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Revision as of 14:28, 15 March 2006
Outkast | |
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Background information | |
Origin | Atlanta, Georgia, USA |
Years active | 1992 – Present |
Members | André Benjamin Antwan Patton |
OutKast is a American hip hop duo based out of Atlanta, Georgia. Their original musical style was a mixture of Dirty South and G-Funk; since then, funk, soul, electronica, and rock elements have been added to the mix. The duo is André "André 3000" Benjamin (formerly known as "Dre") and Antwan "Big Boi" Patton, both from the Atlanta area.
OutKast is currently one of the most successful hip-hop groups of all time (the others being The Fugees, and Bone Thugs-N-Harmony) having sold 20 million copies of their six releases: four studio albums, a greatest hits release, and Speakerboxxx/The Love Below, a double album containing a solo album from each member of the duo. Speakerboxxx/The Love Below is one of only three hip hop albums to go diamond, the other two being MC Hammer's Please Hammer Don't Hurt 'Em and The Notorious B.I.G.'s Life After Death.
History
Origins and Southernplayalisticadillacmuzik
Benjamin and Patton went to Tri-Cities High School together in East Point, Georgia, and battled each other lyrically on a regular basis. They eventually teamed up, and were pursued by Organized Noize, a group of local producers who would later make hits for TLC and Xscape. OutKast, Organized Noize, and schoolmates Goodie Mob formed the nucleus of the Dungeon Family organization.
OutKast signed to LaFace Records in 1992, becoming the label's first hip hop act and making their first appearance on the remix of labelmates TLC's "Ain't 2 Proud 2 Beg". In 1993, they released their first single, "Player's Ball". The song's funky style, much of it accomplished with live instrumentation, was a hit with audiences, and "Player's Ball" hit #1 on the Billboard Rap Chart. Their full length debut, Southernplayalisticadillacmuzik, was issued the next year; follow-up singles included the title track and "Git Up, Git Out", a politically charged collaboration with Goodie Mob that was later sampled by Macy Gray for her 1999 hit "Do Something". On this early material, both Benjamin and Patton contrast lyrical content reflecting the lifestyles of pimps and gangsters with politically conscious material commenting on the status of African Americans in the South. OutKast won Best New Rap Group at the Source Awards in 1995.
ATLiens
ATLiens was OutKast's second album, released in 1996. The album hit #2 on the US album charts, and helped the group earn more recognition among East Coast hip hop fans in the East and West coasts, many of whom usually panned southern hip hop artists. "ATLiens" was the group's first Top 40 single, and reflected the beginning of Benjamin's increasingly sober lifestyle: "No drugs or alcohol/so I can get the signal clear", he rhymes about himself. "Elevators (Me and You)", OutKast's first self-produced single, became the group's first Top 20 hit the same year.
Aquemini and "Rosa Parks"
OutKast's third album Aquemini (1998) also reached the #2 position on the charts; its title was a combination of the zodiac signs of Patton (an Aquarius) and Benjamin (a Gemini). The album was widely praised as an innovative, unique and refreshing album full of hip hop with a progressive vision, both artistic and musically. When reviewed by The Source magazine, it received the much-coveted "5 Mic" rating - the equivalent of a 5-Star or 5/5 rating from another publication. Producing more material themselves, both Patton and Benjamin explored more eclectic subject matter, delving into more innovative sounds inspired by soul, trip hop, and electro music. The album featured collaborations with Organized Noize, Raekwon, funk legend and musical forebear George Clinton, and the Goodie Mob.
In 1999, OutKast and LaFace Records were sued by the late Rosa Parks over the album's most successful radio single, which bore Parks' name as its title. The lawsuit alleged that the song misappropriated Parks' name, and also objected to some of the song's obscene language. The song's lyrics were largely unrelated to Parks, save for a line in the chorus: "Ah ha, hush that fuss / Everybody move to the back of the bus", which OutKast maintained was intended as homage. The initial lawsuit was dismissed. Parks' representation hired the late lawyer Johnnie Cochran to appeal the decision in 2001, but the appeal was denied on First Amendment grounds. In 2003, the Supreme Court allowed Parks' lawyers to proceed with the lawsuit. In 2004, the judge in the case appointed an impartial representative for Parks after her family expressed concerns that her caretakers and her lawyers were pursuing the case based on their own financial interest. Later that same year, the members of OutKast were dropped as co-defendants, and Parks' lawyers continued to seek action against LaFace and parent company BMG. The suit was finally settled on April 14, 2005, with neither OutKast nor their label having to admit any wrongdoing.
Stankonia
The pair's fourth album, Stankonia was released to excellent reviews in October 2000. It debuted at #2 on the album charts and would eventually go quadruple-platinum. Stankonia's first single was "B.O.B. (Bombs Over Baghdad)", a high-tempo jungle-influenced record. The second single, "Ms. Jackson", was about divorce and relationship breakups, particularly Benjamin's breakup with R&B singer Erykah Badu; the titular "Ms. Jackson" being Badu's mother. The single became their first pop crossover hit, landing the #1 position on the US pop singles chart, and the #2 position on the UK pop chart. The album's final single was the Organized Noize-produced "So Fresh, So Clean", featuring a credited guest appearance from regular guest vocalist Sleepy Brown. All three singles' videos had heavy MTV2 airplay, and OutKast won two 2001 Grammy Awards, one for Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group for "Ms. Jackson", and another for Stankonia as Best Rap Album.
During the recording of Stankonia, OutKast joined with partner Mr. DJ to form the Earthtone III production company, and began producing tracks for the artists on their Aquemini Records imprint through Columbia, including Slimm Cutta Calhoun and Killer Mike, who made his debut appearance on Stankonia's "Snappin' & Trappin".
Greatest hits
In December 2001, OutKast released a greatest hits album, Big Boi And Dre Present...OutKast, which also contained three new tracks. One of these new tracks was the single "The Whole World", which won a 2002 Grammy Award for Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group. The following year, the group and Killer Mike contributed the lead single "Land of a Million Drums" to the Scooby-Doo soundtrack.
Speakerboxxx/The Love Below
In September 2003 OutKast released a double album, Speakerboxxx/The Love Below. It is essentially two solo albums, one by each member, packaged as a single release under the OutKast banner. Patton's Speakerboxxx is, for the most part, a party record, tempered by more politically-minded tracks like "War". Benjamin's The Love Below is a sprawling and ambitious work that featured only brief instances of hip hop, presenting instead funk and pop music inspired by Prince, James Brown, the late Rick James, Sly Stone, and the late Frank Zappa. Speakerboxxx/The Love Below has received what is perhaps the duo's most rapturous critical reception to date; both discs were considered highly innovative and accomplished. The album is also OutKast's biggest commercial success yet, having debuted on the Billboard 200 Albums Chart at #1 and stayed there for several weeks. The album eventually sold over five million copies, and, as double-album sales count double for Recording Industry Association of America certification, the album was certified diamond (10 million units shipped) in December 2004.
The first two singles from the album(s), which were released nearly simultaneously, were Patton's "The Way You Move" and Benjamin's "Hey Ya!". Both immediately exploded at radio: "Move" initially becoming enormous on urban radio, then later pop and rhythmic, and "Hey Ya!" becoming a smash crossover hit on pop, rhythmic, AC, and alternative rock radio then later on urban stations. "Hey Ya!" was also one of the first songs to become a hit on the Apple iTunes Music Store, replacing "Stacy's Mom" at #1 and staying there for months. Despite a fall release, the songs' music videos (which were often aired segued together) became two of 2003's most played on MTV, VH1, MTV2, and BET, both having entered heavy rotation on all four channels at one point or another. The digital video channels, MTV Jams and VH1 Soul also gave both videos the heaviest of play, MTV Jams having played each almost once an hour at their peaks. Together, the singles spent ten weeks at number one on the Hot 100 singles chart, with "Hey Ya!" spending nine and "The Way You Move" briefly taking over in February 2004.
Concerned with over-saturation, OutKast's next official single was not released until the summer of 2004. "Roses", a track featuring both members from The Love Below half of the album, did not meet the level of success as either of its predecessors, but it became a modest-sized hit on urban radio and the American music video networks. The final singles were André's "Prototype", which was paired with an unusual science fiction-themed video about alien visitors, and Speakerboxxx's' "Ghetto Musick", which featured both members of OutKast and a sample from a Patti LaBelle song.
Speakerboxxx/The Love Below won the Grammy Award for the 2004 'Album of the Year. OutKast was one of the headlining acts at the show, and gave two performances: Patton performed "The Way You Move" during a medley with George Clinton & P-Funk and Robert Randolph and the Family Band, while Benjamin performed "Hey Ya!" as the show closer. In February 2004, Benjamin's performance, which featured dancers moving wildly around a green teepee in war paint and feathered headdresses, was criticized by the Native American Cultural Center, which called for a boycott of OutKast and of CBS, the broadcaster of the awards show. CBS later apologized.
Future projects
OutKast's Big Boi recently founded Purple Ribbon Ent. (formerly Aquemini Records) to be distributed by Virgin Records. Its first signees were Sleepy Brown, Bubba Sparxxx, Killer Mike, and others. Big Boi has released a group album/compliation, titled Big Boi Presents ... The Purple Ribbon All-Stars - Got Purp? Vol. 2.
The next OutKast album will be the soundtrack to Idlewild and is due sometime in 2006, with another LP called The Hard 10 to follow a year later. Big Boi's second solo record is also expected after Ten The Hard Way, and as of September 2005 is already about fourteen songs deep.
The first single from Idlewild will be called "The Train"
Trivia
- The video for "Hey Ya!" is based on The Beatles' landmark appearance on The Ed Sullivan Show. The video's storyline has "The Love Below" (a fictional band, with all members played by André with the use of special effects) performing in London.
- The video for "Roses" is loosely based on the musical West Side Story. It featured sparring 1950s-style gangs, one representing Speakerboxxx, and one representing The Love Below, parodying the widespread arguing among critics and fans as to which half of the album was better. (It is also one of two songs on the album featuring both members of the group)
- In a campaign commercial released October 30, 2003, the Wesley Clark presidential campaign made reference to OutKast. The reference was an attempt to get the attention of a much younger generation of potential voters. In the ad, Clark is sitting in a coffee shop with a dozen middle-class young adults of various American ethnicities. The young adults do not speak, but sit and listen as Clark appears to be answering their questions. "Well, to answer your questions, no, I would not have voted for the Iraq war... I am pro-choice and I am a strong believer in Affirmative Action; and I don't care what the other candidates say, I don't think OutKast is really breaking up. André 3000 and Big Boi just cut solo records, that's all." The last comment prompts one of the young adults, a blonde-bearded Caucasian, to say approvingly "alright" and to tap fists with Clark.
- They were both "Punk'd" by Ashton Kutcher, after he fakes their rented Maybach being stolen, and crashing through a store window.
- The miniature horse in the "Ghetto Musick" video was from Tanglewood Farm (www.tanglewoodfarmminis.com), a farm in metro Atlanta (OutKast's home), that raises miniature animals. The foal's name is Tiny Bubbles.
- While searching through a dictionary Big Boi and André came across the word "outcast" and decided this would be a perfect group name, for at the time the hip hop industry was dominated by East Coast and West Coast rappers who saw southern rappers as outcasts. They simply changed the "c" in the word into a "k".
- Hey Ya was the number one song on the very final weekend of "American Top 40 with Casey Kasem". It was also number one a week later on the very first weekend of "American Top 40 with Ryan Seacrest".
- The The Way You Move video and Hey Ya! videos tie in together, with the Move video starting and Hey Ya! finishing.
- In the song Prototype on The Love Below, Benjamin has a conversation to "John". Whether this was an actual conversation or played out as a joke is unknown, but seeing as you never hear "John"'s voice it was probably a joke.
- "John" is John Frye, OutKast's audio engineer, who is often there during recordings
Discography
Studio albums
OutKast have sold over 20 million albums.
Year | Title | RIAA certification |
---|---|---|
1994: | Southernplayalisticadillacmuzik | Platinum |
1996: | ATLiens | 2x Platinum |
1998: | Aquemini | 2x Platinum |
2000: | Stankonia | 4x Platinum |
2003: | Speakerboxxx/The Love Below | 10x Platinum (Diamond) |
2006: | Idlewild | |
2006: | The Hard 10 |
Compilations
- 2001: Big Boi And Dre Present...OutKast (Greatest Hits LP, Platinum)
Singles
- 1994: "Player's Ball" (#37 US)
- 1994: "Git Up, Git Out"
- 1994: "Southernplayalisticadillacmuzik" (#74 US)
- 1996: "ATLiens" (#35 US)
- 1996: "Elevators (Me and You)" (#12 US)
- 1997: "Jazzy Belle" (#52 US)
- 1998: "Rosa Parks" (#57 US)
- 1998: "Da Art of Storytellin' (Pt. 1)"
- 2000: "B.O.B. (Bombs Over Baghdad)" (#61 UK)
- 2000: "Ms. Jackson" (#1 US; #2 UK; #2 AU)
- 2000: "So Fresh So Clean" (#30 US; #16 UK)
- 2001: "The Whole World" (featuring Killer Mike) (#19 US; #19 UK (2002 release))
- 2002: "Land of a Million Drums" (featuring Killer Mike and Sleepy Brown) (#46 UK)
- 2003: "Ghettomusick" (#55 UK)
- 2003: "Hey Ya!" (André 3000) (#1 US; #3 UK; #1 AU)
- 2003: "The Way You Move" (Big Boi featuring Sleepy Brown) (#1 US; #7 UK; #3 AU)
- 2004: "Roses" (#9 US; #4 UK; #1 AU)
- 2004: "Ghettomusick/Prototype" (double a-side)
Grammy Award history
Career Stats
- Career Wins: 4
- Career Nominations: 13
Year | Category | Genre | Title | Result |
---|---|---|---|---|
1996 | Best Rap Performance By a Duo or Group | Rap | "Rosa Parks" | Nominated |
2002 | Best Short-Form Music Video | Video | "Ms. Jackson" | Nominated |
2002 | Record of the Year | General | "Ms. Jackson" | Nominated |
2002 | Best Rap Performance By a Duo or Group | Rap | "Ms. Jackson" | WON |
2002 | Best Rap Album | Rap | "Stankonia" | WON |
2002 | Album of the Year | General | "Stankonia" | Nominated |
2003 | Best Rap Performance By a Duo or Group | General | "The Whole World" | WON |
2004 | Producer of the Year Non-Classical | Production | "N/A" | Nominated |
2004 | Best Short-Form Music Video | Video | "Hey Ya!" | Nominated |
2004 | Album of the Year | General | "Speakerboxxx/The Love Below" | WON |
2004 | "Best Urban/Alternative Performance" | R&B | "Hey Ya!" | WON |
2004 | Record of the Year | General | "Speakerboxxx/The Love Below" | Nominated |
2004 | Best Short-Form Music Video | Video | "Hey Ya!" | Nominated |
2004 | Record of the Year | General | "Hey Ya!" | Nominated |
2004 | Best Rap Album | Rap | "Speakerboxxx/The Love Below" | WON |