The Roots
The Roots are an American hip hop band formed in 1987 in Philadelphia by rapper Tariq "Black Thought" Trotter and drummer Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson, distinguished by their pioneering integration of live instrumentation into the genre, eschewing reliance on pre-recorded samples and drum machines common in contemporary rap productions.[1] The group rose to prominence with their fourth studio album, Things Fall Apart (1999), which achieved platinum certification and featured the single "You Got Me" featuring Erykah Badu, earning a Grammy Award for Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group in 2000.[1][2] Subsequent releases like Phrenology (2002) and collaborations, including the 2010 album Wake Up! with John Legend, which won Best R&B Album at the 2011 Grammys, further solidified their critical acclaim and versatility across hip hop, jazz, and soul influences.[1] In 2009, The Roots became the house band for Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, transitioning to The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon in 2014, where their improvisational skills and genre-spanning performances have enhanced the program's musical segments nightly.[3]Musical style and influences
Core elements of sound
The Roots' sound is characterized by the integration of live instrumentation into hip-hop, a departure from the genre's dominant reliance on sampled beats and drum machines during the 1990s.[4] This approach, pioneered in their early recordings, emphasizes organic performance over programmed production, fostering a raw and improvisational quality akin to jazz ensembles.[5] Drummer Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson's contributions form the rhythmic core, drawing from influences like Max Roach and Tony Williams to deliver flexible, groove-oriented patterns that blend funk repetition with hip-hop's linear phrasing.[5] Complementing Questlove's drumming, the band's typical lineup features keyboards handled by Kamal Gray for harmonic layers, bass for foundational lines, guitar for textural accents, and additional percussion, enabling dynamic interplay during live sets and studio tracks.[6] Questlove has described stripping beats to their "naked core," often using minimal kits—such as bass drum, floor tom, and unconventional cymbal setups—to achieve a "dirty" and unringing tone through techniques like EQ adjustments and acoustically dead spaces.[5] This raw aesthetic, evident in albums like Do You Want More?!!!??! (1995), underscores their commitment to live execution, where MC Tariq "Black Thought" Trotter's dense rhymes ride over evolving instrumental beds rather than static loops.[4] The fusion yields an eclectic profile: hip-hop's rhythmic drive augmented by jazz-like solos and soulful extensions, avoiding over-polished effects in favor of tactile, performative energy.[7] While later works incorporated electronic elements, the foundational emphasis on instrumental proficiency and spontaneity remains, distinguishing The Roots as innovators who proved live bands' viability in hip-hop production.[5]Lyrical themes and evolution
The Roots' lyrical output, dominated by Tariq "Black Thought" Trotter's contributions, features complex multisyllabic rhymes, layered wordplay, and a commitment to narrative depth over simplistic boasts. Early works emphasize Philadelphia's gritty urban milieu, hip-hop purism, and assertive displays of technical prowess, as in Do You Want More?!!!??! (1995), where Black Thought proffers "immaculate literal lyrical dissertation" amid organic jazz-rap flows celebrating authentic artistry.[8][9] By Illadelph Halflife (1996), themes sharpened to dissect street-level realities and hip-hop's commercialization, with "What They Do" critiquing artists chasing "capitalistic pursuits" at the expense of genuine expression, signaling a tougher, soul-infused edge distinct from prior jazzy exuberance.[10][11] Things Fall Apart (1999) advanced this trajectory toward conceptual maturity, weaving label politics, personal rivalries, and tributes to Philly pioneers like Schoolly D into structured narratives, evolving from the freestyle spontaneity of debut efforts like Organix (1993) to broader, collaborative introspection.[12] Post-millennium albums intensified scrutiny of success's underbelly; Phrenology (2002) probes ambition's "emotional costs," grappling with fame's pressures while preserving artistic integrity amid genre experimentation.[13] Conceptual sophistication peaked in later releases, such as Undun (2011), a nonlinear biography of fictional everyman Redford Stephens chronicling materialism-driven crime, existential regret, and karmic demise as allegory for systemic traps.[14] How I Got Over (2010) shifts to resilient optimism amid "heavy themes" of adversity, blending personal catharsis with societal critique in tracks like the free-associative "Web 20/20."[15] This progression—from locale-bound vigor and cultural preservation to introspective tales of inequality, resilience, and hip-hop's ethos—mirrors the band's maturation, prioritizing substantive storytelling over trends while upholding Trotter's reputation for deliberate, culturally rooted density.[16][17]Key influences from jazz, soul, and hip-hop traditions
The Roots' integration of jazz elements stems from their emphasis on live instrumentation and improvisation, drawing parallels to jazz ensembles through collaborative performances that prioritize spontaneity and musical dialogue among band members. Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson's drumming style, rooted in jazz traditions, incorporates flexible grooves and polyrhythms that enable dynamic interplay, as seen in tracks like those on their 1995 album Do You Want More?!!!??!, where the band eschewed programmed beats for organic, jazz-inflected rhythms influenced by earlier hip-hop acts experimenting with the genre.[18][19] This approach extended to guest collaborations, such as with jazz cornetist Graham Haynes on early works, blending hip-hop flows with improvisational horn lines to create a fusion that prioritized ensemble cohesion over rigid structures.[5] Soul influences are evident in the band's Philadelphia heritage, reflecting the city's rich tradition of doo-wop and Philly soul from the 1960s and 1970s, which Questlove absorbed through his father, Lee Andrews of the doo-wop group Lee Andrews & the Hearts.[20] Tariq "Black Thought" Trotter's lyrical delivery often evokes soulful introspection and narrative depth, informed by early corner-boy music and the emotive phrasing of soul vocalists, as he cited in reflections on his formative Philly sound influences.[21] Production choices, including neo-soul keyboard textures from members like James Poyser, further embed soul's harmonic warmth, as in the emotional layering on hits like "You Got Me" from 1999's Things Fall Apart, where live bass and keys channel soul's groove-oriented ethos.[22] Within hip-hop traditions, The Roots built on East Coast conscious rap's emphasis on lyrical complexity and social commentary, but innovated by reviving pre-digital era organicism through full-band execution, countering the dominance of sample-based production in the 1990s.[23] Black Thought's rapid-fire, multisyllabic rhymes draw from hip-hop's golden age pioneers, prioritizing technical prowess and thematic evolution over commercial hooks, a style that influenced subsequent live-band acts.[24] Their rejection of synth-heavy beats in favor of acoustic instrumentation, as articulated in discussions of their jazz-soul-hip-hop hybrid, positioned them as exemplars of hip-hop's potential for genre expansion while grounding it in street-level authenticity.[18][25]History
1987–1993: Formation and early years
The Roots originated in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, where drummer Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson and rapper Tariq "Black Thought" Trotter met in September 1987 as students at the Philadelphia High School for the Creative and Performing Arts.[26] Initially performing as a drummer-MC duo under the name Square Roots, they emphasized live instrumentation without reliance on electronic beats or DJs, distinguishing their hip-hop style from prevailing trends.[27] This acoustic approach allowed flexibility for impromptu sets on street corners and at local venues.[1] The duo's earliest organized performances included talent shows at their high school, such as a late-1980s event called "Sentimental Journey," where they competed against and lost to the emerging R&B group Boyz II Men.[28] They progressed through a series of name changes—starting with Radio Activity for their first school gig in 1989—while building a repertoire through club appearances and open mics in Philadelphia.[29] By the early 1990s, the lineup expanded to include rapper Malik B. (Malik Abdul-Basit) for additional vocals and bassist Leonard "Hub" Hubbard for rhythmic foundation, enabling fuller live sets that attracted attention in local and New York City circuits.[1] In 1993, the group—now known as The Roots—self-released their debut album Organix on May 19 via Remedy Records, an independent outlet they established to distribute cassettes as tour merchandise.[30][31] Recorded primarily live to capture their organic sound, the album featured 18 tracks blending raw lyricism, jazz-inflected beats, and group interplay, selling modestly but establishing their reputation for innovative, band-led hip-hop performances.[27]1994–1997: Major label entry with Do You Want More?!!!??! and Illadelph Halflife
In 1993, following the independent release of their debut album Organix, The Roots secured a recording contract with DGC Records, a Geffen subsidiary, marking their transition to a major label.[32] Their initial major-label output arrived with the EP From the Ground Up on April 5, 1994, which showcased their live instrumentation and helped build anticipation among hip-hop audiences accustomed to sample-based production.[33] This period solidified the band's core lineup, including rapper Black Thought, drummer Questlove, and human beatboxer Rahzel, emphasizing organic performances over programmed beats. The Roots' first full-length major-label album, Do You Want More?!!!??!, was released on January 17, 1995.[34] Produced primarily by Questlove and the band, the record eschewed sampling entirely in favor of live jazz-infused grooves, capturing improvisational jam sessions that highlighted their instrumental prowess as a full hip-hop ensemble.[18] Tracks like "Proceed" and "Dynamite!" demonstrated dense lyrical interplay from Black Thought and Malik B over sparse, groovy rhythms, earning praise for innovating within East Coast rap's dominance of loop-based tracks.[35] The album peaked at number 104 on the Billboard 200 and number 22 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, reflecting modest commercial uptake amid critical acclaim from outlets including The Source, Spin, and The Philadelphia Inquirer, which lauded its fusion of hip-hop and jazz traditions.[34] Building on this foundation, Illadelph Halflife followed on September 24, 1996, introducing a moodier, more introspective tone influenced by Philadelphia's urban struggles, with production incorporating subtle samples alongside live elements.[36] Questlove again helmed much of the recording, collaborating with co-producers like Scott Storch, while guest spots from Dice Raw and D'Angelo added vocal depth to tracks such as "What They Do" and "Clones."[37] The album achieved stronger chart performance, reaching number 21 on the Billboard 200 and number 4 on the Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart, driven by singles that gained radio play and underscored the band's evolving balance of raw lyricism and sonic experimentation.[36] Critics noted its thematic maturity and production polish as a progression from Do You Want More?!!!??!, though some observed internal tensions from label pressures and lineup shifts, including Rahzel's expanded role.[37] This era established The Roots' reputation for live-band authenticity in hip-hop, prioritizing musicianship over mainstream trends and laying groundwork for broader recognition.1998–2000: Commercial breakthrough with Things Fall Apart
Things Fall Apart, released on February 23, 1999, by MCA Records, represented The Roots' commercial breakthrough after three critically praised but modestly selling albums.[38][36] Recording sessions occurred primarily at Electric Lady Studios in New York, overlapping with productions for other neo-soul works and involving collaborators like keyboardist James Poyser, who became a key production figure for the band.[39][40] The album integrated live instrumentation with hip-hop, featuring guest appearances from Common, Mos Def, and D'Angelo alongside core members Black Thought and Questlove.[41] The lead single "You Got Me", produced by Scott Storch and featuring Erykah Badu (with an original chorus by Jill Scott), drove much of the album's success, earning the band their first Grammy Award for Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group at the 42nd Annual Grammy Awards on February 13, 2000.[42][43] The track, released January 26, 1999, highlighted the band's ties to the emerging neo-soul movement. Things Fall Apart itself received a Grammy nomination for Best Rap Album, underscoring its artistic and market impact.[42] Commercially, the album achieved RIAA gold certification on April 5, 1999, for 500,000 units shipped, marking The Roots' first entry into significant sales territory and elevating their profile beyond underground acclaim.[38] By late 1999, it had surpassed prior releases in chart performance and revenue, fueled by "You Got Me" and tracks like "Act Too (The Love of My Life)", solidifying the band's reputation for blending jazz-infused beats with dense lyricism.[44] This period from 1998 to 2000 saw increased touring and media exposure, positioning The Roots as a bridge between hip-hop purism and broader soul revivalism.[39]2001–2005: Experimentation in Phrenology and The Tipping Point
Following the commercial success of Things Fall Apart, the Roots pursued greater sonic innovation in their fifth studio album, Phrenology, which marked a deliberate departure from conventional hip-hop structures by integrating punk rock, electronic, and alternative influences alongside their signature live instrumentation.[45] Recording sessions occurred from June 2000 to September 2002, primarily at Electric Lady Studios in New York City, with production handled by core members including Questlove and Black Thought, emphasizing collaborative experimentation over polished commercial appeal.[46] Key tracks like "The Seed (2.0)", featuring Cody Chesnutt's raw guitar riffs and falsetto, exemplified this shift, blending hip-hop rhythms with rock aggression to critique industry conformity, while "Water" incorporated improvisational jazz elements and spoken-word interludes for thematic depth on personal and societal fragmentation.[47] The album's title referenced 19th-century pseudoscience, symbolizing the band's probing of hip-hop's intellectual boundaries, and included guest appearances from artists such as Mos Def, Talib Kweli, and Nelly Furtado, broadening its stylistic palette.[46] Phrenology was released on November 26, 2002, via MCA Records, debuting at number 18 on the Billboard 200 and achieving gold certification by March 2003 through sustained sales driven by singles "Break You Off" and "The Seed (2.0)".[47] Critics lauded its boundary-pushing approach, with outlets highlighting the band's refusal to repeat past formulas, though some noted the eclectic mixes occasionally disrupted cohesion.[46] This period of experimentation reflected internal creative tensions, as Questlove later described the process as a response to post-Things Fall Apart pressures, pushing the group to evolve amid hip-hop's commercial dominance by artists like Jay-Z and Eminem.[48] By 2003–2004, the Roots recalibrated for their sixth album, The Tipping Point, adopting a more streamlined, soul-infused sound that prioritized lyrical introspection and groove over Phrenology's radical genre fusions, signaling a strategic pivot toward accessibility without abandoning live-band dynamics.[45] Recorded amid label transitions from MCA to Geffen, the album drew its name from Malcolm Gladwell's 2000 book on social epidemics, mirroring the band's self-perceived industry tipping point after years of underground-to-mainstream navigation.[48] Standout tracks like "Star" and "Don't Say Nuthin'" featured Black Thought's dense, stream-of-consciousness flows over Questlove's crisp drumming and Kamal Gray's keyboard textures, evoking 1970s soul while addressing fame's pitfalls and urban resilience, with minimal external guests to spotlight the core lineup.[49] The Tipping Point arrived on July 13, 2004, peaking at number 6 on the Billboard 200 and earning platinum status by 2005, bolstered by radio play of "Don't Say Nuthin'" and promotional tours.[49] Reception was generally favorable for its polished execution and return to hip-hop fundamentals, though reviewers critiqued it as less audacious than Phrenology, with production occasionally veering toward formulaic smoothness that diluted the band's earlier edge.[45] This era culminated in heightened visibility, including performances at major festivals, but underscored ongoing challenges in balancing innovation with market viability, setting the stage for future Def Jam affiliation.[48]2006–2010: Conceptual albums Game Theory, Rising Down, How I Got Over, and Wake Up!
Following the relative commercial disappointment of The Tipping Point, the Roots shifted toward more conceptually cohesive albums that delved into themes of urban decay, political disillusionment, and existential reflection, often framed by Questlove's intricate, sample-heavy production and Black Thought's incisive lyricism. This period marked a deepening of the band's engagement with real-world crises, including personal tragedies like the death of frontwoman Kamari's daughter and broader societal issues such as poverty and violence, while maintaining their live-band instrumentation for a raw, organic sound.[50][51] The seventh studio album, Game Theory, released on August 29, 2006, via Def Jam Recordings, exemplified this conceptual pivot with its unrelenting focus on systemic hardship and loss, incorporating tributes to producer J Dilla amid tracks addressing American imperialism and street-level despair. Questlove handled primary production, drawing from boom bap and conscious hip-hop traditions, with guest appearances from artists like Talib Kweli on "False Media" and a cover of Buffalo Springfield's "For What It's Worth" featuring Melissa Etheridge. Critics praised its density and urgency, positioning it as the band's sharpest effort to date, though it peaked at number 9 on the Billboard 200 with modest sales of around 59,000 copies in its first week.[50][51][52] Building on Game Theory's tone, Rising Down, the eighth album, arrived on April 29, 2008—coinciding with the 16th anniversary of the Los Angeles riots—and expanded into explicit political critique, inspired by William T. Vollmann's treatise Rising Up and Rising Down, with lyrics probing violence, environmental degradation, and social inequity. Production emphasized dark, funky grooves with contributions from guest vocalists like Chrisette Michele and Styles P, alongside Roots staples such as Fawn "DJ Scratch" Yvette's scratches; tracks like "Criminal" and "Rising Down" featured dice-rolling motifs symbolizing chance amid chaos. Reception highlighted its intensity and thematic continuity, though commercial performance remained niche, debuting at number 6 on the Billboard 200.[53][54][55] How I Got Over, released June 22, 2010, on Def Jam, marked a more introspective turn, conceptualizing personal triumph over doubt and fame's burdens in the context of African-American middle-class struggles and existential angst, partly reflecting the optimism of the Obama era yet grounded in human vulnerability. Questlove's subtle, somber beats underpinned Black Thought's verses on self-determination, with features from Sugar Tongue Slim and Truck North on cuts like "Dear God" and the posse track "Web 20/20"; the album's lean structure and stylistic unity drew acclaim for its cohesion, earning a Grammy nomination for Best Rap Album and peaking at number 6 on the Billboard 200.[15][56][57] That same year, the Roots collaborated with John Legend on Wake Up!, released September 21, 2010, a conceptual covers collection reinterpreting 1960s and 1970s soul tracks with themes of social awakening, oppression, and resistance, recorded amid the 2008 election's backdrop to urge civic engagement. Featuring reinterpretations like Les McCann's "Compared to What" and Marvin Gaye's "Mercy Mercy Me (The Ecology)," the album blended Legend's vocals with the Roots' instrumentation, including Questlove's drumming and Black Thought's raps, resulting in a groove-oriented protest suite that won the Grammy for Best R&B Album and topped the Billboard R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart.[58][59][60]2011–2014: Narrative-driven works Undun and ...And Then You Shoot Your Cousin
In 2011, The Roots released their twelfth studio album, undun, on December 6 via Def Jam Recordings, marking the band's first foray into a full concept album format.[61][62] The narrative centers on the fictional character Redford Stephens, a low-income Philadelphia resident ensnared in the drug trade, with the tracklist unfolding in reverse chronology from his death to earlier life moments, exploring themes of systemic entrapment and personal downfall.[62][63] Production was led by Questlove, with contributions from Just Blaze on select tracks like "Stomp," and featured guest appearances from artists including Bilal, Big K.R.I.T., Dice Raw, Phonte, Greg Porn, and Sufjan Stevens on the closing track "Did You Wrong."[64][65] The album debuted at number 17 on the Billboard 200 chart and received widespread critical praise for its cohesive storytelling and sonic innovation, blending hip-hop with orchestral strings and jazz elements arranged by Daniel Felsenfeld.[66][67] Building on undun's narrative approach, The Roots issued their fourteenth studio album, ...And Then You Shoot Your Cousin, on May 19, 2014, also through Def Jam, as a satirical concept work critiquing American cultural stereotypes, particularly intra-community violence, income inequality, and hip-hop tropes through disjointed character vignettes.[68][69] The 11-track effort, clocking in at 35 minutes, incorporates experimental elements like unedited samples from Nina Simone's "Theme from Middle of the Night" and Mary Lou Williams, alongside dark, claustrophobic production emphasizing piano, jazz-inflected beats, and minimalistic hip-hop structures.[68][70] Questlove handled primary production, with vocal contributions from core members Black Thought, Dice Raw, and Greg Porn, plus guests Patty Crash, Raheem DeVaughn, and Mercedes Martinez; the album's brevity and thematic fragmentation drew mixed but generally positive reviews for its haunting atmosphere and bold departure from traditional rap albums, though some noted its lack of a linear storyline.[71][72] It achieved modest commercial performance, peaking at number 21 on the Billboard 200.[73]2015–present: Touring focus, member losses, and upcoming album
Following the 2014 release of ...And Then You Shoot Your Cousin, The Roots prioritized live performances and selective touring amid their ongoing commitments as the house band for The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon. The group maintained their reputation for dynamic live shows through festival appearances and residencies, including performances at the Jacksonville Jazz Festival on May 25, 2025, and upcoming slots at ONE Musicfest on October 25, 2025, and the Edmonton Folk Festival in August 2025.[74][75][76] In March 2025, The Roots held a three-day, six-show residency at the Blue Note Jazz Club in New York City to mark the 30th anniversary of their 1995 album Do You Want More?!!!??!, capturing performances later compiled into the live album The Roots Come Alive Too: DYWM30 Live at Blue Note NYC, exclusively released for Record Store Day on November 28, 2025. This emphasis on touring and archival live releases reflected a period of reduced studio output, with the band leveraging their instrumental prowess in collaborative and improvisational settings.[77] The group experienced a significant loss on July 29, 2020, when founding member and early MC Malik B. (Malik Abdul Basit) died at age 47; his contributions had been featured on the band's first four albums, though he had stepped back from regular performances due to personal struggles. No cause of death was publicly disclosed, but his passing prompted tributes highlighting his innovative rhyme style and role in shaping The Roots' formative sound.[78][79] Parallel to touring, The Roots developed material for their first studio album in over a decade, tentatively titled End Game. Questlove revealed in August 2025 that the project, inspired in part by collaborations like Common and Pete Rock's work, would be finalized by November and released in early 2026, with confirmed features from Syd of The Internet and Benny the Butcher. The album's delay stems from the band's television schedule and Questlove's external projects, but he emphasized its thematic ties to their legacy.[80][81]Band members
Current core members
Tariq "Black Thought" Trotter has served as the band's lead MC and primary vocalist since its formation in 1987, delivering dense, narrative-driven rhymes that anchor The Roots' hip-hop foundation across all studio albums and live sets.[82] [1] Ahmir "?uestlove" Thompson, co-founder and drummer since 1987, functions as the band's musical director, driving improvisational grooves informed by jazz drumming techniques and overseeing arrangements for recordings and television performances.[82] [22] Guitarist and backing vocalist "Captain" Kirk Douglas joined in 2002, contributing melodic leads and harmonies evident on albums from Phrenology onward and in extended live jams.[83] [76] Bassist Mark Kelley has provided the core low-end since 2003, succeeding Leonard Hubbard and supporting the band's fusion of hip-hop beats with funk basslines in both studio and touring contexts.[76] Keyboardist Kamal Gray, a member since 1995, supplies organ, piano, and synthesizer textures drawing from soul and gospel traditions, featured prominently on releases like Things Fall Apart.[83] Percussionist Frank "Knuckles" Walker has augmented the rhythm section since 2002, adding congas, timbales, and auxiliary beats that enable the group's signature live extensions and polyrhythms.[84] [22] Tuba player Damon "Tuba Gooding Jr." Bryson joined in 2001, integrating brass depth into the sound, particularly on conceptual albums and festival appearances.[83] James Poyser, on keyboards and as occasional musical director since the mid-1990s, rounds out the harmonic core, with regular contributions to The Roots' house band role on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon.[76] [3] This configuration, stable since the early 2000s, emphasizes live musicianship over guest rotations, enabling The Roots' adaptability for albums, tours, and media commitments as of 2025.[85]Former members and departures
Malik Abdul Basit, known professionally as Malik B., was a founding member and primary MC alongside Black Thought from the group's inception in 1987 until his departure in 1999. His exit stemmed from struggles with addiction and discomfort with the rigors of touring, though he continued contributing vocals to subsequent albums like Things Fall Apart (1999) and Phrenology (2002).[86][78] Malik B. passed away on July 29, 2020, at age 47, with the cause not publicly specified beyond long-term personal challenges.[78] Scott Storch served as the band's keyboardist from 1993 to 1995, contributing to early releases including Organix (1993) and Do You Want More?!!!??! (1995). He departed to pursue a solo production career, later stating in interviews that he felt underappreciated within the group and limited by perceptions of his role.[87][88] Storch's production work post-Roots included hits for artists like Dr. Dre and Beyoncé, marking a shift from band performance to behind-the-scenes roles. Guitarist Ben Kenney joined in 1999 and contributed to albums such as Things Fall Apart and Phrenology before leaving in 2003 to join the rock band Incubus, seeking a change in musical direction.[89] Turntablist DJ Scratch, who had been part of the live ensemble, also exited abruptly that year, leading to lineup adjustments ahead of The Tipping Point (2004).[84] Leonard "Hub" Hubbard, the longtime bassist who joined around 1992, departed in 2007 following a diagnosis of multiple myeloma, a form of blood cancer that impaired his ability to perform and rehearse.[90][91] Hubbard occasionally reunited with the band for performances, such as at the 2008 Roots Picnic, but succumbed to the illness on December 16, 2021, at age 62.[92][93] Owen Biddle succeeded Hubbard on bass in 2007, contributing to Rising Down (2008) and How I Got Over (2010), before announcing his departure on August 25, 2011, to focus on other projects; Mark Kelley replaced him.[94] Earlier contributors like bassist Josh Abrams (1992–1994) and rapper Kenyatta "Kid Crumbs" Warren (1993) also left during the group's formative years, reflecting the fluid personnel typical of The Roots' evolution from street performances to major-label stability.Membership timeline
The Roots were founded in 1987 by vocalist Tariq "Black Thought" Trotter and drummer Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson while they were students at the Philadelphia High School for the Creative and Performing Arts.[82][1] In 1991, rapper Malik B. (Malik Abdul-Basit) and bassist Leonard "Hub" Hubbard joined the group, expanding the lineup for early performances and recordings.[82] Beatboxer Rahzel (Rozell Manely Brown) became a member in 1995, contributing to albums such as Do You Want More?!!!??! (1995) and Illadelph Halflife (1996), before departing in 2001 amid creative differences.[95] Turntablist DJ Scratch (Scott Storch's successor on keys and DJ duties in the mid-1990s) left abruptly in 2003. Guitarist Captain Kirk Douglas joined in 2003, debuting on The Tipping Point (2004) and becoming a fixture in live and studio work.[96][97] Malik B. exited the active lineup in 1999 due to struggles with drug addiction and discomfort with extensive touring, though he made guest appearances on later albums until his death in 2020.[98][99] Hubbard departed in August 2007 following a cancer diagnosis and conflicts over rehearsal attendance, after nearly 16 years with the band.[100][84] Owen Biddle replaced him as bassist from 2007 to 2011, when he left to pursue his project Mister Barrington.[101] Mark Kelley has served as bassist since 2011. Questlove and Black Thought have remained the only constant members throughout the band's history, with the rotating lineup reflecting adaptations to touring demands, personal challenges, and musical evolution.[1][82] Keyboardist Kamal Gray joined around 1999 and has been a long-term collaborator, while additional contributors like Dice Raw and Stro Elliot have integrated in supporting roles since the 2010s without formal full-time status changes.[22]Live performances and touring
Evolution of live reputation
The Roots established their live reputation in the late 1980s and early 1990s through performances on the Philadelphia college circuit and local venues, where their use of live instrumentation distinguished them in a hip-hop landscape dominated by DJs and sampled beats.[102] Formed by Black Thought and Questlove in 1987 as high school students, the band honed a raw, energetic style emphasizing Questlove's dynamic drumming and improvisational interplay, drawing comparisons to jazz ensembles within hip-hop.[103] This approach, rooted in Philly's jam session tradition, quickly garnered word-of-mouth acclaim for unpredictable, high-energy sets that prioritized musicianship over rote playback.[103] By the mid-1990s, following the release of their 1995 album Do You Want More?!!!??!?!, The Roots intensified touring, often exceeding 200 dates annually across the U.S. and Europe, which solidified their status as hip-hop's premier live act.[104] Global tours exposed them to diverse audiences, fostering an international following and propelling commercial breakthroughs like Things Fall Apart (1999), where live prowess amplified album sales despite modest radio play.[18] Critics and fans praised their ability to extend tracks into extended jams, blending hip-hop with funk, soul, and jazz, creating performances that evolved nightly based on crowd energy and spontaneous collaborations.[104] The late 1990s and 2000s marked a peak in improvisational experimentation, exemplified by the Black Lily jam sessions (1996–2003), which Questlove co-founded and hosted weekly in New York City venues like Wetlands.[105] These sessions, evolving from private living-room gatherings to public events, emphasized unrehearsed grooves, guest artists, and support for underrepresented Black female musicians, directly influencing The Roots' stage unpredictability and genre fusion.[106] Shows from this era featured marathon sets—often two to three hours—with medleys, drum solos, and covers, earning reverence akin to rock legends for their technical virtuosity and communal vibe.[107] The band's appointment as house band for Late Night with Jimmy Fallon in 2009, followed by The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon in 2014, curtailed extensive touring to prioritize nightly television commitments, shifting their live focus to festivals, residencies, and select headline dates.[108] Despite reduced frequency—such as a decade-long gap before their 2025 Australian tour—their reputation endured, with sold-out performances showcasing refined fusion of hip-hop, jazz, and funk, often incorporating TV-honed precision alongside enduring improvisation.[109] Recent shows, like those at Wolf Trap in 2025, continue to deliver "masterclass" energy, affirming their legacy as hip-hop's most dynamic live ensemble.[110]Key tours and festivals
The Roots established their live performance reputation through extensive touring in the 1990s, emphasizing live instrumentation that set them apart in hip-hop.[1] In 1998, the band joined the Lyricist Lounge Tour, a 12-date hip-hop showcase that included artists such as Big Punisher, De La Soul, Black Star, and Common, highlighting their collaborative stage presence.[111] Supporting albums like Phrenology (2002) and The Tipping Point (2004), The Roots conducted tours across the United States and Europe, maintaining a rigorous schedule amid lineup changes.[1] From 2015 onward, the group shifted emphasis toward touring, including seasonal engagements like the 2016 Holiday Tour, which featured performances in cities such as Orlando.[112] In 2024, The Roots announced a U.S. tour alongside Arrested Development and Digable Planets, preceding appearances at their own festival and other events.[113] The band's most prominent festival involvement is the annual Roots Picnic, launched in 2008 in Philadelphia, where they curate and headline a multi-day event blending hip-hop, R&B, and other genres, drawing tens of thousands of attendees each June.[114] The Roots Picnic has expanded occasionally, including a 2016 New York City edition co-headlined with artists like John Mayer and D'Angelo.[115] Additional notable festival appearances include full sets at the North Sea Jazz Festival in 2013 and regular performances at events like the Newport Jazz Festival.[116][76]Television and media career
House band for Late Night and The Tonight Show
The Roots were selected as the house band for Late Night with Jimmy Fallon, debuting on the show's premiere episode on March 2, 2009.[117] The decision marked a departure from the traditional big band-style ensembles typical of late-night television, introducing a hip-hop group with live instrumentation that emphasized improvisation and genre versatility.[3] Ahmir "Questlove" Thompson, the band's drummer and musical director, led the ensemble from a custom setup behind the host's desk, allowing for seamless integration into segments.[108] In their role, The Roots provided theme music, walk-on cues for guests, bumpers between segments, and accompaniment during commercial breaks, often improvising to match the show's comedic energy.[3] They frequently collaborated with musical guests for live performances, hosted after-show jam sessions, and participated in sketches, leveraging Questlove's extensive musical knowledge to adapt across genres from hip-hop to pop and jazz.[118] This setup contrasted with prerecorded or minimal live elements on competing programs, fostering a dynamic atmosphere that highlighted the band's technical proficiency and reduced touring commitments to accommodate the five-nights-a-week schedule.[119] When Jimmy Fallon transitioned to host The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon on February 17, 2014, The Roots retained their position as house band, relocating to the New York studio and maintaining their core responsibilities amid the program's expanded format.[3] Over the subsequent years, they innovated further by producing viral musical parodies, Roots remixes of hit songs using classroom instruments, and custom guest entrances, solidifying their influence on late-night television's musical standards.[120] Questlove's curation ensured high-profile collaborations, such as with artists including Ariana Grande and Paul McCartney, while the band navigated occasional absences for tours or specials without interrupting the show's rhythm.[3] As of 2025, The Roots continue in this capacity, having performed on over 2,000 episodes across both programs.[120]Sketches, specials, and production roles
The Roots have actively participated in comedic sketches on Late Night with Jimmy Fallon and The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, leveraging their musical expertise to enhance humorous segments. A prominent recurring feature is the "Classroom Instruments" series, initiated during Late Night, in which band members, host Jimmy Fallon, and celebrity guests perform popular songs using unconventional toys such as ukuleles, kazoos, toy drums, and tambourines, often in the show's Music Room. Examples include renditions of Adele's "Hello" on November 24, 2015; Metallica's "Enter Sandman" in 2016; and Justin Timberlake's medley of hits like "Selfish" and "My Favorite Drug" on January 25, 2024. These bits emphasize parody and improvisation, with The Roots adapting their live instrumentation to fit the playful constraints, contributing to the show's blend of music and comedy. Another staple is "Freestylin' with The Roots," where guests deliver improvised raps over beats crafted by the band, particularly rapper Black Thought, as seen in segments prompting spontaneous lyrics on topics like celebrities or everyday objects.[121][122][123][124] In television specials, The Roots have performed original holiday-themed material and collaborated on festive content. During The Tonight Show's end-of-year episodes, they joined Fallon for custom songs such as "Hey Rudy," featuring the Radio City Rockettes on December 19, 2024, and an '80s-inspired Christmas track about gift cards on December 20, 2023. They also contributed to Jimmy Fallon's Holiday Seasoning Spectacular, including a New Year's Eve polka medley with "Weird Al" Yankovic on December 20, 2024, and performances like "Chipmunks & Chestnuts" from Fallon's holiday album on November 27, 2024. These appearances extend beyond standard episodes, incorporating scripted musical comedy tailored to seasonal themes.[125][126][127][128] Regarding production roles, Questlove, as the band's drummer and de facto leader, has served as musical director for both Late Night (2009–2014) and The Tonight Show (2014–present), overseeing musical cues, bumpers, and segment scoring to integrate live hip-hop elements into the broadcasts. The Roots collectively provide original compositions and arrangements for show transitions and interstitials, enhancing the programs' energetic pacing. Additionally, through their production company Two One Five Entertainment, co-founded by Questlove and others, the group secured a first-look deal with Universal Television on May 13, 2020, enabling development of scripted and unscripted content, though primarily outside the Fallon programs. Questlove's broader production influence includes curating musical elements for sketches, but credits remain centered on performance and direction rather than full executive oversight of non-musical aspects.[3][129][130]Other ventures
Side projects and collaborations
Questlove has engaged in extensive production and drumming collaborations beyond The Roots, including contributions to Erykah Badu's Baduizm (1997), where he provided drums for tracks like "Other Side of the Game," blending jazz and soul elements.[131] He also drummed on Fiona Apple's When the Pawn... (1999) and collaborated with Blackalicious on Blazing Arrow (2002), emphasizing live instrumentation in hip-hop and neo-soul contexts.[132] As a core member of the Soulquarians collective alongside D'Angelo, Common, Mos Def, and J Dilla, Questlove co-produced and performed on albums such as D'Angelo's Voodoo (2000) and Common's Like Water for Chocolate (2000), fostering a sound rooted in organic, jam-session aesthetics.[133][134] Black Thought has pursued solo releases and guest appearances, beginning with the EP Streams of Thought, Vol. 1 (2018), produced by 9th Wonder and others, followed by Streams of Thought, Vol. 2: All Eyes on Me (2018) with Salaam Remi and Vol. 3: Cane Fire (2020).[135] His 2022 album Cheat Codes, a collaboration with Danger Mouse, features guest artists like Joey Bada$$ and features dense lyrical content over eclectic beats, marking a departure from Roots-style live band arrangements.[136][137] He has also collaborated on tracks like "Rise Up" (2016) with Fashawn, Murs, and Del the Funky Homosapien for a video game soundtrack.[138] The Roots have undertaken joint albums, including Betty Wright: The Movie (2011) with singer Betty Wright, which reinterprets her catalog with hip-hop and soul fusions, and Wise Up Ghost (2013) with Elvis Costello, blending rock, funk, and rap in a studio collaboration spanning multiple sessions.[139] Additional member-led efforts include Questlove's drumming on Joss Stone's "Fell in Love with a Boy" (2004) and Bilal's "Sometimes" (2001), showcasing his versatility across genres.[139]Philanthropy and community efforts
The Roots have advocated for arts education initiatives, notably supporting the Save the Music Foundation, which donates instruments, technology, and training to public schools lacking music programs.[140] [141] This alignment reflects the band's emphasis on live instrumentation and its role in hip-hop since their 1993 debut album Organix.[140] Band members have participated in targeted benefit performances, including Questlove's appearance at a 2007 event for Artists for a New South Africa, aiding HIV/AIDS relief and social justice in post-apartheid communities.[142] The group is also listed as a supporter of the Michael J. Fox Foundation, focused on Parkinson's disease research and awareness, though specific contributions remain undisclosed.[141] Questlove, as co-founder and drummer, has driven education-focused efforts, such as fundraising in 2011 for Harlem Village Academies, a charter school network serving low-income students with high academic outcomes, motivated by the need for rigorous schooling in urban areas.[143] These activities underscore a pattern of leveraging the band's platform for youth development and health causes, often through performances rather than large-scale foundations.Discography
Studio albums
The Roots released their debut studio album, Organix, independently on April 13, 1993, through Remedy Records, establishing their early sound rooted in live instrumentation and raw hip-hop delivery. Subsequent major-label efforts under Geffen Records, beginning with Do You Want More?!!!??! on January 10, 1995, expanded their production scope while maintaining a focus on organic band dynamics over sampled beats.| Title | Release date | Label | Billboard 200 peak position |
|---|---|---|---|
| Organix | April 13, 1993 | Remedy Records | — |
| Do You Want More?!!!??! | January 10, 1995 | Geffen Records | 88 |
| Illadelph Halflife | September 24, 1996 | Geffen Records | 21 |
| Things Fall Apart | February 23, 1999 | MCA Records | 4 |
| Phrenology | November 12, 2002 | Geffen Records | 28 |
| The Tipping Point | July 13, 2004 | Geffen Records | 6 |
| Game Theory | September 12, 2006 | Def Jam Recordings | 9 |
| Rising Down | April 22, 2008 | Def Jam Recordings | 6 |
| How I Got Over | June 22, 2010 | Def Jam Recordings | 3 |
| Undun | December 6, 2011 | Def Jam Recordings | 7 |
| ...And Then You Shoot Your Cousin | June 17, 2014 | Def Jam Recordings | 13 |
Extended plays, compilations, and singles
The Roots released two extended plays during their early career. From the Ground Up, issued on April 5, 1994, by Geffen Records, consisted of four tracks previewing material for their subsequent album Do You Want More?!!!??!, emphasizing their live instrumentation and jazz-infused hip-hop style.[147][148] The EP was produced by the band alongside JD and featured Questlove's drumming alongside Black Thought's lyrical delivery.[149] Their second EP, The Legendary, followed on July 20, 1999, via MCA Records, compiling live and remixed tracks amid their rising mainstream profile.[150] Compilations released by the Roots include Do This Well (Remixes & Rarities 1994-1999), a 2004 collection of alternate mixes and unreleased material from their Geffen era, highlighting production evolution with contributors like Scott Storch.[151] Home Grown! The Beginner's Guide to Understanding... Volume One (2005, Okayplayer Records) curated essential tracks for new listeners, spanning their independent roots to major-label breakthroughs.[152] The Roots Present... (2005, Geffen), a collaborative effort, featured selections from affiliated artists like Young Gunz and Skillz alongside Roots cuts such as "Break You Off" and "The Next Movement."[153] Later entries include Things Come Together: 1993-1999 (2022), aggregating early singles, B-sides, and rarities like "The 'Notic" with D'Angelo and "Silent Treatment."[154] The band's singles discography encompasses over 30 releases, often tied to album promotion, with several achieving modest Billboard chart success despite their emphasis on album-oriented material. Key charting singles include:| Title | Release Year | Album | Peak Position (Billboard Hot Rap Songs or equivalent) |
|---|---|---|---|
| "What They Do" | 1997 | Illadelph Halflife | 34[155] |
| "You Got Me" (feat. Erykah Badu) | 1999 | Things Fall Apart | 39[155] |