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The Native Tongues was a collective of late 1980s and early 1990s hip-hop artists known for their positive-minded, good-natured Afrocentric lyrics, and for pioneering the use of eclectic sampling and jazz-influenced beats. Its principal members were the Jungle Brothers, De La Soul, A Tribe Called Quest, Monie Love, and Queen Latifah
The song was also famous for featuring the major members of the Native Tongues posse, including Q-Tip of A Tribe Called Quest, Jungle Brothers, Queen Latifah and Monie Love. While Phife Dawg appears in the video itself and is heard in the extended mix, the mix in the video eliminates his entire verse.
Mojo Ruiz de Luzuriaga, known professionally as Mo'Ju [1] and previously as Mojo Juju, is an Australian musician, best known for their 2018 album Native Tongue and the lead single of the same title. The single won the Best Independent Single category in the 2019 AIR Awards .
Native Tongue (stylized in all uppercase) is the eleventh studio album by American alternative rock band Switchfoot. It was released on January 18, 2019, through Fantasy Records . [ 1 ] [ 3 ] [ 4 ] Native Tongue peaked at No. 41 in its opening week on the Billboard 200 chart and No. 2 on the Billboard Christian albums chart.
The post Filipino American creator says why he thinks many Filipino immigrant parents refuse to teach their children their native tongue: ‘It’s for the clout’ appeared first on In The Know.
Native Tongues, an American hip hop collective; Native Tongue (Poison album), 1993; Native Tongue (Switchfoot album), 2019; Native Tongue, a 2018 album and single of the same name by Australian singer-songwriter Mo'Ju "Native Tongue", a song by Sara Groves from her 2015 album Floodplain
The Meaning Behind Taylor Swift's Track 5 Songs. Moises Mendez II. April 19, 2024 at 10:52 AM. ... These songs contain some of the singer-songwriter’s most biting lyrics, the kind that twist the ...
The song was covered by Roots Reggae and dub artists in the 1970s : in 1972, Sioux Records released two versions of the song, by Jackie Rowland and another by Funky Brown, and later, in 1977, Lee "Scratch" Perry released at least two vocal and dub versions of the record, recorded at the Black Ark Studios and attributed to The African ...