Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American musician Black Thought.
Last updated on November 22, 2024.
Tariq Luqmaan Trotter, better known as Black Thought, is an American rapper, actor and the lead MC of the Philadelphia-based hip hop group the Roots, which he co-founded with drummer Questlove. Regarded as "one of the most skilled, incisive, and prolific rappers of his time", he is widely lauded for his live performance skills, continuous multisyllabic rhyme schemes, complex lyricism, double entendres, and politically aware lyrics. With the Roots, he is a singer and rapper on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, frequently playing games with Fallon and his guests. In July of 2022, Tariq joined the venture capital firm Impellent Ventures as a General Partner.
I'm in great company and some may say that the underexposure has added to my allure and the staying power of me as a MC and The Roots as a band.
I give back because that is what I was taught and it is what I believe.
I strive for improvement. want to be a master of my craft.
There are some millennial artists that I totally get and understand, and I know what they're talking about. People who I've worked with and who I'd like to work with. But there's a whole element of artists that I can't explain what they're talking about.
I do not seem like a funny guy.
You can't expect every idea of yours to stick or even come to fruition, you have to make sacrifices for the greater good of the team.
I grew up in Mount Airy, a middle-class enclave in the Northwestern area of Philadelphia.
'Rise Up' is very necessary. Point blank.
I used to be a Def Jam artist. I was - I survived Def Jam.
I've never studied music.
I feel like I've been around for such a long time, as a writer and as an artist, that I need to sort of speak to the way that my perception of the world has sort of changed.
I was raised as a Muslim.
We've always been a band that intentionally transcended race and age.
I think poor folks are the only people who cannot afford - financially and otherwise - to be sick.
Philly DJs sort of always won battles and always won awards and stuff like that and were always super sharp.
I mean, I'm no superhero.
I think at the end of the day the diversity has served as a major... that's what has determined the difference between The Roots and some of the other artists from our graduating class. I feel we followed the De La Soul, the Native Tongue blueprint.
The thing that's carried over from my visual-art education into what I do musically is my openness.
We always do kinda like the bare bones representation or variation of the voice and drums, which is what we feel is the foundation or backbone of rapping and hip hop.
I grew up in the neighborhood where 'Rocky' came from.
The most profound memory I have from my childhood is burning down my house at 6 years old.
I definitely enjoy performing on stage with The Roots.
Passyunk Productions is our film & tv production company. The name comes from a street in Philly, Passyunk Avenue, where the concept of The Roots was born, as Ahmir and I started out busking on the corner of 5th & Passyunk back in the early '90s.
For me, I'm a super private person.
I want to be at the top of my game.
You are an instrument if you understand your voice and how to use it - this sound, that sound and certain ranges and different pitch. Within that I try to find a rhythm and play the voice as if it was a horn.
The Roots brand is like the Lipton of hip-hop, so to speak.
Lots of people are saying that I shut down mumble rap in one 10-minute setting. But that wasn't my intention, because mumble rap - if we go back - that's something I invented.
I think the true artist - musician, dancer, writer, actor - a true artist is able to sort of articulate pain and tragedy, in a way that sort of expresses what the listener or the beholder may have been feeling but was less able to communicate.
A lot of our earlier material was freestyle tunes.
It felt like a huge weight had been lifted off my shoulders the day I finally finished both verses for 'My Shot.'
The Roots are well-respected and considered vanguards in the music.
I've become a functioning cog in the machine called The Roots, but in my youth I was comin' from a more braggadocious, egotistical perspective.
Something that is funny, that I use sometimes if I'm doing comedy, is the fact that I'm now often mistaken for the rapper Rick Ross. And I don't know that I've ever corrected anyone - like I've never said, 'No no, I'm not Rick Ross, I'm Black Thought from The Roots.'
For me, the arts has always been sort of my saving grace.
Although there are people who regard 'Do You Want More?!!!??!' as our first major release, I think 'Things Fall Apart' was the real arrival of The Roots, so to speak.
Some of my favorites are the classics like 'What They Do,' 'Proceed,' 'You Got Me,' and 'Silent Treatment.'
I got a family to take care of and kids to feed. That's my motivation, this is my job.
I've always sort of listened to news radio.
The Roots - we signed our first record deal when I was about 19 years old.
I think we need more community health programs and we need to develop programs that are low-cost.
If there's a track that's rhyme friendly, the verse will basically write itself. If the track is less rhyme friendly, you have to put forth a little more effort to get the song out.
Our plan for Passyunk Productions is to make an impact in the film & tv world by leveraging our collective resources, telling great stories and creating smart programming told from a unique perspective.
So in my personal opinion, I definitely feel like I'm a legendary emcee, and I also feel like we're a legendary brand, which is why I started rebranding ourselves years ago by saying 'The Legendary Roots Crew,' which is how we're introduced on 'The Tonight Show.'
I remember when I was 15 or 16 years old, I couldn't imagine what life would be like past the age of 30, just because I didn't know that many men who had lived beyond their 20s.
By the time I was, you know, 16 years old, I had done a lot of growing up.
When I was coming up, a freestyle wasn't a freestyle unless everything was completely improvised, in-the-moment and right there, and you had to incorporate various elements of what was going on in the room on the day.
You can always hear me breathing during my verses, but that breathing becomes part of the music.
I started as a visual artist and I've always dealt with music in that same sort of way.
I feel like the youthful experience is what drives the creativity, and I feel like experience and maturity as an adult, experience as an elder statesman, that refines it.
It's weird what can trigger the beginning of a song or some bars. It can be a banging slice of apple pie or it can be smelling a certain perfume or something.
I'll read a book. I'll watch a documentary or a film or whatever. I'll go to an art exhibit and just try and open myself to influence.
I made the mistake of going to a barber who was not from Philly, and let's just say, I would never do that again.
I feel like Black Thought is a name that has so much meaning and depth, not only to me but to my fans, that it's something that I wanted to hold onto a little bit tighter.
To be in a band with the other founding members that never sleep is inspiring. Questlove put out five books a year and deejays every night and still do the same day job that I do, only with more responsibility. It drives me to find a way to juggle it.
Don't do anything for fear, because fear will never do anything for you.
Everything we've ever done has been for artistry's sake, and for the greater good and paying homage to those who came before us and paving the way for those who come after us.
I'm anti-ageism in the arts.
Nah, I don't feel overlooked, underappreciated, or none of that because it's a short list of artists, past and present, that I kind of have respect for. And in all of those situations, the admiration and respect is mutual.
Questlove and I - we were in high school with artists like Boyz II Men and Amel Larrieux.