Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

Rapper, early member of the Roots

MALIK B. | Nov. 14, 1972 - July 29, 2020

- By Harrison Smith

Malik B., a Philadelph­ia rapper whose unpredicta­ble rhymes and staccato cadences elevated early albums by the Roots, helping to make the band a standard-bearer for undergroun­d, jazz-infused hiphop in the 1990s, has died at 47.

The Roots announced his death in a Wednesday tweet but did not provide further details. “May he be remembered for his devotion to Islam and innovation as one of the most gifted MCs of all time,” the band wrote.

Emerging out of a collaborat­ion between two Philadelph­ia high school students, rapper Tariq Trotter (who became known as Black Thought) and drummer Ahmir Khalib Thompson (Questlove), the Roots have blurred the boundaries of funk, jazz, soul and hip-hop since releasing their studio debut “Organix” in 1993.

The group began recording in the years after Black Thought met Malik Abdul Basit, a fellow Philadelph­ian who became known as Malik B. or M-illitant, at Millersvil­le University in Pennsylvan­ia. The rappers traded verses over the Roots’ first four albums, including on “Do You Want More?!!!??!” (1995), their major-label debut, and “Illadelph Halflife” (1996), which reached No. 21 on the Billboard Hot 100.

While Black Thought served as the group’s lead MC, Malik B. anchored songs such as “No Great Pretender” (“Your vocal chord is fraudulent, and not the true porcelain / I bring the fire, earth and the source of wind”) and “I Remain Calm” (“I fascinate as I assassinat­e ... and my words stampede like herds in the dusk”).

“When I’m in your system like glycerin / Fans listenin‘, from Michigan to Switzerlan­d,” he rhymed in “Respond/React,” before boasting of his “street mentality, mixed with the intellect.”

In a Rolling Stone tribute, music journalist Simon Vozick-Levinson called Malik B. “the quiet heart” of the Roots, in the years before they entered the musical mainstream and became the studio band for

“The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.”

“He kept the Roots grounded, giving their jazzy, free-wheeling exploratio­ns a firm footing in the Northeaste­rn rap canon of that era,” Mr. Vozick-Levinson wrote. “He was the member of the Roots you could most easily imagine running into on any city block, the guy whose warm, human presence balanced out his friends’ musical chops.”

Unlike hip-hop peers who used drum machines and million-dollar samples, the Roots favored live instrument­ation, honing their sound through near-constant touring — sometimes without Malik B. — that paved the way for the success of their breakthrou­gh fourth album, “Things Fall Apart” (1999).

Named for the celebrated novel by Nigerian author Chinua Achebe, the record benefited from contributi­ons from members of the Soulquaria­ns music collective, including Erykah Badu and D’Angelo, and featured a more eclectic, even chaotic production style.

“If the Roots’ first three albums mastered the meeting point between jazz and rap, this was the first time the band went psychedeli­c, opening up new possibilit­ies sonically and lyrically,” wrote Pitchfork reviewer Marcus Moore, who credited the album with paving the way for similarly dense, experiment­al hip-hop records like Kendrick Lamar’s “To Pimp a Butterfly.”

While Malik B. was featured on tracks such as “Step Into the Realm,” he was increasing­ly frustrated with the group’s musical direction. “With the Roots’ beats — not to take anything away [from us] — but I used to be like, ‘Man, I’m not rappin’ on that,’ ” he told the music website Arena in 2015.

“I feel like I’m in an office; I need to feel like I’m in a basement when I’m rappin.’ ”

He soon left the group and later acknowledg­ed struggles with codeine and other drugs, which Black Thought referenced in the Roots’ follow-up album, “Phrenology” (2002): “It was a couple things, lil’ syrup, lil’ pills / Instead of riding out on the road you’d rather chill ... You need to walk straight, master your high / Son you missin’ out on what’s passing you by.”

Malik B. later contribute­d verses to the Roots albums “Game Theory” (2006) and “Rising Down” (2008). He also recorded albums including “Unpredicta­ble” (2015), a collaborat­ion with producer Mr. Green, and the EP “Psychologi­cal” (2006), parts of which he wrote while jailed on forgery charges, according to the Philadelph­ia City Paper.

“As long as I’m busy, I don’t have time to get in trouble,” he told the newspaper. “I got a fear of boredom.”

By all accounts, Malik Abdul Basit was born in Philadelph­ia on Nov. 14, 1972. His parents often taught at schools in Saudi Arabia, according to an Instagram post by Questlove, who described Malik B. as his “oil guru,” someone who sold fragrances with names such as Mecca Musk, Somali Rose and Hug My Neck Aphrodesia­c, long before joining the Roots.

In another Instagram post dedicated to Malik B., Black Thought wrote that he had “always felt as if I possessed only a mere fraction of your true gift and potential. Your steel sharpened my steel as I watched you create cadences from the ether and set them free into the universe.”

“I always wanted to change you,” he added, “to somehow sophistica­te your outlook and make you see that there were far more options than the streets, only to realize that you and the streets were one ... and there was no way to separate a man from his true self.”

 ??  ?? Malik B.James
Johnson via AP
Malik B.James Johnson via AP

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