featured-image

This past Saturday, The Roots brought the best parts of their annual festival, , to the for a special concert, . Named after a song from the Philadelphia band’s 1999 fourth studio album (which was itself inspired by Common’s metaphorical 1994 storytelling track “I Used to Love H.E.

R.”), the concert was dedicated to celebrating the group’s 30-year love affair with this thing called hip-hop. To that end, they recruited a slew of guests from the genre’s Golden Era to join them onstage to perform some of their greatest hits.



Arrested Development, Black Sheep, , Digable Planets, The Pharcyde, and were all billed as performers, but throughout the evening, surprise guests ranging from Black Eyed Peas’ Will.I.Am to an all-star roster of pioneer women in rap, including The Lady Of Rage, MC Lyte, Monie Love, and Yo-Yo, all joined The Roots on the legendary stage.

And, as befits any live performance played the Philadelphian ensemble (the most recent of which I have to compare it to was their New Year’s Eve show at the Wiltern in LA just seven months ago), those hits were reinterpreted, remixed, and transformed by the addition of the live band. When the crew launched Roots Picnic back in 2008, I felt so left out, living on the West Coast. While endless sunshine and pretty people never really gets stale, it did feel a bit like I was missing out on all the best bits of culture taking place in the northeast.

As social media became more commonplace, allowed more footage from .

Back to Entertainment Page