Digable Planets

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Digable Planets

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Rap group

While rap music sometimes strikes the uninitiated listener as monotonous rhythms and rhymes, Digable Planets’ two albums have demonstrated the range of sounds rap can encompass. The group has also discovered, however, that such musical experiments can incite political debates among rap’s commentators. The band’s liberal use of jazz prompted mainstream music critics and many white listeners to embrace the trio’s sound, declaring it a part of the "acid jazz" phenomenon. At the same time, their sound also turned away much of a black audience who equated only the stark tones of "gangsta" rap with black urban experience.

Digable Planets’ first album demonstrated not only the politics that surround rap, but also how much those politics can be about race. In their follow-up album the Planets confronted their critics: They brought black power politics to the forefront in their lyrics, while still cultivating the unorthodox sound they had introduced on the first album. That is, Digable Planets insisted that their jazz/rap fusion was not on the margins of black culture, but the future of it.

When Digable Planets first appeared on MTV airwaves in 1992, they attracted attention for many reasons, not the least of which was their unorthodox appearance. While most hip-hop outfits tend to be strictly defined by gender—all men highlighting their masculinity or all women carving out their own space— the Planets presented viewers with two men and a woman who was not just a figurehead.

Furthermore, Digable Planets adopted neither the angry stance of gangsta rap nor the high energy rush of dance-oriented hip-hop. They were, instead, unusually muted in their stage and video persona, presenting the simpler styles of the jazz world. The group’s character emerged from the chemistry of the three individuals who are Digable Planets: Ishmael Butler, also known as Butterfly; Craig Irving, also known as Doodlebug and Knowledge; and Mary Ann Vieira, also known as Ladybug and Mecca.

Band Members Exposed to Jazz in Childhood
Critics see Butterfly, more than the others, as Digable Planets’ "leader," and his history appears to have had the most influence on the group’s sound. "My parents were revolutionaries," he told The Source’s Todd Williams. In the 1960s, Butterfly’s parents worked with both the Black Panthers and the Student National Coordinating Committee, the most active student organization in the civil rights movement. Butterfly apparently inherited those politics from his parents, as Williams and other

journalists have noticed from the contents of Butterfly’s bookshelves, which include volumes by various members of the Black Panthers, leftist philosopher Karl Marx, Chinese communist leader Mao Tse-tung, and French existentialist writer Jean-Paul Sartre.

Butterfly spent his childhood in Seattle, Washington, where he was born in the early 1970s. After his parents divorced, he moved around the country with his history professor father, living in Baltimore, Maryland; Philadelphia, Pennsylvania; and Harlem and Brooklyn, New York. Butterfly’s father provided him with a rich musical environment, exposing his son to an extensive jazz collection. As Butterfly grew up, he augmented that foundation with rap; he also played saxophone in his teen years. Upon completing high school, he attended the University of Massachusetts on a basketball scholarship but quit before long. He decided instead to earn an education in the music business, taking an internship with Sleeping Bag Records, a New York City-based hip-hop label, in the mid-1980s.

Relating a similar early exposure to jazz, Butterfly’s band mate Doodlebug recalled the music of his childhood for Ann Powers of Spin. "My mother would always sit around, reading a book or the Sunday paper, and listen to jazz. My aunt taught me about [jazz legends] Bessie Smith and Billie Holiday, she was always playing the records and talking about them,"he explained. Born in the late 1960s, Doodlebug grew up in Philadelphia before moving to Washington, D. C., to attend Howard University, where he made a reputation for himself as a deejay on the college’s radio station. He also mixed with local members of the religious sect Five Percent Nation of Islam, adopting some of their political ideals of black power.

Digable Planets’ female member, Ladybug, though she was born in Brazil in the mid-1970s, spent her childhood mostly in Maryland. By the time she was in high school, she was a restless young woman; in four years, she attended three different schools. She told Pat Blashill of Details that she "didn’t talk to anyone. I had, like, longass dreads and a nose ring and the other students weren’t used to that…. I just couldn’t wait to get out of high school." Powers described Ladybug as "a tomboy whose version of climbing trees was learning to rap."

Ladybug’s musical influences combined rap with the Brazilian dance music her parents had always listened to. On weekends, she would make exploratory trips to Philadelphia and New York City; there she discovered the clubs and parties where artists experimented with rap and hip-hop. She and Butterfly met in D. C., soon became friends, and eventually moved to Philadelphia together.

Hip-Hop for a Liberal Freshman
By the late 1980s Butterfly had moved to Philadelphia to live with his grandmother while making a living and learning the ropes of the local music scene. He met Doodlebug on the local circuit while the latter was rapping with an outfit called Dread Poets Society, which later became the 7 OD’s. Butterfly, Doodlebug, and Ladybug soon became fast friends and rapping partners. In the early days of Digable Planets, they lived together, first in Jersey City, New Jersey, and later, New York. The last move brought them into the heart of Brooklyn’s black neighborhoods, where they scraped by for a while rapping and working. Ladybug, for example, was selling sneakers just before the group won its record contract in 1992. By that summer, however, they were recording the material for their first album with Pendulum Records.

Spin’s Chris Norris described Digable Planets after the release of their debut album in late 1992 as "poster children for a jazzy new world." Reachin’(A New Refutation of Time and Space) opened on the Billboard charts at Number 15, thanks to the popularity of the single "Rebirth of Slick (Cool Like Dat)." The song appeared on both the Top 40 and R&B charts, went gold in a month, and received heavy rotation on MTV in video form. Powers described "Rebirth of Slick" as "a study in magic wordplay shaped with elegant reserve." The song, according to The Source’s Williams, "expanded hip-hop’s hegemony, dragging it into previously unexpected terrain; an ’alternative’ rap group had come along with ’whip appeal’ for progressives … and Afrocentric Utopians."

In the Details interview with Blashill, Butterfly described the vision that had shaped Reachin." Hip-hop has to change all the time," he explained, "because the African-American community changes at such a rapid pace. Especially in the use of language…. That’s the Digable Planets’ main thing, man. To manipulate language, to use it, juxtapose it, break it down, set it back." Kevin Powell offered his blessing in a Rolling Stone review, in which he wrote that "Reachin’ … is everything hip-hop should be: artisitically sound, unabashedly conscious and downright cool." He also predicted that the album’s mix of jazz and hip-hop would take some of the bitterness out of the latter for outside listeners. "Digable Planets’ modus operandi," Powell claimed, "is to elevate a rebellious and oft-misunderstood music to universal recognition."

Some of the critical response to Digable Planets, however, has argued that "universal recognition" has entailed a sacrifice of the hard edge, the political confrontation rap was known for, making the genre inappropriately accessible to those who normally found it threatening. Dream Hampton pointed out in the Village Voice the political divide that occurred: "Along with Arrested Development, Digable became a safe, politically correct, sexually integrated space for part-time hip hop fans who wanted nothing more to do with ugliness and raised voices." A Time reviewer exemplified that relief when he declared, "At last, rap even a liberal freshman philosophy major could love."

Jazz and Politics
Consequently, some writers dismissed Digable Planets’ jazz-inflected rap for not accurately reflecting the urban black experience. Williams commented in The Source, "Instead of hip-hop lauding [the Planets] for their inventive and smart rap, they were admonished for not being ’hard enough’ or ’keepin’ it real. ’" In retrospect, Butterfly expressed discontent with the album’s reputation, saying that its achievements did not reflect the group’s goals. "We were sampling a lot of jazz and speaking about a lot of political issues," he told Billboard’s Chris Morris in September of 1994. "I felt like people sort of missed it because of that pop appeal. And it was sort of like a misconception, like this was what we were aimin’ for. It didn’t bother us, but the fact that we didn’t achieve all that we wanted it to, did."

The Village Voice’s Hampton, coming to the Planets’ defense, argued that it was "ridiculous and condescending that Digable’s intellectualism is attributed to the fact that [Butterfly’s] dad has a job…. [It’s] offensive because it presumes that [Butterfly] can’t be ’ghetto to his marrow’ if his dad can read. As if the grassroots, leftist black power movement that was [Butterfly’s] ever left its base in the hood." Almost seemingly apart from such debates, the second single from the album, "Nickel Bags," fell flat in what appeared to be a bad omen for the group’s future, despite the album’s gold record status.

When the group was presented with a Grammy Award for best rap performance by a group for "Rebirth of Slick," Butterfly stunned viewers with an explicitly political speech. He told his listeners, as Williams recorded in the Source, that the Planets would "like for everybody to think about the people right outside this door that’s homeless as you’re sittin in these $900 and $300 seats. They not out there eatin’ at all."

With that statement, Butterfly began to declaim more directly the political philosophy he believed in and that had shaped Reachin’. The monikers that each rapper acquired for the debut album, for example, referred to "the insect theory," which Butterfly expanded on in a Source article: "The insect theory is the son of socialist readings. Knowing where you stand in this society and knowing where you should stand. Like if you look at ants and their hill, they’re always around it, protecting it. Cats is going out getting food, bringing it back. Think of [Karl Marx’s] The Communist Manifesto’s last sentence, ’workers of the world unite. ’ In front of, ’of the world unite,’ you could put anything: it’s about unity." The mainstream businesses that had embraced Digable Planets, however, did not find this kind of unity appealing and took a step back.

"9th Wonder (Blackitolism)," the first single off of Digable Planet’s second album, BlowoutComb, signaled the new angle the trio would emphasize. The message became openly political, reflecting in particular the diet of revolutionary socialism on which Butterfly had been raised. Commenting on the shift from the first to the second album, the rapper explained it as necessary to survival in the music business. "If you’re an artist with any type of consciousness," he told Spin’s Norris, "and you have some rudimentary understanding of the business, you know that your political ideas are not going to be easily swallowed by a record company. So it’s sort of like an infiltration. You have to get your foot in the door. Once you get in there, make some noise, sell some records, you got some power. Thenyou can begin to be more stern and direct with the shit you saying."

When Blowout Comb hit the market in October of 1994, critics did hear what Digable Planets was saying. Nathan Brackett commented appreciatively on the change in Musician, describing the trio as having "taken a step back from … jazz-bo posturing, opting instead for a messier, more funk-oriented approach." Rolling Stone’s Eric Berman noted that the trio had "taken admirable chances" with the new release; specifically, he cited the group’s use of live musicians along with samples, as well as the intertwining of "Five Percent Nation dialect and Planetspeak on black pride and cultural imperialism with dabblings in political philosophy… and scenes straight outta New York City’s projects." Craig Marks reviewed the album for Spin in December of 1994 and declared it a "beguiling, demanding, damn near revolutionary follow-up."

In Time Christopher John Farley offered a specific definition of the kind of politics embodied in the jazz/hip-hop hybrid of Digable Planets and their peers. "Rap is a form of rebellion," Farley wrote, "but it can be a trap when it plays into violent stereotypes. By adapting the humanism of jazz and channeling the power of rap away from anti-social braggadocia, Digable Planets … are helping make hip-hop truly revolutionary."

Selected discography
Reachin’ (A New Refutation of Time and Space; includes "Rebirth of Slick [Cool Like Dat]"), Pendulum/EML, 1992.
Blowout Comb (includes "9th Wonder"), Pendulum/EMI, 1994.

Sources
Audio, October 1993.
Billboard, September 10, 1994.
Details, My july 1993.
Down Beat, June 1993.
Entertainment Weekly, March 26, 1993.
Essence, August 1993.
Metro Times (Detroit), April 21, 1993.
Musician, July 1993; November 1994.
Noir, November 1994.
People, April 5, 1993.
Roiling Stone, February 18,1993; March 18,1993; December 1, 1994; May 4, 1995.
Seventeen, March 1993.
The Source, March 1993; April 1993; December 1994.
Spin, May 1993; July 1994; November 1994; December 1994.
Time, February 15, 1993; November 21, 1994.
Us, May 1993.
Village Voice, November 28, 1994.
Additional information for this profile was obtained from Pendulum Records publicity materials, 1994.
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  • Genres: Rap

Biography

Though they were not the first to synthesize jazz and hip-hop, Digable Planets epitomized the laid-back charm of jazz hipsters better than any group before or since. The trio's 1993 debut album, Reachin' (A New Refutation of Time and Space), was a mellow ride packed with samples from Art Blakey, Sonny Rollins, and Curtis Mayfield, and the single "Rebirth of Slick (Cool Like Dat)" became a Top 20 pop hit. After earning a Grammy for Best New Duo or Group and embarking on an ambitious tour that included several live musicians, the Planets returned in late 1994 with their best album yet. Blowout Comb continued the group's jazz-rap fusion, but also saw them branching out to embrace the old school sound of the street as well.

Digable Planets formed in the early '90s, when Butterfly (b. Ishmael Butler, Brooklyn, NY) met Ladybug (b. Mary Ann Vieira, Silver Springs, MD) while attending college in Massachusetts. The two later hooked up with Doodlebug (b. Craig Irving, Philadelphia, PA), in Washington, D.C., and began recording. Their first single, "Rebirth of Slick (Cool Like Dat)," released on the Pendulum subsidiary of Warner, hit the R&B Top Ten while their debut, Reachin' (A New Refutation of Time and Space), was a critical and commercial success. Digable Planets' resulting tour had a laid-back vibe more in keeping with a jazz show than any hip-hop concert, though the live musicians were criticized for doing little more than re-creating samples from the album. The trio solved that problem with the release of their second album, Blowout Comb, in late 1994. Much stronger than its predecessor, it used fewer samples and even included several solos. With no strong single to carry it, however, Blowout Comb's sales performance was not up to that of Reachin'. After Blowout Comb, Digable Planets basically dissolved due to the dreaded "creative differences". All three continued making music separately, but despite many promises that the recordings would become actual releases, nearly a decade passed before releases appeared from Butterfly's Cherrywine project, Ladybug's new billing Ladybug Mecca, and Doodlebug's Cee Knowledge. Then, just a few weeks shy of the ten-year anniversary of Blowout Comb, the three announced that they had reunited to record their third Digable Planets album. A compilation, Beyond the Spectrum: The Creamy Spy Chronicles, filled the gap while fans waited for its release. ~ John Bush, Rovi
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Digable Planets
Origin Brooklyn, New York, U.S.
Genres Jazz rap, alternative hip hop
Years active 1992–1995
2005–present
Labels Pendulum, Blue Note, EMI
Members
Butterfly
Doodlebug
Ladybug Mecca

Digable Planets (play /ˈdɪɡəbəl ˈplænəts/) is an American alternative hip hop trio based in New York City, composed of Ishmael "Butterfly" Butler (from Seattle), Mary Ann "Ladybug Mecca" Vieira (from Silver Spring) and Craig "Doodlebug" Irving (from Philadelphia).[1] They released their debut album Reachin' (A New Refutation of Time and Space) in 1993, and their follow-up album Blowout Comb in 1994. Shortly after this release the trio parted ways, citing "creative differences"[1], though they've re-united to perform shows in more recent years.

Contents

History

Digable Planets' fusion of jazz and hip hop received excellent reviews and solid sales with the release of their debut album, Reachin' (A New Refutation of Time and Space), in 1993, which was certified gold by the RIAA. The album's lead single, "Rebirth of Slick (Cool Like Dat)," in 1994 became a crossover hit, peaking at #15 on Billboard magazine's singles chart, earning gold certification by the RIAA, and winning the Grammy Award for Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group.[2] The track peaked at #67 in the UK Singles Chart in February 1993.[3]

The group's second album, Blowout Comb, was released in 1994 (see 1994 in music). This album departed from their debut by including feature appearances from outside artists, such as Jeru the Damaja and Guru of Gang Starr. Also in 1994, the group appeared on the Red Hot Organization's compilation album, Stolen Moments: Red Hot + Cool. The album, meant to raise awareness and funds in support of the AIDS epidemic in relation to the African American community, was heralded as "Album of the Year" by Time Magazine.

The trio subsequently broke up due to creative differences. An additional hardship hit group member Ladybug Mecca when she dealt with the deaths of both of her parents.[2]

A retrospective album Beyond the Spectrum: the Creamy Spy Chronicles was released in 2005, mixing previously released material with remixes and b-sides.[2]

From 2009 to 2011, Digable Planets' Doodlebug and Butterfly toured across the U.S., Canada, and Europe. Backed by a live band, Doodlebug's Cosmic Funk Orchestra, and often with Butterfly's Shabazz Palaces or hip hop duo Camp Lo as the supporting act, they continue to pack live concert venues around the globe with nostalgic oldschool hiphop lovers and a new generation of fans.

Digable Planets performed at Numbers, in Houston, Texas, on May 15, 2010, alongside the hip hop duo Camp Lo.[2] During an interview with the Houston Chronicle near the time of this show, Doodlebug stated that a new single would be released, called "Fresh Out," and that a new album was planned for digital release in summer of 2010.[2]

Digable Planets are currently touring and working on new music. Although, original member Ladybug is no longer with the group, they tour with other female MCs to represent the female energy that has always been a core element of the group.

Digable Planets performed alongside hip-hop group The Pharcyde at the North by Northeast music festival in Toronto, Ontario on June 19, 2011.[4]

Breakups and reunions

Butler established a hip-hop/blues act called Cherrywine; after failing to release a solo album "Ishmael Since 1999",Co-Produced by longtime friend and musician Marcel Sanders.[citation needed] Cherrywine's album Bright Black was released in 2003 to a lackluster reception. He also starred in the short films "I am Ali" and "We Deliver."[citation needed]

Doodlebug is now known as Cee Knowledge and tours with a band called Cee Knowledge & the Cosmic Funk Orchestra that released two albums in limited edition on FarmHouse Records.[citation needed]

Ladybug, now known as Lady Mecca, has also embarked on a solo career, releasing an album Trip The Light Fantastic in 2005.[citation needed] Ladybug Mecca has also guest appeared on "Spreadin' Rhythm Around" on Legacy/Sony's Billie Holiday Remixed & Reimagined Album. In 2008 Ladybug Mecca lent her talent to eMC (Masta Ace, Punchline, Wordsworth, Stricklin) on the title track "The Show" and Del Tha Funkee Homosapien's album 11th Hour on the song "I Got You". April 1, 2008 marks the release of her collaboration with the likes of Legendary producer Prince Paul, Chali 2na (Jurrasic 5), Ursula Rucker, Scratch (The Roots) and Wordsworth (eMC) on Baby Loves Hip Hop's The Dino-5 Children's CD which is a " Book on Tape" through Ropeadope Records. Ladybug Mecca is the voice of Tracey Triceratops, the leader of The Dino 5 as well as the "interrupting child".

In February 2005 the trio reunited and embarked on a reunion tour, with a compilation album released on October 15, 2005.[citation needed]

Butterfly has a son named Jazz from a previous relationship with Coko of SWV.[citation needed] According to the Digable Planets' Official MySpace page, maintained by Doodlebug and Butterfly, Lady Mecca chose to not continue future collaborations with Doodle and Butter.

Butterfly has also started a project under the moniker Shabazz Palaces in his home of Seattle. He has released two 7 song albums as well as a full length LP on Sub Pop Records, all of which were met with great critical acclaim.

Lady Mecca is currently working on her next album and has taken up another career, as DJ Lady Mecca with her second gig on March 12, 2011 at LOLA in St. Louis, Missouri. According to Kevin C. Johnson, Post-Dispatch Pop Music Critic,"What stood out about Mecca's two-hour, 50-song set was her song choices, full of selections music fans don't necessarily hear every weekend at the clubs (unlike, say, DJ Solange, who totally pandered to the crowd at the gig at Exo earlier this year)."

Rumors surfaced in late 2011 that the group will be reuniting for a run of shows throughout 2012, though no official word has yet been released by the group or their reps.

Discography

Albums

Singles

  • "Rebirth of Slick (Cool Like Dat)" (1992)
  • "Where I'm From" (1993)
  • "Nickel Bags" (1993)
  • "9th Wonder (Blackitolism)" (1994)
  • "9th Wonder (Slicker This Year) Mad Slicker Remixes" (1994)
  • "Dial 7 (Axioms of Creamy Spies)" (1995)
Year Song Chart positions
Billboard Hot 100 Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks Hot Rap Tracks Hot Dance Music/Maxi-Singles Sales
1993 Rebirth of Slick [Cool Like Dat] 15 6 1 1
Where I'm From - 60 7 41
Nickel Bags - 93 12 -

References

  1. ^ a b Bush, John. "Biography: Digable Planets". Allmusic. http://www.allmusic.com/artist/p26355. Retrieved 15 July 2010. 
  2. ^ a b c d e [1] Digable Planets biography page
  3. ^ Roberts, David (2006). British Hit Singles & Albums (19th ed.). London: Guinness World Records Limited. p. 155. ISBN 1-904994-10-5. 
  4. ^ Stevenson, Jane. "Devo, Hats play free for NXNE". Toronto Sun. http://www.torontosun.com/2011/04/19/devo-hats-play-free-for-nxne. Retrieved 25 April 2011. 

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