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Phife Dawg Siblings: Remembering Mikal Taylor

Phife Dawg PHOTO/NBC

Phife Dawg was a highly influential Trinidadian-American rapper, best known as a founding member of the legendary hip-hop group A Tribe Called Quest.

Born Malik Izaak Taylor on November 20, 1970, in Queens, New York City, he grew up in the St. Albans neighborhood of Queens to immigrant parents from Trinidad—his mother, Cheryl Boyce-Taylor, a noted poet, and his father, Walt Taylor.

Tragically, Phife was born prematurely and had a twin brother named Mikal who died shortly after birth.

He was also a cousin to the writer Zinzi Clemmons.

Phife passed away on March 22, 2016, at the age of 45 due to complications from diabetes, a condition he openly referenced in his music.

Siblings

Phife’s twin brother Mikal passed away in infancy shortly after their premature birth, leaving Phife as the only surviving child in his immediate nuclear family.

Career

Phife Dawg’s career centered on his role as the co-lead MC alongside Q-Tip in A Tribe Called Quest, a group he co-founded in the late 1980s.

The collective, which also included DJ/producer Ali Shaheed Muhammad and briefly Jarobi White, emerged as part of the innovative Native Tongues collective and helped define alternative hip-hop with its jazz-infused beats, socially conscious lyrics, and playful energy.

Also Read: Mikkey Dee Siblings: Meet Heléne Delaoglou

Phife brought a distinctive gritty, boastful, and humorous style to the group, often self-referring as the “Five-Foot Assassin” or “Five-Foot Freak”,.balancing Q-Tip’s smoother delivery with punchy wordplay, sports references, and streetwise attitude.

A Tribe Called Quest released their debut album, People’s Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm, in 1990, followed by classics like The Low End Theory (1991), widely regarded as one of the greatest hip-hop albums ever, Midnight Marauders (1993), Beats, Rhymes and Life (1996), and The Love Movement (1998).

After a long hiatus marked by tensions within the group, they reunited for performances and released their final album, We Got It from Here… Thank You 4 Your Service, in 2016, much of it completed before Phife’s passing.

Outside the group, Phife released a solo album, Ventilation: Da LP, in 2000.

His witty, battle-ready verses and love for sports (he was a devoted New York Knicks fan) made him a fan favorite and a key voice in 1990s hip-hop.

Accolades

Phife Dawg’s legacy is tied closely to the collective recognition A Tribe Called Quest received for pioneering jazz-rap and conscious hip-hop.

The group earned a Founders Award at the 2005 Billboard R&B/Hip-Hop Awards, honoring their groundbreaking contributions.

They were celebrated at the 4th VH1 Hip Hop Honors and won the Brit Award for International Group in 2017, shortly after their final album’s release.

Individual tracks like “1nce Again” earned Grammy nominations, including for Best Rap Performance by a Duo or Group.

A Tribe Called Quest’s albums achieved commercial peaks, Beats, Rhymes and Life hit No. 1 on the Billboard 200, and critical acclaim, with The Low End Theory frequently ranked among the all-time best in hip-hop.

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