* En anglais uniquement
Part of the new millennium resurgence of alternative rap,
Little Brother drew from atypical inspirations for a Southern act: classic Native Tongues outfits like
De La Soul and
A Tribe Called Quest, as well as later torchbearers like
the Roots and
Black Star. MCs
Phonte and
Big Pooh swapped rhymes with an easy chemistry, supported by DJ/producer
9th Wonder, a sampling technician who quickly established himself as a worthy heir to production wizards like
DJ Premier and
Pete Rock. Commercially, the group peaked with the Top 20 R&B/hip-hop albums
The Minstrel Show (2005) and
Getback (2007).
9th Wonder departed between those two LPs, and
Phonte and
Big Pooh likewise opted to concentrate on other collaborative and solo pursuits after the release of
Leftback (2010). After the trio reunited for a surprise live performance in 2018,
Phonte and
Pooh fully reactivated
Little Brother with
May the Lord Watch (2019).
Little Brother formed at North Carolina Central University, located in Durham.
Phonte (born
Phonte Lyshod Coleman),
Big Pooh (born Thomas Jones), and
9th Wonder (born Patrick Denard Douthit) had known each other since 1998, when they performed in a local hip-hop outfit called
the Organization. After that group's dissolution in 2000, they anchored a 12-member crew dubbed
the Justus League. The trio worked together off and on in varying combinations until they officially teamed up as
Little Brother in August 2001, adopting the name as a humble nod to their influences. Their first recording together was "Speed," a playful, down-to-earth look at the pressures of holding a day job while trying to make it in the music business. It set the tone for much of their early material. Over the next few months, they developed enough of a repertoire to start performing live around the area and quickly earned a following.
When the group made their music available for download on the Internet, a substantial buzz built far outside North Carolina, and it eventually earned them a deal with the Oakland-based ABB Records in 2002. In 2003,
Little Brother released their full-length debut,
The Listening, which won widespread critical praise that focused especially on
9th Wonder's production. The buzz helped him earn a raft of high-profile outside gigs, including tracks on a pair of multi-platinum releases:
The Black Album by
Jay-Z and
Destiny Fulfilled by
Destiny's Child.
Little Brother leapt to major-label Atlantic for the
The Minstrel Show, a highly satirical and uncommercial set that entered Billboard's R&B/hip-hop chart at number 19 in 2005. In 2007, as the group was finishing up their third album, it was announced that they had left Atlantic and had become a duo with the departure of
9th Wonder. After its release later that year,
Getback -- which featured one
9th Wonder-produced track with Illmind,
Nottz,
Khrysis, and
Zo! also among the contributors -- nonetheless debuted at number 18 on the R&B/hip-hop chart.
Amid significant activity outside the group --
Pooh's solo discography was lengthening, while
Phonte was busy with the Grammy-nominated
Foreign Exchange --
Little Brother made it known that a hiatus would follow their next album. That set,
Leftback, arrived in 2010, after which
Phonte and
Pooh continued down separate, occasionally intersecting paths for nearly a decade. The MCs and
9th Wonder reconvened in 2018 to perform at Durham's Art of Cool Festival (as a last-minute replacement for
Royce da 5'9", who missed his flight).
Phonte and
Pooh then took it to the studio for a fifth proper
Little Brother album,
May the Lord Watch, which arrived within a year of the MCs' reconnection. Among the producers were past associates such as
Khrysis,
Nottz, and
Zo!, along with the likes of
Focus...,
Black Milk, and
Devin Morrison. ~ Steve Huey & Andy Kellman