A Tribe Called Quest Beats Rhymes and Life CD 1996 Jive Original Pressing ATCQ
A Tribe Called Quest Beats Rhymes and Life CD 1996 Jive Original Pressing ATCQ
Regular price
$5.00 USD
Regular price
$0.00 USD
Sale price
$5.00 USD
Unit price
per
Shipping calculated at checkout.
Couldn't load pickup availability
1996 A Tribe Called Quest Beats, Rhymes and Life on Jive/Zomba Recording Corporation. Original US pressing, catalog # 01241-41497. Produced by The Ummah (Q-Tip and Ali Shaheed Muhammad). Full 15-track sequence including Ince Again featuring Tommy Evans, Stressed Out featuring Faith Evans, and Baby Phife’s Return. Complete with booklet, original jewel case, and original purchase receipt.
• Artist: A Tribe Called Quest
• Album: Beats, Rhymes and Life
• Label: Jive / Zomba Recording Corporation
• Year: 1996 (original pressing)
• Catalog #: 01241-41497
• Disc: Clean, no visible scratches
• Case: Complete with booklet
• Receipt: Original Wherehouse Music / Rocky Mountain Records purchase receipt dated 03/30/97
The fourth ATCQ album and the first produced entirely by The Ummah, marking a shift toward a harder, more introspective direction. Often discussed as the beginning of the internal tension that led to their breakup two years later with The Love Movement, which gives this album a specific weight in the catalog for fans who track that arc.
The original Wherehouse Music receipt from March 1997 ships with the item. The Wherehouse was a major US record retail chain that closed permanently in the mid-2000s. This receipt documents a same-year purchase within months of the album’s September 1996 release, making it a minor piece of music retail history alongside the disc itself.
View full details
• Artist: A Tribe Called Quest
• Album: Beats, Rhymes and Life
• Label: Jive / Zomba Recording Corporation
• Year: 1996 (original pressing)
• Catalog #: 01241-41497
• Disc: Clean, no visible scratches
• Case: Complete with booklet
• Receipt: Original Wherehouse Music / Rocky Mountain Records purchase receipt dated 03/30/97
The fourth ATCQ album and the first produced entirely by The Ummah, marking a shift toward a harder, more introspective direction. Often discussed as the beginning of the internal tension that led to their breakup two years later with The Love Movement, which gives this album a specific weight in the catalog for fans who track that arc.
The original Wherehouse Music receipt from March 1997 ships with the item. The Wherehouse was a major US record retail chain that closed permanently in the mid-2000s. This receipt documents a same-year purchase within months of the album’s September 1996 release, making it a minor piece of music retail history alongside the disc itself.
