
ATLiens is a Hip-Hop album by OutKast, originally released in 1996. On Gatefold: 52 pressings tracked, owned by 53 collectors.
Sound DNA
- Hip-Hop
- Southern Hip-Hop
- bassheavy
- meditative
- spacey
About
You can’t talk about <i>ATLiens</i> without talking about André 3000 getting up at the 1995 Source Awards and saying, “The South got something to say.” Not only did it mark the beginning of a tidal shift in the role the South played in hip-hop (whether it was Master P or Juvenile or Big Tymers or Ludacris or Lil Jon or countless others), it told you something crucial about who Outkast were and how they handled themselves. Yes, they were laid-back and a little spiritual and at the very least coming in at an angle more oblique than Biggie or Tupac, but that didn’t mean they didn’t know how to be hard when hard was necessary. If anything, it was that sense of groundedness that made their more cosmic sides digestible in the first place—like, coming from them, you could believe it in a way that flightier artists might give you pause. “Softly as if I played the piano in the dark/Found a way to channel my anger, now to embark,” André starts a verse on “ATLiens,” ending on the image of his creativity as a gun that never runs out of ammunition. <i>Southernplayalisticadillacmuzik</i> is great, but this is when they really arrive. The beats are richer (“Elevators (Me and You)”), the rapping more complex (“Wheelz of Steel”), the imagery both more sci-fi-futuristic but also more deeply rooted in the jazz and gospel that gave Black America something to lean on when racism—whether institutional or otherwise—had taken away pretty much everything else (“13th Floor/Growing Old,” “Babylon”). This was music you could party with if you wanted to party, and think with if you wanted to think, not to mention an <i>album</i> in the novelistic, front-to-back way Prince and Bruce Springsteen made albums. In the end, where they came from couldn’t have mattered less—and that’s part of what made them matter so much.
via Apple Music
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Tracklist
- 1You May Die (Intro)1:06
- 2Two Dope Boyz (In a Cadillac)2:42
- 3ATLiens3:50
- 4Wheelz of Steel4:03
- 5Jazzy Belle4:11
- 6Elevators (Me & You)4:25
- 7Ova da Wudz3:47
- 8Babylon4:24
- 9Wailin'1:58
- 10Mainstream5:18
- 11Decatur Psalm3:58
- 12Millennium3:09
- 13E.T. (Extraterrestrial)3:06
- 1413th Floor / Growing Old6:50
- 15Elevators (ONP 86 Mix)4:37
Credits
Performers
- JoiVOCALS BACKING VOCALS
- Debra KillingsVOCALS BACKING VOCALS
- Tomi MartinACOUSTIC GUITAR
- MoogBASS
- Preston CrumpBASS
- Organized NoizeDRUM PROGRAMMING PROGRAMMED BY KEYBOARDS
- OutKastDRUM PROGRAMMING PROGRAMMED BY KEYBOARDS
- Marvin "Chanz" ParkmanKEYBOARDS ORGAN PIANO
- Kerren BerzVIOLIN
- Trina PowellVOCALS BACKING VOCALS
- Whild PeachVOCALS BACKING VOCALS
- PeachesBACKING VOCALS
- LaMarquis JeffersonBASS
- Edward StroudGUITAR
- Five Stairsteps
- Dee SimmonsDRUMS
- Kenneth WrightKEYBOARDS
- Craig LoveGUITAR RHYTHM GUITAR
53 collectors on Gatefold own this · 52 pressings tracked on Gatefold
