The FLEX: Ali Shaheed Muhammad & Skratch Bastid @ TATTOO

Skratch Bastid Presents The FLEX

ALI SHAHEED MUHAMMAD

&

SKRATCH BASTID

Opening Set from DJ Big Jacks

TATTOO - 567 QUEEN STREET WEST

MARCH 7th - 10pm

TICKETS: $15

18

http://www.skratchbastid.com/

http://alishaheed.com/

http://soundcloud.com/bigjacks

---------------

DJ/Producer Ali Shaheed Muhammad is known around the world as one-third of the legendary hip hop group A Tribe Called Quest, but he began his musical career in his hometown of Brooklyn, New York. It was there that his uncle, Michael Jones, a bass player and DJ himself, pulled aside 8-year-old Ali and began teaching him music. Ali then spent years DJ-ing parties in his Bedford-Stuyvesant neighborhood and recorded a slew of demos before co-founding Tribe in 1985 with Q-Tip, Phife Dawg, and Jarobi. He was just 19 when the group released its first album, Peoples Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm, in 1990, and four more followed: The Low End Theory released in 1991; Midnight Marauders 1993; Beats, Rhymes and Life 1996; and The Love Movement 1998. All went either gold or platinum, with The Low End Theory and Midnight Marauders both widely considered hip-hop classics. The groups socially conscious lyrics coupled with their unique production: heavy on jazz, funk and 70s rock samples helped push it to the forefront of rap, and scores of current artists/producers, including Kanye West, Pharrell Williams and Will. I. Am, cite Tribe as an influence.

Though Tribe disbanded in 1998, the groups place in hip hops pantheon has long been secured. It is unclear if the group will record another album, but Tribe remains relevant, recently eclipsing their contemporaries as co-headliners on the Rock the Bells 2010 Tour and starring in the 2010 documentary, Beats, Rhymes, & Life: The Travels of A Tribe Called Quest.

Tribe, however, is just one representation of Alis talent. He formed the production company The Ummah in the 90s with Jay Dee and Q-Tip, and hes worked with a wide range of artists, including Faith Evans, Mos Def, and DAngelo, the last of whom he collaborated on the Grammy-nominated single, Brown Sugar, in 1995. That song led the way for the neo-soul movement, making possible the rise of such performers as Erykah Badu, Musiq Soulchild and Jill Scott. Ali has also remixed songs for Janet Jackson Maxwell, Maroon 5and KRS-One. In all, he has credits as writer, producer or co-producer on 23 albums, most recently with the Irish band The Kanyu Tree. The groups lively, fresh sound convinced Ali to work in a new genre alternative music and the debut album is due out summer 2011.

Ali also has a sharp eye for talent. Seeking to gain insiders perspective on the record industry, he took a job in 1996 as an A&R for Quincy Jones Qwest Records. While there, he scouted and tried to sign Corey Glover, Common, The Black Eyed Peas and The Neptunes. Qwest passed on all. Feeling that he was unable to satisfy the needs of Qwest, Ali parted ways with the label. Separately, he was introduced by his friend, producer Dahoud Darien, to Bilal, and Ali tried to get him signed, as well, but Ali could not convince his contacts to make the deal. Though he soon returned to his own artistic ambitions, it is worth noting that Alis instincts were correct: those artists have gone on to sell millions of records.

In 1999 he co-founded the star trio Lucy Pearl, aligning with Dawn Robinson, formerly of En Vogue, and Raphael Saadiq, of Tony! Toni! Ton! Lucy Pearl fused funk, rock, R&B and hip-hop to create an organic, sexy sound that was unprecedented at the time and still unmatched today. The groups self-titled debut album produced the hits Dont Mess With My Man, and Dance Tonight, the latter nominated for a Grammy in the best vocal performance by a duo or group category.

Ali has also built up a solo career, beginning with his 2004 debut LP Shaheedulah and Stereotypes, featuring the dance song All Night. Beyond engineering a unique sound for his first LP, Ali also performed songs on it, and he has two more albums scheduled for release in summer 2011. The first is pure hip hop and boasts collaborations with Phife Dawg, De La Soul and Raphael Saadiq; the second is a dance album, continuing the vibe he started with All Night.

While the music world awaits those two albums, Ali keeps busy by performing as a DJ around the globe, reaching music fans of all types, each gig adding to the journey he started as an 8-year-old in Brooklyn.



Latest Videos