Tag: OutKast

  • OutKast’s “So Fresh, So Clean” Almost Didn’t Feature André 3000, Sleepy Brown Reveals

    OutKast’s “So Fresh, So Clean” Almost Didn’t Feature André 3000, Sleepy Brown Reveals

    Sleepy Brown revealed that OutKast’s “So Fresh, So Clean” almost went in a different direction during its creation

    OutKast’s iconic track “So Fresh, So Clean” nearly took a different direction during the time of its making, as Organized Noize producer Sleepy Brown recently disclosed in an interview with SPIN.

    It was originally thought of being a solo Big Boi song, and almost had André 3000 not on it at all. According to Brown, André didn’t want to get involved with it right away.

    “André didn’t like that record,” Brown revealed. “It wasn’t because he didn’t think it was dope — it just wasn’t matching where he was at at the time. We really just did it for Big.”

    Brown and the Organized Noize team were thinking they needed a “hood theme” for the album, which Big Boi got behind completely. But once the bass line was added by Preston Crump, everything changed for André.

    “When Dre heard that, he got excited and came up with ‘the coolest motherfunkers on the planet’ part,” Brown explained. “Thanks to Preston, that’s the reason why Dre even got on that record.”

    Brown also credited the song’s catchy hook to the dying Organized Noize member Rico Wade, who contributed to the lyrics. Brown recounted laying down the initial piano melody and requesting Wade to write the words.

    “Rico was really slick with words,” Brown shared. “I asked him to write it, and I just laid down a melody. He had it ready the next morning.”

  • André 3000 Shuts Down Hopes for an OutKast Reunion: ‘We’re Further Away Than Ever’

    André 3000 Shuts Down Hopes for an OutKast Reunion: ‘We’re Further Away Than Ever’

    OutKast lovers will have to adjust their expectations for a reunion from the legendary hip-hop duo. The rap star revealed in an honest interview with Rolling Stone published on December 12 that the possibility of any new OutKast album or tour could be more distant than ever before.

    “I’ll say maybe 10, 15 years ago, in my mind, I thought-Outkast album would happen,” André admitted, with foresight into what might come in the future. “I don’t know the future, but I can say that we’re further away from it than we’ve ever been. It’s a chemistry thing. We have to be wanting to do it.”

    The man also referred to their past, which he said is from where that magic happened, as “chemistry.” For André, there was a specific time in their lives when OutKast magic really happened. “It was a great time in life, and our chemistry was at a certain place that was undeniable. The audience sometimes believes that something has to last forever, but I do not think that is true. This art is not a product you can replicate on demand.”

    He compared it to something dynamic and runs well instead of a static formula, such as making a commercial product. “It’s not like Coca-Cola that you press a button and it happens,” he said. “The audience never knows what it takes to make what they’re getting.”

    He was also not so literal in saying that a farewell tour is something he looks forward to. “No, I doubt that. We did a tour in 2014. I knew when I was 25 that at a certain age, I wouldn’t want to be onstage doing those songs; they require a certain energy. I’m grateful for everything that’s happened, but that was a time. I wish y’all were there.”

    For the time being, it appears that the magnificent legacy of OutKast will remain just that event in the past, a time in a glorious moment in music history.

  • OutKast’s ‘Hey Ya!’ Achieves Diamond Certification Two Decades After Release

    OutKast’s ‘Hey Ya!’ Achieves Diamond Certification Two Decades After Release

    OutKast has now set another milepost in their celebrated career as their smash hit “Hey Ya!” from 2003 has officially received Diamond certification from the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) after earning more than ten million units.

    The above announcement, made on Friday, December 13, 2013, is the first-ever Diamond record by Outkast for one of their singles. “Hey Ya!” really attests to the long-lasting legacy the band has created in the world of music.

    As part of the groundbreaking double release Speakerboxxx/The Love Below, the track contributed significantly to the album’s commercial success. The record itself received Diamond certification less than 15 months after the September 2003 release.

    Composed by André 3000, who both wrote and performed the song “Hey Ya!” became an instantaneous cultural phenomenon upon its release. It held the number one spot on the Billboard Hot 100 for nine weeks in a row, from mid-December 2003 to early February 2004.

    The song deservedly received much acclaim outside of commercial recognition, earning three nominations at the Grammy Awards and winning one, thus etching OutKast into music history even more.

    While fans throw a party in celebration of this new milestone, “Hey Ya!” hardly misses a beat as it seems to boomerang yet again at the gates of contemporary pop.

  • Offset ranks Migos second best rap group of all time

    Offset ranks Migos second best rap group of all time

    Set says Migos are only second to OutKast

    Offset shares his thoughts on Migos’ place among hip hop groups of all time. During a sit-down on Club Shay Shay podcast this week, Set explained why Migos is the second best rap group in history.

    “I’ll give us [number] two because I’m respectful,” he told host Shannon Sharpe. “You gotta respect Outkast. They kicked the door down for us down South when it was a time that we weren’t even accepted. I’ma put Outkast first, I’ma put us at two.

    “I’ma put Wu-Tang [at three]. The LOX, I give them four. I respect N.W.A and they kicked the gangsta off and everybody in that situation still got some type of motion that’s still here, but I’m young too.”

  • Moneybagg Yo thanks OutKast for clearing his latest single “Quickie”

    Moneybagg Yo thanks OutKast for clearing his latest single “Quickie”

    Moneybagg sampled OutKast on his new song

    Moneybag Yo returned with a brand new single, “Quickie,’ which he unleashed on Friday (December 9). The Memphis native shortly hopped on Instagram stories to thank Atlanta group OutKast for clearing the record. On the track produced by Skywalker OG, Bagg samples OutKast’s 1996 hit, “Jazzy Belle,” lifted from their sophomore album, ATLiens.

    “Preciate @outkast for clearing the “Quickie” song for me,” the A Gangsta’s Pain artist wrote.
    Moneybagg accompanied his latest single with a music video by Diesel Films.

    The record follows up Bagg’s last single, “Blow,” which was released on his 31st birthday, September 22.


  • OutKast (André 3000 & Big Boi) attended the same High School

    OutKast (André 3000 & Big Boi) attended the same High School

    André 3000 and Big Boi met in High School

    Back in the early ’90s, André 3000 & Big Boi both attended the same high school; Tri-Cities High School in the Atlanta borough of East Point, Georgia.

    With the mutual love for Hip-Hop and funk music that we hear in their music, they would both join forces to form the group we all know today as Outkast. They would release their debut single on LaFace Records’ Christmas album titled Player’s Ball. LaFace would sign them and they will release their debut album Southernplayalisticadillacmuzik in 1994.

    Related Content: OutKast’s first rap name as a duo was 2 Shades Deep

    OutKast’s fourth studio album Stankonia, which came out in 2000, earned them two Grammys, one for Best Rap Album of the Year and one for Best Rap Performance by a Group or Duo.

    Purchase our 100 Hip-Hop Facts (1973-2000) Book

    Read: DJ Kool Herc and Coke La Rock went to High School together

    Read: Tupac & Jada Pinkett-Smith went to high school together

    Read: Cam’ron and Ma$e went to high school together

  • OutKast’s first rap name as a duo was 2 Shades Deep

    OutKast’s first rap name as a duo was 2 Shades Deep

    OutKast originally went by the moniker 2 Shades Deep, then Misfits.

    Before Atlanta duo OutKast (Andre 3000 (André Benjamin) and Big Boy (Antwan Patton)) was famously known as Outkast, they were originally known as 2 Shades Deep, then Misfits, eventually they settled on “OutKast”.

    Outkast (sometimes written as OutKast) met in high school in East Point and the group was formed in 1992 under the name 2 Shades Deep,” and after they found out a similar name was being used by an Atlanta group called “4 Shades Deep” they changed the name to “Misfits” which was also taken. They looked into the dictionary for synmonyms of ‘Misfits: and “outcast” came up so they settled on that name with its phonetic spelling of the c replaced with “k”.

    Read: OutKast was booed after winning Best New Rap Group at the 1995 Source Awards

    Read: Diddy directed the music video for “Player’s Ball” by Outkast

    Read: “Hey Ya” by OutKast was the first song on iTunes to reach one million downloads

  • Andre 3000’s stepfather, Pastor Robert Hodo, played the harmonica solo on Outkast’s ‘Rosa Parks’

    Andre 3000’s stepfather, Pastor Robert Hodo, played the harmonica solo on Outkast’s ‘Rosa Parks’

    Outkast‘s 1998 single ‘Rosa Parks’, released via LaFace Records, from their third studio album Aquemini features a harmonica solo from Andre 3000‘s late stepfather, Pastor Robert Hodo. The late Pastor Robert Hodo is listed in the song and album credits.

    “After doing the track and hearing where we were going with it, it sounded like a hoe-down, it sounded porchy. And I knew [my stepfather, Rev. Robert] Hodo played harmonica, so I was like, ‘Hey, come over and play.’ And what’s crazy is he killed it in like one or two takes.” – Says Andre 3000, in a 2010 interview with CreativeLoafing about the album Aquemini. This quote specifically on how the Harmonic solo came about.

    You can also see Pastor Robert Hodo appear in the music video for Rosa Parks around the harmonica solo part of 2:47 to 3:15.

    Read: Diddy directed the music video for “Player’s Ball” by Outkast

    Read: OutKast was booed after winning Best New Rap Group at the 1995 Source Awards

    Read: Kanye West auditioned for Will Ferrell’s movie Semi-Pro but lost the role to Andre 3000

    Read: Pimp C didn’t like Andre 3000’s verse on “International Players Anthem”

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