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- Formed: 1992, Davis, CA
- Genres: Rap
- Representative Albums: "The Album," "Muzapper's Remixes"
- Representative Songs: "Lady Don't Tek No," "Rankin' No. 1," "Latyrx"
| Artist: Latyrx |
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Performed Songs By:
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| Discography: Latyrx |
| Wikipedia: Latyrx |
| Latyrx | |
|---|---|
| Origin | USA |
| Genre(s) | alternative hip hop |
| Years active | 1996–1999 |
| Label(s) | Solesides |
| Members | |
| Lateef the Truth Speaker Lyrics Born |
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Latyrx is a hip hop music group consisting of Lateef the Truth Speaker and Lyrics Born. The roots of their partnership lay in the formation of the Solesides collective at the University of California, Davis.
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The crew's charter members—which also included DJ Shadow and the future Blackalicious team—were all involved in student radio and shared a progressive-minded approach to hip hop. Lateef and Lyrics Born initially recorded as solo artists; under the name Asia Born, the latter released the first single on the Solesides label, "Send Them," in early 1993.
The first proper Latyrx release came in 1996, and was actually the B-side of Lateef's solo single "The Wreckoning." For the track in question, also called "Latyrx," both MCs recorded completely different raps that were played back simultaneously. Coupled with DJ Shadow's production and its unique effect, it started to build an underground buzz for the duo. More solo sides followed that year—Lateef cut "The Quickening (The Wreckoning, Pt. II)" with DJ Shadow on the boards, and Lyrics Born produced his own 12" release, "Balcony Beach" b/w "Burnt Pride." Most of these solo sides, along with a raft of new material, appeared on the duo's debut LP, Latyrx (The Album), which was released in 1997.
DJ Shadow produced a total of four tracks, and Chief Xcel (later of Blackalicious) helmed two, while Lyrics Born handled the rest himself. The Album earned rave reviews for its adventurous, electronic-flavored production and the distinctive flows of both rappers. It was followed closely by the Muzapper's Mixes EP, which contained the boundary-pushing single "Lady Don't Tek No." Muzapper's Remixes appeared in 1998, but unfortunately, The Album didn't stay in print much longer; it was reissued briefly in 1999 before disappearing again. Meanwhile, Solesides was reconfigured into a new label, Quannum Projects, and the collective officially changed its name to Quannum as well. Latyrx didn't record much following their brief reign as an underground sensation. They guested on "8 Point Agenda," a 1999 single by the Herbaliser, and also contributed new material to the Quannum Spectrum compilation that year.
Quannum Projects finally reissued it in 2002, allowing it to take its place alongside the new crop of independent hip hop that included El-P's Def Jux crew, Anti-Pop Consortium, and
Lyrics Born announced on his website in February-March 2007 through a podcast that a new Latyrx album would see light after his next solo project.
| Year | Album |
|---|---|
| 1997 | Lady Don't Tek No (single) |
| 1997 | The Album |
| 1998 | Muzapper's Mixes |
| 1999 | Muzapper's remixes |
| 2002 | The Album (reissue) |
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| Muzapper's Remixes (1998 Album by Latryx) | |
| Lateef the Truth Speaker (Rap Artist, '90s, 2000s) | |
| The Album [UK] (1997 Album by Latyrx) |
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