Talib Kweli Greene (born October 3, 1975 ),[1] better known as Talib
Kweli, is an American MC from Brooklyn, New York. His first name
in Arabic means "student" or "seeker"; his middle
name in Swahili means "truth". Kweli first gained recognition
through Black Star, a collaboration with fellow MC Mos Def.
Born in Brooklyn, New York, Kweli grew up in a highly educated household
in Park Slope. His mother, Brenda Greene, is an English professor
at Medgar Evers College of the City University of New York[2] and
his father an administrator at Adelphi University. His younger brother,
Jamal Greene, is a professor of Constitutional Law at Columbia Law
School, and former clerk to Justice John Paul Stevens on the Supreme
Court. As a youth, he was drawn to Afrocentric rappers, such as De
La Soul and other members of the Native Tongues Posse whom he had
met in high school. Talib Kweli was a student at Cheshire Academy,
a boarding school in Connecticut. He was also a student at Brooklyn
Technical High School, before being academically dismissed. He later
studied experimental theater at New York University.[3]
[edit] Early career (1995-2001)
Kweli made his underground debut in 1995, with featured appearances
on "Doom", an album by Cincinnati, Ohio group Mood (Main
Flow, Donte, Jahson). In Cincinnati, Kweli also met DJ Hi-Tek and
the two collaborated on a few well received underground recordings
as Reflection Eternal. Shortly afterwards, upon returning to New
York, he reconnected with Mos Def and formed Black Star. Kweli brought
along Hi-Tek to produce their first and only album, 1998's Mos Def
and Talib Kweli Are Black Star. The a lbum, released amidst a late
'90s renaissance of conscious, Afrocentric hip hop, was immediately
hailed by critics and achieved modest mainstream success. When Kweli
and Mos Def parted ways shortly thereafter, Kweli and Hi-Tek continued
their Reflection Eternal partnership on the 2000 album Train of Thought,
which was likewise met with critical acclaim, but modest sales.
[edit] Start of solo career (2002-2003)
Following Train of Thought, Kweli and Hi-Tek split as well, and
Kweli used his first truly solo debut to attempt a move toward a
more mainstream sound. 2002's Quality accomplished this goal to some
extent, featuring production by a host of different producers, including
DJ Quik and Kanye West. The album was met with wide spread critical
acclaim and received some mainstream attention thanks to the West-produced
single "Get By."
In 2001, Kweli with Black Star partner Mos Def contributed to the
Red Hot + Indigo compilation album created by the Red Hot Organization
in tribute to Duke Ellington, that raised money for various charities
devoted to increasing AIDS awareness and fighting the disease. Black
Star collaborated with fellow artists John Patton and Ron Carter
to record "Money Jungle." In 2002, Kweli contributed to
the critically acclaimed Red Hot + Riot, a compilation CD created
by the Red Hot Organization in tribute to the music and work of Nigerian
musician Fela Kuti. He collaborated with fellow hip-hop artists Dead
Prez, Jorge Ben, and Bilal to remake the famous song by Fela Kuti, "Shuffering
and Shmiling," for the CD.[4]
[edit] Rise in cultural popularity
In 2004, Talib Kweli, along with Bob Moore's Amazing Mongrels, supported
the Beastie Boys on their "Challah At Your Boy World Tour",
and appeared in a few Dilated Peoples songs, including a live remix
later featured on the video game NBA Street Vol. 2.
Along with Common and Questlove, he contributed to Zap Mama's Ancestry
in Progress (2004) with "Yelling Away."
Kweli has used television appearances extensively to increase visibility,
notably on MTV's Wild 'N Out, and several performances on Chappelle's
Show with long-time collaborator Mos Def; these performances were
a product of host Chappelle's friendship with Kweli. Chappelle in
turn participated in a number of skits on Kweli's albums "Train
of Thought" and "Quality"- impersonating several people
including Nelson Mandela. Kweli also had a guest spot on Kanye West's
widely successful debut album on the track "Get 'Em High".
West has produced some of Kweli's songs, including his biggest commercial
hit "Get By". West also includes a nod to Kweli on the
song "Breathe in, Breathe Out" from his album "The
College Dropout". The lyrics read: "Golly more of this
bullshit ice rap/ I got to 'pologize to Mos and Kweli", an acknowledgement
of Kweli's meaningful message spread while part of Blackstar. Kweli
can be seen in a commercial for the NCAA's Big Ten Conference, rapping
about the league's basketball teams.[5] He also provided the voice
of the protagonist in the graffiti-themed video game Marc Ecko's
Getting Up: Contents Under Pressure, released in 2006.[6] Kweli's
stature continued to grow, particularly fueled by a line from the
track "Moment of Clarity" on Jay-Z's 2003 record, The Black
Album: "If skills sold, truth be told/I'd probably be, lyrically,
Talib Kweli." Kweli responded to this in his track "Ghetto
Show" on his 2004 album The Beautiful Struggle by stating "If
lyrics sold then truth be told/I'd probably be just as rich and famous
as Jay Z."
[edit] Middle career (2004-2006)
In 2004, he released his second solo album and final Rawkus release,
The Beautiful Struggle, which debuted at no.14 in the billboard top
100. The album featured much more commercial production, and although
Kweli's lyrics retained their socio-political content, he affected
a somewhat harder persona. The album failed to cross over into the
mainstream and suffered a critical backlash.
In 2005, Kweli released a Mixtape-CD off of his newly formed Blacksmith
Records. The project was called Right About Now: The Official Sucka
Free Mix CD, a title which is considered likely a response to the
criticism of The Beautiful Struggle.
On Right About Now: The Official Sucka Free Mix CD, Talib Kweli
sampled Ben Kweller's "In Other Words" for his own song "Ms.
Hill". In part 7 of Kweller's video podcast series "One
Minute Pop Song," Kweller said he found Kweli's use of the song "a
little fucked up" due to the fact that it was sampled without
permission.[7]
[edit] Recent career (2007-2010)
On December 31, 2006, Kweli released nine songs he recorded with
acclaimed underground producer Madlib for free download in conjunction
with the web site for Stones Throw Records, the label to which Madlib
is signed. The album was entitled Liberation, of which Talib later
was quoted by XXL magazine as stating releasing the album was liberating
to him; "The idea that I could put out an album like that: record
it in my house, put it out for free and get that type of response."[8]
In 2007, the album was made available for purchase.
For his newest release, Kweli formed his own record label, Blacksmith
Records, and has recently signed acclaimed rapper Jean Grae and the
group Strong Arm Steady. He also signed a new distribution deal with
Warner Bros. Records for Blacksmith Records. His latest solo album
is called Eardrum and was released on Aug 21, 2007. It debuted at
#2 on the Billboard 200. The first single was Listen!!!.[8]
Kweli embarked on a national Australian tour in October, 2007. In
2007, a bootleg import CD containing rare and collaborative songs
was released entitled Focus. Recently Talib has joined MTV's hit
show MADE and filmed an episode in the town of Arlington, Massachusetts,
as well as SMT Studios in New York City. He was the coach of Colin
Colt, a young man who wanted to be made into a rap star.
In March 2008, Kweli was featured on the 9th Wonder and Buckshot
track "Hold It Down".
Talib was featured at the fifth installment of Hot 97 radio personality
Peter Rosenberg's acclaimed live interview series "Noisemakers
with Peter Rosenberg," joining a distinguished list of previous
guests including DJ Premier, ?uestlove of The Roots, Q-Tip and Raekwon,
on October 21, 2009.[9]
Talib Kweli and DJ Hi-Tek released a second Reflection Eternal album
titled Revolutions Per Minute on May 18, 2010. Revolutions per Minute
was recorded at Electric Lady Studios. It is their second album after
a 10-year hiatus.
Gutter Rainbows, Kweli's is the fourth solo album, was the first
to be released by his imprint Talibra. The album was originally intended
to be released in only a digital format. However, on November 16th,
2010, Duck Down Records announced its plans to offer Gutter Rainbowas
a CD release.[10] This will include an import edition and a special
edition with extras.[11] In its first week, the album sold 13,900
copies in the United States.[12]
[edit] Ongoing and Future projects
Kweli confirmed in a recent interview with VIBE magazine that the
title of his next album will be Prisoner of Consciousness, a title
derived from Talib's constant labeling as a "conscious rapper" and
based on Nigerian reggae artist Majek Fashek's album "Prisoner
of Conscience."[citation needed]
Talib recorded an album entitled Party Robot with R&B singer
Res and musician Graph Nobel under the group alias Idle Warship.
The album was released as a free download on the website for Kweli's
label Blacksmith with 2 different cover art options in late 2009.
There were videos shot for two of the songs from the album "Bedroom
Lights" and "Black Snake Moan".
In February 2009 it was announced that Talib would be featured in
the graphic novel-turned-animated series Blokhedz on Missiong.com,
voicing the lead part of the character Blak.[13][14]
[edit] Personal life
Talib Kweli married DJ Eque on May 9, 2009 in Bel Air, California.
[15]
Talib has a daughter Diani Eshe and a son Amani Fela.
Talib Kweli is a spokesperson and mentor for P'Tones Records a non-profit
after school music program that's mission is "to create constructive
opportunities for urban youth through no-cost music programs."[16]
[edit] Discography
Main articles: Talib Kweli discography and List of Talib Kweli songs
Solo
* Quality (2002)
* The Beautiful Struggle (2004)
* Right About Now (2005)
* Eardrum (2007)
* Gutter Rainbows (2011)[17]
With Mos Def as Black Star
* Mos Def & Talib Kweli are Black Star (1998)
With Hi-Tek as Reflection Eternal
* Train of Thought (2000)
* Revolutions Per Minute (2010)
With Madlib
* Liberation (2007)