(AllHipHop News) Rich Homie Quan caught the wrath of the collective internet over the last day because of his horrendous performance at VH1’s 2016 Hip Hop Honors show.
The Atlanta native was tapped to rap The Notorious B.I.G.’s verse during a tribute to Lil Kim’s music career.
Moments after hitting the stage, Quan flubbed Biggie’s lyrics from “Get Money.” The backlash came quick as a torrent of memes spread across the web.
Social media users berated RHQ for what some people felt was a sign of blatant disrespect to the deceased Hip Hop icon.
“The Most” rhymer has now responded to the controversy via a representative. Read Rich Homie Quan’s statement below.
I assure you that I never intended to disrespect the Memory of Biggie Smalls. I have long respected his work and his contribution to the rap game. I greatly apologize not only to Biggie Smalls, but also to all of my fans, Biggie Smalls fans and to New York. The city of New York has been nothing but good to me. I felt honored to stand on stage with artists I grew up listening to. Once on stage I had some technical difficulties and must admit I got nervous. I will forever be sorry New York, my fans, Biggie Smalls, Biggie Smalls fans, Lil Kim, and all the Hip Hop community for my performance. I hope you can accept my apology. To Lil Kim, Thank you for the opportunity.
(AllHipHop News) When Geto Boys told the world their minds were playing tricks on them in 1991, Andre 3000 declared “the South got something to say” at the 1995 Source Awards, and Master P’s No Limit tank rolled through mainstream America in 1997, southern rap started to become a permanent fixture in Hip Hop culture nationwide.
The South’s rap scene would later became a global phenomenon thanks to countless acts over the last 20+ years. However, some observers, such as Hot 97’s Ebro Darden, believe the region’s dominance is set to end soon.
DJ Smallz interviewed Lil Keke about the Third Coast’s potential to fall from the perch. According to the Don’t Mess Wit Texas creator, the South’s reign is far from over.
“We just getting started,” said Keke. “The other people had 15, 20 years.”
The Houston representative discussed how when the East Coast and West Coast had their respective runs southerners supported their music. But in his view, the South was left out of the conversation for so long that fans below the Mason-Dixon line have become die-hard followers of the artists from the area.
“They used to call us ‘country,’ but country people, we all stick together,” stated Keke.
The “Southside” spitter also commented on how southern rap fans do not put age limits on their stars. He pointed out that veterans such as Juicy J and Yo Gotti are still producing hits today. In comparison, Keke does not believe other regions have the same level of backing from today’s youth.
“You don’t have a 17, 18, 19, or 20 year old going back to the store buying a Run-D.M.C. Not that they don’t respect it, they just not from that,” he added. “You don’t have a 18, 19, 20 year old going back and getting [Ice Cube’s] AmeriKKKa’s Most Wanted. But you could get a 15, 19, 20 year old to go buy a Face Deeply Rooted or new Lil Keke Slfmade like that. And it keeps on flowing.”
Ok, Hip-Hop 101 for a minute. A long time ago, most people hated Hip-Hop, especially stuffy white people. However, as Hip-Hop got more vocal, a lot of rappers were like freedom fighters and voices for the voiceless. You had Ice Cube, Tupac, Public Enemy and of course Ice-T. All of these acts had commentary on police brutality and injustice. Almost all of them paid a price in some way or another. some lost deals. Some were under attack in the media and depending on who you ask, assassinated.
The killing of 5 police officers in Dallas was a tragedy, no doubt. So, were murders of Philando Castile, Alton Sterling and many others at the hands of police. But, what does rap gotta do with this? Here is a rumor we heard:
The word on the street is these two dates on the Art of Rap festival tour, by Ice-T and Mick Benson….HAVE BEEN CANCELLED DUE TO THE SHOOTING. We are waiting for a confirmation, but we are almost 100% Dallas is a wrap. We’ll have to find out about Austin. The reason? It seems that a picture of Professor Griff of Public Enemy and the presumed shooter Micah Johnson has gotten people upset. A picture. They have openly slandered Griff over this. And, it seems like the blowback is heavy to the point where they have been forced to cancel dates. I feel for you guys in Texas on many levels.
(AllHipHop News) Rapper Lil Wayne has played down reports he suffered another seizure by telling fans it was a “false alarm.”
The “Lollipop” star reportedly suffered the epilepsy scare last Wednesday, a month after his last seizure, just before he was about to step onstage at TAO nightclub in Las Vegas.
According to TMZ.com, he pulled out of his co-hosting gig at the last minute and was treated in an intensive care unit in a nearby hospital and has since been released to recover at home in Florida.
However, the 33-year-old has taken to Twitter and implied the scare wasn’t as serious as reports suggested, but thanked his fans for their messages of support regardless.
The alleged incident came just weeks after he was hospitalized following a “minor” seizure during a flight between Wisconsin and California, causing the private jet to be forced to make an emergency landing in Nebraska in June.
His representative told TMZ at the time that the rapper ran out of his prescribed medication and couldn’t find a replacement in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, where he was performing.
False Alarm! I appreciate da prayers and konsern but I'm good!!! Luv!!!!
Lil Wayne, real name Dwayne Carter, Jr., revealed his epilepsy diagnosis in 2013 after he suffered a near-fatal seizure, which lead to him being placed in an induced coma.
He told MTV News at the time that his seizures come with “no warning, no nothing,” adding, “I don’t feel sick… I go to sleep and wake up in the hospital,” he said. “I don’t feel anything. I just hope it stops happening.”
Meanwhile, the rapper is back to business. He just announced his second annnual “Lil Weezyana Fest” will feature a performance featuring his group ColleGrove, with rapper 2 Chainz.
(AllHipHop News) Gun violence is one of the most talked about issues in America. Whether it is the over 2000 people shot in Chicago this year so far, the 49 people killed at Orlando’s Pulse nightclub, or the incidents of innocent people falling victim to police gunfire, regulation and oversight of fire arms has become a hot button political topic once again in 2016.
Both parties typically fall to their go-to position on guns. Democrats tend to call for gun control legislation such as universal background checks. Republicans tend to stand with the NRA on its unwavering support of citizen’s 2nd Amendment right to keep and bear arms.
California rapper Schoolboy Q was asked about guns in an interview with Montreality. The 29-year-old creator of the recently released Blank Face LP took a very hard stance on the issue.
“That gun law sh-t is real,” said Q. “That’s probably the only thing I agree about the law and all that political sh-t that’s been going on. N-ggas need to take away guns from officers, from everybody. It should be no guns.”
Schoolboy admitted it would be impossible to take away the more than reported 300 million fire arms in the United States. The Black Hippy member would have preferred guns were never invented.
“Guns should not be existing,” declared Q. “But it does, so whatever.”
(AllHipHop News) Jay Z is one of the emcees on a lot of Hip Hop devotee’s list of greatest emcees of all time, but the Brooklyn legend may not be a favorite rhymer for the under 30 audience.
That is understandable. Jay first burst on the scene back in the “Hawaiian Sophie” video before many Millennials were even born, and his debut studio album Reasonable Doubt arrived while they were likely still elementary school age or younger.
NBA superstar Kevin Durant sat down with Genius to reveal his game time playlist. The 27-year-old former league MVP and Roc Nation Sports signee revealed he had to expose some of his basketball colleagues to Hov’s music.
“Most of my teammates [are] 21, 22 years old. I put on Jay Z, and they’re like, ‘I never heard this song before.’ It’s like ‘Big Pimpin’,'” said Durant. “I’m like, ‘Who am I around?’ So they don’t like when I take over the auxiliary chord, because I’m gonna play all Hip Hop.”
The new Golden State Warriors forward went on to name some of the classic 1990’s rap albums he listens to regularly. Durant’s pre-game ritual includes A Tribe Called Quest’s The Low End Theory and Midnight Marauders as well as Wu-Tang Clan’s Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers).
His daily routine also includes tuning into everything from Teddy Pendergrass and Roy Ayers to 2Pac and Future. Durant is also a part-time rapper in his own right.
VH1 hosted the reboot of their annual “Hip Hop Honors” awards show, by recognizing the ladies in Hip-Hop.
Hundreds of pioneering female rappers, industry execs, and fans gathered at David Geffen Hall to celebrate pioneering females rap artists for the “All Hail The Queens” tribute event.
Lil Kim, Remy Ma, Salt-N-Pepa, Sweet T, Queen Latifah, Lil Mama, Roxanne Shante, Missy Elliot and dozens of other female rappers walked the red carpet.
Take a look at some of the ladies who attended VH1 Hip Hop Honors: ‘All Hail The Queens.”
(AllHipHop News) Last night (July 11), VH1 celebrated several iconic female Hip Hop acts with the return of the Hip Hop Honors awards show. Many stars were on hand to salute Salt-N-Pepa, Queen Latifah, and Missy Elliott. But it was the tribute to Lil Kim that had fans online going crazy the most.
The set opened with Dej Loaf and Lil Mama doing a rendition of Kim’s “Crush On You.” However, Teyana Taylor stole the show with her uncanny channeling of the Queen Bee while performing “No Time” with French Montana and “It’s All about the Benjamins” with The Lox.
Twitter users let Taylor know she was the MVP of the night.
(AllHipHop News) Pop superstar Taylor Swift ($170 million) was named #1 on Forbes magazine’s Highest-Paid Celebrities list of 2016. There were also several Hip Hop and R&B acts that earned enough money between June 2015 and June 2016 to crack the Top 100 as well.
Rihanna came in at #13 with $75 million. In addition, Sean “Diddy” Combs (#22, $62 million), The Weeknd (#30, $55 million), Beyoncé (#34, $54 million), Jay Z (#36, $53.5 million), Dr. Dre (#63, $41 million), and Drake (#69, $38.5 million) were named among the top earning entertainers.
Other celebrities to make the Top 50 included Kevin Hart (#6, $87.5 million), Adele (#9, $80.5 million), LeBron James (#11, $77 million), Dwayne “The Rock” Johnson (#19, $64.5 million), Kevin Durant (#26, $56 million), Cam Newton (#37, $53 million), Kim Kardashian (#42, $51 million), and Kobe Bryant (#43, $50 million).
In May, the business publication revealed its list of Wealthiest Artists In Hip Hop which calculated the performers’ net worth. Diddy, Dr. Dre, Jay Z, Birdman, and Drake were announced as “The Forbes Five” for 2016.
Watch the video of the Celebrity 100 Top 10 below.
As a young man and person of color, Hip-Hop music and culture have given me support for many things in a way that my single Caucasian mother could not.
Whether it addressed the importance of maturity (Nas’ “2nd Childhood”), voiced frustration about having it bad cause I’m brown (N.W.A’s “F**k Tha Police”), or even explained why I wore glasses (The Pharcyde’s “On the D.L.”), there have been numerous kindred spirits that I’ve come across as a result of the art form that DJ Kool Herc founded in the Bronx. However, the most profound influence I had was not on wax, but the silver screen.
Furious Styles, played by Laurence Fishburne, in the 1991 masterpiece Boyz N the Hood is a character that I will forever hold near and dear to my heart.
In honor of the film’s 25th anniversary, I pay homage to a father figure of mine that Mr. Fishburne himself has described as, “the father to a generation of fatherless children.”
Here are the finest examples of when Furious Styles had a truly positive affect on me and the respective subjects which he addressed.
Institutionalized Racism:
I remember it was the last day of class my freshmen year in high school and, as usual, I took my dog for a walk around the block when I returned home in the afternoon.
On this particular day, my dog stopped to relieve himself while we were in sight of a parked police car.
The car proceeded to follow me for an entire block until finally a cop got out and approached me.
He asked if I lived in the area, if I had ID on me, and claimed that I was acting suspicious because I changed directions (referring to when the dog stopped to urinate on a plant).
When I returned home, my mother called the police department and we were invited down to the station to discuss our grievances.
We spoke to the chief of police who, like the despicable officer in Boyz N the Hood, was an African-American man. He told me, a then 14 year-old boy, point blank, that in addition to following and stopping me, he would’ve also run a check to see if I had a criminal record.
It spoke volumes to me about the institutional racism within the police department.
On the way home, I recalled the scene early in the movie after Furious’ house is broken into and the one where Tre and Ricky are pulled over years later.
And like in the former, I couldn’t help but imagine the cop saying, “Something wrong?” And then Furious saying, “Something wrong? Yeah. It’s just too bad you don’t know what it is. Brother.” While my mom couldn’t have done a better job calling out the cops for how poorly they handled everything, I know Furious’ words would’ve had a different impact.
Parenthood:
The scene when Tre, at age 10, and Furious are fishing is powerful. “Any fool with a d##k can make a baby, but only a real man can raise his children,” Furious says.
As someone who is adopted, the potential results of sexual activity have always been clear.
“I wasn’t but 17 when your mother was pregnant with you … Remember my friend, Marcus? He got into robbing people and wanted me come along and join him, but I was like, ‘Nah man, I’m getting ready to have a son,’” he continues.
While robbery is obviously wrong, I thought the more significant message was seeing an example of a man taking responsibility for becoming a father.
Had my biological father placed more importance on his actions, my life would have been a stark contrast compared to what it turned out to be.
In retrospect, that’s very logical.
However, seeing the movie at age 11 and hearing a man talk about being a parent for the first time was something I’d never heard before and so it left a lasting impression.
I couldn’t have asked for a better life than the one I have, but the information and experiences that my biological father’s choices took away from me are not unnoticed either.
Accountability:
This is something which manifests itself in a variety of ways throughout Boyz N the Hood.
From Furious having Tre do chores, recall the rules of the house, and break down the guidelines of being a leader as a boy to the scene when this issue culminates and Tre, as a teenager, walks out of his room in blood-stained clothes with a loaded gun in his hand and a decision to make, it all connects because those are things that define what it means to be a man.
Furious told Tre as a child, “You may think I’m being hard on you right now, but I’m not. What I’m doing is I’m trying to teach you how to be responsible. Like your little friends across the street, they don’t have anybody to show them how to do that. They don’t. And you’re gonna see how they end up too.”
He did. We all did.
The film’s Academy Award nominated writer and director, Mr. John Singleton, put on an insert of the anniversary edition of the DVD stating that the film has a lot of messages in it, but his main message is that fathers have to teach their boys to be men.
In the words of Reva Styles, Tre’s mother, “I can’t teach him how to be a man.”
Happy Silver Anniversary to my favorite film and respect due to Mr. Jason “Furious” Styles.
Every time you hope Bow Wow will turn his life and career around and win, he let’s the people down. Bow has taken to social media to imitate Desiigner, encourage Omarion to celebrate his recent break up, but he hasn’t spoken about the recent national incidents of injustice and police brutality. His fans took a moment to ask him to use his platform, to which he replied saying,
“I’m minding my own business.”
They say if you remain silent or “mind your business” you have taken the side of the oppressor. This was pretty disappointing to most especially coming from someone with a platform to speak out, and coming from a black male. What are your thoughts?
(AllHipHop News) Rambunctious Odd Future general Tyler the Creator has announced the return of his Camp Flog Gnaw Carnival.
Last year’s event featured performances from artists such as Snoop Dogg, YG, Schoolboy Q, A$AP Rocky, Syd The Kid, and Danny Brown and saw over 30,000 tickets sold.
After the success of last year’s carnival the event has been bumped up to two days and is set to go down November 12 and 13 at Exposition Park in Los Angeles, CA.
The outrageous MC recently made his own remix of Zayn Malik’s track “Pillowtalk” without the former One Direction singer, after the artist repeatedly dodged his requests to record together.
In addition, Tyler also held his first runway show in LA last month.
Check out the flier for the 2016 Camp Flog Gnaw Festival below and check out the website for the event here.
You gotta remember these kids don’t know Biggie. They don’t love B.I.G.! Rich Homie Quan blew it big time on the big stage at Hip-Hop Honors, which paid homage to Lil Kim, Salt-N-Pepa, Missy Elliot and Queen Latifah. It was a great show that had a few foibles. One of those was Rich Homie. Lord, why didn’t they just get somebody that knew the songs and could give it some validity? I guess ratings wouldn’t be the same if Lil Cease did it, even though he would never mess up B.I.!
Rumors have once again begun to swirl that Tyga & Kylie Jenner may be headed down the aisle soon. Since the two seem to have an on and off again relationship, no one knows what to expect. Kylie certainly helped fuel the rumors by posting and deleting a photo on Instagram with a caption that said,
“Mr. and Mrs.”
She has also been sporting some pretty nice bling on her ring finger. Sources are telling E! News a completely different story as they claim that Tyga & Kylie aren’t looking at marriage anytime soon. According to E!Online,
“Kylie Jenner is not getting married, despite sporting some curious new bling. Kylie is not engaged. However, she has discussed marrying Tyga.”
Well they definitely shouldn’t rush into anything and end up getting divorced soon after.
Rapper Pharrell got a little raunchy with his dancers over the weekend at the British Summer Time festival in Hyde Park.
Artists like Massive Attack, Kendrick Lamar, Mumford & Sons, Florence + ThebMachine, and Stevie Wonder hit the stage for the U.K.-based festival, which started on July 2 and wrapped this weekend on July 10.
Check out some images of Pharrell as he and his dancers ran through a medley of his hits in front of tens-of-thousands of concert goers.
Barclaycard presents British Summer Time Hyde Park – Day 10 – Performances
Featuring: Pharrell Williams
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 10 Jul 2016
Credit: WENN.com
Barclaycard presents British Summer Time Hyde Park – Day 10 – Performances
Featuring: Pharrell Williams
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 10 Jul 2016
Credit: WENN.com
Barclaycard presents British Summer Time Hyde Park – Day 10 – Performances
Featuring: Pharrell Williams
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 10 Jul 2016
Credit: WENN.com
Barclaycard presents British Summer Time Hyde Park – Day 10 – Performances
Featuring: Pharrell Williams
Where: London, United Kingdom
When: 10 Jul 2016
Credit: WENN.com