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(TimesLedger) Friends of Phife Dawg remember late musician at public memorial
By Madina Toure
St. Albans residents who grew up with the late Phife Dawg, a member of renowned hip-hop group A Tribe Called Quest, braved the rain to show their respect for him at a public memorial hosted by the group at St. Albans Memorial Park Monday morning.
Despite the rainy weather, nearly 200 fans trekked to St. Albans from all over the borough and the city, with some fans even coming from out of state.
Malik Taylor, known by his stage name Phife Dawg, died March 22 in California at the age of 45 due to complications from diabetes. He was raised in St. Albans.
St. Albans resident Carleene Cannon, 48, had known Phife Dawg since he was around 9 years old. She also knew honorary group member Jarobi White.
She has fond memories of Phife, recalling that he had a big crush on her cousin.
āAs we got older and as A Tribe Called Quest became more of an entity, with everybody just grooving to the music, he would come off the road and I would go visit him at his grandmotherās house…He gave me my copy of āLow End Theoryā (the groupās second album) and leaked it,ā Cannon said. āAnd my sonās name is Jaden Malik Lake.ā

A group of Phife Dawg’s friends who grew up with him in St. Albans made an appearance at the public memorial. (Photo by Madina Toure)
Steve McDaniel, 41, also of St. Albans, said he and Phife spent a lot of time playing basketball and football in St. Albans Park.
āWhen they (his friends and Phife) were in high schoolāI was younger than them, I was in junior high schoolāI would meet them in the colosseum on Jamaica Avenue and we would go down to the food court and sit there and bug out with a lot of the kids we grew up with from back here on Sayres Avenue,ā McDaniel said.
Another friend of Phifeās, Norman Bennett, 37, who lives next door to McDaniel, referred to him as his ālittle big broā because Bennett was younger but taller. They bonded over their common heritage: Bennettās father is from Trinidad and so is Phifeās family.
āEveryone would beat on the (picnic) table, kick rhymes, something crazy was going on… we played football, baseball, kickball,ā Bennett said.
St. Albans resident Keith Taylor, 42, also a friend of Phifeās, echoed similar sentiments.
āMalik was a good dude,ā Taylor said. āWe all grew up together so we all seem similar. He loved sports and he got into the music thing and kind of went off on his way.ā
The first 200 fans who arrived at the memorial received a Phife Dawg T-shirt as well as a ticket to attend an invite-only tribute concert for the musician at the Apollo Theatre in Harlem Tuesday.
Andres Titus, known by his stage name Dres, is one-half of Black Sheep, a hip-hop duo from Queens that started in the 1990s. He had known Phife Dawg since 1989, describing him as a ādope (cool) personā who āhad a moral compass.ā

Jarobi White, an honorary member of A Tribe Called Quest, waives at fans during the processional. Photo by Madina Toure
The processional for Phife Dawgās funeral drove by the park along Sayres Avenue and 172nd Street. Jarobi White waved at fans from a car
There are currently two efforts underway to honor the singer and the group. One calls for Linden Boulevard between 192nd and 193rd streets to be co-named A Tribe Called Quest Boulevardāwhere the video for the first single from the groupās second album was shotāwhile the other calls for St. Albans Park to be renamed āMalik āPhife Dawgā Taylor Park.ā
The article was published in the TimesLedger Newspapers.