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2KBABY Talks Roots In Louisville, “Great White” & Collaborating w/ Marshmello At 20-Years-Old

Nowadays in an oversaturated music industry, more than ever do we appreciate artists who carry a different, unique, and captivating sound that sets them apart from the rest.

2KBABY is the newest superstar out of Louisville, Kentucky.

At only 20-years-old, the rapper and singer already has records with some of the biggest artists of our generation, from Marshmello to Lil Durk to G Herbo.

When it comes to turning your life around for the better, 2KBABY serves as a role model — someone who’s risen from the trenches with no food on the table to now being able to provide for not only himself, but his family and loved ones.

Talk about full circle, 2KBABY, real name Christian Todd (who used to go by Lil Sage) went from listening to G Herbo (his favorite rapper), to then doing a song with him (“OLD SOUL” ).

In fact, it was 2KBABY’s remix of Herb’s “Eastside Story” into “Southside Story” that first got him his hood fame.

His biggest song to date remains “OLD STREETS,” a heartfelt record that speaks volumes to the pain and obstacles he faced coming up as a kid — even catching the ear of Lil Durk who hopped on the remix. Fast forward to 2021, the Warner Records signee continues to achieve new heights, releasing “Like This” in collaboration with dance music’s hottest DJ and producer, Marshmello, and most recently “Great White.” The sky’s the limit for 2KBABY, and fans are at the edge of their seat for new music.

On the 11th episode of Shirley’s Temple, Shirley Ju sat down with 2KBABY at Matrix Studios in downtown Los Angeles to discuss his love for cannabis, collaborating with Marshmallow on “Like This” and more.

AllHipHop: How much you smoking?

2KBABY: About a zip a day. I be smoking, ain’t gonna lie.

AllHipHop: How long you’ve been smoking for?

2KBABY: My first time ever smoking, I was 14. But I wasn’t a heavy smoker. Living in my city, I wasn’t really big on smoking weed. I smoked the blacks, but I wasn’t smoking weed. I wasn’t trying to be out and about high all the time, I was trying to be focused. Once I moved out my city and moved to Atlanta, I was putting my all into music, then I started smoking a lot of weed. I’ve been smoking since a youngin’, I’m 20 now.

AllHipHop: You’re only 20 and have a record with one of the biggest artists in the world. Were you aware of who Marshmello was?

2KBABY: I was already aware about who Marshmello was. Of course, lately he really started breaking out a lot more into different audiences. He started doing the track with 42 Dugg, then with Roddy Rich.

AllHipHop: So how did you hop on that train?

2KBABY: Just good people on my team, good people on his team. Bro heard the song, it was a song I had did a couple years ago. I had put it out, but I wasn’t who I was. I was still who I was, but a lot smaller. People didn’t see it, but bro heard it and he did his thing with it. Turned it into a whole new song. We made it happen. Since then, we were vibing.

AllHipHop: Wait with the head off or on? [laughs]

2KBABY: With the mask off. After he heard the song and sent it back, we got up in person. We’re vibing all the way up until we shot the video, and now we here.

AllHipHop: What was your reaction when you heard it back?

2KBABY: I was amazed honestly. Being from where I’m from, even the music I grew up listening to, I was really proud of myself seeing how far I’ve come as an artist. I really want to be able to take over every genre and even grow as an artist. I want to perfect my craft and see progress. Seeing where I came from, damn now I’m here. The song sounds great. I know what type of audience it’s going to go to, an audience I never thought I’d be able to reach. It’s a blessing.

AllHipHop: You said you want to make pop music. Talk about wanting to attack every genre and your distinct sound.

2KBABY: I want to make everything. Lately I’ve been trying to make pop and other s###, but I always continue to do what got me here. I always continue to make music in the lab for the streets, for my people that still love “Old Streets” and still love Lil Sage. I’m definitely trying to master everything in the background.

AllHipHop: I love “Old Streets.” I know that was originally a freestyle for Say Cheese?

2KBABY: It was a freestyle I’d posted, then Glock Rivers picked it up on Twitter. He’s a big influencer on Twitter. It went viral on Twitter. It went crazy, then it transitioned over to Instagram. Say Cheese picked up the freestyle, then a whole bunch of other pages. When I posted the freestyle, I had 20K followers. It was going viral for the whole summer. By the end of summer, it had 70K to 80K going up on 100K. By the end, I made it into a real song and dropped it.

AllHipHop: Did you think it’d become your biggest song? You can feel the emotion.

2KBABY: When I first did it, when I first dropped the freestyle, I didn’t know nothing. Now that I think about it, I’d dropped “Like This,” the original one. I was trying to promote and trap people to watch my video I just dropped. Alright, let me shoot a freestyle video and post it on Instagram. S###, that went crazy. They wasn’t even paying no attention to the music video I was trying to get people to watch, the freestyle’s going crazy.

AllHipHop: How was it getting Lil Durk on the remix?

2KBABY: Shout out to Lil Durk man, Durk hopped on the remix through the same people. Before I had made my decision as far as what label, I’d already made connections with certain people over at Alamo. Shout out them over at Alamo. My team and their team, it was off the strength of what we had already had. We crossed paths in the past, so same s###.

AllHipHop: How does it feel to get your first plaque so young?

2KBABY: It’s a blessing. It motivates me. Once I got that first one and I put it up on the wall, I envision the whole wall covered in plaques. It made me want to get more!

AllHipHop: You came along way since bologna meat…

2KBABY: Facts! Bologna meat to gold plaques.

AllHipHop: A huge part of this show is mental health. What was the reality of coming up in Louisville?

2KBABY: You gotta definitely be strong. You gotta be strong-minded because it’s a crab-in-a-bucket effect. It’s really every man for himself because nobody really gets it out of us. Everybody’s trying to maintain, they chasing a lot of s### that’s not even in the city too. Listening to everybody else and being around too many other people, you gon’ get caught up. My big bro instilled in me when I was 14: “always ride alone.” I had times when I was on some knucklehead s### and I was picking up the squad, but I learned my lessons from that s###. I tell everybody else: “ride dolo” when I’m in my city. It’s different. My city is lost in time.

AllHipHop: Really? How so?

2KBABY: The best car you gon’ see in my city is a Maserati. If you see anything better than that, it’s one of the odds. We ain’t even got no designer stores. The closest designer store is in Simpsonville. Other cities like here, New York, LA, everybody got stars coming out of there every day. You see stars, you see cars, you see all this crazy s### like it’s normal. In my city, we see all that on our phones. What I’m doing right now and what I’m seeing, my life now is still surreal everyday. It was already programmed in my head: “this is where I’ma be, this is where I’ma live or die. This is the normal.” Now, it’s crazy. Everybody and they mama wish they could go to Cali, in my city. It ain’t even about getting out here or trying to get no big crazy AirbnB. In my city, they be satisfied to be out this m########### in the hotel. Just be walking the strip.

AllHipHop: You say “I’ve been through too much just to live like this.” How was your mental state back then?”

2KBABY: Once I really put my whole focus into it, it did help. I ain’t gon’ lie growing up, I drove myself crazy sometimes. I look at other other kids, they live life. They focus on being a kid, having fun every moment. Damn, why am I 12, 13, 14, stressed as f### like I’m old? I was never satisfied, I always wanted more. I didn’t have the most. My momma had told me we didn’t have it like that, that’s just being real. We gotta work for everything, but I never gave up though. I always kept hustling.

AllHipHop: How does mom’s feeling now? I’m sure she’s proud as f###.

2KBABY: Yeah she’s good now, everybody’s good now. Everybody’s good, everybody’s maintaining. We all trying to keep working to the next level. It’s just the beginning.

AllHipHop: You used to rap as Lil Sage, where’d that come from?

2KBABY: It was my nickname back home, all my friends called me Lil Sage. I really started rapping because my best friend got locked up when I was 14. At that time I waited 6 months, he was downtown in the YC (Youth Camp). His sister told me after 6 months he got sent to camp. In my head worsT case scenario, I’ma start rapping Just to say free my homie. So he got a name here back out here while he’s gone, leaving his legacy. That’s what I was on. By the time he came home, I gained the city on my back. I said “c’mon bro, let’s go crazy with rap!”

AllHipHop: Is he still here to this day?

2KBABY: Yeah, he’s still here. Shout out Blasian, he got a kid now. Bro still doing music.

AllHipHop: How’s your mental state now that you got all these eyes on you?

2KBABY: I really focus every day on not living too fast. I try to stay in the same mindset. Keep myself in the same place I was when I was back home, living with my mama or living with my grannie. Staying at one of my homie’s spots, I was hungry as f###. Every day, I’d wake up hungry. I know it’s never overnight, but as long as I’m making progress everyday and taking care of what I gotta take care of, I’m getting steps closer. I’m set.

AllHipHop: I want to touch on “Old Soul,” because I love G Herbo. You’ve got the perfect features.

2KBABY: G Herbo is one of my favorite artists, fasho. Once I got that feature, alright I know what I’m doing right. That’s one of my favorite songs.

AllHipHop: Was that done in the studio or was that sent?

2KBABY: Nah it was sent. Same s###. Me and bro caught up in New York though. It was dope! Pulled up to his first show on the tour in New York, that s### was crazy.

AllHipHop: People be knowing all his lyrics.

2KBABY: Yeah, everybody be saying he off beat, but I don’t hear it.

AllHipHop: Talk about dressing up as old people. How was that?

2KBABY: Oh man, that was dope I ain’t gon’ lie. When I looked at the treatment, I loved it. I was chillin’, it wasn’t nothing crazy. Shorty went crazy on the makeup. The most fun honestly was the acting. We shot the video in two different places. I shot the video in Atlanta, he shot his s### back home. It was the beginning of COVID, everything was real strict. My favorite part was they did something in the video where we FaceTimed each other while we’re playing chess, that was dope.

AllHipHop: I was gonna ask, are you good at chess?

2KBABY: Hell yeah! I whoop ass in chess.

AllHipHop: What’s your favorite G Herbo song?

2KBABY: “Back On Tour.” When he dropped that, he was going by G Herbo. I like “Eastside Story” too. That’s how I blew up back home. I remixed “Eastside Story” and called it “Southside Story.” That’s how I got my hood fame.

AllHipHop: How was Atlanta?

2KBABY: Atlanta was cool, I locked in in Atlanta. I was in the studio everyday, either in the basement or in Sonny Digital’s studio. Shout out Sonny Digital, that’s big bro!

AllHipHop: I know Lucci’s out there, you got “Half A Milli” with him.

2KBABY: Hell yeah, shout out Lucci. We all under the same label.

AllHipHop: Is there someone you want to work with that you haven’t?

2KBABY: Post Malone, I want to work with Post Malone. That’s gonna happen.

AllHipHop: Are you big on manifesting?

2KBABY: YeaH fasho, that’s what I be on all day long.

AllHipHop: Do you meditate?

2KBABY: I be trying to. I ain’t gon’ say I be sitting up somewhere with my feet or my legs crossed up, but I definitely talk to myself. I be figuring s### out. Every day, I gotta get s### done. I gotta make progress here and there. I’ll be figuring s### out, having conversations with myself. Two minds work better than one. I can’t think with one mind, I gotta think with two minds.

AllHipHop: You record off the dome?

2KBABY: Yeah, I don’t write anything. Going to the studio prepared to me is going to the studio with the energy, ready to create and get in the bag. Call whoever I want to call. Call my squad, whoever to meet up and help with the vibe. Get in there and start painting.

AllHipHop: 3 things you need in the studio?

2KBABY: Lemon pepper wings, weed of course, and my loved ones forreal. Gotta make sure they my people.

AllHipHop: How many people you got in your circle?

2KBABY: Not more than I can count on my hand.

AllHipHop: You liking it out here in LA? I know you’re cold.

2KBABY: Yeah I’m freezing out here. I love LA, I make some of my best music out here. The scenery and the vibes, of course the weed. It’s all inspirational, motivational.

AllHipHop: Talk about your drip, I see you.

2KBABY: Shoutout Cult man! Cult sent me the jacket.

AllHipHop: Who are your favorite designers?

2KBABY: I like Balenciaga. I like Gucci, Burberry. I love Burberry. Honestly, I’m not one of those n*ggas that be crazy about designer s###. I grab s### I like. I could walk into whatever store and if I see a T shirt or flannels, I’ll buy it. I be wearing flannels, s### like that.

AllHipHop: I see crystals around your neck, I love that.

2KBABY: Yeah, I’ve been recently trying to get up on that s###. Trying to get some better vibes.

AllHipHop: You have a new song “Great White” coming out Friday, why did you name it “Great White”?

2KBABY: In the chorus, I say “Great White, all you little n**** in the backseat” basically saying I’m a big shark and everybody else is watching. Also sharks do their own thing, a shark is in its own world in the ocean while everything else is happening on land. I’m not in the mix like that. And when anything comes into the ocean the shark is at an advantage.

AllHipHop: And you shot a video for “Great White”? yeah the video is about me going and getting it by any means. Rich Porter came up with the treatment and we shot it in LA.

2KBABY and Shirley Ju

AllHipHop: Anything you want to let the people know?

2KBABY: I’m dropping my mixtape next month, it’s called First Quarter.

AllHipHop: Any features?

2KBABY: Mozzy, I threw Mozzy on there. That’s big bro, I f### with Mozzy. I got Mozzy on there, I ain’t gon’ say all the features right now. Always got something in the works.

AllHipHop: Favorite emoji?

2KBABY: The laughing emoji.

AllHipHop: Favorite snack?

2KBABY: Goldfish.

AllHipHop: Favorite song at the moment.

2KBABY: “Like This.”

AllHipHop: Favorite thing to do for self-care?

2KBABY: Shower. I take a shower when I’m bored. I take a shower when I wake up and take a shower when I go to sleep. During the day if I’m bored, f### it. If I feel like I’m sticky, take a shower.

AllHipHop: Hot or cold?

2KBABY: Hot! I like the heat, I ain’t gon’ lie.

AllHipHop: Greatest fear?

2KBABY: Going broke.

AllHipHop: Favorite show on Netflix?

2KBABY: Right now, I like Riverdale. I like Shameless too though.

AllHipHop: What’s your idea of perfect happiness?

2KBABY: Being at peace.

AllHipHop: First thing that comes to mind: “Old Streets.”

2KBABY: Louisville.

AllHipHop: What’s your secret talent?

2KBABY: I play alto saxophone and tuba, some high-pitched s###. I bought one, on some f### it s###. I should try to record some saxophone s###…I like Dragonball Z. That’s the only anime I watch. N*ggas be leveling up and going super saiyan, I be trying to level up.

Sophie Schultz On “I Don’t Camouflage” With Hip-Hop Fashion Icon April Walker

I Don’t Camouflage Presents… Sophie Schultz

Born and raised in Tokyo, Japan, Sophie Schultz is a 17-year old makeup artist and entrepreneur currently living in Brooklyn, NY with her aunt and fashion icon, April Walker. After being bullied for not blending in, she moved to NYC at age 15 to pursue her dream and explore her identity.

I Don’t Camouflage is a community and documentary series featuring the patterns and migrations of creatives who dare to stand out. https://www.idontcamouflage.com

Directed, Filmed, Produced and Edited by: Aiko Tanaka of I Don’t Camouflage
Special Thanks To: Sophie Schultz and April Walker #IDontCamouflage​

Lil Nas X Feels No Responsibility To Be A Role Model For Kids

Lil Nas X has insisted it’s “not (his) job” to be a good role model.

The 22-year-old rapper – whose real name is Montero Lamar Hill – shot to fame in 2019 when he released his hit single, “Old Town Road,” and has said that whilst he originally felt “a sense of responsibility” to be a role model for his fans, he now “doesn’t care.”



When asked about being a good role model, he told GQ Style magazine: “At first I felt a sense of responsibility. But now I kind of just don’t care. It’s not my job. Of course I want to spread good ideals, but I’m not nobody’s parents. At the end of the day, I’m just doing me, and hoping everybody else is following the lead, and doing themselves.

“Part of my plan is to make sure people know I’m going to do whatever the f### I want, when I want to, and if you’re mad at it, I’m going to laugh in your face.”

Nas X recently released his latest single, “Montero (Call Me By Your Name),” and accompanied it with a note written to his 14-year-old self, in which he reflected on coming out as gay two years ago.

And now, the musician says he initially feared he would have to be “straight passing” if he wanted to continue his career.

“(I thought that I wouldn’t be) allowed to be really sensual or anything … like, I’m gay but I’m not ‘gay’ … like, I’m gay but I have to make sure you feel like I can be straight passing too,” he mused.

Nas X also reflected on his Christian upbringing and admitted he “never wanted to be gay” when he was growing up because he thought it was “just a test” from God.

“That was one of the main reasons why I never wanted to be gay,” he added. “I even thought, “If I have these feelings, it’s just a test. A temporary test. It’s going to go away. God is just tempting me.’”

Golden Globe Awards Canceled By NBC For Being Rusty As Hell With Stunning Lack Of Diversity

Hollywood Foreign Press Association officials have responded to NBC bosses scrapping coverage of the 2022 Golden Globes by announcing a two-month set of reforms.



The HFPA board has been slammed for failing to have any black members, with Hollywood A-listers and executives calling for a boycott until the organization has its house in order.

And it appears they are deadly serious about making necessary changes.

In a statement released hours after NBC’s decision to cancel its coverage of the 2022 Golden Globe Awards, a spokesman says: “Regardless of the next air date of the Golden Globes, implementing transformational changes as quickly – and as thoughtfully – as possible remains the top priority for our organization.

“We invite our partners in the industry to the table to work with us on the systemic reform that is long overdue, both in our organization as well as within the industry at large.”

Among the reforms the organization is planning between now and the middle of July: approving a new code of conduct in consultation with publicists and studios, continuing outreach to potential new member candidates, and beginning a search for a Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion officer.

The HFPA bosses will also add 13 black journalists to their membership.

Last week, former 8-time president Phil Berk was booted from the organization emailing members a scathing criticism of Black Lives Matter Founder, Patrisse Cullors.

Also, back in 2003, Berk was accused of grabbing Brendan Frasier’s butt and rubbing his middle finger on his “taint” during a HFPA luncheon.

The Golden Globes is also accused of ignoring Black filmmakers and journalists.

https://twitter.com/ava/status/1366183977438957570

Richie Re Taps Trap Beckham For “Long Hair Thick A$$”

Flint, Michigan Native Rapper Richie Re teamed up with superstar Trap Beckham for the release of summer’s hot summer anthem “Long Hair Thick A$$,” following the success of her current single ‘On the Flo.’

Bringing the heat out of Flint, MI, independent artist and rapper Richie Rehas surpassed many of her counterparts within the 3 years of her career. Being an independent artist, she’s already surpassed 14 million streams on her latest album Rich B#### Chronicles Vol. 1 that was released in late November with artist Trina “Big Money”, YN Jay “Coochie Girl”, and QC artist Kollision “Goldmine.”

Seeing that the industry is taking a new turn with females dominating like Nicki Minaj, Cardi B, and Megan Thee Stallion, the guys have had a run for their money. On the rise with endless views and streams, Richie Re is making her mark in the game. Following the success of her solo single “On the Flo”, sampled from hip hop superstar David Banner’s ‘Like a Pimp’…” Richie and Trap Beckham’s collaborative effort is giving real Freaknik vibes. Having great energies on the record the two are already getting great feedback and responses from their fans across the world.

Listen Here :

https://richiere.ffm.to/longhairthickass

J. Cole Hints At Retiring From Making Music In ‘The Off-Season’ Documentary

On May 14, Roc Nation emcee Jermaine Cole is expected to drop his next body of work named The Off-Season. The North Carolina native, better known as J. Cole, presented a new 12-minute mini-doc before the project hits DSPs this Friday.

“Applying Pressure: The Off-Season Documentary” was published on YouTube yesterday (May 10). The Scott Lazer-directed video opened with J. Cole talking to his “a lot” collaborator 21 Savage in the studio about the meaning behind The Off-Season title.

At one point, Cole tells 21, “That’s where The Warm Up [mixtape] came from. Every day I woke up, wrote verses, made beats. All that to say, The Off-Season was like the same concept. One more time before I leave, before I feel fulfilled in this game, let me try to reach new heights from a skill level standpoint.”

In addition, J. Cole spoke about being appreciative of reaching a position of comfortability, and he discussed wanting to spend more time with his family. Chapter 2 of The Off-Season documentary was labeled “Father Time.”

On fatherhood, the 36-year-old spitter said, “It was almost like a clock went off. Before life completely changes, I was like, ‘Damn, I need to refocus, wake back up, lock back in, and begin the process of The Fall-Off.’ Which is reaching its highest height before I feel like I can comfortably just relax.”

The Fall-Off is yet another music project Cole is apparently creating. He has been teasing that particular effort since 2018’s KOD album which ended with a track titled “1985 (Intro to The Fall Off).” Then the SoundCloud description for his “Album Of The Year (Freestyle)” in 2018 read, “The Off Season coming soon… All roads lead to The Fall Off.”

Some J. Cole supporters were already speculating that the Dreamville Records co-founder hinted at retirement with a cryptic Instagram post in December. The IG image of a notebook page with the phrases “The Fall Off Era,” “The Off-Season,” “It’s A Boy,” and “The Fall Off” was perceived by some fans as Cole sharing his final “to-do list” with his followers.

Near the end of the “Applying Pressure” documentary, Cole can also be heard saying, “Letting people know: The Off-Season, It’s A Boy, The Fall-Off is coming. Now that the possibility of not doing this s### seems real, and I’m at peace with that, don’t have a regret.”

Back in 2014, around the time he released 2014 Forest Hills Drive, J. Cole spoke about possibly retiring early from the Hip Hop game. The entertainer/businessman expressed that he would be “content” if Forest Hills Drive was his final album, saying “That would be the illest note to leave listeners with.”

J. Cole likely has at least two more album eras before he steps off the court for good. The Off-Season period kicked off with the well-received “Interlude” (stylized as “i n t e r l u d e”) single. The record was produced by Cole, T-Minus, and Tommy Parker. Both “Applying Pressure: The Off-Season Documentary” and “Interlude” are currently trending on YouTube.

Pooh Shiesty Speaks Out About Rumors He Hooked Up With Trans Woman

Lontrell “Pooh Shiesty” Williams Jr. is pushing back against rumors that he was involved with a transgender woman. Social media users began questioning if the “Back in Blood” hitmaker was the person seen in sexually suggestive screenshots.

Reportedly, a trans woman named Nicki P posted videos online that included a bare-chested man wearing a 1017 chain and a long-nailed hand wearing a wristwatch. The Atlanta resident wrote in one caption, “Wit yo favorite rapper! Literally! Thanks for the AP DADDY.”

Nearly instantly, Twitter sleuths speculated the jewelry belonged to 1017 Records signee Pooh Shiesty. Other aspiring detectives determined the 1017 chains were fake and therefore the man in the clip could not be the Memphis-raised rapper.

As the theories played out on social media, Pooh Shiesty started reacting to the drama associated with his name. At first, he sent a now-deleted message to his 246,000 Twitter followers that read, “Can’t no internet tell u who I’m [f######].”

Pooh Shiesty also posted on the platform, “Go Play with somebody who ain’t gone kill you.” That statement could be referring to reports of accelerating fatal violence against transgender citizens across the nation. Some people interpreted the tweet as a possible threat.

The self-described Slime Lil Dude also added, “And on that man on my face I ain’t comment that 💯that’s my response.” However, it is not clear if Pooh Shiesty’s tweets were referring to the Nicki P allegations or another viral controversy involving YoungBoy Never Broke Again’s ex-girlfriend Jania Meshell.

Professional boxer Devin Haney and Jania Meshell apparently ended their relationship in recent days. Pooh Shiesty was brought into the couple’s public split after he was accused of commenting “She was in my dm” under an Instagram blog post about Haney and Meshell. The 21-year-old southerner denied leaving that comment.

In addition, Pooh Shiesty went on Instagram Live to address both situations. When it comes to the Nicki P allegations, he stated, “F###### and s###… Quit playing with 1017’s name though. That’s the wrong clout. That s### gonna lead to a shorter life span. Your ass gonna check out of here… They ain’t playing with me, they playing with 1017. They know I ain’t got no neck tattoo.”

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Tory Lanez Accused Of Attacking ‘Love & Hip Hop’ Star Prince Michael Harty Again

Once again, there are reports of Tory Lanez allegedly assaulting Love & Hip Hop: Miami star Prince Michael Harty. The two men have been engaged in a feud for years that reportedly included other violent encounters.

According to TMZ, Harty told police he was hit in the face while partying at Vendôme Club in Miami Beach, Florida last week. Tory Lanez is said to be the named suspect in a police report about the alleged battery.

The entertainment news website writes:

However, representatives for Lanez told TMZ the incident never happened and the “Luv” performer did not come in contact with Harty at the location. Plus, Lanez’s team claimed there is no video nor witnesses that back up the party promoter’s accusations.

Tory Lanez’s rep also suggested Prince Michael Harty is “obsessed” with the Canadian singer/rapper. A similar situation supposedly took place in 2019 which led to Harty suing Lanez for allegedly attacking him at Miami’s LIV nightclub.

At the time, LIV released the following statement, “Last night our security broke up an altercation between Love and Hip Hop’s Prince and Tory Lanez. We have a zero-tolerance policy towards violence and both parties were immediately asked to leave the venue.”

Tory Lanez is already facing 22 years and 8 months in state prison for the July 2020 shooting incident in Hollywood Hills, California involving Megan Thee Stallion. The Houston-bred rapstress called out Lanez as the person who caused her to suffer gunshot wounds in her feet following a function at Kylie Jenner’s home.

Los Angeles County District Attorney’s Office charged Lanez (born Daystar Peterson) with assault with a semiautomatic firearm, personal use of a firearm, and carrying a loaded and unregistered firearm in a vehicle. He pleaded not guilty to all counts.

Tory Lanez recently took to social media to declare his apathy towards any public backlash directed at him. The 28-year-old Daystar album creator tweeted, “I don’t care about repairing an image that people tried to smear and couldn’t.”

Cordae Talks Working With Young Thug & Collaborating With H.E.R.

Cordae (formerly known as YBN Cordae) is preparing to release his sophomore studio LP, From a Bird’s Eye View. Prior to that project arriving in the future, the Maryland-raised emcee let loose the four-pack titled Just Until EP in April.

Just Until featured A Tribe Called Quest’s Q-Tip on “More Life” as well as Young Stoner Life’s Young Thug on “Wassup.” Cordae spoke about recording tracks with Thug during an interview on Apple Music’s Rap Life Radio with Ebro Darden.

“We did that joint one of the first nights we [were] in the studio just linking up,” said Cordae about Young Thug. “And we just [sat] down in a control room going back and forth and it’s incredible with Thug. This n#### is a master of cadence, flow, and being able to create high-level music at an extremely fast pace.”

Cordae continued, “And he would stop what the engineer was doing and shift the vocals and put a certain EQ and compressor on a vocal, so I’m just so impressed by that as well. I tell Thug all the time, I told him this in person, I’ll say it right now too. I feel like when it’s all said and done, he definitely belongs in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame for sure.”

The four records on Just Until will not appear on the From A Bird’s Eye View album. However, Cordae fans can expect another collaboration with R&B singer H.E.R. to make the final cut. The two recording artists previously connected for “Lord Is Coming” and “Racks” off H.E.R.’s I Used to Know Her.

“Yes, she’s definitely going to be on this next album,” Cordae told Darden. “We got a bunch of songs together in the can. Whenever we create, it’s always something dope. H.E.R and Anderson, I love being in the studio with them because they’re actual musicians to the highest level though.”

Kodak Black Shocks Fans With New Tattoo On His Eyelids With Ominous Message

Kodak Black has a new tattoo that is a little more disturbing than his criminal record.

The 23-year-old took to social media as a social media phenom after his most recent incarceration and pardon by former POTUS Donald Trump, to show off his new ink.

In a music video called “Rip Stick” featuring Pooh Shiesty and Sykobob, he revealed that he had “murder” tattooed in red on his eyelids.

His face is most striking as his thick black eyebrows and big almond-shaped eyes outline the tat. To further emphasize the dastardly message, fully read when his eyes are closed, is the red teardrop slightly under his eye, across from a cross.

In the video, he captioned, “Ain’t been sleep in a week still catching the biggest Z’s. And this ain’t even everything or what’s coming.”

This new body art comes days after he and Pooh Shiesty squashed their beef. On the eve of Mother’s Day, multiple videos emerged showing the two young adults…adulting and maturely handling their beef.

This comes after many suspected that their conflict would end in violence.

Introducing Rap Artist CountreeSlim​ From Prison To New Hollywood Reality Show

[embedyt] https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KXHpaNHHUno[/embedyt]

K.SHOY ENTERTAINMENT makes it to MJ Own Network on Roku Cable TV!!. Over the past 10 years, KShoy Entertainment has stamped its name as a successful recognized caribbean and hip hop entertainment multimedia resource outlet for talents. Reggae, Hip hop, R&B artists, as well as non-music talents (models, actors), and companies have increased their brand visibility and publicity through our carefully crafted and selective artist promotion services, media, advertising, events, contests, castings, affiliations, consultations and services.

KShoy Entertainment has worked with and trained several recognized independent artists to enhance their artist careers, in addition to covering interviews with some of the top artists, producers and recognized personalities in the entertainment industry. Founded by C.E.O. “K-Shoya, K.SHOY ENTERTAINMENT provides Media and Entertainment promotional services for performing artists and all talents.

KShoya interviews Rap Artist Countree Slim. Faces of Rap Mothers branded rap artist Countree Slim from North Carolina talks about his life and debuts his rap hit song and music video COUNTREE SLIM – Came In. Introducing Rap artist #CountreeSlim From Prison to Hollywood Reality TV.

KSHOY ENTERTAINMENT INTERVIEW- Rap Artist #CountreeSlim talks #PRISON101 exclusive details about his 7 yr experience incarcerated. From Prison to Hollywood Countree Slim gets on Reality TV? Watch a sit down interview with Kshoya of #KShoyEntertainment interviewing Countree Slim.

#CountreeSlim #FacesofRapMothers #RapArtist #NorthCarolina #NYC #Inmate101 #prisonlife #netflix #Roku #mjownnetwork #realitytv #Hollywoodreality #Hollywoodrealitytv #NYCrap #NorthCarolinarapartist #SnoopDogg #WestCoast #Kshoya #kshoyentertainment #amazonfirestick #TikiLIVE #VladTV #WorldStar #LilBaby #TMZ #MTV

#FreeCountree #FreeCountreeSlim Please if you support Countree Slim please rotate and reshare this interview and his music!!! Since this interview Countree Slim has been rearrested and currently back in a correctional facility awaiting next court appearance smh)

SOCIAL MEDIA:

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instagram.com/countreeslim

Nicki Minaj Sends The Internet Into A Frenzy With One Post

The Barbs are happy because their queen has returned.

Nicki Minaj fans are celebrating as the “Super Bass” rapper posts for the first time in months on her social media. But don’t think she emerged because she wanted to show fans what she did for mother’s day!

She captioned the two-flick post, “F R I D A Y.”

View this post on Instagram

A post shared by Barbie (@nickiminaj)

Rocking her signature pink, Nicki appeared a little less matronly than one might expect a new mother to appear.

Perhaps, wanting to show her bounce back, Nicki is poised on her blushed-quilter desk with Chanel candy decorations where a less fabulous executive would have a lamp or stapler.

Covering up the most private parts of her body, which we are sure is also kinds of sickening, are two fuzzy pillows. She also was wardrobed in platinum jewelry and drippy rose crocs.

THE QUEEN IS BACK!

Her last post was January 9, only days after giving birth to her first child. Now, she may be giving birth to something else on Friday and fans believe that might be music.

New life, whether that be her hubby, baby, or a project, is needed for Nicki Minaj.

Especially since her father, Robert Miraj, was killed after being run down in a hit-and-run accident almost a month after she became a mother.

Many believe his death was a huge fact in her social media silence.

Kelvin “GP Radio” Santiago is the Man Behind Some of the Industry’s Biggest Latin & Hip Hop Artists

Steve Jobs once said “It’s not a faith in technology. It’s faith in people.”  Kelvin “GP Radio” Santiago follows that line of thought.  They say it is difficult to find industry executives that are equated with integrity, sincerity, drive and loyalty, but over the past 15 years Kelvin “GP Radio” Santiago has developed a reputation for just that. The Dominican rooted, New York raised, Miami based Santiago has amassed a roster of clients and successful projects that have effectively distinguished the promoter and talent broker from his peers.

Growing up in Long Island listening to artists like Biggie, Snoop, Dr. Dre, 50 Cent was the beginning of his love for Hip Hop, eventually turning his music passion into becoming one of the most respected radio promoters in the urban market. He says, “Money comes and goes but relationships last forever.”

Santiago is utilizing his experience to benefit an array of Grammy award winning and multi-platinum artists. Now he’s hoping to forge a multi-faceted entertainment company that encompasses music management, production and promotion. Whether he’s booking his clients on Power 105’s The Breakfast Club, Hot 97’s Ebro in the Morning, or rubbing shoulders with CEO’s at Sirius XM and iheart Radio Santiago is constantly pushing the envelope and finding new ways to break records and expand his artist’s presence. 

As far as definitions go, Santiago’s titles are flaunting. Director of radio, booking agent, artist manager, and overall conduit between DJs and the music. He’s responsible for breaking records and monitoring how they’re landing. His client roster includes heavy hitters— Tory Lanez, singer/rapper Melii whose song “Icey” was used in Beyonce’s Ivy Park commercial. He also boasts clients including Rapper/Boxer Jake Paul who balances a distinguishable music and athletic career as well as Roc Nation DJ “Bodega” Flee.

He has broke over 10 records for Tory Lanez between 2017 and 2021 including hits like “Talk To Me,” “Broke In a Minute” and “Jerry Sprunger.” Santiago came up with the idea and facilitated Tory Lanez sending more than one thousand drops to radio DJs personally, and Santiago has managed to keep his rotation steady.  Santiago also runs a three-tier label slash management marriage—Break Records, Next Level, and InAvAtor/Umbrella. 

He’s currently focused on the development of Afro-Latina artist Melii. The Harlem bred vocalist’s latest release “Big Tipper” alongside Lil Wayne under Tory Lanez’ imprint Umbrella, made serious noise. Juggling creative personalities that are behind the world’s most acclaimed and often notorious superstars can be arduous. For Santiago, it’s routine. But not always as easy as he makes it look. Still, it’s a task he prefers to shoulder alone. 

People always say I should get an assistant or some help,” he laughs. “But trust is a major factor. I’m the oldest one here and I feel responsible for making sure things get done right. If anything goes wrong at the hands of someone else, then that would be on me.” 

Santiago was vital in the early stages of R&B singer Jason Derulo’s career, as well as reggaeton artist J Álvarez and even financed  Latin Trap artist Anuel’s first record ” Coronamos” featuring Lito Kirino. So what’s next on the horizon for Santiago? “I would like to open a one stop shop studio in Miami which will offer video editing, recording studios, green rooms but with a different vibe to each and every room.”

Meek Mill Praises Georgia Governor Kemp For Signing Probation Bill

Meek Mill sent a shout out to Georgia’s Republican Governor Brian Kemp over the weekend.

This might have raised some eyebrows a few months ago when Donald Trump was running for re-election since Kemp was a supporter before the former POTUS turned on him.

But Georgia’s governor is getting kudos from more than Meek, thanks to a new bill he put his John Hancock one earlier this week.

Governor Kemp signed Senate Bill 105, which streamlines the processes within the state’s probation system.

In a rare showing of bipartisanship between the Republicans and the Democrats, Bill 105 passed 169-2 in the Georgia House of Representatives and unanimously in the State Senate.

Meek Mill, his organization the REFORM alliance, and other activists say Bill 105 will end the “probation to prison pipeline” which day has said has led to massive over incarceration.

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“If you live in Georgia you can file for probation termination after 2 years with very high % of being granted,” Meek Mill explained. “This change will let up 50,000 people off probation when in effect!! THIS HOW WE
MOVING STATE TO STATE WITH ‘REFORM.’ We need all hands on deck join the movement! Reform alliance.com s/o to Georgia
governor for helping free some of us!”

The new bill will greatly release the time offenders will have to spend on probation in Georgia. According to stats, the average probation term in In the state is a whopping 6.3 years.

And, over 40% of those end up serving more than 10 years of probation, leading to an incredible stat: 1 in every 18 Georgian is caught up in the probation system.

“SB 105 is a bipartisan, evidence-based reform that will safely reduce the prison population, save taxpayer dollars and allow resources to be redirected towards true public safety priorities,” said REFORM Alliance CEO Robert Rooks. “It is a sensible and essential step toward ensuring a probation system that gives Georgians a meaningful second chance and an opportunity for real redemption.”

Meek became the poster boy for the problems with the probation system, after an 11-year battle with the state of Pennsylvania.

Meek was sent to prison for violating the terms of his probation for some minor and fractions, but after pressure, his sentence and his probation was vacated and he was allowed to plead guilty to a misdemeanor firearms gun possession charge.

In January, the REFORM Alliance played a role in passing the SB 1048, SB 1050, and SB 1051 laws which will reshape Michigan’s probation and parole system.

Meek, along with Philadelphia 76ers partner Michael Rubin serves as Co-Chairs for the REFORM Alliance.

Shawn “Jay-Z” Carter, Robert Kraft, Robert Smith, and others are listed as Founding Partners.

Swizz Beatz And Timbaland Explain Why Triller Is The Right Fit For Verzuz

Swizz Beatz and Timbaland are excited about Verzuz’s new deal with Triller.

The pair took Verzuz – the virtual artist battle series – from Apple Music to Triller because they wanted to partner with a company of “super-disruptors and risk-takers.”

Swizz told Variety: “We needed a team that wasn’t scared and were super-disruptors and risk-takers. You can find companies that have a load of money, but they’re not thinking disruptively or strategically.

“It’s a multimedia company now. It’s a movement. It’s a lifestyle. That’s the part that I like, and this is just the beginning.”

Timbaland added: “We just got in the house and we’ve barely had a chance to look around yet. I knew Triller was a creative outlet similar to TikTok, but it seemed as if more rappers were using it — a lot. I watched the way they worked it, their edits of their own songs, the snippets they put out there. They made their own videos. I caught on to so many songs just because I saw them on Triller.”

And they are hoping to keep Verzuz’s gritty appeal, while also boosting its production values.

Swizz explained: “Now, we’re just a better-produced show. Everyone expects a show such as ours to stay raw and gritty, stay in that low place. My thing is that we can still keep it real, but we can totally put quality and integrity first. Everybody on the show is real, everybody behind the show is real — how much more real do you need to get?”

Coke La Rock: Hip-Hop’s First MC Tells His Crazy Life Stories, When Kool Herc Was Stabbed & Why He Deserves More

Coke La Rock is Hip-Hop’s original MC. This is not in dispute.

Coke La Rock was partners with DJ Kool Herc commonly known as the father of Hip-Hop. But right next to him, on the mic, was Coke La Rock. The 60-something-year-old Hip-Hop Pioneer was right there in the West Bronx with Herc and his sister/First Lady of Hip-Hop Cindy Campbell when they threw that now-infamous back to school party that doubled as a fundraiser for Cindy’s school clothing. Coke La Rock served as a companion piece to DJ Kool Herc work on the wheels of steel by grabbing the mic, doing shout outs and short rhymes in front of partygoers. Those rhymes would soon be the foundation for numerous rap heads, hit records like the Sugar Hill Gangs “Rapper’s Delight” and an eventual billion dollar business full of millions and millions of rappers. Such is his impact, he is now being called a “co-founder” of the culture of Hip-Hop.

We talked to Coke La Rock at WonWorld Studios in NYC for this exclusive and enchanting interview with a pioneer in a genre that doesn’t always pay proper homage to its forefathers and mothers. But this interview is a no holds barred look at an intriguing figure whose most interesting parts do not necessarily have anything to do with rap music. However, as it relates to Hip-Hop, Coke has a lot to say about his life and times. He discusses going all out for Kool Herc, ready to take a life, when the legend was nearly killed in a stabbing. He talks his early days of hustling and getting to places no other 17-year old could get into. He also discuses The Bronx, how crazy those jams were and even his penchant for holding three guns on him just in case.

AND THEN THERE IS HIP-HOP…

Coke La Rock keeps it real from his relationship to Herc to how he feels undervalued. He was here for the first Hip-Hop party with Herc and Cindy to being involved in the first rap battle to the first one to grab the mic to kick a rhyme. He even gives his Top 5…and the answer is a shocker. In a historical context, Coke La Rock is a national treasure and does not get nearly the respect that he deserves and it is time for that to change.

Look at this intriguing interview with AllHipHop’s own Chuck “Jigsaw” Creekmur.

For more on Coke La Rock, click here.

Lizzo Has Tearful, Mental Breakdown On TikTok

Lizzo became tearful as she admitted to feeling “like a burden on everyone” in a TikTok video over the weekend.

The “Juice” star is known among fans for her usually-upbeat attitude, but kept things real as she headed online and opened up on her emotional state.

Filming herself in close-up while wearing a black-and-white striped shirt, Lizzo explained: “You know that part of sadness where you feel like a burden on everyone, and annoying, and nobody cares about you?

@lizzo

♬ original sound – lizzo

“Can we get rid of that part? It’s like, ‘Yo, I’m already sad’. Gotta add insult to injury that I have no one to talk to about it. It’s crazy. Like, why do we feel this way? Why do we feel this way when we get sad?”

Lizzo added: “I don’t want to feel this way anymore. I want to feel like I do have someone to talk to and people do care about me.”

“I am loved. I’m not alone. That’s how I want to feel but I don’t feel it,” she went on to remind herself, before ending the video by saying, “OK, this is embarrassing.”

And although Lizzo didn’t specify what had caused her sadness, she hinted in a follow-up clip that things were getting better for the star.

“I’m feeling better. I had a really rough night and a very emotional morning just thinking about my relationships and life,” she explained. “You know how it is, it gets dark.

“I’m definitely glad I reached out in any way I could, and TikTok was one of those ways to feel perceived and seen and heard was really, really helpful,” she said, adding that she planned to drink some tea and have a bath.

Don Cannon Talks Discovering Lil Uzi Vert & New App ‘TmrO’ For Creatives

Don Cannon is a legend in his own right, and he’s come a long way from DJing at the young age of 5 years old. With his Instagram bio reading “your favorite producer,” the Philadelphia native is responsible for some of Lil Uzi Vert’s greatest hits, from “Money Longer” to “The Way Life Goes,” and even Rocko’s timeless smash “U.E.O.N.O.”

When he’s not producing and making beats, Don is playing the music executive role: primarily the co-founder of Atlantic Records’ Our Generation Now alongside long-time friend and collaborator DJ Drama. He also previously served as Vice President of A&R at Def Jam Recordings.

But now, he’s excited as ever to be stepping into his newest venture: the TmrO app. With his partner Kayla Shelton, this new app serves as a digital marketplace connecting the most creative minds from all over the world, specifically tapping into the music, film, and content creation industries. The location-based service allows businesses and creatives to connect with each other nearby.

Coming from true humble beginnings, which includes not even having food to eat, Don is here to pay it forward. AllHipHop caught up with Don via Instagram Live, who was interacting with the fans and playing them exclusives before tapping in with us. Read below as we discuss his come up in Philly, fond memories with DJ Drama, the mixtape days, discovering Lil Uzi Vert, why the TmrO app is a gamechanger, and more!

AllHipHop: Bring us back to when you were DJing at age 5, that’s wild.

Don Cannon: I did my first gig when I was 6, it was a wedding for my cousin. I was up there playing, I only had one record. 8 or 9 years old, I was rapping and making beats, but I was making these things called Pause Tapes. Back then, I had a karaoke machine so I’d sample stuff. I’d take a little piece of a sample, record it onto the next thing, pause it, go back and keep doing it until I had 3 minutes worth of loops, then I’d go back and rap on it through the karaoke machine.

Don Cannon:I moved on to getting my own professional DJ setup when I was 12 years old: Technics and a Gemini mixer. By the time I got to high school, I was already making mixtapes for the kids to listen to. My DJ name then was The Last Don. [laughs] I don’t know where that came from, probably some mafia movie. I carried that all the way until I got to college.

AllHipHop: What are your fondest memories from the mixtape days?

Don Cannon:One of them is Drama’s crib. DJ Drama had a house on 532 Glen Iris Drive, which is in the 4th Ward. I remember going there for the first time and making beats, having so many people want to come by the crib. Tip came through the crib to rap, David Banner, Lil Scrappy, Lil Jon. Any and everybody you can think of was at the house. It was a duplex, so he had the other side of the duplex. He had a lot of people come through. He had Monica come through, 2 Chainz when he was T#### Boi early, a lot of people. Sean Garrett’s a great writer, he’s coming by the crib as well. Those are my fondest memories because once I got my chops up and my money up, I’d dropped out of school on some Kanye West.

AllHipHop: Did you?

Don Cannon:Yeah, and Drama took me in. He said “yo, you can stay here until you get your s### together.” I wind up getting my own apartment, then we shifted a lot of the talent over to my apartment. I was living in this apartment complex, nobody had any idea that everybody from Raekwon to Freeway to Remy Ma to so many people came through there rapping. Nobody ever knew, Young Jeezy came through there. Nobody knew that apartment ever existed. I know now everybody’s like, “damn, I used to live next door! I ain’t know all that was going on.” We used to sneak people in, the most memorable times of where we started.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CN-oI1wBZ3q/

AllHipHop: I saw you post you and DJ Drama have been through a lot together. I saw your post, y’all were locked up too. What happened?

Don Cannon:There was a little misunderstanding of what we did to the mixtape game. The IRAA is really the protection for labels and artists to make sure the copyrights stay intact, it protects the companies. When we’re doing mixtapes, they had no idea we were working with the artist. For the most part, they thought we’re taking albums and switching the covers. Bootlegging an album with a different cover.

AllHipHop: What the hell! That’s wild.

Don Cannon:It’s crazy because a young intern that worked at IRAA was a big fan of us. He wound up explaining to them what we really did. Once they took a listen, it seemed like a lot of the artists like John Legend to CeeLo Green when they’re doing Gnarls Barkley… when Gnarls Barkley first started, the first thing they put out was a mixtape with us. When they first got their deal with Downtown Records, they came to us to do a mixtape and we put the music out. It was a fun time. We got locked up behind it for us for a little while until they got an understanding. Once that came in, we got out of the case. It was a rough time but we stand tall, we got right back to the grind.

AllHipHop: Bring us back to when you guys came up with Our Generation Now? Did you think you’d build this into one of the most lucrative hip hop labels?

Don Cannon:For all the work that we put in, we always knew we’d turn into something. We never told the real story. What really happened was when Drama was doing Gangster Grillz, we had some other mixtapes on the side too. That wasn’t the only mixtape we’re doing. I had something called 28 Grams. He had an R&B series, I had an R&B series, then we had Gangster Grillz. We were trying to come up with something that could break artists, without it having to be under the Gangster Grillz brand.

At that time, Kanye was beating down doors trying to be the next rapper. Everybody loved him for his beats, but would never really give him a chance on rapping. He could rap really good. Him, Joe Budden, Cory Gunz, Stat Quo, these are all names that don’t fit the Gangster Grillz brand because the Gangster Grillz brand really started with Southern artists. What do we want to call this brand for breaking artists outside of Gangster Grillz? We wound up coming like “what’s going on? It’s the generation. It’s the new generation, generation now.” We only did 3 pieces, Killa Mike was in Generation Now under the Gangster Grillz brand.

AllHipHop: Really?

Don Cannon:Yeah. Gangster Grillz wind up taking off so we put all steam ahead, kept moving on that. Years later, people don’t know this neither, we had a DJ crew called Affiliates with me, him, and Trendsetter. We had our first label deal with Asylum Records in 2006. We had a situation there. As we moved forward, we took another stab at it. I was telling the story on The Breakfast Club, I had an artist named Jimme Wallstreet that my guy from Philly, Ace McCloud, one of my closest friends brought me. He changed my perspective on what I was looking for.

At first, I wanted a super duper rap rapper. It was hard to find. When Jimme Wallstreet came, he had Biggie swag. He wasn’t Biggie, but he had that finesse. It was different from Philly because everybody in Philly was battle rapping and going hard. Some years after, he wound up passing. I took some time off to keep my eyes on talent. It opened up my eyes to see somebody like Lil Uzi Vert, which was so different from Philadelphia. That’s history made from there.

AllHipHop: What did you see in Uzi in the beginning? I remember the “Carnage” record going crazy.

Don Cannon:The conviction. When his team first played me some of the records, I thought “man, dude is nice.” I imagine a rapping person that could really have stage presence like Waka Flocka. He was a performer. I said “yo, dude can rap. He’s from Philly and can perform. This is a no-brainer. I already see this vision.” When I first met, he was down in this basement studio up in Philly being nonchalant. I listen to some jams, I was liking all of the joints. A couple of weeks later, he’d hit my phone and said “yo what we doing?” Oh s###, kid’s is dope.

I went back to Philly and met him on South Street, he came with his cousin. We’re walking down South Street in Philadelphia, one of the most famous streets for shopping, eating, taking a stroll. It’s a dope street. We’re walking and talking, going to sneaker stores, people said “oh s###, that’s the boy Uzi!” Oh, he’s got a following in Philly? I gotta f### with the kid. I wind up saying, “oh okay, I’m going to take it back to the team.” At that time, we weren’t even thinking about making another label. I told Dram we should start this whole situation again. We wind up making history from there.

AllHipHop: Bring to when you made “Money Longer.” What was the vibe in the studio?

Don Cannon:When we first started making music, our first 50 songs had no thought process. Nothing to it. We’re gelling, getting sounds together, getting his voice together, getting my newfound trap beats from the history of what I was doing. I was doing a lot of classic hip hop records, and it was a sound that matched. When you find an artist, a lot of times they don’t match when you meet. It’s okay, you can still work with each other, but sometimes it’s not a gel.

Once we knew we had a gel, there were some things I started focusing on. I seen that EDM was making so much noise at the time. It was about beats, but I seen a transition early of EDM starting to pick up on artists. The DJs get popular and going to get artists and putting them on the beats. Bet, we taking it back to rap. Okay, how do I make a song or beat that’s a transition from EDM back to rap?” The “Money Longer” horns provided by Maaly Raw, they’re similar to the EDM sounds coming out. I had to bring back the hip-hop sounds without all the extra drops that EDM had. When I had that sound, I said, “oh we might’ve did something with this.”

Because he had already did the “Carnage” record, a few other records. This one was the lifeline to segue him into the hip-hop world. That’s where he’ll start making money: “oh, my money getting longer!” Wee put it out on SoundCloud one crazy night.”Yo, let’s put it out and see what it’s going to do.” My thoughts on it is it’s going to go. It had 99K downloads in 2 or 3 minutes, it was crazy.

AllHipHop: Do your expectations get higher as the success gets higher?

Don Cannon:My expectation for all artists gets higher. If it didn’t I wouldn’t have a vision or believe in nobody. I’m looking at that from all our artists. Uzi hasn’t even reached his peak. Our artists haven’t even reached the max potential they can get to before they go into their prime years. 2 albums in, you can’t really tell if a person’s#### his prime yet. It’s too early. Some people go classic first album, second album, then critically acclaimed. Critically acclaimed makes you that super duper star. Seeing a potential where it could be. A lot of this stuff is amazing, we just sit back and watch.

AllHipHop: Can you touch on Jack Harlow’s success and the rise of “What’s Poppin?”

Don Cannon:Same influence with Jack: a young talented dude that came to us. He had some records. When he came and met with us, he was totally professional. We sat in our office. We had a little room, he brought his producer Juan with him. We sat in there, chopped it up. We talked about favorite movies, favorite stances, anything that we loved musically. He told us a vision he had, we told him the vision we had. I’m not a great salesman. Anything that I’m doing, all I can give you is the real. If you follow, that’s cool. If you love what we’re doing, that’s cool. But I can’t sell you on why we’re the best fit for anything.

That goes for the app I’m doing, that goes for any artist I’m doing, or even if I’m starting a show. I can’t sell you on that. We’re not fake. He felt the vibes. We’ve got a condition going with us. The same thing, we gelled and from there he worked his ass off to get to where he is now, I can’t do nothing but respect that. I love artists that work the ass off and get there, and he did. I can’t say one thing he missed. When we find these artists, we always say, “yo, promise us you gon’ give us your all because we gon’ give you our all.” It happened, here he is.

AllHipHop: Let’s get into the app, tell us about TmrO.

Don Cannon:The TmrO app is an on-demand gig app, it’s great for any creative that wants to find gigs and be a part of that gig community. We have clients, we have creatives in there. You could be any type of creative. You could be a drummer, a hairstylist, an artist, a voiceover. I’m in the app as a voiceover. I do cartoons and commercials for the radio, so I got myself set up. Graphic design, videographer, on-set help, even down to an intern. This allows you to be in there and find things all in one app instead of having to search.

I see people on IG so many times say “hey I’m in Atlanta, I need a barber. I need a guitarist.” I always wanted to eliminate that. Even when we were starting Generation Now, it was more than artists at first. It was more where a we’re breeding the next entertainment lawyer? Where we’re breeding the next marketing person? This is a very important app for us to make for the world. Especially me growing up, knowing how hard it is to stay in your field. A lot of people love to create, then have to work a side job. Kayla’s friend was on set and when there was some downtime, she had to do Door Dash. Door Dash was good because it helped her live and eat, but she’s always trying to find out a good way to stay in her field. For the creatives, we’re trying to keep people in one field. If you’re a photographer, you don’t have to go make donuts at night. There’s nothing wrong with that, but that’s what this is all about. It’s giving people an opportunity to stay there.

AllHipHop: What’s the reality of coming out with your own app?

Don Cannon:I’ve always been in the tech. When I was little, I’d always take computers apart, put them back together. Create coding for little video games, was always that person ahead of the game with technology. It could be any gadget. 10 years ago, I had my own app for myself, but it was a selfish app. It was me and supported my brand. It told you where I was performing next. I had a platform called Studio Rats which was in there, it was videos of me in the studio. If you weren’t a fan of me at that time, that app wouldn’t necessarily be for you. It was all about me.

Moving forward now, I want to create a solution for people. There’s problems here, what’re the solutions? This is a solution based app because it gives creatives their chance to be in a space where they can make money and interact with different people, meet new clients without having to go to classifieds and sell people on a whole script of why they’re the best graphic artist. Their portfolios in there, you can look at it. You can talk to them, they’re real people. It’s not a bunch of bots. [laughs] It’s really important for us to do this.

https://www.instagram.com/p/CMcnQtAB7f-/

AllHipHop: I saw you raised over $20K dollars in less than two hours? How did that happen?

Don Cannon:We’re doing a crowdfunding campaign. Ihe crowdfunding campaign is very important because it’s allowing not only the creatives and clients to work inside the app, it’s gathering a whole community of people out there in their world that can invest in an app. Since the job acts Obama put into place, we weren’t able as the community to invest in the Ubers, Airbnb, all these things. To be an accredited investor, you had to make a certain amount of money. Now with the Jobs Act, it’s allowing you to be able to invest in small startups, small companies at any point.

We wanted to go to crowdfunding way so we can invite people like that. It could be my little cousin that saved up $250 sweeping floors, and wanted to invest in a startup that could turn into a billion dollar baby. When we put it out there, people started to see “oh, I can get $6 per share for $246 dollars minimum.” That’s nothing. That’s a pair of sneakers. That’s 2 months’ worth of pizzas, 2 concerts, whatever it is. It’s giving you some longevity with your finances, that’s all we wanted to bring. You know, a lot of people don’t get this life. Investments is everything now. You see people getting Bitcoin,t Doge coins, the new life in NFTs. We wanted to give people a chance. That first hour that we put out, people jumped on it. This crowdfunding thing for anybody is a slow grind, you gotta go out there and campaign. I want to educate and tell people you can invest and make some money later with a great startup company, and that’s TmrO. It’s for creatives, made by creatives.

AllHipHop: How do they sign up if they want to?

Don Cannon:Go to App Store in Apple. One thing I want to make clear, we didn’t do a crowdfunding campaign to make the app. The app’s already up and running, been out since November 2020. We have a thousand users in the app. People are working on both sides. Download it, it’s very easy. You set up a profile, you go on there and look around. If people want to invest, you can go to startengine.com/trmo-app. It’s $246. That’s not really a lot of money, but you can hold some stakes on owners and equity in a real startup.

We’re coming out with an Android version soon, I know a lot of people have Androids. We have so many new features, like Instant Book which allows you to book a gig. Say me and you were doing a gig and you cancel, I have to find somebody within less than an hour. It’s set up like Uber where I could go in there and find somebody really quickly, they could be on the job in about an hour. That’s very important. A lot of things we’re implementing in there, Instant talk. At first, we weren’t able to send links and pictures through the text on a portfolio. Now you’ll be able to send pictures and links through the text, talk to the person, get a feel for who they are before you hire them. That’s where we’re going with it.

AllHipHop: How are you balancing the app, the music, running a label, and your personal life?

Don Cannon:It’s a lot. It’s a 24-hour thing, especially with the education of it. The thing that I learned the most over the years is having a team. Sometimes people go into business and be the sole owner of everything, I’m glad that I have great partners on the label side. Got Drama, I got Lake. I got some good understudies like Willie Joe, who I call P. Diddy Jr. You got Royce Monroe, a lot of guys that help support the team and help everything move smoothly. On the TmrO side, we got people like Kayla, the CEO and the greatest person doing anything close to an app. You balance it out by you gotta have a super duper great team. Everybody wants to go into business by yourself but I’m here to tell you, get you some partners man. It’s the decade of the partnership. Get some people that know what they’re doing.

Swizz Beatz Confirms New Album From DMX Dropping On May 28th

Swizz Beatz and Ruff Ryders just confirmed some great news: a brand-new, posthumous album from the late rapper DMX is on the way.

DMX passed away on April 9th, 2021, but thankfully, he stayed in the recording studio and had plenty of material to drop the new album EXODUS, his first studio album in 18-years.

The new album from DMX shares the name of one of his sons, Exodus Simmons, and is the late rapper’s first official studio album since Grand Champ was released in 2003.

“My brother X was one of the most pure and rare souls I’ve ever met. He lived his life dedicated to his family and music,” Swizz Beatz said in a statement. “Most of all, he was generous with his giving and loved his fans beyond measure. This album, X couldn’t wait for his fans all around the world to hear and show just how much he valued each and every single person that has supported him unconditionally.”

The cover for EXODUS was shot by legendary photographer Jonathan Mannion, who shot many of the most iconic images of DMX during the rapper’s 25-year career.

Before his death, DMX sold over 74 million records world-wide and racked up over 14 platinum RIAA certifications.

EXODUS will land in stores via Def Jam Recordings on May 28th.