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c71
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Sat Aug-13-22 06:43 PM

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"Little Brother’s ‘The Listening’ Continues To Shape Hip-Hop - RS"


  

          

https://www.rollingstone.com/music/music-features/little-brother-influence-1392279/


AUGUST 10, 2022 12:17PM ET

Nearly Twenty Years Later, Little Brother’s ‘The Listening’ Continues To Shape Hip-Hop

Kendrick Lamar and Drake are just two of the artists influenced by the North Carolina duo’s insightful, original way of sidestepping clichés

By WILL DUKES

When Drake stepped onstage to give his acceptance speech for the BMI Songwriter of the Year Award in 2011, one of the names he shouted out — along with his mom, Kanye West, and Andre 3000 — belonged to Phonte. The name of the rapper from the acclaimed North Carolina duo Little Brother probably wasn’t familiar to many of the fans who’d been suffering through a broadcast about music licensing just to see the emergent Canadian superstar. But the plaudit made sense. The melodic marriage of singing and rapping that Phonte had perfected eight years earlier on Little Brother’s 2003 debut, The Listening, is deeply entangled in Drake’s artistic DNA. It mattered that a heavyweight of Aubrey’s stature had taken the time to acknowledge a criminally underrated trailblazer. And now, as we approach The Listening‘s 20th anniversary next February, its influence still stands as a crucial model instructing today’s MCs on how to be more versatile and original.


Drake was perhaps Little Brother’s most prominent fan back then — he’d also recorded songs with them on his 2007 mixtape, Comeback Season — but he wasn’t the only bold-name MC from the next generation who owes a lot to the group. Kendrick Lamar, whose 2013 cut “Thanksgiving” featured Little Brother’s other half, Big Pooh, didn’t fully come into his own until he started making the kinds of ruminative songs that were very much in the vein of The Listening. Years later, he’s still finding new ways of exploring that style on songs like “Father Time” and “Purple Hearts” from his recently released Mr. Morale & the Big Steppers.




Little Brother’s far-reaching, trendsetting appeal wasn’t apparent to everyone in the early 2000s. At the time, after 50 Cent and G-Unit’s hostile takeover, rap had begun to feel as polarized as voters were over whether the U.S. should invade Iraq. Indie powerhouses like Rawkus and Def Jux catered to fans of unapologetically underground hip-hop, serving as alternatives to the blithely sadistic jingle of 50’s ubiquitous “Wanksta.” Little Brother were neither staunch subterranean agitators like other underground rappers, nor mainstream-sanctioned stars. Some listeners didn’t see them coming.

Mere months after Get Rich or Die Tryin’ debuted in February 2003, The Listening revivified an underserved audience. In New York City, beloved record shops like the now-defunct Greenwich Village institution Fat Beats — whose entryway was frequently crowded by CD-brandishing buskers who’d accost you, as you walked in, with “Yo, you listen to hip-hop?” — proudly displayed the album. It sold like hotcakes to fans who couldn’t get enough of Little Brother’s spirited boom-bap reinvention.

The LP was full of upbeat bars over in-house producer 9th Wonder’s sumptuous, soulful beats. Phonte and Big Pooh seemed to speak for all the regular dudes who were just looking for good vibes, with intelligent and irreverent perspectives on life. The Listening conveyed big red-black-and-green-wristband energy, but it was also simpatico with whatever energy the guy in a fitted and Timbs came into the function with just to mack on the ladies in sundresses. The album was fun and lighthearted and brimming with infectious Everyman appeal. This was proto-Black Twitter in miniature — a jokey Spaces room for the dial-up era. Little Brother let you emote about groupies and estranged family members at the same time as you snarked on the granola-munching herbs reciting bad poetry at the local coffee house.




Songs like “The Yo-Yo” highlighted Phonte’s lithe, jocular flow. Unlike other rappers at that time, he didn’t half-sing bars that sounded a little like cheesy Top 40 hooks — when Phonte sings, he sings. Nor did he bombard you with tortuous verbiage. Instead, he posted up with an easy delivery that stayed in the pocket. He poked fun at some of the hypocrisy associated with “Black righteousness,” pointing out that many overblown militants, for all their accusatory rhetoric, are basically there for the same thing as him: “Even though y’all niggas might not cuss like me/End of the night, y’all just trying to fuck like me.” He concludes by confessing that he’s not here for speeches and would, instead, rather listen to Trick Daddy.

“The Yo-Yo,” which earned Phonte a “Quotable of the Month” in The Source, was subversive in the way that it cross-examined the quandary of not exactly wanting to pick a side. He made that stance feel fun at a time when it seemed like no one — not the pop-friendly favorites or the underground heroes — was truly happy where they were. Jay-Z, who would work with 9th Wonder months later on his Black Album, famously rapped, “If lyrics sold, truth be told, I’d probably be lyrically Talib Kweli/Truthfully, I want to rhyme like Common Sense”; yet as the decade went on, both of those icons of alternative hip-hop would make tentative moves toward more commercial sounds.

The Listening resonated, especially, with a younger generation that was more comfortable assembling all of the moving parts of themselves. What Little Brother’s music really signaled was a kind of freedom from the uncomfortable compromises of the previous generation. One of the songs Kendrick Lamar is performing on his current tour is 2017’s “Humble” — a prime example of the newfound autonomy Little Brother celebrated. That vertiginous blend of impudence and gratitude is so indebted to the blueprint they mapped out on The Listening, it’s no stretch to say they made “Humble” possible.

“I like to think of ourselves as giving young rappers a look around the corner,” Phonte told Vulture in a 2019 interview about Little Brother’s legacy and impact. “Hopefully we can give a blueprint to show that you can mature, you can grow older, and you can be true to yourself but not be crotchety. There’s a way you can settle into that moment and still be dope and be profitable and have things to say.” With The Listening, Phonte, Big Pooh, and 9th Wonder made it cool to not be easily boxed in. Twenty years later, the culture is still all ears.

  

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Little Brother’s ‘The Listening’ Continues To Shape Hip-Hop - RS [View all] , c71, Sat Aug-13-22 06:43 PM
 
Subject Author Message Date ID
No
Aug 13th 2022
1
RE: No
Aug 13th 2022
2
No, to you sir. Respectfully.
Aug 14th 2022
3
I think you went all the way absolute with it homie
Aug 14th 2022
4
RE: I think you went all the way absolute with it homie
Aug 14th 2022
5
RE: No
Feb 27th 2023
12
Visiting Durham, NC today...
Aug 14th 2022
6
home of black wall street
Aug 15th 2022
7
I saw LB in Durham last spring
Aug 16th 2022
8
Little Brother on 20 Years of ‘The Listening’ - RS swipe
Feb 25th 2023
9
Saw that, love that they’re getting their flowers
Feb 25th 2023
10
9th?
Feb 27th 2023
11
      It frustrates me to no end.
Feb 27th 2023
13
      If I remember correctly the last album initially involved 9th
Feb 28th 2023
14
           You're remembering correctly. That's what makes it even more frustrating...
Feb 28th 2023
15
           but they showed that 9th is superfluous at this point
Mar 26th 2023
35
           Yeah, as far as sequencing, skits, song writing and overall direction
Mar 26th 2023
36
           Yea it's nostalgia for sure.
Mar 28th 2023
38
           Here’s Scudda talking about where they stand, a bit
Mar 27th 2023
37
           And here’s Tay and Pooh speaking on it a bit…
Apr 20th 2023
42
           damn this is frustrating to learn
Mar 25th 2023
30
                Khrysis, Nottz, Black Milk, Focus…. Cheap beats?
Mar 25th 2023
31
      RE: 9th?
Mar 26th 2023
32
      RE: 9th is a narcissistic piece of shit
Apr 29th 2023
44
           Jeez.
May 01st 2023
45
                RE: Phonte and Pooh do
May 02nd 2023
46
                     RE: Phonte and Pooh do
May 04th 2023
47
                     RE: didn't read past 'no disrespect' off GP
May 04th 2023
48
                          RE: didn't read past 'no disrespect' off GP
May 04th 2023
49
                     I don't recall them calling him a "narcissistic piece of shit"
May 08th 2023
50
                          oh everything after 'narcissistic' was 100% me
May 14th 2023
52
                               RE: oh everything after 'narcissistic' was 100% me
May 15th 2023
53
                                    RE: oh everything after 'narcissistic' was 100% me
May 16th 2023
54
                                         www.betterhelp.com
May 18th 2023
55
RE: Little Brother’s ‘The Listening’ Continues To Shape Hip-Hop - ...
Feb 28th 2023
16
Seeing them tonight in SD for the first time ever
Mar 03rd 2023
17
Jumping in a Little Brother post for old times sake
Mar 04th 2023
18
Caught them last night in San Diego
Mar 04th 2023
19
Love it! I’m going to the Brooklyn show in 2 weeks
Mar 05th 2023
20
I'll be @ the Boston show. Can't wait.
Mar 06th 2023
21
      They killed it last nite.
Mar 17th 2023
22
      Yeah, they put on a great show
Mar 18th 2023
23
           Hell yea. Place exploded when Scudda jumped on stage.
Mar 20th 2023
24
                Ha yeah his Lovin It verse always goes off live, in my experience
Mar 20th 2023
26
                     Yea - he def has mic presence and charisma.
Mar 21st 2023
28
      Just noticed that in the show posters they're selling ..
Mar 21st 2023
29
           I got there early as hell to make sure I got one of those, lol
Mar 26th 2023
34
           Somehow i'm just now noticing that...
Mar 28th 2023
39
Brooklyn Show is Dope. Phonte is such a showman.
Mar 20th 2023
25
      “That’s not V.I.P., that’s O.L.D”
Mar 20th 2023
27
           he said that in Boston and I was dying...
Mar 26th 2023
33
Boston show was great!
Apr 02nd 2023
40
Yeah, Chaundon was at the merch table
Apr 02nd 2023
41
Shouts to FWMJ - LB talking about The Listening album cover
Apr 20th 2023
43
taking it a step further..
May 08th 2023
51

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