(AllHipHop News) Drake has won a legal battle with his stage designer over a $108,000 invoice.
Bosses at the firm Sila Sveta sued the rapper over his 2018 co-headline tour with Migos, claiming he was hired to create an elaborate 3D stage for the Aubrey & The Three Amigos tour but alleged his team failed to pay the invoice.
However, according to reports, they have now dropped the lawsuit, which initially claimed the stage, which utilized drones, a flying Ferrari, and 3D illusions, and was inspired by a basketball court, required extra hours work because several dates on the tour were rescheduled.
(AllHipHop News) Fans of the late Juice WRLD are still consuming his posthumous album, Legends Never Die, at a high rate. The project collected another 162,000 units in its second week of release.
That total was enough to keep Legends Never Die in the #1 position on the Billboard 200 chart for two consecutive weeks. One week ago, Juice WRLD debuted in the top spot with 497,000 units.
Another LP from a recently deceased Hip Hop artist also brought in a six-figure haul over the latest Billboard 200 tracking period. Pop Smoke’s former #1, Shoot for the Stars Aim for the Moon, remained at #2 with138,000 third-week units.
Jhené Aiko jumped back into the Top 10, thanks to Chilombo rising from #43 to #6. The huge chart boost was aided by the deluxe version of the album. Lil Baby’s My Turn (#5), Post Malone’s Hollywood’s Bleeding (#7), DaBaby’s Blame It on Baby (#8), and The Weeknd’s After Hours (#10)are still among the ten most-consumed albums of the week.
(AllHipHop News) Last year, Ja Rule was once again the butt of social media jokes when the Queens-raised rapper experienced an awkward moment in Wisconsin. He was tapped to provide the halftime entertainment, but the initial audience reaction was not quite what Ja was expecting.
The performance at the Minnesota Timberwolves and Milwaukee Bucks game went viral at the time. Before his set began, Ja asked the crowd if they were ready. When he was met with mostly silence, the “Livin’ It Up” hitmaker responded, “I guess not.”
You just jinx yourself talking to the GOD this way… your CURSED NOW!!! You won’t win a championship for the next 30 years… AND KAT IS LEAVING!!! Apologize and I’ll lift the CURSE!!! 😘 kiss of death… https://t.co/RzUn4vKx2Y
On Sunday morning, ESPN’s verified Twitter account decided to resurrect the clip from Milwaukee with a caption that read, “Never forget this Ja Rule moment .” The 44-year-old entertainer apparently took issue with the tweet.
“Very disappointed to see how UNPROFESSIONAL and DISRESPECTFUL @espn is allowing their social team to be if [you’re] not holding them accountable that means you’re complicit with oblivious slander and defamation to your 35 million plus audience… Duly noted… #ICONN,” posted Ja on Sunday afternoon.
Very disappointed to see how UNPROFESSIONAL and DISRESPECTFUL @espn is allowing their social team to be if your not holding them accountable that means you’re complicit with oblivious slander and defamation to your 35 million plus audience… Duly noted… #ICONNhttps://t.co/VIYHYByDT4pic.twitter.com/i3v3xvYqLM
(AllHipHop News) Swizz Beatz and Timbaland’s Verzuz series is one of the few silver linings to emerge from the deadly COVID-19 pandemic era. The musical faceoffs have entertained internet audiences since March.
Over the weekend, social media users began debating a hypothetical Verzuz matchup involving two R&B greats. Who would win a battle between Usher Raymond and Chris Brown?
One of those legendary performers addressed the online chatter. Brown posted two statements on his Instagram Story in response to requests for him to jump in the ring against Usher.
“What we not gone do is CAP,” wrote Chris Brown on IG. He later added, “I could do a vs off features alone… So I’ll humbly decline… I’m busy doing nothing .
Previous Verzuz battles included Swizz Beatz vs Timbaland, RZA vs DJ Premier, Teddy Riley vs Babyface, Erykah Badu vs Jill Scott, Nelly vs Ludacris, and Bounty Killer vs Beenie Man. The most recent competition/celebration, involving DMX and Snoop Dogg, amassed nearly 2 billion impressions online.
(AllHipHop Music) Oklahoma City recording artist Phil Lea is providing the bedroom vibes for your late-night sessions and gracing the intimate beats with sensual lyrics.
The seductive sounds for the follow up to his last single, “Fah Me” (produced by Hero) are accompanied by a video featuring Phil Lea at the center of attention, as beautiful women lavish him with affection in the privacy of a luxury hotel-suite somewhere in Atlanta.
After setting the tone-enchanting vibes, Phil Lea has pressed paused on the lovely electric sounds to voice his point of view on being an African American male in today’s time.
Lea pens,
“Why can’t we breathe, why can’t we be justified, why can’t we be rationalized, why can’t we be treated with respect, treated equal.”
This song solidifies different things that black people deal with in everyday life from cultural appropriation to assumed guilty, due to not having enough evidence in the court of law. Members of the African American community are treated unfairly and this is what Phil Lea had to say about it.
“We [sic] me and Milano decided to remain friends and build our child as separate parents … we still have mad love for eachother but we both came to a understanding!” Meek Mill said.
Meek assured his fans the breakup was cordial, mainly because the two were good friends prior to their romance.
Still, Milano may not be feeling the same way. She posted a meme with a passage that read:
“A wise man once said “be careful who you let on your ship because some people will sink the whole ship just because they can’t be the captain.”
Meek Mill has two other children, Murad and Rihmeek, from previous relationships.
(AllHipHop Rumors) Is LL Cool J ducking the rapper teacher KRS-One? This idea is being explored through the thoughts and emotions around the internet pertaining to the new potential Verzuz battle. KRS-One straight called LL cool J OUT in an in interview with Fat Joe. He straight challenged him! Now, to some, this means you MUST respond. LL Cool J does not seem to be inclined to battle KRS-One because there is a start difference in the nature of their content. KRS-One is one of the most celebrated lyricist in Hip-Hop history and so is LL Cool J.
But the question at hand is: Is he ducking KRS-One? I am not so sure that is the case right now. LL is one of the BATTLE LORDS. He does not DUCK BATTLES! I think there is something to be said about a matchup i.e. the one between Snoop Doggy Dogg and DMX! It was a good battle, but the winner was based on preference! That may just rub some people the wrong way. LL Cool J has such a broad range in Hip-Hop and KRS-One does too but they are very,very different. LL Cool J is more of a popstar/TV star than KRS-One, the living definition of Hip-Hop.
What do you think?
KRS-One had a very aggressive posture, saying the LL would not SURVIVE a battle! These are supposed to be exhibitions, but this is coming off like straight up 80’s / 90’s BATTLE.
I can’t find the time stamp right now here is a Fat Joe interview with KRS-One!
It should be noted that Swizz Beatz and KRS have a song from a few years ago and it BANGS. I know this is for the OGs, but Hip-Hop doesn’t lie down and die!
(AllHipHop News) According to sources, and photos released, Kanye West took himself to the hospital yesterday evening due to his anxiety.
However, upon arrival, the hospital was packed with people, further triggering him. Feeling uncomfortable, Kanye left, and shortly afterward, an ambulance was seen arriving at the rapper’s ranch.
When EMTs arrived, they checked his vitals and confirmed Kanye had eventually calmed his nerves down and was fine.
The EMT’s left the ranch as Kanye rode off on his ATV.
Looks like ‘Ye had an eventful weekend. The ambulance incident occurred not too long after his public apology to his wife, Kim.
Kanye has made some rather brash comments about Kim during a rambling rally in South Carolina last weekend, where the rapper claimed he almost aborted his daughter North.
Kim urged him to seek help for his mental illness but was immediately shut down by the Chicago rapper in a series of offensive tweets, which were later deleted.
(AllHipHop News) Jay Electronica stirred up a lot of emotion on Saturday, when he reacted to an interview with Nick Cannon and Rabbi Abraham Cooper.
The response to the rapper was varied after he demanded that the Rabbi meet with Minister Louis Farrakhan or other scholars from the Nation of Islam.
Electronica, 43 , took five days to reply to an interview with Rabbi Abraham Cooper and Nick Cannon. In a “Cannon’s Class” with Professor Griff of Public Enemy fame, Nick Cannon made several comment widely regarded as anti-Semitic. He relented after putting up a defiant stance.
Electronica called Rabbi Cooper a “coward” and stated the “true children of Israel,” among other things.
The audience on social media responded with broad, clashing comments that ranged from support to criticism.
End this garbage. This is exactly what evil people want, us divided over whose religion is the best, over who’s ideas are true. We’re all people. We all deserve love, health, prosperity. We need to come together and protect and grow our society before it’s too late.
@JayElectronica If your calling out a man for lying to someone else, then calling him the devil. All while using hate-filled racist rhetoric. You should let us all know exactly what Rabbi Cooper lied about? I think that's the least you can do for everyone envolved or following it
(AllHipHop News) Los Angeles Clippers’, Lou Williams, initially left “the bubble” to attend a funeral.
He was excused by the league since it was a family matter. However, Williams decided to stop by a strip club in Atlanta to pick up food (cos it was the only option to get food, right?).
As a result of the additional stop he made along his trip, he must now quarantine for 10 days. Additionally, he’ll miss the first two seeding games that the Clippers are set to play next week, and cough up $150K in salary.
He must’ve been really hungry.
How did he get caught, you ask?
Well, shortly after attending the funeral, photos of Williams at a strip club appeared on social media.
Apparently, rapper, Jack Harlow, took a photo with Williams and posted it on his profile. Realizing what he did, he quickly deleted the photo but people move faster, and screenshots were already being shared.
“That was an old pic of me and Lou,” he tried to claim, via his Twitter page. “I was just reminiscing cuz I miss him.”
Sure, Jack.
He quickly deleted that post as well. Despite an attempt to cover it up as a “late post,” all of the evidence went against Williams. Now, he must deal with the consequences.
(AllHipHop News) Kanye West could be headed in the right direction after several mental breakdowns.
Ye recently issued an apology to his wife Kim Kardashian for the publicity his erratic behavior has garnered after his kick-off rally for President in South Carolina.
Last Sunday (July 19th) during his bizarre rant, Kanye claimed Harriett Tubman never freed slaves, while admitting he and his wife Kim considered aborting their first daughter North.
Later in the week, Kanye rolled out a series of tweets taking aim at his wife and her mom, Kris “Jong-Un” Jenner, and other family members for attempting to get the rapper committed, to get some help.
Kanye even threatened to divorce Kim, something that he had been supposedly contemplating for a while now after he found out she met Meek Mill at a hotel for a meeting about criminal justice reform.
Taking to Twitter, Ye apologized to his “wife Kim for going public with something that was a private matter.” He then admitted that he “did not cover her like she has covered” him.
If you’ve been following the news on Kanye, you are aware of the “bipolar episodes” he’s been having which have apparently resulted in him shutting his wife out – despite her efforts in trying to encourage him to seek help.
(AllHipHop News) It was supposed to be a fun day of Hip-Hop as a local rap group planned to record a rap video on Wednesday evening (July 22nd) on Dalton Street in Baton Rouge, LA.
But somehow gangster lyrics pumped up into high-speed, real-life drama as shots rang out and killed two men. Unfortunately, according to neighbors, by the time the police arrived every single person present at the video shoot vanished.
Disparu!
The artists, the extras, the director, the label people, the crew, and even the people responsible for the food disappeared moments before the cops arrived to investigate the crime scene.
One might ask, “Why is this a problem? Aren’t you supposed to get out of dodge when the pop pop of a gun breaks the air?” Yes. Of Course.
But because no one was left on the scene, there were no witnesses to give context of what turned out to be a double homicide.
The Baton Rouge spokesperson for the police department had even fewer details to communicate, but for a desire that the community to help bring justice for the two deceased men.
D’Andre Mills, 25, and Landon Johnson, 31, were both taken to the hospital, succumbing to their gun injuries once in the infirmary.
According to the Advocate, many people are speculating that the deaths may have been connected to a local rap beef between some crews in the Red Sticks from last summer.
(AllHipHop News) Doja Cat had a recent interview with Capital XTRA yesterday where she revealed that she contracted the virus.
Ironically, Doja was seen on her IG Live back in March making fun of people who were genuinely concerned about the pandemic.
Somebody should have told her to be careful of what you mock.
The 24-year-old singer/rapper told XTRA hostsYinka & Shayna Marie that she had the virus, but wasn’t sure of how she caught it.
“I got COVID. Honestly, I don’t know how this happens but I guess I ordered something off of Postmates and… I don’t know how I got it but I got it,” Doja Cat said.
Thankfully, Doja recovered without complications as her symptoms only lasted a few days, according to her.
“I’m okay now. It was a four-day symptom freak out but I’m fine now,” she confirmed.
Doja’s stance on the virus changed quickly after it hit home. She had previously boasted that she was not “scared of” the virus.
Brooklyn, New York is home to some of rap’s biggest names, and HDBeenDope aims to be own. Having been working on music for 8 years now, it was at age 16 when he decided this would be his end-be-all. He states, “I use music as my expression, that’s really what it is for me.”
When it comes to his actual raps, he brings that East Coast swag and lyricism, telling real-life, honest stories of his upbringing and what it took to get to where he is today. When it comes to touring, he had the pleasure of opening for one of the biggest rock bands, Portugal. The Man. The opportunity itself speaks volumes to his talents and what he brings to the rap game.
Most recently, he released his new album titled BrokeN Dreams, recorded and produced almost entirely inside his bedroom in New York.
AllHipHop: What happened at age 16 that made you realize you could do music?
HDBeenDope: Really I was doing it the whole time, but it was the culmination of a mixtape. I was working on a tape and said “I’ma put something out myself.” Because I did a tape with a couple of my homies. We had this studio club, basically an after-school program we created. We made a mixtape all together but when I said I’ma work on my own, that’s when I thought “okay, I’m an artist now.” Putting out a project was that moment.
AllHipHop: What was it like being born and raised in Brooklyn?
HDBeenDope: It was pretty cool, my mom wasn’t really hitting the hip-hop heavy but my brother was. My family lives in the whole building pretty much. My grandma’s on the second floor, my uncle’s on the top floor. There’s always family around. My mom worked a lot so I had a lot of time to myself, my brother would be out. In the years I started getting serious with music, that’s when my brother moved out. I had a lot of time to work on music, get comfortable with my voice and not have to worry about being around for those stages. I got really really comfortable with being in my own space and recording. Even now, I got my whole set up in the crib still.
AllHipHop: Who were your biggest influences growing up?
HDBeenDope: I got into hip-hop heavy when I was 9, that’s when I started listening to it. I was taking my brother’s CDs. I was looking to 50 heavy, a lot of Roc-A-Fella stuff. I listened to 50’s Guess Who’s Back? mixtape a lot. Cam’ron Purple Haze, the Young Gunz first album, Freeway’s album, Snoop Dogg’s Rhythm & Gangsta, all these were heavy. I got into middle school and Lil Wayne was a huge huge influence. Till this day, Dedication 2 is probably one of my favorite projects. I loved that project.
AllHipHop: What’d you like about Dedication 2?
HDBeenDope: At 12 years old, I went to school in Manhattan. I remember going to the mixtape spot on 14th St., a little further down from the Guitar Center. It was a hole-in-the-wall shop, he had all the spray-painted t-shirts, the DVDs, and the mixtapes. We used to go over there after school every Friday, I got that Dedication 2 mixtape from that spot. Coming home and listening with my cousin, I’m like “this is the greatest rapper ever.” [chuckles]
In high school when I turned 14, that’s when Cole became prominent for me because I got Warm Up at that time. That was the s##t for me. I’m listening to Wayne and 50 heavy, I’m emulating those 2 from what I’m talking about to how I’m rapping. Cole was my transition to be like “oh, he’s talking about himself and it’s not necessarily this glorified preach s##t. I’m talking about me and it’s connecting.” That was my shift to become more introspective with the music.
AllHipHop: Congrats on the release of BrokeN Dreams, what’s the significance in the title?
HDBeenDope: It’s 3 meanings in the title. I went on tour with Portugal. The Man in 2017, definitely shouldn’t even been on that tour in terms of where I was in my career. I did a show at Gramercy Theatre in 2016, opening for Lady Leshurr. 4 months later, this dude Scott who’s Portugal’s tour manager told me he’s a stage manager at that show and he really liked my set. They’re about to be in New York in 2 months, he asked “yo can you open?” I’m like “yeah fine, I’ll do it whatever.” I didn’t know who they were at the time.
This was before “Feel It Still,” but obviously they had this huge fanbase. I go look them up like “oh wow, they’re doing s##t.” I do that show, it was a great show. We all f##ked with each other, it was cool. A couple weeks after, I was telling a booking agent that I did that show. They’re like “what the f##k, you did that show? We know their booking agent.” They reached out to their booking agents, the guys were like “yeah, let’s bring him on tour.” They ended up paying me way more than I should’ve been paid at that time.
AllHipHop: Nah, you deserved that!
HDBeenDope: All the work that I did, I was ready for the opportunity for sure. But they could have definitely taken a bigger artist, somebody who would’ve helped them sell tickets on that tour. They’re doing me a favor, I acknowledge that and I’m beyond appreciative. Getting on the road with them was this feeling of “alright this is the first time I’m being paid all this money to do this, this is amazing. I’m getting to live my dream.” Obviously first time being quoted to get all this money, “alright here’s how we’re going to do this. We’re going to divvy it up like this. I’m able to help my homies out, they’re coming on the road.” We’re projecting the fact that we’re going to bring in $1000 from merch, so we’re looking at $30K in merch sales alone. It’s $15K for the road, we’ll be good off this. We get off the road, merch didn’t sell the way we thought and we spent so much money on production of the show. I didn’t do it all basic, I went and bought lights. I wanted it to feel like an actual show.
BrokeN Dreams comes from me getting off the road and realizing “oh s##t, I’m broke now. I gotta figure it out.” Also being so close to my dream. Then there’s broken dream where as you get older, you start to see the people around you falling off. Everybody was on track for these certain dreams, “I’ma do this.” Now, people start to get to a place where alright, I gotta be more realistic. I gotta go get the job, I gotta go back to school, whatever it is. Witnessing that. Then the word ‘broken’ and the word ‘dream’ because as I got older, it’s a lot of things I grew up on that I thought were bible. Now I’m looking at it like “woah, that’s a horrible way to be thinking about things.” It’s realizing that I’m a bit of a broken individual, then I’m an individual on his journey towards his dreams. All 3 of those packed into this one project.
AllHipHop: You say the project explores the duality of a growing career and dwindling bank account. What’s the reality of this independent grind?
HDBeenDope: The independent grind is a lot of forward thinking. You always have to tell yourself “oh nah, but it’s better for the next one.” Things might not always be good but you have to constantly be thinking about how it’s going to work the next time, even if it doesn’t work. It’s a lot of “damn it’s not working, it’s not working,” but it eventually gets there. A big part of that struggle is having that confidence when things look like they’re not going up.
AllHipHop: The project was entirely written and produced by HD in your bedroom?
HDBeenDope: I’ve been recording out of my bedroom since I was 12, I was recording on cassette tapes with my homies. I had this little Sony tray. When I got my first laptop at 13, I had Mixcraft and was recording all the homies. I’d either record here or at my friend TJ’s house, a couple blocks down from me. I got comfortable with engineering. I got really comfortable being in my own space, even making beats for the projects I made.
AllHipHop: What’s the meaning behind “Die With Me”?
HDBeenDope: I did a show one time, my homegirl was saying “how do you get on stage all the time? I’d die if I had to get up there.” For me, a moment clicked of “oh wow, that’s what I’d feel if I had to go to work everyday the way you do specifically. More so looking at the other world like “you’re doing something that I can’t do and that’s fire, but if I had to, I wouldn’t enjoy it.” I made “Die With Me” in order to look at both sides. It’s written from the perspective of the 9 to 5 worker or the freelancer, but I also wanted to do it in a way that doesn’t glorify freelance life.
A lot of times, people talk about “be your own boss, you could do what you want.” That s##t sounds cool, but there’s so much you have to deal with on that side of the fence. Not knowing when your next paycheck’s coming in, the doubt, all these things you have to deal with as a freelancer that isn’t pretty. I really wanted “Die With Me” to not necessarily glorify either side, but have both looking at each other like “wow it’s f##ked up on both sides.”
AllHipHop: Was “Superheroes” inspired by Eminem?
HDBeenDope: 1000%. “Stan” is one of the best songs I’ve ever heard, ever. Coming up with the concept of “Superheroes,” I thought “this would be cool if I do something as an ode to that record.” I started messing around with keys and that’s what I came up with. For sure an ode to that song.
AllHipHop: How was touring with Portugal THe Man in 2016? That’s huge. What’d you learn?
HDBeenDope: One thing for sure is having those conversations with them and understanding the grind of it all. Before “Feel It Still” hit, they’re not necessarily the biggest thing in the world. They’re not the Grammy winners yet, but they’re in a place doing a 100K cap on average. I didn’t see them as these super super prominent people, but it’s a testament of actually going out and grinding for all these years. They had a decent amount of projects, a lot of years they were together. To see oh wow before y’all even had the hit hit, y’all had fans. People really love you because you kept working the ropes. I took heed to making sure when you’re on the road, really getting out there (when it’s possible) and staying true to that.
AllHipHop: How’s it feel to have the 10th Spot on the 2020 XXL Freshman Class Contender?
HDBeenDope: That was dope, it’s one of them things on the hip-hop checklist. To even be recognized, I remember being 13 like “yo, I’ma be this.” To be in a position where you’re on their radar, alright we’re good. You’re on the right track, so that feels really cool.
AllHipHop: Goals for yourself at this point of your career?
HDBeenDope: At this point, I’m really focused on getting to a place of touring. Being that I went on that tour with Portugal, I’m super adamant on being able to do that for somebody else. The fact they’re able to take this small kid from Brooklyn and bring him around the country, damn that’s really dope. They didn’t have to do that. I want to build it up so I can be able to start doing that for other people because I know how much that s##t meant for me, how pivotal it was for my career. I want to be able to pay that forward.
(AllHipHop Rumors) Since nobody else will say it, I will say it! What in the world was Janelle Monáe doing at the Snoop Dogg and DMX battle last week? Now for those that don’t know, Janelle Monáe made a bold proclamation just a little while ago. The singer said that we need to abolish Hip-Hop because of the way it has done women. Here are some quotes:
“I really only ever wanna hear women rapping. The amount of misogyny from most of men in rap and music is infuriating. We need to abolish that s### too.”
“Women (black women [in] particular) have been betrayed by the majority of men for far too long. The systems that enable Patriarchy and abusers of power are burning. Either bring gasoline or burn with them.”
“Y’all can’t wait to call women every b####, hoe, discuss violent acts against women, etc for clout in rap, rock, and through out music history. Misogny has NEVER been okay yet it has become normalized. Women didn’t create misogny, y’all did. SO YOU DO THE WORK to ABOLISH IT.”
Now let me be clear I think Hip-Hop is done bad by women in our great many ways. But calling for the abolishment? No. I do think there’s a time and place for everything, and right now we are in a period of reformation. I do not think that it is time to call for the abolishment of one of our greatest art forms. Furthermore, if you look at gym Janelle Monáe’s history she made a lot of progress thanks to two big names in Hip Hop, Diddy and Big Boy from Outkast.
So, what was she doing in the battle? Being a regular human being! Being like everybody else! Enjoying the culture that we all grew up loving! I am not here to attack Janelle Monáe, because I think she is super talented in so many different ways. She also has a very large following, and people listen to her. I hope in the future she can make proclamations that are as complex as her music is and not make it so simplistic on Twitter or some other platform. Because at the end of the day, we have a lot of self work to do and that involves hard work. It all can’t be put into tweets. We are here for solutions, good communication, and forward progress! I hope this makes sense to you and does not sound like I am trying to bash Janelle Monáe because I am not. I just want her to understand the gravity of her words and also understand if some of us look at this as a slice of hypocrisy.
Whether it is the Brit’s brash and irreverent attitude or that he simply believes he is right, Wiley is not backing down.
Among the tweets, he equated the Jewish people with “Red necks” and the Klu Klux Klan, pushing a narrative that the community is racist and subversively implying that they hate Blacks.
He also dredged us the stereotype of Jews as wicked businessmen, who oppress people through laws and banking.
He wrote, “Who writes the laws ? Who changes the laws ? Who implements new Laws ? WHO ? What is the 5%ers ? Who are they all ? Who runs the world ? Who runs the banks ? WHO WRITES THE LAW BOOK ? Who hides behind the police ? Who owns the police ?”
Wiley also dared them to silence him, stating that he is not like Kanye — no one can control him.
Throughout the seemingly hundreds of tweets, he shouted out Ice Cube and gave a history lesson on African history and the Jewish community’s hands in the slave trade of millions of Black bodies from the 15th Century until the 19th Century.
“You call me anti semetic but you stole our land so what’s called please ? Theft ? Oh we will just take it Cos black are slaves anyway ?” he tweets.
Fans warn that his Twitter account might be deleted, but he seems unbothered and continues to bang on the Sons and Daughters of Abraham with his might … first by telling them they do not represent the true 12 tribes … then by maintaining he will not be canceled.
He even shouts out Jay-Z and Diddy, dismissing Drake (who is Jewish and Black) from the Black excellence conversation and flat out disrespecting the “Hotline Bling” rapper.’
(AllHipHop Rumors) Talib Kweli has been allegedly kicked off Twitter after harassing a woman for weeks. The rapper’s profile has disappeared from the platform after a 24-year old woman maintained he consistently berated her since early July. It seems that Talib has left the Twitter-verse for Patreon. It is pretty much universally accepted that he was kicked off because of the alleged harassing Maya Moody. There has been no official word so we can just keep using the word “allegedly” a lot. It all started so stupid! Maya replied to a tweet about Black men married to light-skinned women. A guy started the tweet and she was just somebody the commented in the thread. This poor woman received death threats from Talib followers, she said, and was the recipient of hundreds of tweets. There are others who have complained about getting harassed by Talib as well and it seems as if it is all over now.
(AllHipHop News) Brooklyn rapper Bobby Shmurda hopes to turn over a new leaf as soon as he’s released from prison.
According to reports, Bobby is prepping to release a documentary about his rough upbringing in Brooklyn, his rise to fame, and his crash landing behind bars.
Bobby Shmurda, born Ackquille Jean Pollard, is finishing up a 7-year-sentence, for conspiracy to possess weapons and possession of a weapon.
For the last month, fans have been speculating about his release date thanks to a phony website that featured a countdown timer for a release date of August 4th.
While that turned out to be a hoax, Bobby is prepping to go in front of the parole board next month, where he hopes to be sprung from the Clinton Correctional Facility.
His mother Leslie Pollard told TMZ that Bobby Shmurda was hard at work writing rhymes in preparation to hit the ground running to record music for Epic Records.
(AllHipHop News) Donald Trump admitted he liked the attention he received from the rap community before he was President.
The 45th POTUS sat down for a lengthy interview with Barstool Sports founder, Dave Portnoy outside of The West Wing on Thursday (July 23rd).
In a clip that was released over the weekend, President Trump said he was a big hit with rappers who wanted to emulate his lifestyle – before he became President.
According to President Trump, the best day of his life was the day before he announced he was running for President.
Up until then, life was great for Trump, but he blamed the Democrats for ruining the last four years in office, by impeaching him for working with Russia to interfere in the United States elections and putting pressure on Ukraine to do the same.
“It’s a very interesting thing that you say because the best day in my life, in terms of business and life and everything, was the day before he announced the running for President,” Trump said.
“Everything was good. The company was good. I had finished up a lot of jobs that were very successful. And then I said, I want to do this now. I’m really glad I did and I was treated very unfairly with fake Russia, you know, Russia Russia Russia and Ukraine. Ukraine. All that stuff,” President Trump complained.
(AllHipHop Music) A native of Waterbury, Connecticut, Headru$h has always been a student of music.
This was evident with his affinity for instruments at an early age, playing both the piano and guitar.
In later years, Headru$h transitioned into a full-fledged writer, performer, and recording artist.
Hailing from a state that hasn’t produced many Hip Hop superstars proved to be a roadblock, considering that there are so few opportunities for success in music in Waterbury. Despite this, Headru$h has been able to carve out his own lane in the Connecticut music scene, establishing a strong standard of quality musical production in his region for over a decade.
In that time, Headru$h has toured with Dave East and done shows with the likes of Lil Uzi Vert, Jadakiss, Polo G, Fabolous, Styles P, Young M.A. and many more.
Now that 2020 is at the midway point and his forthcoming album ‘EastSide’ is slated for release later this year, Headru$h has released the first official single from the project via the Luxe Gang imprint titled Wake Up.
Produced by Beat Demons, the track finds Headru$h showcasing his infectious melodies over the bouncy island-themed cut.
Check out “Wake Up,” which is currently available on all digital streaming platforms and keep up with Headru$h on Instagram at @HeadRushJordan & @LuxeGang_