"Everything Is Fair" (produced by Skeff Anselm, co-produced by Q-Tip) "Show Business" (featuring Diamond D, Lord Jamar & Sadat X) (produced by Skeff Anselm, co-produced by Q-Tip) "Verses from the Abstract" (featuring Vinia Mojica & Ron Carter) Incognito" (released in 2003) Ī Tribe Called Quest - The Low End Theory
Unity 2 - What Is It, Yo?! (VLS) ġ991 A Tribe Called Quest - Hits, Rarities & Remixes "Rhythm (Devoted to the Art of Moving Butts)" "The Promo" (featuring Q-Tip) (produced by Jungle Brothers & Q-Tip ) ġ989 A Tribe Called Quest - unreleased demo tape ġ990 A Tribe Called Quest - People's Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm
When producing, Q-Tip is sometimes credited under the pseudonym "The Abstract". Q-Tip's contributions as a member of The Ummah production team are also listed. All songs credited as "produced by A Tribe Called Quest" were produced by Q-Tip, with the exception of " True Fuschnick", "Heavenly Father", and " La Schmoove" by Fu-Schnickens, which were produced by Ali Shaheed Muhammad.
And so Fellowship endures: a miracle of storytelling, a feat of filmmaking and still the gold standard for cinematic experiences.The following is a discography of production by Q-Tip, an American hip hop musician, record producer, and DJ. Its ultimate heroes aren't the strongest, or those with the best one-liners, but the ones who just keep going.
This oddball suicide squad has so much warmth and wit, they're not just believable as friends of each other - they've come to feel like they're our pals too.Īn ornately detailed masterwork with a huge, pulsing heart, it's just the right film for our times - full of craft, conviction and a belief that trudging forward, step by step, in dark days is the bravest act of all. But Fellowship remains the most perfect of the three, matching every genius action beat with a soul-stirring emotional one, as its Middle-earth-traversing gang swells in size in the first act, then dwindles in the third. The Return Of The King boasts the most batshit, operatic spectacle. As Fellowship thrums to its conclusion, finally applying the brakes with a last swell of Howard Shore's heavenly score, you're left feeling euphoric, bereft and hopeful, all at the same time. Onwards his adventure hustles, to the bravura dungeoneering of Khazad-dûm, to the sinisterly serene glades of Lothlorien, to the final requiem for flawed Boromir amidst autumnal leaves. Even at the halfway point, as the characters take a breather to bicker in Rivendell, you already feel sated, like you've experienced more thrills, more suspense, more jollity and ethereal beauty than a regular film could possibly muster up. The Fellowship Of The Ring contains so much movie. But here it is, brighter and more resplendent than ever. It might have taken 20 years for Peter Jackson's plucky fantasy to clamber, Mount-Doom-style, to the very pinnacle of our greatest-movies pantheon. He arrives precisely when he… well, you know the rest.
Looking for our list of The 100 Greatest TV Shows Of All Time? Read here.Ī wizard is never late. Combining reader votes with critic’s choices from Team Empire, here we have it – the latest version of the 100 Greatest Movies list. Films that blow your mind, help you see things from a new perspective, and that continue to shape cinema as we know it today. The best films – from classic movies that have stood the test of time, to contemporary works that changed the game – offer heartwarming comfort, iconic scares, big laughs, and pulse-pounding suspense, becoming firm audience favourites and garnering critical acclaim.Įmpire asked readers to share their picks for the best films of all time – ones that comfort, challenge and pioneer. The greatest movies of all time endure for many reasons – they give us characters to fall head-over-heels for, plots that twist and turn in unexpected ways, depict experiences that change us, and thrill us with incredible filmmaking craft.