5 Surprising Facts About OutKast’s ‘Speakerboxxx/The Love Below’

In 2003, Speakerboxxx/The Love Below detonated the charts and blew minds. Outkast’s double album was two discs of genre-defying brilliance, and – really – two entire solo universes crashing together under one name. It changed the sound of hip-hop forever, won Album of the Year at the Grammys, and made every radio, dance floor, and high school hallway scream “Hey Ya!” in unison. Think you know this double LP inside out? Here are five lesser-known facts that will make you want to revisit both sides — fast.

1. “Hey Ya!” Was Inspired by the Ramones and Recorded in Dozens of Takes
André 3000 wasn’t trying to make a hip-hop song. He was channeling his love for punk bands like the Ramones, the Hives, and the Buzzcocks — and somehow ended up with a track that sounded like Prince at a garage party in space. He recorded 30–40 takes of nearly every line, experimenting with vocoders, overdubs, and drum machines. The result? A song that felt spontaneous — but was meticulously built, beat by beat.

2. Big Boi Played “Unhappy” for His Mom in Her Driveway
Big Boi’s Speakerboxxx wasn’t all bounce — it had heart. After crafting the hook for “Unhappy,” one of the album’s most emotionally resonant tracks, he drove to his mother’s house, parked outside, and played it for her. She loved it. It’s a beautiful image: a rap titan getting the ultimate co-sign from the original queen of his life. Family first. Beats second.

3. André 3000 Recorded in Four Studios at Once and Nearly Burned Out
While Big Boi wrapped up his half of the album early at Stankonia Studios, André 3000 was running between four different studios, layering jazz, funk, electro, falsetto, and pure chaos into The Love Below. Studio manager John Frye later admitted André was completely drained by the end. But that exhaustion birthed everything from “Roses” to “Prototype” — glittering weird-pop gems that still feel futuristic 20 years later.

4. The Album Artwork Was a Double Act — With a Hidden Political Homage
Big Boi’s Speakerboxxx cover was a tribute. The imagery mimics a famous 1967 photo of Black Panther Huey P. Newton, seated in a rattan chair. Meanwhile, André posed shirtless with a pistol for The Love Below, channeling his Cupid Valentino alter ego. CD editions featured only Big Boi on the front — vinyl editions placed both side by side, just like the music. Together but separate. A perfect metaphor.

5. They Recorded 120 Songs — and One Landed on a Kelis Album Instead
In total, Outkast recorded around 120 songs during these sessions. That’s more than some bands make in a decade. One track, “Millionaire,” didn’t make the final cut… but it did wind up on Kelis’s album Tasty. That’s the power of Outkast: even their leftovers were hits. Somewhere out there, there’s still a vault full of unreleased gems from the wildest album-making process in hip-hop history. One day, we’ll hear it all.

Speakerboxxx/The Love Below was a seismic shift. It shattered genre lines, shook up the Grammys, and made hip-hop safe for weirdos, crooners, poets, and party-starters alike. Whether you’re on Big Boi’s basslines or André’s extraterrestrial love songs, one thing’s for sure: nobody else could have pulled this off. And no one’s matched it since.