Find a Way (song)

"Find a Way"
Single by A Tribe Called Quest
from the album The Love Movement
B-side "Steppin' It Up"[1]
Released August 4, 1998
Format 12" single
Genre alternative hip hop
Length 3:24
Label Jive
Producer The Ummah
A Tribe Called Quest singles chronology
"Stressed Out"
(1996)
"Find a Way"
(1998)
"Like It like That"
(1998)

"Find a Way" is the first single by A Tribe Called Quest, from their fifth and final album The Love Movement. The song samples "Technova" by Towa Tei. The New York Times' Ben Ratliff wrote that the song "innocently wonders about the point at which friendship spills over into sex."[2]

Contents

Music video

The video starts in outer space, with a wide view of Earth that is later revealed to be a decoration in Ali Shaheed Muhammad's car. Ali spots three girls, and Q-Tip decides to make a move on all three. A scene of California appears, and shows the group walking on the beach while Phife Dawg is rapping. It then moves to a party, showing Q-Tip in a romantic moment. From there, the video shifts to an art museum where Q-Tip is talking to his girl. The video then returns to Phife Dawg on the beach, telling a girl that he will do what she wants. The video ends with the group in a club, dancing with women and having fun. During the final chorus, the video pans once again to outer space, then shows the group sleeping in Ali's car.

Charts

Charts (1998)[3][4] Peak
position
UK Singles Chart 41
U.S. Billboard Hot 100 71
U.S. Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Singles & Tracks 29
U.S. Hot Rap Singles 18

Remake

In 2007, Danny!, influenced greatly by A Tribe Called Quest, reworked the "Technova" sample and created an updated version of "Find a Way" with reinterpreted lyrics titled "Check It Out". It was eventually released on his Danny Is Dead EP.

References

  1. ^ Tribe Called Quest Focuses On New Disc . Rolling Stone (June 18, 1998). Accessed December 27, 2008.
  2. ^ Ratliff, Ben (November 27, 1998). POP REVIEW; After a Decade, Rap's Tribe Called Quest Goes Silent. The New York Times. Accessed December 22, 2008.
  3. ^ Warwick, Neil; Kutner, Jon; Brown, Tony (2004). The Complete Book of the British Charts, p. 1122. Omnibus Press. ISBN 1-84449-058-0.
  4. ^ allmusic ((( The Love Movement > Charts & Awards > Billboard Singles ))). Allmusic. Accessed December 22, 2008.