A Tribe Called Quests’ music is making plays in the digital currency space.


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The advancement of technology has brought back ol’ school rap, literally. Because of the rising popularity of NFTs in hip hop, rappers of past eras have found a new way of profiting from their music.

Legendary rap group A Tribe Called Quest is the latest artists to have their music regain revenue through non-fungible tokens or NFTs.

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According to the group’s co-founder, Ali Shaheed Muhammad PPX Enterprises, which owned as small percentage of their royalities, sold their share to a group that partnered with Royalty Exchange, a music technology platform, to auction off a percentage of the groups first five albums: People’s Instinctive Travels And The Paths Of RhythmThe Low End TheoryMidnight MaraudersBeats, Rhymes And Life, and The Love Movement

The auction opened up at $35,000 USD, but the winning bid came in the form of crypto at 40.191 ETH, which is about $84,765 USD, from a man named Stephen F. 

The winning bidder will collect royalties generated from sales, streaming, and sync fees for any of the included albums, as well as the individual singles, released by the group between 1990 to 1998.

The Royalty Exchange website revealed that holders of the NFT would have accumulated over $6,000 in royalties just last year. It also showed that “Can I Kick It?” was the highest-earning song last year, accounting for 27% of last year’s royalties for the group.

Tribe’s music also appeared in many movies and TV show properties, from Tom and Jerry to Soul to Ted Lasso and The 40-Year-Old-Version.