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"I start the album off with the Obama speech not just because I'm African-American, but because I really feel like he's a fresh new voice and alternative from what we've seen in the political scene in some time," Q-Tip stated in a recent interview with Billboard earlier this year. "I see similarities in his way of thinking and my way. I really like him a lot."
Also featured on the set is the piano-based lead single, "Getting Up," which is in the vein of Tribe's "Award Tour," the Raphael Saadiq-assisted "Fight/Love," which tells the stories of a girl in a troubled relationship and a young man fighting in Iraq, and "Life Is Better," featuring Norah Jones, where Q-Tip pays tribute to all his favorite rappers, including Biz Markie, LL Cool J, Leaders of The New School, Snoop Dogg, Eazy-E, Bone Thugs-N-Harmony, Brand Nubian and Pimp C.The album also includes the 60's-inspired "Won't Trade," "ManWomanBoogie," with Amanda Diva, and "Believe," featuring the reclusive D'Angelo.
Q-Tip has once again reunited with Tribe's Phife Dawg, Ali Shaheed Muhammad and Jarobi White for this summer's Rock The Bells Tour. Q-Tip's last album, 1999's "Amplified," has sold 675,000 copies in the United States, and reached No. 4 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart
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