Arrested Development – Tennessee

Description

Tennessee” a song by American hip hop group Arrested Development, released in March 1992 as the first single from their debut album, 3 Years, 5 Months & 2 Days in the Life Of… (1992). The song contains a sample of Prince‘s 1988 hit “Alphabet St.“. It peaked at number six in the United States and won the Grammy Award for Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group in 1993. The song’s music video was directed by Milcho Manchevski. A 2007 poll of VH1 viewers placed the song at number 71 on the list of the “Greatest Songs of the 90s” and is listed as one of the “500 Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll” by the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. It was also ranked number 78 on VH1’s “100 Greatest Songs of Hip Hop”. The song served as the theme to the short-lived Malcolm-Jamal Warner 1992 sitcom Here and Now.

Impact and legacy

Slant Magazine listed “Tennessee” at number 98 in their ranking of “The 100 Best Singles of the 1990s” in 2011, writing, “Perhaps no other track from the early ‘90s provided better (or catchier) proof that hip-hop was more versatile and capable than prevailing gangster-rap themes than Arrested Development’s “Tennessee”, its stuttering drumline ably providing a clean backdrop for expositions on civil rights, genealogical discovery, Southern culture, the devastating legacy of slavery, and the nature of God. A pained but uplifting narrative struggles at times to catch up with the song’s driving gait, but “Tennessee” satisfies nonetheless, mixing raw, percussive power, quirky sampling, and inspirational imagery into one cerebral whole.”

Bob Dylan played the song on the “Tennessee” episode of the first season of his Theme Time Radio Hour show in 2006, noting that Arrested Development had “kind of updated the Sly and the Family Stone sound for the hip-hop generation”.

A 2007 poll of VH1 viewers placed it at number 71 on the “Greatest Songs of the 90s” list and was also ranked as one of the “500 Songs That Shaped Rock and Roll” by the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame. It was also listed at number 78 on VH1’s “100 Greatest Songs of Hip Hop”. The song served as the theme to the short-lived Malcolm-Jamal Warner sitcom Here and Now