Andre 3000 Regrets Not Making OutKast & A Tribe Called Quest Collaborative Project

    Phife Dawg was honored yesterday (April 5) at a memorial service hosted by A Tribe Called Quest held at the Apollo Theater in Harlem, New York. The Five Foot Assassin died in March from complications due to diabetes.

    Among the speakers honoring Phife was Andre 3000, who says that an OutKast and A Tribe Called Quest collaborative project was talked about between the two groups. He says that the project never happened for various reasons and he is using this missed opportunity as a lesson.

    “I don’t wanna let the time go by,” he says. “Please people, don’t let the time go by because you never know. That’s one of the biggest things that I regret now. For whatever reason we didn’t do it. It was on our plate and we let it go for our own personal reasons or whatever.”

    Three stacks then reflects on the impact Tribe had on him and Big Boi as they were starting OutKast. He says that their label, Laface, referred to Andre 3000 as the “poet,”referencing Q-Tip‘s name as The Abstract Poetic, and named Big Boi the “playa.”

    “We wanted to be a street Tribe, like a hood Tribe,” he says. “I guess that’s what we ended up being in a way.”

    He then extends what he learned from talking with Q-Tip about different generations of artists respecting each other. The Tribe rapper told Andre that he saw a shift in the musical landscape when the Atlanta group broke into the mainstream. The OutKast member says he understands Q-Tip’s point after seeing rappers like Lil Wayne and Young Thug bring yet another generation of sound.

    “My nigga said, ‘When y’all came out as OutKast, I knew that the tides had changed. I knew rap had changed,'” Andre 3000 says. “I knew what he was talking about. ‘Cause when I see Wayne and Thugger, I’m like, ‘Whoa, I can’t keep up with that shit.’ But it’s so dope. It’s the connection. They’re there because of us. It has to keep going. All this old shit, young shit and the old niggas hating on the young niggas, that shit gotta stop, completely. It’s all music. It’s all influence. There’s kids right now listening to Wayne, Thug was listening to Wayne. What I’m saying is like it’ll keep going. We gotta keep it going because we are all connected. I don’t have no big message or speech or nothing, but just keep that shit going, man. Tribe, they meant everything to me. They are everything, everything. There’s always these, ‘Who the greatest groups?’ and all this shit. Fuck that shit, man. That’s for real.”

    Watch Andre 3000’s speech honoring Phife Dawg and revealing plans to make an OutKast and A Tribe Called Quest album below:

    For additional Andre 3000 coverage, watch the following DX Daily:

    11 thoughts on “Andre 3000 Regrets Not Making OutKast & A Tribe Called Quest Collaborative Project

    1. wish 3 stacks practiced what he preaches…doesn’t want to “let the time pass by,” but never drops a solo joint AND it’s been a decade since Idlewild…come on man

      1. Agreed man. I respect not being able to rush the creative process. But it’s just a sad situation. You can recall how dope dre was esp when he started jumping on everyone’s remix i 07, 08 and its just disheartening. If you don’t want to do an outkast do a solo joint. Do something. I hate that J. Electronica swag of I’m dope and release no music. I almost feel like these guys might even doubt themselves if they still got their mojo. What else could it be?!

      2. He’s been acting and writing creative sketches on adult swim. I don’t think he feeling rap anymore dude is 40. Most successful rappers always say they’d stop rapping once they clock 30. Can’t blame the man because of your selfishness. He dropped a solo album already. Go back and listen to outkast’s classic if u want some Andre

    2. maybe this will motivate him to pursue all his musical ideas and finally put out a solo or better yet, another outkast album..

    3. Tribe, Outkast, Public Enemy, and EPMD are tied for best hip hop group of all time. I simply won’t ever rank them.

    4. Michelle Obama, First Lady of the United States, was born Michael LaVaughn Robinson in Chicago, Illinois on January 17th, 1964. He was the second son born to Fraser Robinson III, a well-known cocaine dealer and union thug for Crime Lord/Mayor Richard J. Daley, and Marian Shields Robinson, a transient street prostitute who was diagnosed with the HIV virus in 1998. He was a popular high school athlete and in 1982, he accepted a scholarship to play middle linebacker for the Oregon State Beavers.”

      After finishing a respectable rookie season with 88 tackles and 7.5 sacks, he suddenly dropped out of the school. Fellow teammates observed that Robinson could regularly be heard lamenting over how he is a ‘woman trapped inside a man’s body’ and on January 13th, 1983, he underwent sex reassignment surgery at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine. To hide the shame of his new identity, Michael left Oregon State to attend Princeton University under his new legal name, “Michelle Robinson”. Years later, he met Barry Obama Jr. a Kenyan immigrant who later became aware of ‘Michelle’s’ true identity. They subsequently married and adopted two children.

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