tribe Called Quest - “Award Tour”

This classic hip hop track is also constructed by alternating between verses and choruses (more commonly called hooks in hip hop), again all built in multiples of four bars.

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‘the righteous gemstones’ costume designer christina flannery on bringing a psychedelic flair to season 3, black reel tv awards unveils 2024 nominees: nat geo’s ‘genius: mlk/x’ tops the crop with 14.

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Black Reel TV Awards 2024 nominations list

The nominations for the eighth annual Black Reel Television Awards are out. Topping the list is Genius: MLK/X , Season 4 of National Geographic’s biographical series, and Abbott Elementary is next with 12.   

Amazon’s Prime Video leads all networks with 19 noms, fueled Gen V , I’m a Virgo , Them: The Scare and Mr. and Mrs. Smith . The streamer edged rival Netflix, which received 19 nominations. But Netflix claimed the most nominated shows, with 11 titles receiving recognition vs. Prime Video’s four.

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Awards Season

2024-25 Awards Season Calendar – Dates For Oscars, Tonys, Emmys, Grammys, Guilds & More

award tour rap genius

BET Awards Nominations: Drake & Nicki Minaj Lead The Field

Mr. and Mrs. Smith star Donald Glover nabbed four individual nominations, achieving a trifecta by being nominated for lead performance, directing and writing (twice). Michelle Buteau received nominations for comedic writing and acting in the freshman year of her Netflix dramedy Survival of the Thickest . 

BET+ was the breakout network this year, garnering its first two series nominations for Outstanding Comedy Series for The Ms. Pat Show and Diarra From Detroit .  Another big first is for series X-Men ’97 becoming the first animated series to receive nominations for Outstanding Drama Series, Outstanding Writing, and Outstanding Directing in a Drama Series.

“This year’s Black Reel Television Awards marks a significant changing of the guard, as many landmark shows transition, making way for the next generation of Black creatives,” said Black Reel Awards founder, Tim Gordon. “As beloved series conclude their impactful runs, we’re excited for new voices and fresh talent are stepping into the spotlight, eager to continue the legacy of excellence and representation in television.”

Here are the nominees for the 2024 Black Reel Television Awards:

Outstanding Lead Performance in a Comedy Series Abbott Elementary – ABC | Quinta Brunson, showrunner Diarra from Detroit – BET+ | Diarra Kilpatrick, showrunner The Ms. Pat Show – BET+ | Jordan E. Cooper, showrunner Rap Sh!t – MAX | Syreeta Singleton, showrunner Survival of the Thickest – Netflix | Danielle Sanchez-Witzel, showrunner

Outstanding Lead Performance in a Comedy Series

Outstanding supporting performance in a comedy series.

Tone Bell | Survival of the Thickest – Netflix Lionel Boyce | The Bear – FX on HULU Giancarlo Esposito | The Gentlemen – Netflix Janelle James | Abbott Elementary – ABC Danielle Pinnock | Ghosts – CBS Sheryl Lee Ralph | Abbott Elementary – ABC Tami Roman | The Ms. Pat Show – BET+ JB Smoove | Curb Your Enthusiasm – HBO Vince Swann | The Ms. Pat Show – BET+ Tyler James Williams | Abbott Elementary – ABC

Outstanding Directing in a Comedy Series

Chasing Ghosts ( Diarra from Detroit ) | Chioke Nassor, director – BET+ Clueless ( Loot ) | Kevin Bray, director – Apple TV+ Guardians of Godolkin ( Gen V ) – Sanaa Hamri, director – Amazon Prime Video Party ( Abbott Elementary ) – Ken Whittingham, director – ABC You a Big Muthaf*cka ( I’m a Virgo ) – Boots Riley, director – Amazon Prime Video

Outstanding Writing in a Comedy Series

Career Day, Part 1 ( Abbott Elementary ) | Quinta Brunson, writer – ABC Honeydew ( The Bear ) | Stacy Osei-Kuffour, writer – FX on HULU Keep Your Plants Watered, Bitch ( Survival of the Thickest ) | Michelle Buteau & Danielle Sanchez-Witzel, writers – Netflix Librarian ( Abbott Elementary ) | Morgan Murphy, writer – ABC You a Big Muthaf*cka ( I’m a Virgo ) | Boots Riley, writer – Amazon Prime Video

Outstanding Guest Performance in a Comedy Series

Erika Alexander | Run the World – Starz Tatyana Ali | Abbott Elementary – ABC Garcelle Beauvais | Survival of the Thickest – Netflix Jordan E. Cooper | The Ms. Pat Show – BET+ Keegan-Michael Key | Abbott Elementary – ABC Sanaa Lathan | Curb Your Enthusiasm – HBO Da’Vine Joy Randolph | Only Murders in the Building – HULU Phylicia Rashad | Diarra From Detroit – BET+ Cree Summer | Abbott Elementary – ABC Robert Townsend | The Bear – FX on HULU

Outstanding Drama Series

Black Cake – HULU | Marissa Jo Cerar, showrunner The Equalizer – CBS | Andrew Marlowe and Terri Miller, showrunners Lupin – Netflix | George Kay, showrunner Mr. & Mrs. Smith – Amazon Prime Video | Francesca Sloane, showrunner X-Men ‘97 – Disney+ | Beau DeMayo, showrunner

Outstanding Lead Performance in a Drama Series

Rosario Dawson | Ahsoka – Disney+ Idris Elba | Hijack – Apple TV+ Aunjanue Ellis-Taylor | Justified: City Primeval – FX on HULU Giancarlo Esposito | Parish – AMC Donald Glover | Mr. & Mrs. Smith – Amazon Prime Video Quincy Isaiah | Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers – HBO Sonequa Martin-Green | Star Trek: Discovery – Paramount+ Queen Latifah | The Equalizer – CBS Zoe Saldana | Special Ops: Lioness – Paramount+ Omar Sy | Lupin – Netflix

Outstanding Supporting Performance in a Drama Series

Joey Bada$$ | Power Book III: Raising Kanan – Starz Malcolm Barrett | Average Joe – BET+ Nicole Beharie | The Morning Show – Apple TV+ Colman Domingo | Fear the Walking Dead   – AMC Gugu Mbatha-Raw | Loki – Disney+ Audra McDonald | The Gilded Age – HBO Wunmi Mosaku | Loki – Disney+ DeVaughn Nixon | Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty –  HBO Karen Pittman | The Morning Show – Apple TV+ Lynn Whitfield | The Chi – Showtime

Black Cake – HULU | Melissa Ho Cerar, showrunner The Equalizer – CBS | Andrew Marlowe and Terri Miller, showrunners Lupin – Netflix | George Kay, showrunner Mr. & Mrs. Smith – Amazon Prime Video | Francesca Sloane, showrunner X-Men ‘97 – Disney+ | Beau DeMayo, showrunner

Outstanding Directing in a Drama Series

A Breakup ( Mr. & Mrs. Smith ) | Donald Glover, director – Amazon Prime Video  BEAT L.A. ( Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty ) | Salli Richardson-Whitfield, director -HBO Eleanor ( Black Cake ) | Natalia Leite, director  – HULU Pilot ( Average Joe ) | Eric Dean Seaton, director – BET+ Tolerance Is Extinction, Part 1 ( X-Men ‘97 ) | Chase Conley, director – Disney+

Outstanding Writing in a Drama Series

Outstanding guest performance in a drama series.

Michael Braugher | The Gilded Age – HBO Michaela Coel | Mr. & Mrs. Smith – Amazon Prime Video  Loretta Devine | Kingdom Business – BET+ Taye Diggs | All American – CW Lisagay Hamilton | Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty – HBO Rashida Jones | Silo – Apple TV+  Rob Morgan | Winning Time: The Rise of the Lakers Dynasty – HBO Wendell Pierce | Power Book III: Raising Kanan – Starz  CCH Pounder | 3 Body Problem – Netflix Susan Kelechi Watson | Will Trent – ABC

Outstanding TV Movie or Limited Series 

Genius: MLK/X – National Geographic | Raphael Jackson Jr. & Damione Macedon, showrunners Lawmen: Bass Reeves – Paramount+ | Chad Feehan, showrunner The Other Black Girl – HULU | Gus Hickey & Jordan Reddout, showrunners Them: The Scare – Amazon Prime Video | Little Marvin, showrunner True Detective – HBO | Issa Lopez, showrunner

Outstanding Lead Performance in a TV Movie or Limited Series

Uzo Adbua | Painkiller – Netflix Deborah Ayorinde | Them: The Scare – Amazon Prime Video Zazie Beetz | Black Mirror – Netflix Kelvin Harrison Jr. | Genius: MLK/X – National Geographic Carl Lumbly | The Fall of the House of Usher (Netflix) Ashleigh Murray | The Other Black Girl – HULU Leslie Odom Jr. | Great Performances: Purlie Victorious – PBS David Oyelowo | Lawmen: Bass Reeves – Paramount+ Aaron Pierre | Genius: MLK/X – National Geographic Courtney B. Vance | Heist 88 – Showtime

Outstanding Supporting Performance in a TV Movie or Limited Series

Jelani Alladin | Fellow Travelers – Showtime Don Cheadle | Secret Invasion – Disney+ Luke James | Them: The Scare – Amazon Prime Video Pam Grier | Them: The Scare – Amazon Prime Video Jharrel Jerome | Full Circle – MAX Ron Cephas Jones | Genius: MLK/X – Amazon Prime Video Aja Naomi King | Lessons in Chemistry’ – Apple TV+ Lamorne Morris | Fargo – FX on HULU Kali Reis | True Detective – HBO Noah J. Ricketts | Fellow Travelers – Showtime

Outstanding Directing in a TV Movie or Limited Series

CH 3 COOH (Lessons in Chemistry) |  Millicent Shelton, director – Apple TV+ Graduation (Genius: MLK/X) | Channing Godfrey Peoples, director – National Geographic One Of Us Is Gonna Die Tonight (Them: The Scare) | Little Marvin, director – Amazon Prime Video Saddlebags (A Man In Full) | Regina King, director – Netflix  To Be Young, Gifted and Broke (The Other Black Girl) | Mariama Diallo, director – HULU

Outstanding Writing in a TV Movie or Limited Series

Are You Scared? (Them: The Scare)   | Little Marvin, writer – Amazon Prime Video Graduation (Genius: MLK/X) | Jeff Steson, writer  – National Geographic Matriarchs (Genius: MLK/X) | Sigrid Gilmer, writer – National Geographic Part V (Lawmen: Bass Reeves) | Terence Anthony, writer – Paramount+ White Nights (Fellow Travelers) | Brandon K. Hines & Ron Nyswaner, writers – Showtime

Outstanding Variety, Sketch or Talk – Series or Special

A Grammy Salute to 50 Years of Hip Hop – CBS The Apple Music Super Bowl LVIII Halftime Show Starring Usher – CBS Great Performances: Purlie Victorious – PBS The Jennifer Hudson Show – Syndication Trevor Noah: Where I Was – Netflix

Outstanding Documentary

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award tour rap genius

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Real Teenagers, Fake Nudes: The Rise of Deepfakes in American Schools

Students are using artificial intelligence to create sexually explicit images of their classmates..

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Warning: this episode contains strong language, descriptions of explicit content and sexual harassment

A disturbing new problem is sweeping American schools: Students are using artificial intelligence to create sexually explicit images of their classmates and then share them without the person depicted even knowing.

Natasha Singer, who covers technology, business and society for The Times, discusses the rise of deepfake nudes and one girl’s fight to stop them.

On today’s episode

Natasha Singer , a reporter covering technology, business and society for The New York Times.

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  1. A Tribe Called Quest

    Award Tour Lyrics. [Produced by A Tribe Called Quest] [Chorus: Trugoy the Dove & Q-Tip] We on a world tour with Muhammad, my man (Right, true) Goin' each and every place with the mic in their hand ...

  2. Midnight Marauders by A Tribe Called Quest

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    Award Tour 2012 Lyrics: We went from state to state / New York was great, Delaware was hoping we would come back to home plate / Them niggas would show me love, because I'm balling like Kobe brah / Or

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  5. Award Tour

    "Award Tour" is a song by American hip hop group A Tribe Called Quest, released in October 1993 by Jive Records as the first single from their third album, Midnight Marauders (1993). The song features rapper Trugoy on the chorus, from the fellow Native Tongues group De La Soul.It contains a sample of "We Gettin' Down" by Weldon Irvine, from his 1975 album Spirit Man.

  6. A Tribe Called Quest

    Going each and every place with the mic in their hand. Chinatown, Spokane, London, Tokyo. We on a world tour with Muhammad, my man. Going each and every place with the mic in their hand. Houston, Delaware, DC, Dallas. Back in '89, I simply slid into place. Buddy, buddy, buddy all up in your face.

  7. A Tribe Called Quest: 20 Essential Songs

    In remembrance of Phife Dawg, who passed away Tuesday at age 45, here are the pioneering rap group's 20 essential tracks. De La Soul, "Buddy (Native Tongue Decision)" feat. Q-Tip, Phife Dawg ...

  8. The Meaning Behind The Song: Award Tour by A Tribe Called Quest

    It also reached #7 on the Hot Rap Songs chart and #47 on the Billboard Hot 100, making it one of A Tribe Called Quest's most successful songs. The Meaning behind "Award Tour" "Award Tour" appears to celebrate A Tribe Called Quest's worldwide success following the release of their critically acclaimed sophomore album, The Low End Theory.

  9. Lazyjot • Lyrical Analysis of Award Tour (feat. Trugoy The Dove)

    From intricate rhyme schemes to compelling storytelling, every line in "Award Tour (feat. Trugoy The Dove)" is a testament to masterful songwriting. Rhyme and Rhythm Analysis: Our Lazyjot editor highlights the ingenious use of multi-syllabic rhymes and the rhythm pattern that undefined employs. Understand the construction of each verse and how ...

  10. The Meaning Behind The Song: Award Tour by A Tribe Called Quest

    Award Tour explores the journey and experiences of A Tribe Called Quest as they navigate through the music industry and achieve fame. The lyrics illustrate the challenges faced by artists on the rise, particularly the pressures and expectations that come with success. The song's chorus, "We on Award Tour with Muhammad, my man / Goin' each ...

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    Provided to YouTube by JiveAward Tour · A Tribe Called Quest · Trugoy The DoveMidnight Marauders℗ 1993 Zomba Recording LLCReleased on: 1993-11-08Associated ...

  12. A Tribe Called Quest-Award Tour [1993]*

    [CHORUS]We on Award Tour with Muhammad my manGoin' each and every place with the mic' in their handNew York, NJ, NC, VAWe on Award Tour with Muhammad my manG...

  13. A Tribe Called Quest Lyrics, Songs, and Albums

    Following appearances from Q-Tip on the debut albums of De La Soul ( 3 Feet High and Rising 's "Buddy") and the Jungle Brothers ( Straight Out the Jungle 's "The Promo" and "Black is ...

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    A Tribe Called Quest - "Award Tour" Read "Award Tour" by A Tribe Called Quest on Genius. To annotate Award Tour, visit the song page on Rap Genius. Your annotations will also appear here at the Harvard Hiphop Archive! Themes: Money. Success. Hiphop Archive & Research Institute.

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    Immerse yourself in the enchanting melodies of 'Award Tour' by A Tribe Called Quest. Explore our in-depth review, background story, and the unique musical elements that make this song a standout

  16. Award Tour (feat. Trugoy the Dove)

    We on award tour with Muhammad my man Goin' each and every place with the mic in their hand New York, NJ, N.C., VA We on award tour with Muhammad my man Goin' each and every place with the mic in their hand Oaktown, L.A., San Fran, St. John People give your ears so, I be sublime It's enjoyable to know you and the concubine Niggaz, take off your coats ladies, act like gems Sit down, Indian ...

  17. Meaning of 'Award Tour' by 'A Tribe Called Quest' feat. Trugoy The Dove

    "Award Tour" by A Tribe Called Quest, featuring Trugoy The Dove, is an anthem celebrating the group's success and progression in the hip-hop industry. This tune is a lyrical journey that pays homage to the artists' roots, highlights their personal growth, and underlines the importance of staying true to oneself while navigating the ...

  18. "Award Tour"

    1) Shawn posted a list of about a dozen essential old-school rap songs that were in bad shape and asked people to help clean them up. As I remember it, I did "The Message" and was going to do ...

  19. Award Tour by A Tribe Called Quest feat. Trugoy the Dove

    A Tribe Called Quest. Main genre: Hip-Hop / Rap / R&B. Tags: Alternative Hip-Hop, East Coast Hip-Hop. 64 users contributed to this page. Contains samples of 7 songs see all. Olinga by Milt Jackson (1974) Hook / RiffJazz / Blues. We Gettin' Down by Weldon Irvine (1975) Hook / RiffSoul / Funk / Disco.

  20. "Award Tour"

    A Tribe Called Quest - "Award Tour". This classic hip hop track is also constructed by alternating between verses and choruses (more commonly called hooks in hip hop), again all built in multiples of four bars. When you click play, YouTube will process your personal data and may set its own cookies on your device.

  21. A Tribe Called Quest

    See all of "Award Tour" by A Tribe Called Quest's samples. ... History of Rap 1. Jimmy Fallon, Justin Timberlake (2010) ... Genius is the world's biggest collection of song lyrics and ...

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    Provided to YouTube by JiveAward Tour · A Tribe Called Quest · Trugoy The DoveThe Anthology℗ 1993 RCA Records, a division of Sony Music EntertainmentReleased...

  23. Black Reel Awards 2024 Nominees: 'Genius: MLK/X' & Prime ...

    Black Reel TV Awards Unveils 2024 Nominees: Nat Geo's 'Genius: MLK/X' Tops The Crop With 14. The nominations for the eighth annual Black Reel Television Awards are out. Topping the list is ...

  24. Real Teenagers, Fake Nudes: The Rise of Deepfakes in American Schools

    A disturbing new problem is sweeping American schools: Students are using artificial intelligence to create sexually explicit images of their classmates and then share them without the person ...

  25. Mike G

    Album Credits. Featuring Speak & Vince Staples. Producers Hodgy, Left Brain, Patrick Paige II & 1 more. Writers Left Brain, Mike G, Speak & 2 more.