The term has been applied to other musical genres such as The Three Tenors in Opera,[1] as well as in R&B/Pop with such popular acts like Bell Biv DeVoe (BBD), LSG & TGT.
The term is applied in Hip hop to collaborations such as The Firm, Westside Connection, Method Man & Redman, Kids See Ghosts, and Mount Westmore.
Albums: Gub (1991), Fook (1992), Notes From Thee Underground (1994), A New High in Low (1997), Easy Listening... (2003), Dubhead (2004), Free For All Tour Demo (2005), 6 (2009) 1993–1995 1998–2002 Touring musicians Emmerson version Core lineup Supported by Russell/McNally version Former members Afro Celt Sound System initially had no clear-cut lineup, but over time several stable line-ups emerged.
Albums: Welcome To Our World (1997), Indecent Proposal (2001), Under Construction Part II (2003) Singles: Nuttin' to Do (1998), Scary Movies (1998), Fast Lane (2011), Lighters (2011) Named after Bad Meets Evil the 19th track from The Slim Shady LP, which was the first collaboration between the two and led to the formation of the duo.
Tour: 1999 Albums: Tales from the Lotus Pod (2001), Black Rain (2004), The Opaque Brotherhood (2008) Former members include Paz Lenchantin (Zwan), Troy Van Leeuwen (Queens of the Stone Age), and Tim Alexander (Primus).
Some groups listed were also either a collaborative effort as well as created for television specials and/or may have released one project or few singles as well as unite one or few times on an audio recording or live performance appearance.
supported by (Da Bassment Cru & Superfriends[broken anchor]) Hip Hop/R&B collaboration label & multi-group(s) The Superfriends members: (Spinoff collaborations of various works as a collective) *Timbaland -provided a large portion of production for various artists of the collective family as well as featured his rap vocals or sound bites on their work, alongside Magoo who only provided a few.
Many of their collaborations could be found online although it is often confused not to be listed as a group because 'Da Bassment' brand and trademark as a whole did not have a strong promotional market on their namesake.
[147][148][149] Which resulted in Missy Elliot, Ginuwine, Timbaland & Magoo to continue on into a spinoff crew within Da Bassment Cru's remaining and new members.
However Ralph Tresvant and Johnny Gill voiced their creative differences which in turn left the group to tour as BBD and Bobby Brown under a new contractual moniker.
Notable examples are the various charity supergroups which formed in response to the 1983–85 famine in Ethiopia, initiated by Band Aid which recorded "Do They Know It's Christmas?"