The Ummah
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The Ummah | |
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Origin | New York City, USA, Detroit, Michigan |
Years active | 1996 – ? |
Genres | Hip-Hop |
Labels | Freelance |
Members | Kamaal Fareed (Q-Tip) James Yancey (Jay Dee) Ali Shaheed Muhammad |
The Ummah is a music production collective, composed of members Q-Tip and Ali Shaheed Muhammad of A Tribe Called Quest, and the late Jay Dee (also known as J Dilla) of the Detroit based group Slum Village. Occasional members include Raphael Saadiq, and D'Angelo. In addition to producing the entirety of A Tribe Called Quest's fourth and fifth albums, The Ummah has provided backing tracks for a notable array of hip hop and R&B artists, including Busta Rhymes, Whitney Houston, Keith Murray, Brand New Heavies, Janet Jackson, and Jon B. The group is so named because two of its members (Tip and Ali) are devout Muslims. The word "ummah" is Arabic for "community" or "brotherhood".
The collective took shape around 1995, when veteran keyboardist, Amp Fiddler, introduced Jay Dee (who at the time was shopping for a deal for his group) to Q-Tip. Although Tip wasn't taken by Slum Village as a whole, he was impressed enough by Jay Dee's deeply soulful productions to invite him as a permanent, although largely unseen, 4th member of A Tribe Called Quest. Their first work, Beats, Rhymes and Life, was criticized for moving away from the group's earlier, more dense, and bottom heavy sound exemplified by tracks such as "(We've Got) Jazz" and "Oh My God". The new sound which now leaned towards a more laid back, polished, tone would be embraced a little more with the release of Tribe's "Find A Way" from their fifth and final album The Love Movement, although the album itself received a lukewarm reception, and no second proper single or video was released.
Following this, and the split of A Tribe Called Quest, Q-Tip and Jay Dee continued to collaborate under the 'Ummah' moniker, producing almost all of Tip's solo venture Amplified, which included one track from DJ Scratch. For several reasons, including label complications, Tip has since remained inactive while Jay Dee and D'Angelo went on to form the Soulquarians with other like-minded artists. Although Tribe has since formed somewhat of a reunion, releasing " ICU (Doin' It)" in 2003, the possibility of them once again using the 'Ummah' name for future productions seems unlikely, especially since member Jay Dee's death on February 10, 2006.
A Tribe Called Quest |
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Members: Q-Tip | Phife Dawg | Ali Shaheed Muhammad | Jarobi White |
Albums: People's Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm | The Low End Theory | Midnight Marauders | Beats, Rhymes and Life | The Love Movement |
Compilations: The Anthology | Hits, Rarities, and Remixes |
Singles: "Bonita Applebum" | "I Left My Wallet in El Segundo" | "Can I Kick It?" | "Check the Rhime" | "Jazz (We've Got)" | "Scenario" | "Hot Sex" | "Award Tour" | "Electric Relaxation" | "Oh My God" | "1nce Again" | "Stressed Out" | "Find a Way" | "Like It Like That" |
See also: Native Tongues Posse | The Ummah |
J Dilla |
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Studio albums |
Fan-Tas-Tic (Vol. 1) (1997) | Fantastic, Vol. 2 (2000) | Best Kept Secret (2000) | Welcome 2 Detroit | Welcome 2 Detroit Instrumentals (2001) | Vol. 1: Unreleased (2002) | Vol. 2: Vintage (2003) | Ruff Draft (2003) | Champion Sound (2003) | Champion Sound Instrumentals (2003) | Donuts (2006) | The Shining (2006) | The Shining Instrumentals (2006) | Ruff Draft (Re-issue) (2007) | Jay Love Japan (2007) |
Singles |
"Get Dis Money" (1999) - "I Don't Know" (2000) - "Climax (Girl Shit)" (2000) - "Raise It Up" (2001) - "Fuck The Police" (2001) - "Pause" (2001) |
Related articles |
Slum Village | 1st Down | The Ummah | Soulquarians | Jaylib |