Gift of Gab (rapper)
Gift of Gab | |
---|---|
Background information | |
Birth name | Timothy Jerome Parker |
Born | [1] Pacoima Los Angeles, California, U.S. | October 7, 1970
Died | June 18, 2021 | (aged 50)
Genres | Alternative hip hop |
Occupation | Rapper |
Years active | 1993–2021 |
Labels | Quannum Projects |
Website | officialgiftofgab |
Timothy Jerome Parker (October 7, 1970 – June 18, 2021),[2][3] better known by his stage name Gift of Gab, was an American rapper best known for performing in the Bay Area hip hop duo Blackalicious along with DJ Chief Xcel. He was also a member of Quannum Projects, a Bay Area hip hop crew and record label, and performed and recorded as a solo artist.
Life
Timothy Jerome Parker was born in 1971 and raised in the Pacoima neighborhood of Los Angeles, California.[4] He had two brothers and a sister at time of death, he also had two sisters that passed before him. He attended high school in Sacramento with his future bandmate Xavier "Chief Xcel" Mosley. In the years leading up to 2020, Parker had suffered from kidney failure and was receiving dialysis multiple times a week. In January 2020, Parker received a kidney transplant. Parker died on June 18, 2021 of natural causes.[4]
Collaborations
Gift of Gab was featured on Galactic's album From the Corner to the Block (2007). He collaborated with DJ Z-Trip on the track "Go Hard" for the All-Pro Football 2K8 Soundtrack. He also released The Prelude EP with Lateef the Truthspeaker and Headnodic as The Mighty Underdogs. He went on to do a song called "All In" with The Grouch & Eligh. He was also featured on the track "The People Tree" on the 2009 N.A.S.A. release "The Spirit of Apollo".
In 2002, Gift of Gab contributed to Red Hot + Riot: The Music and Spirit of Fela Kuti, a compilation CD released by the Red Hot Organization in tribute to the music and work of Nigerian musician, Fela Kuti, that raised money for various charities devoted to raising AIDS awareness and fighting the disease. He collaborated with hip hop artist Lateef the Truthspeaker to remake Fela Kuti's song, "Kalakuta Show."
In addition to this, Gift of Gab collaborated with Del the Funky Homosapien and Brother Ali on the track "Dreamin'" on his solo album, Escape 2 Mars, as well as making tracks with DJ Vadim, Cut Chemist, Ben Harper and Chali 2na of Jurassic 5.
He also featured on fellow San Francisco rapper Watsky's song "Everything Turns Gold", and the track "They Warned Us" by Watsky's jazz-rap fusion band Invisible Inc.[citation needed]
Discography
Studio albums
Solo
- 4th Dimensional Rocketships Going Up (Quannum Projects, 2004)
- Escape 2 Mars (Cornerstone R.A.S., 2009)
- The Next Logical Progression (Quannum Projects, 2012)
- Finding Inspiration Somehow (Nature Sounds, 2021)[5]
(Gift of Gab w/ Chief Xcel)
- Nia (Mo' Wax, 1999)
- Blazing Arrow (MCA, 2002)
- The Craft (ANTI-, 2005)
- Imani Vol. 1 (OGM, 2015)
- Imani Vol. 2 (TBA)[6]
(Gift of Gab w/ Chief Xcel, DJ Shadow, Lateef the Truth Speaker & Lyrics Born)
- Spectrum (Quannum Projects, 1999)
(Gift of Gab w/ Lateef the Truth Speaker & Headnodic)
EPs, mixtapes & compilations
- EPs
- Melodica (Solesides, 1994) (Blackalicious)
- A2G EP (Mo' Wax, 1999) (Blackalicious)
- The Prelude (MU Records, 2007) (The Mighty Underdogs)
- Rejoice! Rappers Are Rapping Again! (2017)[7]
- Offerings (2020)[note 1][8]
- Mixtapes
- Compilations
- Solesides Greatest Bumps (Quannum Projects, 2000) (Quannum MCs)
- Greatest Misses Vol. 1 (2018)[11]
Singles
- "Swan Lake / Lyric Fathom" (1994) (Blackalicious)
- "A to G / Alphabet Aerobics (The Cut Chemist 2 1/2 Minute Workout)" (1999) (Blackalicious)
- "Deception" (1999) (Blackalicious)
- "If I May / Reanimation" (2000) (Blackalicious)
- "Passion" (2001) (Blackalicious)
- "It's Going Down (Sit Back)" (2002) (Blackalicious)
- "Art of Mind / Just What Can Happen" (2002) (Blackalicious)
- "Blazing Arrow" (2002) (Blackalicious)
- "Make You Feel That Way" (2002) (Blackalicious)
- "Wizzy Wow / It's Going Down" (2002) (Blackalicious & Blackstreet)
- "The Writz / Just Because" (2003)
- "Rat Race / Real MCs" (2004)
- "Your Move" (2005) (Blackalicious)
- "Rhythm Sticks" (2005) (Blackalicious)
- "Powers" (2006) (Blackalicious)
- "Want You Back" (2008) (The Mighty Underdogs)
Guest appearances
- DJ Shadow - "Midnight in a Perfect World" (Gab Mix)" from Midnight in a Perfect World (1996)
- Latyrx - "Burning Hot in Cali on a Saturday Night" from Latyrx (The Album) (1997)
- New Flesh - "Communicate" from Understanding (2002)
- DJ Vadim - "Combustible" from U.S.S.R. The Art of Listening (2002)
- Lyrics Born - "Cold Call" from Later That Day (2003)
- Crown City Rockers - "Fortitude" from Earthtones (2004)
- Troublemakers - "Everywhere Is My Home", "And Music Everywhere", and "Race Records" from Express Way (2004)
- Zion I - "Stranger in My Home" from True & Livin' (2005)
- Zion I - "Yes Yes" from Break a Dawn (2006)
- Motion Man - "One Time for Your Mind" from Pablito's Way (2006)
- G. Love - "Banger" from Lemonade (2006)
- Galactic - "The Corner" from From the Corner to the Block (2007)
- The Grouch & Eligh - "All In" from Say G&E! (2009)
- N.A.S.A. - "The People Tree" from The Spirit of Apollo (2009)
- Watsky - "Everything turns Gold" from Watsky (2009)
- Lyrics Born - "Pillz" from As U Were (2010)
- Unspoken Levels - "What We Do" from Welcome to Where you Are (2010)
- Raashan Ahmad - "Falling" from For What You've Lost (2011)
- Illus - "Better" from For Adam (2011)
- Playdough - "Franks & Beans" from Hotdoggin (2011)
- Medium - "Hologram" from Graal (2012)
- Blueshift - "Wounded Man (feat. Gift of Gab)" (single) (2012)
- Lotus - "Another World" from Monks (2013)
- Latyrx - "Watershed Moment" from The Second Album (2013)
- Opiuo - "Life" from Meraki (2014)
- Smokey Joe & The Kid - "Stay Awake" from "The Game" (EP) (2014)
- Amp Live- "ihearthiphip" from Headphone Concerto (2014)
- L'Orange & Jeremiah Jae - "All I Need" from The Night Took Us in Like Family (2015)
- Markis Precise - "Leaving the Hood" from The Feeling of Flying (2015)
- Hip Bones - "Taskmaster" from The Moose Lodge Sessions (2016)[12]
- Zero Dinero - "The Time Has Come" (2016)
- Prophetiko - "Calling You" ft. Realistic from "Prophzilla" on Nomad Hip Hop (2016)
- Invisible Inc. - "They Warned Us" from "Fine Print" (2018)
- Sirreal - "Keep it Moving" (2018)
References
- ^ "Blackalicious lyricist Gift of Gab dead at 50".
- ^ Kreps, Daniel (June 25, 2021). "Blackalicious Rapper Gift of Gab Dead at 50". Rolling Stone. Retrieved June 25, 2021.
- ^ Strauss, Matthew (June 25, 2021). "Gift of Gab, Blackalicious Rapper, Dies at 50". Pitchfork. Retrieved June 25, 2021.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ a b Cite error: The named reference
https://laist.com/news/laist-interview-22
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ "New Gift of Gab Song "Vice Grip" Gets Posthumous Release". Pitchfork. 17 August 2021.
- ^ "Rappers Macklemore, Evidence, Run the Jewels' El-P, Lyrics Born & More Mourn Gift of Gab's Death". 25 June 2021.
- ^ "Gift of Gab Launches Patreon Campaign for New EP "Rejoice! Rappers Are Rapping Again!"". 27 April 2017.
- ^ "Blackalicious' Gift of Gab Launches GoFundMe Campaign for Kidney Transplant". 28 January 2020.
- ^ "The Gift of Gab – Supreme Lyricism Volume One (2006, CD)". Discogs.
- ^ "BRAND NEW MIXTAPE!! | The Gift of Gab on Patreon". Archived from the original on 2021-06-27.
- ^ Archived at Ghostarchive and the Wayback Machine: "Gift of Gab - Stardust". YouTube.
- ^ Moss, Bill (August 4, 2016). "Henderson County News: Hip Bones holds CD launch party at Southern App - Hendersonville Lightning". Hendersonvillelightning.com. Retrieved September 24, 2019.
https://laist.com/news/laist-interview-22
External links
- Official website
- Gift of Gab discography at Discogs
- 1970 births
- 2021 deaths
- 21st-century American male musicians
- 21st-century American rappers
- African-American male rappers
- African-American songwriters
- People from Panorama City, Los Angeles
- Quannum Projects artists
- Rappers from Los Angeles
- Rappers from Sacramento, California
- Songwriters from California
- West Coast hip hop musicians
- 21st-century African-American musicians
- 20th-century African-American people
- American male songwriters