American rap group De La Soul’s debut album, 3 Feet High and Rising (1989), revolutionised hip hop with its positivity, playfulness and humour. It set songs about subjects as serious as the dangers of crack cocaine, and as comical as poor personal hygiene, to a palette of unexpectedly funky samples featuring everything from Steely Dan and Hall & Oates to Liberace and French-language learning records. It also introduced the concept of the hip hop skit, with its knockabout game show interludes. Music consultant and DJ Simon Pang Washford explains how it changed his life.
I was about 20 when I heard it. I’d just finished an engineering apprenticeship and I was on the way to (the Greek island of) Corfu to try to blag a job as a DJ. I thought I could get away with playing the music I thought was cool, instead of the usual commercial fodder.