A close-up, dramatic live performance shot of a person with a grey-flecked beard and short hair singing into a microphone. They are wearing a light pink windbreaker with a teal collar over a brown button-down shirt and a long beaded necklace. The scene is bathed in atmospheric blue and red stage lighting, with a second microphone stand visible in the blurred background.
Digable Planets at Gasparilla Music Festival in Tampa, Florida on Feb. 17, 2024.
Credit: Ysanne Taylor / Gasparilla Music Festival

Digable Planets‘ mainstream success stopped on the Grammys stage. Collecting two awards in the 1994 ceremony, the emcee trio from Phillyโ€”Ishmael โ€œButterflyโ€ Butler, Craig โ€œDoodlebugโ€ Irving, and Mary Ann โ€œLadybug Meccaโ€ Vieiraโ€”used their speeches to call out hypocrisy in the music industry.

โ€œWeโ€™d like everybody to think about the people right outside this door thatโ€™s homeless,โ€ Butler told the crowd. โ€œAs you sit in these $900 seats โ€ฆ they out there not eating at all. Also, weโ€™d like to say to the universal Black family that one day weโ€™re gonna recognize our true enemy. Weโ€™re gonna stop attacking each other, and maybe then weโ€™ll get some changes going on.โ€

The Planetsโ€™ sophomore album, Blowout Comb, carried the same tone, spreading antifascist messages to stand up for Black Americans. Unsurprisingly, it got virtually no label support and was considered a commercial flop, leading to the group’s breakup. Somewhere along the way, its message and complex production made Blowout Comb a cult classic. Thirty years later, the group is back together, and St. Pete is part of an extended anniversary tour.

Tickets to see Digable Planets play Jannus Live in St. Petersburg on Thursday, Feb. 12 are still available for $28 and up.


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Selene San Felice is managing editor of Creative Loafing Tampa Bay. Prior to joining CL in 2025, she started the Axios Tampa Bay newsletter and worked for her hometown paper, The Capital in Annapolis,...