One Love (Nas song)

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"One Love"
Single by Nas featuring Q-Tip
from the album Illmatic
ReleasedOctober 25, 1994
Recorded1993
Genre
Length5:26
LabelColumbia
Songwriter(s)
Producer(s)Q-Tip
Nas singles chronology
"The World Is Yours"
(1994)
"One Love"
(1994)
"Fast Life"
(1995)
Q-Tip singles chronology
"Buddy"
(1989)
"One Love"
(1994)
"Got 'til It's Gone"
(1997)
Music video
"One Love" on YouTube

"One Love" is a song by American rapper Nas, released October 25, 1994 on Columbia Records. It was issued as the fifth and final radio single in promotion of his debut studio album Illmatic (1994). The song was produced by Q-Tip of A Tribe Called Quest, who also contributed vocals for the chorus line. According to Nas, the title of the song originates from Jamaican singer-songwriter and musician Bob Marley's song of the same name.

"One Love" is composed as a series of letters written by Nas to his incarcerated friends, describing events that have occurred prior to and after the receivers' imprisonment. "One Love" contains samples of the Heath Brothers' "Smilin' Billy Suite Part II" (1975) and Parliament's "Come in out the Rain" (1970). In the song's first verse, Nas references fellow Queensbridge emcee Cormega, whose rapping career had been put on hold due to his incarceration during the early 1990s. In 2008, VH1 named "One Love" the forty-eighth greatest hip hop song.[1]

Background and recording[edit]

While producing A Tribe Called Quest's Midnight Marauders album, Q-Tip had his production setup in the house basement of Phife Dawg's grandmother.[2][3] After Q-Tip met with Nas in the basement, Nas heard the main sample and decided to use it for "One Love".[2] Q-Tip created the beat there, using the pause tape method of production.[4] At the recording session, after Nas's verses were recorded, Q-Tip "finessed" the song's drum programming.[2]

Composition[edit]

"One Love" samples the mbira (thumb piano), double bass and piano from the Heath Brothers' "Smilin' Billy Suite Part II" (1975) and contains a drum break from Parliament's "Come in out the Rain" (1970), which add to the song's mystical and hypnotic soundscape.[5]

Lyrically, "One Love" is composed of a series of letters written by Nas to incarcerated friends,[6] recounting mutual acquaintances and events that have occurred since the receiver's imprisonment,[7] including unfaithful girlfriends, emotionally tortured mothers and underdog loyalty.[8] According to one writer, the phrase "one love" represents street loyalty in the song.[9] Nas later explained that the title of the song originated from Jamaican singer-songwriter Bob Marley's song of the same name, which, according to writer Mickey Hess, "echoed the ubiquitous street salutation 'one' (similar to 'peace') used around Nas's neighborhood."[6] In a 1994 article on the distinct styles of East Coast and West Coast hip hop, music journalist Touré referred to "One Love" as an example of the thematic differences between the two regional scenes, stating:

The more ambitious themes of New Yorkers' rhymes over those of their L.A. counterparts can be traced to the original intention of hip-hop in each city: Many L.A. rappers embraced the drug culture, while those in New York tended to use hip-hop as an avenue of escape from it ... In 'One Love', Nas echoes that perspective, rapping about his own temporary getaway: 'So I be ghost from my projects/ I take my pen and pad for the weekend/ A two-day stay/ You may say/ I needed time alone/ To relax my dome/ No phone/ Left the nine at home.'[10]

— Touré

Among those referenced in the song was fellow Queensbridge-based rapper Cormega ("And night time is more trife than ever/What up with Cormega, did you see him, are y'all together?").[11] Cormega's rapping career had been put on hold due to his incarceration during the early 1990s, before his release in 1995.[11] After delivering "shout-outs to locked down comrades", Nas chastizes a youth who seems destined for prison in the final verse, "Shorty's laugh was cold blooded as he spoke so foul/Only twelve tryin to tell me that he liked my style ... Words of wisdom from Nas, try to rise up above/Keep a eye out for Jake, shorty-wop, one love".[12] Music writer Susan Weinstein wrote that "the literary technique Nas most strongly excels in is the one that would seem to be most pedestrian: rhyme", and cited "One Love" as the first display of Nas's "formal inventiveness".[6]

Retrospect[edit]

From artist:

Q-Tip used to come and hang out with me in my projects from time to time. I remember him coming out there and hanging out, and I remember him letting me hang out at his session when he was working on Midnight Marauders. I thought he was just the most incredible, so to have him producing my album, for him to even do the chorus for me is a blessing. The song just came from life, it's a song about letters to prison inmates, friends of mine, shout-outs to childhood friends and their uncles and people who were like family to me. I was, again, too young to be going through all of that. That's what I think about when I hear that album. I was too young to be going through all of that.[13]

— Nas

Track listing[edit]

A-side[edit]

  1. "One Love" (Album Version) (5:23)
  2. "One Love" (Radio Edit) (5:23)
  3. "One Love" (Album Instrumental) (5:23)
  4. "One Love" (Acappella) (5:21)

B-side[edit]

  1. "One Love" (LG Main Mix) (5:33)
  2. "One Love" (LG Radio Edit) (4:29)
  3. "One Love" (LG Instrumental) (2:06)
  4. "One Love" (One L Main Mix) (5:43)
  5. "One Love" (One L Radio Edit) (4:48)
  6. "One Love" (One L Instrumental) (1:55)

Charts[edit]

Chart (1994) Peak
position
US Dance Singles Sales (Billboard)[14] 6
US Hot Rap Songs (Billboard)[15] 24

Notes[edit]

  1. ^ Hip Hop Press: VH1's '100 Greatest Hip Hop Songs'
  2. ^ a b c Q-Tip Red Bull Music Academy. Accessed on October 13, 2017.
  3. ^ Large Professor Remembers His 'Witty, Sharp, Smooth' Friend Phife Dawg Billboard. Accessed on October 13, 2017.
  4. ^ “Summoned By Aliens”: How Beastie Boys, Pete Rock, Q-Tip & Others Changed Rap Music With The Pause-Tape HipHopDX. Accessed on August 12, 2017.
  5. ^ Love, Dan. Deconstructing Illmatic Archived 2009-03-25 at the Wayback Machine. Oh Word. Retrieved on 2008-02-15.
  6. ^ a b c Weinstein, S. "Nas." In Hess, M. (ed.), Icons of Hip-Hop, vol. 1, pp. 341–363
  7. ^ Hill, Marc. Illmatic (Anniversary Edition). PopMatters. Retrieved on 2006-02-11.
  8. ^ Illmatic: Ten-Year Anniversary Series Review on Blender Archived 2005-05-03 at the Wayback Machine. Maxim Digital. Retrieved on 2009-02-11.
  9. ^ IGN: Illmatic - 10 Year Anniversary Platinum Series Archived 2008-01-17 at the Wayback Machine. IGN Entertainment, Inc. Retrieved on 2009-02-12.
  10. ^ Touré. Pop View; Only One Star in the Two Schools of Rap. The New York Times. Retrieved on 2009-03-20.
  11. ^ a b Birchmeier, Jason. Cormgea: Biography. Allmusic. Retrieved on 2009-02-22.
  12. ^ RapReviews: Illmatic. RapReviews. Retrieved on 2009-02-11.
  13. ^ Nas' "Greatest Hits": A Track-By-Track Journey With the Pride of Queens : Rolling Stone
  14. ^ "Nas Chart History (Dance Singles Sales)". Billboard. Retrieved May 28, 2022.
  15. ^ "Nas Chart History (Hot Rap Songs)". Billboard. Retrieved May 28, 2022.

References[edit]

  • Mickey Hess (2007). Icons of Hip Hop: An Encyclopedia of the Movement, Music, and Culture. Edition: illustrated. Greenwood Publishing Group. ISBN 978-0-313-33904-2.

External links[edit]