Taylor, known as ATCQ’s cocky, high-pitched MC, died in 2016 from diabetes complications. The rapper/producer spoke about his condition in his music, famously referring to himself as the “funky diabetic” in the group’s song “Oh My God.”
During a ceremony on the late rapper’s birthday in New York, Linden Boulevard was co-named as Malik “Phife Dawg” Taylor Way at the intersection of 192nd Street in the Saint Albans neighborhood of Queens, New York City. Attendees included A Tribe Called Quest co-members Q-Tip and Jarobi White, extended Tribe family Busta Rhymes and Consequence, rapper Cormega, city government officials and members of Taylor’s family.
“It’s really a sickness,” Taylor said in Beats, Rhymes & Life, Michael Rapaport’s candid 2011 documentary on the group. “Like straight-up drugs. I‘m just addicted to sugar.”
The musician had been struggling with health issues associated with diabetes for several years, and received a kidney transplant from his wife in 2008.
Phife co-founded the hip-hop group in 1985 with his classmates Q-Tip, Jarobi and Ali Shaheed Muhammad. With hits like “Can I Kick It”, “Scenario”, and “Check The Rhime” the group was a favorite and grew millions of fans from all around the world.
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The group would go on to make its mark as one of the most progressive hip-hop acts of its time. And commercial success didn’t elude them. ATCQ’s 1996 album Beats, Rhymes and Life reached No. 1 on the Billboard 200 and its follow-up, The Love Movement from 1998, peaked at No .3 on the chart (another, earlier set, Midnight Marauders, reached No. 8 on the U.S. chart in 1993). They were rewarded in 2005 with a Special Achievement Award at the Billboard R&B Hip-Hop Awards In Atlanta.
The band recently reformed to perform the song on Jimmy Fallon’s US chat show, as they marked the 25th anniversary of their debut album People’s Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm. Phife, who had the nicknames “Five Foot Assassin” and “The Five Footer” because of his short stature (he stood at 5 ft. 3 in), released a solo album, Ventilation: Da LP, in 2000.
…David Letterman with the rest of the group because of complications from the disease. It was after that, the rapper made his battle with disease more public.
Following the group’s dissolution, Taylor continued to battle diabetes, reuniting with the group for live shows, in part, to help defray medical costs. “Even though I knew I had [diabetes], I was in denial,” Taylor said in the documentary. “I had to have my sugar. You have to accept it. If you don’t accept it, it’s going to kick your ass.”
Along with acts like De La Soul and Queen Latifah, the band were part of an overall movement that challenged the macho posturing of rap in the ’80s and ’90s. Their lyrics addressed issues like date rape and the use of the N-word in the track Sucker Niga, and avoided the hip-hop cliches of gunplay and expletives.
Musically, they fused jazz with hip-hop, often rapping over a drum loop and an upright bass – while 1991’s complex, atmospheric The Low End Theory has often been ranked among the best hip-hop albums of all time.
Rest In Peace, Phife.
Here’s a little walk down memory lane in the video below: