Here’s How Hip-Hop Is Mourning A Tribe Called Quest Legend Phife Dawg

Impact

"I'm like an energizer 'cause, you see, I last long," rapped Malik "Phife Dawg" Taylor on A Tribe Called Quest's 1991 hit "Check the Rhime." Taylor died on Wednesday after battling a slew of health complications, including a 26-year battle with Type 1 diabetes that earned him the self-described moniker "the funky diabetic." But as the hip-hop world mourns, it's clear that Phife's legendary music will live on.

Questlove, longtime drummer for The Roots, left a touching note on Instagram:

Phife forever 1970-2016. 1991 in Sept I went to visit Tariq at Millersville U in the middle of PA (Lancaster). Miles Davis had just passed & I went on a binge to study his post jazz works. Went to Sound Of Market to purchase Nefertiti, In A Silent Way & Live Evil---the only non jazz purchase I made that day ironically was the most jazziest album in that collection: #TheLowEndTheory  by @ATCQ. — it was raining that day so somehow the 1 ... 2 punch of "Nefertiti"/"Fall" just had me in a trance that train trip — even though I suspected there was a possibility that Tribe could possibly have made a better album then their debut (the perfect @@@@@ mic Source rating would be on stands in a week so I was right) — but I knew I wanted to save that listening for when I got up to the campus w Riq. — so some 90mins later when I get to his dorm — we ripped that bad boy open  (I can't describe the frustration that was CD packaging in 1991, just imagine the anger that environmentalists feel when all that paper packaging in Beats headphone gets wasted — it's like that) — the sign of a true classic is when a life memory is burnt in your head because of the first time you hear a song. — Riq & I had this moment a few times, but the look on our faces when we 1st heard "Buggin Out" was prolly Me & Tariq's greatest "rewind selector!" moment in our friendship. (Back then every MC's goal was to have that "rewind!!!" moment. As in to say something so incredible. Or to catch you by surprise that it makes you go "DAAAAAYUM!!!" & you listen over & over — Malik "Phife" Taylor's verse was such a gauntlet/flag planting moment in hip hop. Every hip hop head was just...stunned HE. CAME. FOR. BLOOD & was taking NO prisoners on this album (or ever again) we just kept looking at the speaker on some disbelief old timey radio Suspense episode. & also at each other "Phife is KILLIN!" — by the time we got to "Scenario" I swear to god THAT was the moment I knew I wanted to make THIS type of music when I grew up — (yeah yeah dad I know: "go to Juilliard or Curtis to make a nice living at  'real music'") but he didn't know that Phife & his crew already wrote my destiny. I ain't look back since. THANK YOU PHIFE!

And the grief poured in:

Too many of hip-hop's greatest have died at relatively young ages. In 2014, Phife Dawg released a tribute to J Dilla, who died at 32 after complications from lupus. It's a poignant song that's especially relevant now:

h/t Rolling Stone