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Chris Rock Is Heading For A Costly, Messy Divorce

Chris Rock is not that dude right now. Well, he’s that dude, but I am thinking this divorce is going to bust him up a bit. His estranged wife, who he married in 1996, is going for the pockets. Malaak Compton-Rock wants her piece of the $70 million Rock and she may just get it. The couple had a pre-nup, but it has expired. Compton-Rock was in PR, but retired so that she could raise the couple’s children – Lola Simone, 13, and Zahra Savannah, 11. She now does a lot of work in charity. The 46-year-old woman is a good one, if you ask anybody. People have been saying that Chris cheated on her with Rosario Dawson, but I thought that was proven false. Nobody really know, but I don’t think that component is real. People just started talking that crap, because of that movie “Top 5” they had. Anyway, Chris’ ex is used to a lifestyle and it seems like she may get it. Even with the divorce, Chris is a millionaire many times over and has the ability to get more.

Rich Homie Quan On Rape Lyrics: ‘I Had No Guidance In My Life’

Rich Homie Quan received major criticism when two songs were leaked where he referenced rape. On the first song, “I Made It,” he rapped  “I don’t want your ho, just want that cookie from her/ She tried to resist so I took it from her/ How are you gonna tell me no?/ You must not know who I am.” He then apologized and said he “would never condone rape.”

[ALSO READ: Rich Homie Quan Apologizes For Rape Lyric On ‘I Made It’]

 

Shortly after, another song titled “Day 1” where he rapped  “Chances ain’t s### if you don’t take one / Mansion full of b######, about to rape one.”

Again, the Atlanta native is offering his apologies saying he does not “condone or promote rape.”

“I’m not a rapist,” he told Billboard. “That song (Day 1) was recorded in December 2012. I was young and just rapping. At the time, I had no guidance in my life. I blame it on that. So I apologize once more to my fans.”

His latest project If You Ever Think I Will Stop Goin’ In Ask RR (Royal Rich), which features “Flex” as its first single, was released in April.

D’ Angelo Is Working On ‘Black Messiah’ Companion Album

After gaining much critical acclaim for his album that ended his 14-year hiatus, Black Messiah, D’Angelo has revealed that he is working on a “companion” album to go with the project.

“If it were left entirely up to me, [Black Messiah] wouldn’t have come out,” he told Rolling Stone. “I had to get out of my head. Because there were so many songs that I wanted people to hear. What I’m working on now is like a companion piece. I hope people receive it that way. It’s part of the same vision.”

The Virginia native said he had so many ideas that they could not fit on one album. For his Black Messiah follow up, it seems like fans will not have to wait another 14 years for new music.

“I’m trying to keep myself open, my heart open, to receive and to know what that is,” he said. “But I do want to put a lot of music out there. I feel like, in a lot of respects, that I’m just getting started.”

EXCLUSIVE: Watsky Talks New Live Album, The Phoniness Of The Industry & White Rappers Using The N-Word

San Francisco music fans were given a special treat for two nights last November. After filling their bellies over the Thanksgiving holiday, crowds filled up the Golden Gate City’s iconic Regency Ballroom to witness hometown artist George Watsky’s “All You Can Do” Tour.

The 11/28 and 11/29 show dates were the only time the former Def Poetry Jam participant performed back-to-back nights in the same location. To ensure the show would be a standout moment from his North American trek, Watsky shared the stage with Anderson .Paak, Kush Mody, A-1, Julia Mattison, and his band Créme Fraiche.

Watsky wanted his non-San Fran supporters to experience the invigorating energy of the event, so the 28-year-old rapper/poet recorded the Bay Area concert for his latest live album All You Can Do: Live! From the Regency. He provided even more incentives to his loyal fan base by offering the project as a BitTorrent Bundle featuring exclusive perks such as photographs, a tour poster, and a tour merchandise coupon.

The artist that found himself on Ellen after his 2010 viral video “Watsky Raps Fast” is hitting the road again. Watsky’s Meaner Than Your Average Tour lands in New York City on June 17 and wraps up on August 29 in Santa Ana, California.

Before Watsky criss-crosses the continent this summer, AllHipHop spoke with the 2006 Brave New Voices National Poetry Slam winner about his most recent release, the price of fame, white rappers using the n-word, and more.

You dropped your latest project as a BitTorrent bundle.

Yeah, it seems like people like it. I think the folks appreciate that I put a quality project out, and I wanted to do it for free. It’s a concert album, but it’s one we worked on for a long time getting the mix right. I’ve bought live albums from my favorite bands before, and sometimes it doesn’t really replicate what I hear on the CD. This is not the same instrumentation. We wanted to make sure that the album sounded tight and the mix was good.

How was it recording the album in front of your hometown?

Playing for San Francisco is always the meaningful stop on every tour I do, because that’s my hometown. Even though I’ve been living in L.A. for five years, I think of myself as a San Franciscan. So it’s important for me to make that show special.

It was the only time we did back-to-back nights on the tour. The Friday-Saturday right after Thanksgiving. I just tried to pull out all the stops, bring out as many guests as I could. I would rather spend the budget I got to make money in San Francisco on bringing out other guests to make the night special, than trying to make as much money as possible. San Francisco has got emotion packed in it for me.

What was the transition like going from being a slam poet to being a musical recording artist?

It turns of artistically, it was never a transition, because I was always doing rap and poetry at the same time. It was just a matter of convincing people that I could do it. Anytime, career wise, you get established doing one thing, I think people start to pigeonhole you in their mind as that thing. Especially, if it’s working for you.

Poetry was working for me. I was making money. Not a ton of people were watching my videos, but I did have a following. I just kept trying to say to folks, “I’m going to do music. This is happening. This is what I’m working on.”

I got a lot of “smiles and nods.” People patted me on the head like, “Alright, sure man. Good luck with that.” I just had to grind it out. It took a long time. I put out a lot of material. Eventually, I got stuff to hit. I found my niche. I found my audience of people that related to my stuff. It took a while to find them, because it’s not easily digestible. It’s not that Top 40 mold.

You mentioned artists being pigeonholed. At any point did you feel like the tag of being the “fast rapping kid” was ever a hindrance?

Yeah, I think it did both things. Anytime something happens in my career – good or bad –  I look at it as an opportunity to be able to take wind from it. Even if at the time it might feel like it set me back. I mean that sincerely. That was a blessing and a curse. I got tons of exposure, but it was exposure in one particular avenue. At the same time, it gave me the opportunity to show people I had multiple dimensions.

I was lucky when that particular video hit that I had a lot of material. So people that did any back research, who were really curious and liked my sh*t, they went back and saw that I had all this spoken word material. They could say, “I stumbled on this video, but I see he’s got material with substance to it. He really put in work as a live performer.”

My goal for the last three years since that video happened was to put my head down and put in work in making material that I’m proud of, and let the people who like it, like it. I’m not worried about how people see me. My career is working for me. I have fans that like my sh*t, and I’m just going to try to make good material and have a good time.

Were the lyrics to your song “Ink Don’t Bleed” from actual experiences of people that you knew?

Yes. All those examples are about specific people that I knew. I’m not going to mention who they are. I lived in L.A. for five years. I see so much fakeness out here. I see so many people whose only goal is to be famous and rich, the pathway to it doesn’t matter. They don’t have a vision for their career.

I’ve gone into sessions with people who wanted to work with me as a producer. They sat down and their basic warm-up routine everyday was to listen to the Top 40 charts to try and figure out what they’re going to plagiarize from what other people are listening to.

There are artists who get all the attention for tracks that are literally just having their names posted on the front of the CD, not even necessarily doing the singing on that record. If they are, it’s so auto-tuned out of being recognizable who knows what that person actually contributed to it.

A lot of the most talented creative people behind the scenes don’t get any credit, because they’re just pulling the strings as invisible people. That’s something I wanted to address, because I feel like there’s a different path.

There’s always that carrot hanging there for any artist. A lot of people make the decision that they’ll do whatever it takes to get fame and wealth. What keeps you from crossing that line?

I got to acknowledge I grew up not needing anything. I didn’t grow up rich, but I never grew up hungry. I never grew up not having a roof over my head or my parents worrying about rent. That really affected me.

I’m not hating on people that want to get rich and make their dreams happen. That’s a big part of rap music. It’s compelling to see people who started out with nothing make their dreams happen. But all I can say is being from a middle class family and not needing money, I had the privilege of not worrying about where my next meal was going to come from. I didn’t have to dedicate my life to making more money. That’s part of it.

I had parents that never inspired me to be greedy. They never bought more than what we needed for the house. I drove crappy twenty-year-old cars my whole life, and that was fine. We had the basic necessities taken care of, so I knew I could live a lifestyle without wanting more than you need. I also knew I could be happy doing that. I learned I could live a happy life without having a mansion and a fancy car.

How did you get involved in the Epic Rap Battles Of History series?

They contacted me after the fast rap video. I got asked to do a Shakespeare character. Even though I made the decision to try not to repeat the viral success of the first video and put out real content, I accepted it because it gave me a chance to play a character who was known for poetry.

I had the opportunity to write in his voice which was really fun. I had a blast with that. I got to do Shakespeare and Edgar Allan Poe. Plus, it’s this cool opportunity for young kids to associate me with iconic poetry. Getting the chance to write in the style of those poets was really fun.

There have been Caucasian rappers that have embraced the idea of using the n-word. What are your thoughts about that?

When I hear V-Nasty do it, I f*cking cringe. It strikes me in a really uncomfortable place. I’ve heard other rappers co-sign her for doing it, because they say, “She grew up in the hood. That’s where she came from, and she’s just speaking her mind.”

From my perspective, it’s f*cked up, and I hate when people do it. I also don’t know [V-Nasty] personally or her life experiences. I just think as a rule you shouldn’t do it. You’re going to offend so many people.

In some ways, it’s a similar argument to making jokes about race. When you’re doing it – even if you think you’re justified – there’s a huge section of people that have trauma, and you’re basically poking them with a stick. Even if you feel you have the credibility to do it, why do you have to poke people with a stick? There are tons of other words you can use.

For me, it’s not a question of whether you’re allowed to do it. Yeah you can do back flips because you feel justified because you have credibility, but just as a decent human being you realize you’re pissing off, offending, and hurting so many people. Why bother? Use one of the other thousands of words in the English language to get your point across.

You’re about to head back on tour. Could another Watsky live album happen in the future?

No, I just put this one out. I put one out two years ago for Live! From The Troubadour. I wanted people to see how I grew as a performer and how much better my band has gotten. Not that they didn’t start off great, but just to see our progress over the last couple of years on the road.

I have a feeling if I do put out another live record, it won’t be for another two years from now – until we’ve made another leap forward. The next project I put out will be a real studio album. Probably in 2016.

Watsky-MTYA Tour

Follow Watsky on Twitter @gwatsky and Instagram @gwatsky.

Stream All You Can Do: Live! From the Regency and download thBitTorrent Bundle below.

Mary J. Blige Will Perform At TIDAL Concert In Front Of The Statue Of Liberty

The Queen of Hip-Hop Soul has been tapped for a TIDAL exclusive. In wake of the Made In America festival, Mary J. Blige will performing in front of New York City’s Statue of Liberty for the “Made In America Presents the Monument Series Statue of Liberty.” Blige will take stage on June 21st. Instead of purchasing tickets, fans have to enter to win tickets here. For those who prefer to watch the show from the comfort of their homes, the special concert will be streamed on TIDAL at 9:00 p.m EST time. T_X_MIA_statueofliberty_landing.75de9a7d

Janet Jackson Announces Dates For ‘Unbreakable World Tour’

Janet Jackson has revealed the dates and cities that she will be performing in for her “Unbreakable World Tour.” Kicking off Aug. 31st, she is heading to Vancouver, BC and then hitting the stage in Orlando, Las Vegas, North Carolina,  Miami, New Orleans, San Francisco and will wrap up the 36-date trek on Nov. 12th in Honolulu.

[ALSO READ: Janet Jackson’s New Album Will Arrive In The Fall]

The pre-sale has already begun on janetjackson.com. Peep the dates below.

Unbreakable World Tour

Aug. 31, 2015 Pepsi Live at Rogers Arena, Vancouver, BC
Sept. 2, 2015 Scotiabank Saddledome, Calgary, AB
Sept. 4, 2015 Rexall Place Edmonton, AB
Sept. 5, 2015 Revolution Place Grande Prairie, AB
Sept. 7, 2015 SaskTel Centre Saskatoon, SK
Sept. 8, 2015 MTS Centre Winnipeg, MB
Sept. 11, 2015 Van Andel Arena Grand Rapids, MI
Sept. 12, 2015 PNC Pavilion at Riverbend Music Center Cincinnati
Sept. 15, 2015 Air Canada Centre Toronto
Sept. 17, 2015 Walnut Creek Amphitheatre Raleigh, NC
Sept. 18, 2015 PNC Music Pavilion Charlotte, NC
Sept. 20, 2015 American Airlines Arena Miami
Sept. 23, 2015 Amway Arena Orlando
Sept. 24, 2015 Amalie Arena Tampa, FL
Sept. 26, 2015 Chastain Park Amphitheatre Atlanta, GA
Sept. 27, 2015 Ascend Amphitheater Nashville
Sept. 29, 2015 Fedex Forum Memphis, TN
Sept. 30, 2015 Smoothie King Center New Orleans, LA
Oct. 9, 2015 Axis @ Planet Hollywood Las Vegas
Oct. 10, 2015 Axis @ Planet Hollywood Las Vegas
Oct. 13, 2015 Bill Graham Civic Auditorium San Francisco
Oct. 14, 2015 Bill Graham Civic Auditorium San Francisco
Oct. 16, 2015 The Forum Los Angeles
Oct. 17, 2015 Viejas Arena San Diego
Oct. 19, 2015 Comerica Theatre Phoenix
Oct. 21, 2015 Santa Barbara Bowl Santa Barbara, CA
Oct. 22, 2015 Santa Barbara Bowl Santa Barbara, CA
Oct. 24, 2015 Energy Solutions Arena Salt Lake City, UT
Oct. 25, 2015 Pepsi Center Denver, CO
Oct. 27, 2015 Sprint Center Kansas City, MO
Oct. 29, 2015 Chaifetz Arena St. Louis, MO
Oct. 30, 2015 CenturyLink Center Omaha, NE
Nov. 1, 2015 Target Center Minneapolis
Nov. 3, 2015 Chicago Theatre Chicago
Nov. 4, 2015 Chicago Theatre Chicago
Nov. 12, 2015 Neal S. Blaisdell Center Arena Honolulu, HI

YP Talks ‘Untitled’ EP: It’s 100% Real & Represents All of Me

Chicago’s own,  YP, physically and metaphorically towers above Hip-Hop’s emerging rappers. Regardless of his domineering 6’6″ physique, the self-professed green aficionado, BackWood Jones, possesses a THC-enhanced, relaxed confidence, which allows his innate lyrical integrity to be easily distinguished.  As one of Hip-Hop’s true MC’s his presence works to challenge these fun-sized caricatures who mock actual artists.

During the release party of his  magnum opus, Untitled, while in New York City at the iconic Quad Studios, AllHipHop chopped it up with the “Let Us Pray” lyricist. Check out the concise clip,  to see why YP believes people should listen to his music, and how it motivates people to live life on their terms.

Vince Staples: Ray J Is A Top 5 West Coast Hip Hop Artist, He Damaged Fabolous’ Career

(AllHipHop News) Who would have known California rapper Vince Staples is a Ray J fan. The Odd Future affiliate was joined by Tyler, The Creator for an interview at Hot 97. During the discussion, Staples expressed his opinion that Brandy’s brother is one of the all time greats.

[ALSO READ: Vince Staples Talks The State Of Hip Hop, Baltimore Uprising & Why He Doesn’t Care About Being A Rapper]

“Ray J is probably top 5 Hip Hop West Coast of all time,” said Vince. “Does Ray J not have hits? Ray J was the first Blood on a record that was certified… So without Ray J there is no Game.”

Besides suggesting Ray J has had a hand in almost everything related to Black culture (eg VH1 reality show Love & Hip Hop, UPN sitcom Moesha, and Kanye West), Vince insists Ray also played a role in hurting the career of a certain Brooklyn emcee.

“Remember when Fabolous was real, real hot? But remember when he did that sh*t to Ray J?” Staples asked, referring to the highly publicized feud between the two artists. “The last time I seen Fabolous he had on a backwards jersey, being the man… Then the next time I seen him he was dressed like Marty McFly [from the Back To The Future movie].”

Is Vince just trolling? Or is he really a huge Ray J fan? Tweets from last year suggest the latter.

Either way, Staples’ appreciation for all things Ray J may have caused him to neglect some things. For example, DJ Quik has been associated with the Bloods gang before Ray J’s career took off.

The 2015 XXL Freshman also fails to acknowledge Fabolous’ latest album The Young OG Project was well received and that Fab just had one of the most talked about sets from this year’s Hot 97 Summer Jam concert.

[ALSO READ: Fabolous Brings Out Black Rob, Remy Ma, Wu-Tang Clan, Lil Kim, Ma$e & More At Summer Jam 2015 (VIDEO)]

Watch Vince Staples’ interview below.

Young Gii “More To Life” ft. The Real

Young Gii continues his month-long series of single releases with “More To Life” featuring The Real.  From the constant violence to the amount of people living in poverty, the city of Chicago is heading down a road of destruction, but Young Gii strives to uplift and encourage his listeners by giving them a sense of hope.

Kendrick Lamar & Chance The Rapper’s Full Freestyles With Earth, Wind & Fire Hit The Net (VIDEO)

(AllHipHop News) Legendary R&B/Soul band Earth, Wind & Fire shocked the audience during their Bonnaroo Festival set over the weekend by bringing out Hip Hop stars Kendrick Lamar and Chance The Rapper.

The moment was uploaded to the Internet in various short clips, but now EWF’s full performance has made its way to YouTube.

Los Angeles’ K. Dot and Chicago’s Chance joined the group as they were playing the song “Gratitude.” Both emcees grabbed the microphone and kicked freestyles for the crowd.

[ALSO READ: Sweetlife Festival Recap: Day 1 Feat. Kendrick Lamar, SZA, Allen Stone, and More!]

Watch Earth, Wind & Fire’s full Bonnaroo Festival set below. (Or fast forward to 1:15:00 mark to see Kendrick Lamar and Chance The Rapper.)

via 

The Lox Discuss How The Internet Has Led To More Fabrication In Hip Hop (VIDEO)

(AllHipHop News) “Why do n*ggas lie in 85% of they rhymes,” spit Jadakiss on “Why?” off 2004’s Kiss Of Death album. Over a decade later Kiss and his Lox brethren Sheek Louch and Styles P shared their thoughts on how the Digital Age has led to even more rap lies.

[ALSO READ: The Lox Talks About New Artist, Labels, And Radio Microwaving Hip Hop]

“The game is already 85-90 something percent perception,” Jadakiss told Jenny Boom Boom. “Now with the Internet you can take a picture with a gun. You can take a picture in somebody else’s car. It’s yours. Let me borrow your chain for a minute, upload it. So it’s more fabrication going on.”

The Yonkers, New York native also talked about how “beef” has gone from rappers recording diss tracks about their rival to posting videos online. Kiss added, “Before when you had beef you had to do music. Now you can just do a whole webisode on it.”

[ALSO READ: Jadakiss – “Incarcerated Scarfaces (Freestyle)”]

Watch The Lox interview below.

“Black In America” Rapper MC Supreme Killed In Car Crash

(AllHipHop News) There is sad news coming out of California. According to multiple reports, 1990’s rapper MC Supreme was killed on Saturday from a car crash in Malibu.

Supreme (born Dewayne Coleman) was pronounced dead at the scene after a pick up truck ran into his Honda Civic on the shoulder of the Pacific Coast Highway around 6:20 am. He was 47 years old.

A female passenger in Supreme’s vehicle was taken to a local hospital. Her injuries have not been announced.

The driver of the truck, identified as 34-year-old Philip Torres II, was arrested on suspicion of vehicular manslaughter and DUI.

Watch the video for MC Supreme’s “Black In America” below.

THAI96 “That Right” – (P### by MusiqByTheCoach)

ReignFGM artist and Decatur, GA native, Thai96, follows up his “Fifty Shades” single with a visual for “That’s Right.” Over a caribbean-infused, MusiQbyTheCoach-produced track, this budding emcee offers up a song that is an example of pure rap cadence, line-for-line and bar for bar.

Apple Is Only Giving Indie Artists 58% Of Streaming Royalties, Company Facing Antitrust Investigations

(AllHipHop News) Unlike rival Tidal, the launch of Apple Music was met with mostly positive reactions, but the new streaming service is already catching some heat on several fronts. There are now reports that Apple is only paying independent artists 58% of subscription revenues as compared to Spotify’s 70%.

[ALSO READ: Apple Officially Set To Launch Music Streaming Service To Take On Spotify & Tidal]

Those Apple payout percentages apparently do not apply to major labels that signed first-run deals before the service was announced last week. While users will get free access to the platform for the first three months, artists will not see any revenue at all during that period.

Apple is also facing investigations in New York and Connecticut over possible antitrust violations. According to the New York Times, government officials are checking to see if the company pressured or conspired with music labels to stop supporting “freemium” services such as Spotify. The European Commission is said to be looking into Apple’s negotiations with the music labels as well.

Apple was previously accused of purposely interfering with Tidal’s placement on its App Store charts. There were claims Apple’s Vice President of iTunes Content told Universal Music Group executives if their artists put music exclusively on Tidal they would not be promoted as featured artists on iTunes. Co-owner Jay Z also accused competing companies of conducting a “smear campaign” against Tidal.

[ALSO READ: Spotify’s Contract With Sony Music Leaks – How Does Spotify’s Stream Payout Compare To Jay Z’s Tidal?]

Lil Wayne’s Manager Clarifies “Signed A Deal With Jay Z” Statement

(AllHipHop News) Lil Wayne had the internet buzzing this weekend after he told the crowd at KMEL’s Summer Jam, “I just signed a deal with my motherf*cking idol, Jay Z.” What deal was Weezy referring to in those comments?

[ALSO READ: Lil Wayne Says He Signed A Deal With Jay Z]

Bloggers and social media users began wondering if that meant the Young Money leader had finally cut ties with Cash Money and joined Hov’s record label Roc Nation. Wayne’s manager Cortez Bryant explained to Billboard that is not the case.

“The Internet and blogs took his words out of context,” said Bryant. “When Wayne was speaking about the partnership with Jay Z, he was speaking about his new deal as an artist owner with Tidal.”

Wayne recently became a part owner of the Tidal streaming service along with Jay, Nicki Minaj, Kanye West, J. Cole, Beyoncé, Rihanna, and others. He released his song “Glory” exclusively through the platform.

[ALSO READ: Article Claiming Jay Z Sold Tidal For $1 Billion Is Fake]