Peoples' Instinctive Travels & the Paths of Rhythm

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Peoples' Instinctive Travels & the Paths of Rhythm album cover
Album Information

Total Tracks: 14   Total Length: 64:21

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Jeff Chang

eMusic Contributor

06.30.09
A Tribe Called Quest, Peoples’ Instinctive Travels & the Paths of Rhythm
1990 | Label: Jive

ATCQ's 1990 debut was framed by a metaphorical journey, and the first sounds heard were the low ruble of a cosmic birth. But this bit of self-mythmaking was followed by a casual ride at a relaxed pace, full of insight and free of cliché. "Push It Along" was the humblest of manifestos; Q-Tip announced the crew's aesthetic, but also humbly confessed, "We ain't trying to rule rap." Another anthem, "Can I Kick It?," begged permission to entertain. "Bonita Applebaum" extended this mindset into one of rap's steamiest come-ons. The closing cut was a Nation of Islam-influenced "Ham 'N Eggs," which is less an uber-vegan scold than a Saturday afternoon stoop sing-along. At the moment Public Enemy was mightily fighting the power, ATCQ made Afrocentrism sound mind-ticklingly seductive.

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Smooth Rhyming Over Deadly Grooves

PaleolithNick

Great beats and Tribe's lyrical content and flow were hot out of the box. Their first is their best.

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KICK eMUSIC

crowward

sob this was my fav album ...why why why can't i download this!!!!!!!!!! jumped into the ocean with my walkman and lost it (I had this on tape)

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Can I kick it!

EMUSIC-01DA0271

This is classic without the filler, tribe put jazz/hip hop on the map...without a doubt, bonita applebum you got ta put this on!

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Classic

ejrupert

I don't know how eMusic is able to get this and other Jive artists (as well as Columbia and LaFace artists) on here but get these albums now from eMusic because they may not be here tomorrow.

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Icon: A Tribe Called Quest

By Jeff Chang, eMusic Contributor

If fellow travelers De La Soul were the giddy braniacs and the Jungle Brothers the funky eccentrics, A Tribe Called Quest were the artful romantics of the vanguard Native Tongues hip-hop crew in the mid-'90s. They shared their peers 'taste for conceptually rich work but, unlike De La, they preferred minimalism and, unlike the JB's, they proffered a sound that enfolded the listener (props due to shadow Quest member/studio wizard Bob Power). Because of that,… more »

They Say All Music Guide

One year after De la Soul re-drew the map for alternative rap, fellow Native Tongues brothers A Tribe Called Quest released their debut, the quiet beginning of a revolution in non-commercial hip-hop. People’s Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm floated a few familiar hooks, but it wasn’t a sampladelic record. Rappers Q-Tip and Phife Dawg dropped a few clunky rhymes, but their lyrics were packed with ideas, while their flow and interplay were among the most original in hip-hop. From the beginning, Tribe focused on intelligent message tracks but rarely sounded over-serious about them. With “Pubic Enemy,” they put a humorous spin on the touchy subject of venereal disease (including a special award for the most inventive use of the classic “scratchin’” sample), and moved right into a love rap, “Bonita Applebum,” which alternated a sitar sample with the type of jazzy keys often heard on later Tribe tracks. “Description of a Fool” took to task those with violent tendencies, while “Youthful Expression” spoke wisely of the power yet growing responsibility of teenagers. Next to important message tracks with great productions, A Tribe Called Quest could also be deliciously playful (or frustratingly unserious, depending on your opinion). “I Left My Wallet in El Segundo” describes a vacation gone hilariously wrong, while “Ham ‘n’ Eggs” may be the oddest topic for a rap track ever heard up to that point (“I don’t eat no ham and eggs, cuz they’re high in cholesterol”). Contrary to the message in the track titles, the opener “Push It Along” and “Rhythm (Dedicated to the Art of Moving Butts)” were fusions of atmospheric samples with tough beats, special attention being paid to a pair of later Tribe sample favorites, jazz guitar and ’70s fusion synth. Restless and ceaselessly imaginative, Tribe perhaps experimented too much on their debut, but they succeeded at much of it, certainly enough to show much promise as a new decade dawned. – John Bush

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