Q-Tip, the late Phife Dawg and Jarobi White of A Tribe Called Quest perform at Barclays Center on November 20, 2013 in New York City. Phife Dawg passed away earlier this year due to health complications from diabetes. Dave Kotinsky/Getty Images

A 25-year award tour: Celebrating A Tribe Called Quest

25 years after the release of their groundbreaking album The Low End Theory it’s hard to sum up what it is that A Tribe Called Quest really meant to hip-hop heads around the world.

This isn’t a band known for its longevity, and yet nearly 20 years since their last album, their legacy endures, arguably longer than many of their peers. From 1990 to 1998, the group, as a group, released only five studio albums. From that another five compilation albums and five solo albums saw light of day, and yet the memory of a band who disbanded after their final album, 1998’s The Love Movement, still endures.

Now what makes A Tribe Called Quest so influential, so memorable is also hard to suss out over the course of their short time on the scene. The best possible comparison could be that of the “comic’s comic”, the sort of performer that’s popular with other performers, thereby gaining their own sense of notoriety and legend without ever actually being number one (save for 1996’s Beats, Rhymes and Life, which did hit number one on the US charts).

That’s not to say that Tribe wasn’t a successful group, each of their albums received no less than a Gold certification, three of which went platinum.  But despite their modest successes, they never played the role.

When you look at Q-Tip, Phife Dawg, Ali Shaheed Muhammad (and very occasionally Jarobi White), you couldn’t see the commonplace trappings of success on them visually or lyrically, especially during a time when hip-hop willingly drowned itself in excess. The group didn’t spend much time glorifying guns or cars or designer labels. Sure, sex loomed large in their lyrics, but with no more braggadocio than their contemporaries.

As a group, A Tribe Called Quest was about social consciousness and lyrical prowess, and given the nature of hip-hop today, it’s hard to believe we’ll ever see anything that good ever again.

To celebrate the milestone of The Low End Theory, let’s take a walk down memory lane with the Tribe and see how far their influence spread through key moments in their history.

1988 – A Band by Any Other Name

Like most hip-hop groups, A Tribe Called Quest grew out of childhood friendships. Q-Tip and Phife Dawg grew up together in Queens, NY, a hotbed for a significant portion of the coming East Coast explosion. The duo went to high school with another influential pair in the coming scene, the Jungle Brothers.

As a group the Jungle Brothers wouldn’t know nearly the same level of success as Tribe, but as founders of the Native Tongues collective and mentored by legendary DJ Red Alert, they would foster the careers of Tribe, De La Soul, Monie Love, Black Sheep and Queen Latifah.
In ‘88, once joined by Jarobi White, the future Tribe would receive their name from the Jungle Brothers themselves.

1990 – A Subtle, Yet Auspicious Beginning

In 1990, hip-hop was not yet the juggernaut it would become, and while the year featured some groundbreaking and classic albums like competing offerings from N.W.A and their acrimoniously departed bandmate Ice Cube (100 Miles and Running, Amerikkka’s Most Wanted), Public Enemy’s Fear of a Black Planet and LL Cool J’s Mama Said Knock You Out, the genre itself was still a bit of a curiosity.

One of those curiosities was Tribe’s debut, People’s Instinctive Travels and the Paths of Rhythm. Certainly a mouthful of a title, the music within was far more lighthearted than anything Public Enemy or N.W.A. offered, with peculiar, yet enduring singles like “I Left My Wallet in El Segundo”, ”Bonita Applebum” and “Can I Kick It”.

But as lighthearted as the sounds were, trouble for the Tribe happened almost immediately, as Jarobi White would leave the band soon after the album’s release. The album itself, despite a few quirky videos occasionally seeing air on MTV, wouldn’t actually take off for a few years, supported by the group’s later popularity.

1991 – The Low End Theory and a Growing Fanbase

While A Tribe Called Quest spent the previous year nearly becoming Hip-Hop’s version of the Grateful Dead, their second album, The Low End Theory, brought with it a leaner, more vocal sound that veered further into socially conscious lyrics that matched what was coming out of New York at the time.

It also brought the group closer to jazz with numerous samples harkening itself to days of Blue Note and acid jazz, leading music critics to place Tribe in a new category considered to be jazz pap, something that Q-Tip himself wasn’t a huge fan of.

While the album is nearly flawless, the cornerstone of the entire experience is “Scenario”, a truly epic collaboration between Tribe and Leaders of the New School, featuring breakout artist Busta Rhymes. Featuring five fiery verses from each member of the respective groups, “Scenario” blew minds and ended up on best-of lists throughout history, including Time Magazine’s All-TIME 100 Songs.

1993 – When Midnight Strikes, It’s a Good Thing

By 1993, the hype for Tribe had never been higher. The group was in the midst of a small piece of mainstream success, something remarkable for a group rooted in the East Coast, as 1992 was all about West Coast gangster rap. When Midnight Marauders was released in November of 1993, fans and critics welcomed it with open arms, even if it wasn’t as groundbreaking as their earlier effort.

While the album’s sound was more urgent and the tag team nature between Q-Tip and Phife Dawg was never better, only a couple songs, “Award Tour” and “Electronic Relaxation” really managed to endure through the years.

Of the group’s five albums, Midnight Marauders arguably signals the end of the best years of A Tribe Called Quest.

1994 – Hip-Hop’s Franz Ferdinand Moment?

Even though A Tribe Called Quest wasn’t a prime participant in the looming East Coast / West Coast rivalry, an incident at the 1994 Source Awards is seen as a flashpoint that led to future beef, as Tupac Shakur “accidentally” cut off Tribe’s speech accepting the “Best Hip-Hop Group of the Year” award.

Tempers flared between Tribe and Tupac, but cooler heads prevailed when everything was explained on a technical issue causing Tupac to start his performance before the end of Tribe’s speech.

Despite the perceived slight, Q-Tip and Tupac would appear (albeit not together) in John Singleton’s "Poetic Justice," both as love interests of Janet Jackson’s character. As for the coastal rivalry, even a misunderstanding wouldn’t stop what was to come.

1995 – Pause, Not Pause

With the group’s success following Midnight Marauders, they took time to spread their wings and foster other artists, most notably D’Angelo, as Ali Shaheed Muhammad worked on a portion of his groundbreaking Brown Sugar album. Q-Tip would help produce tracks for Nas and Cypress Hill.

1996 – The Beginning of the End

Beats, Rhymes and Life, an album that while critically acclaimed, is ultimately flawed, saw release in July 1996. Released during the height of the East Coast / West Coast feud, the album feels darker, even if it doesn’t directly serve as a salvo in the ongoing musical rivalry.

Q-Tip does use a track “Keep it Moving” to address the rivalry itself, including some disses from Gangsta Rap ham ‘n eggers Westside Connection, but very little of it is all that memorable.

Despite Beats, Rhymes and Life being their only album to hit number one on the overall US charts, it’s hard not to dismiss this to the band’s general popularity crossed with an insatiable desire for all things hip-hop making a high out of just about anything.

1998 – No More Love in the Movement

By the time 98’s The Love Movement released, the band already announced it would be their last. While the breakup wasn’t acrimonious, it was clear that the label pressures and the deaths of Tupac and Notorious B.I.G. cast a pall over hip-hop as a whole, making some wonder whether the effort was worth it.

As an album, The Love Movement isn’t bad, however, the entire effort felt too lightweight given the times in which it was produced. Listening to it years later, it still feels just out of place. If anything, it showed that after five albums, the Tribe was clearly ready for a break.

1999-2000 – A "Vivrant" New Millenium

While A Tribe Called Quest was officially in an induced coma, the members of the band were far from it. 1999 saw the release of solo projects from each of the members, starting off with Q-Tip’s Amplified, featuring the ironic hit “Vivrant Thing”, a track that was far more danceable and radio-friendly than anything he’d done with Tribe. Q-Tip would go on from that success to release two other solo efforts, to lesser degrees of success.

For his part, Phife Dawg released his only solo album, Ventilation: Da LP in 2000. Unfortunately for Phife, his adherence to the things he knew didn’t lead to the same level of success as Q-Tip, as the album was neither a critical nor commercial success.

Ali Shaheed Muhammad went on a different path altogether, joining with Tony! Toni! Tone! founder Raphael Saadiq and En Vogue’s Dawn Robinson in the supergroup Lucy Pearl. The new group struck gold with a couple hits, “Dance Tonight” and “Don’t Mess With My Man”, but as supergroups often go, egos got in the way, causing the band to splinter even before the tour completed. Shaheed would go on to produce a smaller stable of up and coming artists, but none really caught fire.

2004-2015 – Reunions and Perspective

While A Tribe Called Quest would still fly separately, the group would occasionally come together for festivals and occasional reunions, often selling out each of their appearances. While the band seemed happy to reunite (even with most absent member Jarobi White), as far as the public knew, there was no new album on the horizon.

In 2011, actor Michael Rapaport, a self-professed “hip-hop head from way back”, directed a well-received documentary on Tribe entitled "Beats, Rhymes & Life: The Travels of A Tribe Called Quest," ensuring that a new generation would get a fresh look at this seminal group.

2016 – Death and Life

Never one to bask in the limelight, Phife Dawg was relatively quiet about his personal life. One those closest to him knew that he was a lifelong sufferer of Type 1 diabetes. In the years since the breakup of Tribe and the release of his first solo album, he worked quietly on his follow up, titled Songs in the Key of Phife: Volume 1 (Cheryl’s Big Son). Sadly, Phife Dawg would pass away due to complications from diabetes on March 22, effectively killing any hope of a true Tribe reunion album.

Or so we thought.

In August during an interview on the Rap Radar Podcast, former record producer and Epic Records CEO L.A. Reid announced that before his death, Phife Dawg reunited with Q-Tip, Ali Shaheed Muhammad, and yes, Jarobi White to record a new album. While that date has yet to be released, fans and followers of A Tribe Called Quest can take joy in knowing that after all these years, there’s one more gem left to be unearthed from one of the greatest groups in hip-hop history.

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Intro

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Who doesn't like a side of beef with their music? Since the first concerto ever performed, rivalries in the musical world have just been a fact of life. Now we can cover the waterfront with various tales of tempestuous musicians at each other's throats, but you only have so many minutes and there are so, so many beefs.

That said, enjoy the following 20 best musical beefs, which come from all genres, throughout time, because whether it's bangin' on wax or bangin' on piano wire, these beefs have been some of the best. Some of them were real, and some were just for show, but all were worth mentioning here.

But first, let's start with the OG of all musical beefs, a beef that really wasn't...

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Mozart vs. Salieri

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If we're to believe the 1979 musical and 1984 Oscar-winning film, Amadeus, Antonio Salieri was not only a rival of Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart; he was responsible for his death. The very assertion itself makes for one of the juiciest of musical beefs, but unfortunately, much of this rivalry was simply a bunch of make-believe, based on one incident in 1781, where the two composers competed for the right to teach Princess Elisabeth of Württemberg. In fact, the real Salieri would go on to teach Mozart's son, who was born in the year following his father's death.

One more piece of exculpatory evidence was found in a piece of music earlier this year that looks to be a collaboration between the two composers. But then, there are a number of musicians who once worked together only to be at each other's throats, as we'll see later in the list.

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Joe Tex vs. James Brown

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As a performer, Joe Tex didn't enjoy nearly the same amount of success as the Godfather of Soul, James Brown, but the two were once locked in a bitter feud that led to shotguns being pulled—literally. The beef itself built up over a dispute about stage moves. Remember Brown's famous microphone kicking tricks? Well, Tex claimed he invented those, and that Brown stole them. From there, the beef would escalate into Brown making off with Tex's girlfriend and go on into Brown notching hit after hit, while Tex seemed stuck in obscurity.

The beef really started sizzling when the two were double-billed at a concert in Macon, Georgia, something Tex took an opportunity to mock Brown by using a torn up blanket as a cape to replicate his signature begging act. The Godfather didn't take kindly to being embarrassed in his hometown, so he went outside, grabbed some shotguns and went after Tex. Once the smoke cleared, seven people were injured, and Brown flew out of Macon like a bat out of hell. Years later, the two rivals would patch things up. Tex, however, would remain in relative obscurity, but if you're a fan of Quentin Tarantino's Reservoir Dogs, you can hear Tex belt out his signature song, "I Gotcha" during one of the scenes.

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Keith Richards vs. Chuck Berry

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Even legends have someone they look up to, which was the case with legendary Rolling Stones guitarist Keith Richards, who idolized '50s and '60s rock pioneer Chuck Berry so much, he may have stolen a lick or two from him down the line. Over the years, the pair had a number of choice run-ins, largely attributed to Berry not always being pleased with how Richards got away with aping his sound. Fellow Stones bassist Ronnie Wood recounted a time when Richards went to see his idol Berry perform at a show, and upon seeing him in the crowd, Berry leapt off stage and punched Richards in the eye...just because.

A memorable run in between the two happened during Berry's 60th birthday show, which would be chronicled in the concert film Hail! Hail! Rock and Roll. In the film, we see a practice session where Berry makes life hard for Richards as they rehearse a song. What seems like a battle of wills ends up feeling more like a master taking out his frustrations on his apprentice. While Richards may have admiration for his favorite icon after all these years, Berry could be the one harboring deep-seated resentment for the millions the Rolling Stones made using his sound.

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Creedence Clearwater Revival

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Many successful bands fight and bicker, but fewwith the exception of others included in this listdid so with the level of ferocity that would not only destroy a band, but also wreck a family and even a desire to play the music that made its writer a rock icon. With Creedence Clearwater Revival you have all these things, and the eye of the storm was its leader and composer John Fogerty. Fogerty, along with his brother Tom, Stu Cook and Doug Clifford took the music industry by storm with their unique brand of swamp rock. Unfortunately, nothing good lasts, as John Fogerty's demanding standards forced his own brother out of the band in 1972.

As the primary driving force behind the band, Fogerty became disillusioned with the rest of the band as well as his music label, Fantasy, who he would fight for rights years after the end of the band. John and Tom never recovered their relationship, with Tom dying from AIDS as a result of a bad blood transfusion in 1990. John Fogerty would not play another CCR song until goaded into it nearly 15 years after the end of Creedence.
 

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Crosby, Stills and Nash vs. Young

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Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young were a supergroup whose members were just as well known for the work they did outside of the group as they did inside. This was especially true in the case of Neil Young, who was already popular on his own, leading to some, let's just say, mercurial behavior, most of which was fueled by a unhealthy amount of cocaine. As a member of CSNY, Young would enjoy a number of hits, though the supergroup only recorded three albums together: 1970's Deja Vu, 1988's American Dream and 1999's Looking Forward. 

Much of the reason the beef lasted so long was continued acrimony between Young and Stephen Stills, who fought constantly over creative control of the band. They would all reunite from time to time for concerts, but never long enough to put out more studio albums. The remaining three members would grow to hate each other enough to completely disband in March 2016, after nearly 50 years of back and forth beefing.  

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Lynyrd Skynyrd vs. Neil Young

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Here's a beef based more on ideology than anything else. During the '70s, Neil Young took aim at the South’s treatment of African-Americans in a pair of songs, "Alabama" and most notably, "Southern Man." Both songs made clear references to slave ownership and cross burning. Of course, this was something that did not sit well with proud Southerner and Lynyrd Skynyrd lead singer Ronnie Van Zant, who thought it only fair to take a shot at the Canadian putting down what he saw as his friends and neighbors. The result of which became one of the most classic songs of the period, 1974's "Sweet Home Alabama." One of the lyrics targeted Young directly, saying that the South “don’t need him around anyhow.”

The veracity of this beef, however, was more myth and legend than fact as both musicians had a respect for one another, with Young saying in his 2012 autobiography Waging Heavy Peace, "My own song 'Alabama' richly deserved the shot Lynyrd Skynyrd gave me with their great record. I don't like my words when I listen to it. They are accusatory and condescending, not fully thought out, and too easy to misconstrue." Van Zant died tragically in a plane crash in 1977.

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The Bridge Wars: KRS One vs. MC Shan

KRS One: Des Willie/Redferns via Getty Images, MC Shan: Michael Ochs Archives/Getty Images

Now there may have been hip-hop beef before the infamous Bridge Wars, but what took place between Boogie Down Productions and the Juice Crew set the stage for hip-hop for years to come. More importantly, this wasn't a beef about women or simple braggadocio: This was about laying a claim on the true birthplace of hip-hop. While there were many skirmishes on wax between the groups, the prime pugilists were BDP leader KRS-One and Marley Marl protege MC Shan. These names may not mean much to modern day rap fans, but between these to, fans were treated to two of the best dis tracks in hip-hop history: "The Bridge" and "The Bridge is Over."

It would be dishonest to say that things didn't get dirty in this feud, and among the victims were insulted families and friends, and a suspected murder or two, including BDP producer Scott La Rock. But it was here were hip-hop finally showed its teeth, and for better or worse, became the urgent poetry of the streets. The BDP/Juice Crew feud extended in one form or another until 2007 when KRS-One and Marley Marl produced an album together signifying the decades-long battle, one that fell out of favor with fans years ago, had finally been quashed.

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Biggie vs. Tupac

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This is the beef to end all beefs, and sadly the flashpoint of East Coast vs. West Coast feuds closed with the deaths of two of hip-hop's greatest artists, The Notorious B.I.G. and Tupac Shakur. Unlike the Bridge Wars that preceded it, East Coast vs. West Coast skirmishes had no real value outside of record sales. What was about honor in the late '80s with the Bridge Wars, turned into senselessness in the '90s as record labels Death Row, headed by thug impresario Suge Knight and Bad Boy Records mogul in the making Sean "Puffy" Combs. The sadly ironic part of all this was that once upon a time, earlier in their careers, Biggie and Tupac recorded together, but time, circumstance and the greed of others (namely, Knight) turned something much simpler into something dark.

Suge Knight goaded his stable of artists to go after Bad Boy performers, and in kind, they would retaliate. While beefin' on wax isn't all that bad, the problem here was that the violence was spilling over into the streets, and criminals from both coasts took a musical feud and spun it into a civil war. Tupac would be attacked in New York on more than one occasion, with his survival only fanning the flames as harder tracks came out. Tupac's luck, however, would run out in 1996, as he was gunned down in Las Vegas next to Knight, who was only wounded. Not long after, Biggie would be similarly murdered in Los Angeles, in an act that many deem as retaliatory, even though there's no evidence whatsoever that he or Bad Boy were in any way involved with Shakur's death. Their deaths closed a bloody chapter on hip-hop that changed the status quo forever.

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Jay-Z vs. Nas

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Depending on who you ask, this is a hip-hop beef that didn't sink the genre lower, but actually elevated the game. Instead of fighting in the streets, the beef between Jay-Z and Nas in 2001 bore itself out in two instant classic tracks, Nas' "Ether" and Jay-Z's "The Takeover." While both MCs were at the top of their game at the time, the tracks reminded hip-hop fans who really ran things post Biggie and Tupac. That the feud was bloodless in nature only raised its popularity among fans.

While the rivalry between the two entertainers seemed to simmer for years within every, "who's the greatest MC" debate, it wasn't until these two tracks came out that the beef hit a higher level of awareness. As it played out in radio stations through interviews and on MTV, fans knew that no matter how bad things got, the real winner here were the fans, who got the absolute best out of two MCs who when at their best couldn't be touched by any of their peers. The best part? Once the smoke cleared and the dust settled, the two came out on the same side, later collaborating and both, for better or worse, are still around to this day.

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Pearl Jam vs. Nirvana

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With the explosion of alternative rock in the early ;90s, two bands from Seattle seemed to rise to the top very early, Pearl Jam and Nirvana. As bands, they both had different approaches to the Seattle sound, and if we're being honest, of the two bands, Pearl Jam was certainly the more experimental of the two. As beefs go, this one has been viewed in later years as something media-created, but the basis of the feud is clear in statements from late Nirvana front man Kurt Cobain, who called Pearl Jam "careerists" only looking to make a buck, and Pearl Jam's Eddie Vedder, whose comments about the 1994 suicide of Cobain gave credence to the idea that animosity still remained.

The truth is, while there was beef, it wasn't something that couldn't have been reconciled, something Vedder alludes to in a longer interview, where he admits that the two were "probably scared" to approach one another, especially in the moments of need. It's hard not to think what one conversation between the two would have accomplished, not just in clearing the air, but also in potentially saving a life.

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Waylon Jennings vs. Garth Brooks

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Our first and really only generational beef between two country legends was just as much about personalities as it was about the future of country music. Waylon Jennings was never a fan of Garth Brooks, who in 1994 was the model of a country superstar, with sell-out arena shows in the round, and a polished if albeit flashy personality that had none of the outlaw spirit that performers like Jennings exuded in what he considered to be a much simpler time. At the height of their feud, Jennings would often shoot fast and loose about Brooks, saying in a 1994 interview, “I think he’s the luckiest s.o.b in the world. He’s gotten more out of nothing than anybody I can think of. I’ve always accused him of sounding like Mr. Haney on Green Acres.”

Brooks was much kinder to Jennings, who passed away in 2002, saying in later interviews that not only had he never met Jennings, but that he was unclear why there was beef in the first place, although he suspected it was as a result of the direction of country music, something that he certainly was the poster boy for.

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Oasis vs. Blur

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Much like hip-hop and alt rock in the US, Brit pop in the UK exploded in a meteoric fashion, with two bands rising to the top in Oasis and Blur. As British media tends to play things fast and loose, especially when it comes to celebrity coverage, it only natural that beef would be manufactured between the popular bands, but it wasn't long before that beef became real as animosity grew between the groups in the summer of 1995 over who would sell the most albums, and fending off nasty comments, largely from caustic Oasis frontman Noel Gallagher, who once famously said he hoped Blur frontman Damon Albarn and Blur guitarist Alex James would “catch AIDS and die.”

But as with all such beefs, time has a way of taking off the sting of things, and by 2013, a kinder, gentler Gallagher would reach out to Albarn and Blur member Graham Coxon to take the stage together for a performance, of which they did, officially burying the hatchet once and for all.

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Oasis vs. Oasis

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When it comes to family, some beefs are unlikely to be extinguished any time soon. While members of Oasis, particularly vocal leader Noel Gallagher, could bury the hatchet with their greatest Brit pop rivals, the feud between Noel and Liam endures to this day. It's true the relationship between the brothers has always been tempestuous at best, by 2009, the two could barely stand to be in the same room, which meant the death of Oasis as a band, a fact lamented by fans on both sides of the pond.

For those holding out hope that the brother beef will go away, it would be wise not to hold your breath. These days, the feuding siblings do most of their fighting through the press and each never hesitates to blame the other for the lack of an Oasis reunion, leading many to believe that until the two famous hotheads finally calm down, hopefully with age, the return of Oasis is little more than a distant mirage.

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Toby Keith vs. Dixie Chicks

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In 2003, Dixie Chicks lead singer Natalie Maines made some inflammatory comments about then-President George W. Bush over the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan. To a country fanbase that mostly considers themselves to be patriots, this would not stand. As they were becoming country music outcasts, Maines doubled down when she took a shot at Toby Keith's pro-war anthem "Courtesy of the Red, White and Blue," sparking a feud that would essentially drive the Chicks from country music for nearly a decade.

Keith escalated the feud when he began showing a photo of Maines with Iraqi President Saddam Hussein, implying the singer was in league with the former dictator. For the better part of two years, the feud raged on until Keith, for reasons unrelated, felt that life was too short to let a beef go on too long.

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Michael Jackson vs. Prince

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If one thing is true about beef, often one side keeps the fire burning more than the other. This was the case when it came to Prince's feelings towards reputed King of Pop Michael Jackson. The genesis of the beef seemed to spur from popularity and record sales in the early '80s. As a consummate musician, Prince wanted to be the very best, and he saw Jackson's Thriller as a threat as it eclipsed his 1999 in sales.

From that point, Prince waged a silent war against Jackson, even as the Gloved One extended an olive branch by sending him an early copy of his future hit "Bad" to Prince in hopes of a collaboration that would never be. Sadly, neither would ever collaborate with the other, as Jackson died in 2009, and Prince passed away in 2016, coincidentally both as a result of drug overdoses.

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Madonna vs. Elton John

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For 10 years, two of the biggest names in pop music were embroiled in a musical cat fight, as Elton John and Madonna spent the lion's share of the '00s in a very public beef that started with John calling Madge out on her much-reviled single for the James Bond film, Die Another Day. Not one to rest on her own laurels, the Material Girl stood up to John, even after he accused her of lip syncing during her life performances.

This war of words would go on until 2013, when John would finally get over himself and bury the hatchet with Madonna over for dinner. It is surprising that she accepted the invitation, since he never wasted a moment over the decade-long beef to bury her every chance he got.

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Taylor Swift vs. Kanye West

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Of all the beefs we've covered in this piece, the feud between Taylor Swift and Kanye West is by far the most interesting, if only because the shift in villains and heroes has been so dramatic. The beef took flight during the 2009 MTV Video Music Awards, when, as Swift was receiving an award for Best Female Video, Kanye would storm the stage and ruin her moment by saying the award should've gone to Beyonce. The incident stunned everyone in the audience, and forced West to redeem himself through public apologies designed to salvage his image.

Fast forward to 2016, and the beef hit a new height with the release of "Famous" from Kanye's The Life of Pablo, where he struck yet another low blow with a graphic lyric. However, the tables turned when Kim Kardashian released an audio recording (of questionable legality) of Swift giving Kanye her blessing for the lyric well in advance, painting the beef as manufactured and her as the villain Kanye was meant to be. This is a beef that is not only still-fresh, but looks to burn on for some time to come.

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Taylor Swift vs. Nicki Minaj

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Maybe it was her toughening up as a result of Kanye's machinations, but the Taylor Swift that emerged from their beef over the years would go on to have more public spats with hip-hop artists, all while smartly playing the victim. This time it was another VMAs and the beef was with a much more vocal Nicki Minaj, who was upset that her video for "Anaconda" was not nominated for an award. Of course, the newly emboldened Swift decided to lay her two cents in, and the response was not one she expected, or probably wanted.

The feud would continue into the awards show itself, but in the end, probably because Swift knew she couldn't possibly win, she made a conciliatory gesture meant to bury the hatchet, which, if the beef continued with Minaj much longer, could've ended up buried in her head.

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Guns N' Roses vs. Everyone (including themselves)

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Like similar beefs within Creedence Clearwater Revival and Oasis, the destruction of 80's rock icons Guns N' Roses was a result of mini wars within the band that shook the foundations of the group and, for a time succeeded in killing it dead. In the wake of the uber-successful Appetite for Destruction, GNR was a band on top of the world. Featuring the genius of Axl Rose and guitarist Slash, there were few competing bands that measured up to their manic energy. But nothing good ever lasts as tensions, drugs and general hard living mixed with massive egos ran the band aground in 1992, effectively killing the band by 1993.

Rose would try to revive GNR with a number of different lineups, none of which found any success and only spawned one disappointing album in that time. However finally, in 2015, the main beef between Rose and Slash was finally put to bed, and the real (but not full) reunion was on. How long that reunion will last and how many original members will return remains to be seen, but for fans, it's just good to see Axl and Slash together on stage again.

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Van Halen

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And finally, of all the beefs we've covered, few are as ongoing and asinine as the many feuds of Van Halen. Since its inception in 1978, Van Halen have been known for two things: iconic music and volcanic amounts of pettiness, mostly wrapped around the relationship of prodigious guitarist Eddie Van Halen and one Diamond David Lee Roth. For a remarkable run from 1978-1984, Van Halen and Roth ran a well-oiled machine that laid waste to everything in its path musically. When Dave left (or was fired) in 1984, fans thought the end was near, but instead the addition of Red Rocker Sammy Hagar led to a new era for the band, and for a decade, things were good. That is, until Eddie let the beef revive, largely as a result of his alcohol addiction, sending the band into a tailspin and Hagar to leave acrimoniously. Former Extreme lead singer Gary Cherone was brought in only to be sent out again after only one album, by far the worst of the band's career.

But that's where it gets fun. After Cherone was sent packing, Van Halen would see the brief return of Roth and Sammy, but Eddie's unwillingness to let bad blood go, and Roth's never-ending preening took an instant toll and killed things dead before they started. When the smoke cleared, even longtime bassist Michael Anthony found himself on the outs with Eddie, only because he wanted to sell some barbecue sauce. Van Halen would reunite once more with Roth, this time with son Wolfgang Van Halen taking over on bass. But it wouldn't be Van Halen if there wasn't discontent in the ranks, as a now clean and sober Eddie says he and Roth aren't even friends, much less barely bandmates. When it comes to the Mighty Van Halen, beef will always be a way of life, even as the lineups continue to evolve.

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