In support of her greatest hits album titled #1 To Infinity, Bae aka Mariah Carey delivers the video treatment for one of the standout tracks Infinity. Directed by Brett Ratner.
In support of her greatest hits album titled #1 To Infinity, Bae aka Mariah Carey delivers the video treatment for one of the standout tracks Infinity. Directed by Brett Ratner.
Bay Area rhymer Watsky returns with a new project. The San Francisco born rapper/poet is giving his fans a special treat by releasing his Live From the Regency Ballroom album as a BitTorrent Bundle.
Individuals can download the free package which includes the album, videos, photos, and a poster. For listeners willing to “pay what you want,” Watsky is offering a tour merch coupon and Waveform audio files of LFTRB.
Check out Watsky’s Live From The Regency Ballroom BitTorrent Bundle packages and download the bundle below.
Live From the Regency Ballroom Live Album [Audio]
3 Live Videos [Video]
Live Photo Collection [Artwork]
Watsky Tour Poster [Artwork]
Watsky Tour Merchandise Coupon
Live From the Regency Ballroom WAVs [Audio]
Future keeps things moving and brings along his new video for No Compadre, which lives on his latest 56 Nights project. See you again next week.
G4 Boyz and the UK’s own Blade Brown link up for the official UK Remix to their new single Alexander Wang.
Waka Flocka Flame connects with Rock group Good Charlotte for a new single Game On, which will be featured on the upcoming soundtrack for Pixels – The Movie which hits theaters July 24th. Don’t forget, Waka4Prez.
Dear Tom Hanks,
Never in my life did I think I would be writing Tom Hanks a letter. But, here I am in 2015 writing you, buddy. I hope you don’t mind me calling you “buddy,” but you seem like the sort of father I could have grown up knowing. See, Tom, a good part of my life was growing up around White parents that resembled you and son’s that lookd like you kid Chester. Most of them were good, hard working people that were just looking to raise their kids. It just so happened my family and two other Black families decided to break the color barrier in a certain section of Newark on the outskirts of Delaware back in the day.
Tom, I am going to leap to the present day for a minute before I go back to my rearing in Delaware. I promise there is a rhyme and a reason. Lets get to the rhyme: your son, Chester, aka rapper Chet Haze, aka a white guy that feels strongly he should be able to use the N-Word despite the objections of…anybody. Here is what he said – word for word – on his Instagram account.
If I say the word n***a I say it amongst people I love and who love me. If I say “f**k yall hatin ass n***az” it’s because that’s really how I felt at the time. And I don’t accept society getting to decide what ANYBODY can or can’t say. That’s something we call FREE SPEECH. Now I understand the older generation who grew up in the Jim Crowe era might have strong feelings against this. And that’s understandable… But what I’m saying is this is 2015… And even tho we are still far from where we need to be and black people are still being literally KILLED by a RACIST and f##### up system… We have also reached a point where the word can no longer have a negative connotation if we so choose. And who is to say only black people can use it? The way I see it, it’s a word that unifies the culture of HIP-HOP across ALL RACES, which is actually kind of a beautiful thing. It’s a word that can be used out of camaraderie and love, not just exclusively for black people. What’s the point in putting all these built up “rules” about it. It’s time to let go. You can hate me or love me for it, but can’t nobody tell me what I can or can’t say. It’s got nothing to do with trying to be a thug. It’s about the culture of the music. And that’s all I have to say about that (no pun intended) lol. It’s all love. Some people will get it, some people won’t. Either way, Ima keep living my life however the f### I want. ALL LOVE.
There is so much wrong in this stupid post that I cannot begin to address it in a single sitting, Tom. I think the fallacies and the foolishness speaks for itself. So, I am going to question you, because you are Chet’s daddy and he, my Hollywood friend, is a reflection of you. Why does your boy want to use the N-Word so bad? Why’s he using it anyway? Did you all use it in the house a lot? Or was it his white, hot lustful burning love of Black people, culture and Hip-Hop music that make him long to spew the word as symbol of his camaraderie? Do you think he would take a bullet for his African American Hip-Hop comrades? Since he mentioned racists and a f**ked up system, is he out here marching to fight the evils that we Black people face daily? Does he want to play in the Black playground a bit without once delving into what life is truly like?
Back to Delaware and me, Tom.
I am bringing it back to my life, because I wonder how many real Black people your boy Chester knows. While growing up, a white boy that looks a lot like your son Chester called my best friend a n***er on the way to school. My friend proceeded to bash his head in on the school bus and they had to pull him off of that kid. They kicked my friend off the bus after that, but he was never called a n***er again. Tom, I too have been called that ugly word too. There’s no need to share all the stories with you, because you can gather that it is still a very sensitive topic and word.
I gotta tell you, bro, you have a problem here. Chester is making you look a bit crazy and we used to wonder what went on in the house of those white kids that said n***er. If Black people tell you not to use a word considered derogatory, who is your boy to say otherwise? Talk to him, Tom. Don’t pin the tail on the donkey of Hip-Hop when you talk and don’t let Chet either. As parents, we have to raise our kids right and check them hard when they are very wrong. If you don’t, somebody else will. I’m a little older and wiser – not Jim Crow era – but the younger me would probably try to turn Chez into a human pretzel or something. OK, I know I wasn’t going to share any more stories, but here is a quick one. In college, some White students from the University of Delaware in a car did a “drive-by” calling me a n***er. Tom, I instinctively picked up this gigantic cobblestone rock and threw it. I missed and that was a good thing. The cops were right there to witness it all. Imagine if I had hit that car or somebody in it.
Sure there are some Black people out here that willingly allow White people to call them n***a or n***er. That does not you we should do it. The great Ice-T once said, “Freedom of Speech…Just watch what you say.” This slogan applies to everybody even though he was talking about Black people under persecution. In Baltimore recently, a Black man was peacefully protesting at a march, but he happened to have a t-shirt that said “F**k The Police.” Don’t you know those cops yanked him by his locks (dreadlocks), pepper sprayed him and cuffed him, seemingly for wearing such a shining example of Freedom of Speech? Check the video, Tom. You gotta see this!
This op ed originally appeared on MommyNoire.com. For the rest of this article, click here.
After announcing the new album earlier, The Coke Boys crew is right back with the first single off the upcoming project. This one is called On Your Body and features Meet Sims. Welcome To JFK in stores August 14th.
After releasing “World in Your Pocket” featuring Joey Bada$$ a few weeks ago, Nyck Caution drops his new song “Vulcan”.
Nyck will be performing with the rest of Pro Era at the first annual Steez Day Festival on July 7th along with Flatbush Zombies, The Underachievers, Phony Ppl, Smoke DZA, & more. Purchase Steez Day Festival tickets here.
Photo via Benzino’s Instagram
Last night in the reality world there seems to have been a confrontation between Joseline Hernandez and Funky Dineva during the Love & Hip Hop after party. The two went back and forth, but Joseline seems to have revealed some possible activity that Benzino could be into. She told Funky that she knows what him and Benzino do in the bathroom on Peters St. (a popular street in Atlanta filled with bars and businesses). We don’t know what allegedly went down in those bathrooms, but Benzino responded with this statement:
Your Old Droog kicks a freestyle on Showoff Radio with Statik Selektah
Photo via Rihanna’s Instagram
Some people are just delusional. Apparently, looking like Rihanna/ or thinking you look like Rihanna can be a real struggle. At least that’s what 25-year-old stylist Bianca Guthrie says. Guthrie claims she has experienced hardships for a decade for resembling the singer. She says it has ruined her life as she is constantly stopped by strangers for selfies. She says dating is even hard because people only date her because she “looks” like Rihanna. Bish where?!
Chicago rapper Shaquon “Young Pappy” Thomas posted a video a week ago in which he made fun of a rival gang, rapping at one point, “You don’t even know how to shoot.” Thomas, 20, was shot dead about a block from where he recorded that video in the Uptown neighborhood, the Chicago Tribune reported.
https://youtu.be/utAnR6lhM2s
This boy got tired of people in class picking on him, so he went on a slapping rampage.
https://youtu.be/0PfppjXWl2g
Diplo and Walshy Fire stopped by The All New Cruz Show to talk about their new Major Lazer album, Peace Is The Mission, and Diplo talks about how crazy is life looks on Snapchat.
Fabolous and celebrity stylist Emily B have welcomed their second child today (June 2). Emily reportedly gave birth to a baby boy.
Fab took to his Instagram last night to upload a pic of him in scrubs, letting the masses know that he was getting ready to welcome an addition to the family. The couple already have a 7-year-old son, Johan, and Emily has a 17-year-old daughter from a previous relationship.
The former Love & Hip Hop star also revealed the news of her birth via her IG.
I guess enough was enough for this kid. After trying to avoid fighting, he gives in then gives his opponent a beating. Then they shook hands.
https://youtu.be/vNP7MJ_A1OY
When Kendrick Lamar recorded the self-empowering track “i” he said that it was inspired by not only his homies behind bars but also by his fans who told him that his music kept them from committing suicide. Last weekend while headlining the Sweetlife Festival in Maryland, he came face-to-face with another one of those special fans.
“I’m at the end of the show, and I see this young lady crying, and I’m thinking, She must be really going through something right now,” the Compton rapper told MTV News. “Then I start hearing her murmur with her lips, ‘You saved my life.’ So I’m like, Damn. This is serious. This is not for play, why she’s out here right now. She came to see the person that actually helped her get through a life, through music.”
He added that the fan, Claire, said that she was going to kill herself last year.
“So I said, at that point, I gotta bring her up onstage and show her some love and let her know this is real.”
While onstage, K.Dot embraced Claire as she broke down in tears.
At 15, Claire was diagnosed with severe depression and said that Kendrick’s music is what “got her through” such a hard time.
“And I couldn’t have done it without him,” the 16-year-old told MTV News. “I listened to his music over and over and there were nights where I thought I was going to end it all, and I didn’t, and I think that’s because his words impacted me in a way that no other artist has ever done. I can’t thank him enough. I can’t thank the people behind him enough for making him come to the earbuds that I listen to. I feel inseparable from his music.”
When he brought her to the stage, she finally had the chance to share with him how his words saved her life and spend time with him backstage.
Kendrick Lamar may have stole the show Day 1 of Sweetlife Festival, but Day 2 was even better. The day started out with a performance from a plethora of talented DMV artists. Local DC artist Bishop Nehru stepped onto the Treetop Stage, with Goldlink following soon after. Goldlink surprised many by performing a brand new song with fellow DMV artist, Chaz French. Both artists have started to establish a national following through their different sounds, however, they both shared a cohesive chemistry on stage to rock the crowd. Raury also performed on the main stage, bringing his unique style of rock and hip hop to the festival. While many fans were patiently waiting for Vic Mensa to perform later that day, they were blessed with performances by the unique electronic duo Phantogram, who’s stellar performance for the soulfully-sampled song “Fall In Love” rocked the Columbia Merriweather Post-Pavillion. Although there were a ton of dope performances at Sweetlife, nothing was more crazier than Vic Mensa’s. The Chicago rapper was electrifying on stage for his first few songs, and than he turned up, literally. Dude was so crazy, not only did Mensa give out a bottle to the crowd, but he also jumped of stage and started to crowdsurf on them as well. The final day of Sweetlife ended with a dope set by The Weeknd. The Canadian singer went through his catalogue with several lights to make the setting more eerie. Check out some of photos, clips and social posts about the festival below.
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Its June 2nd, rent was due yesterday but at least today Dom laces the fans up with some music just in time for the Summer. Life can be have ups and downs and Dom talks about it all. This project is in essence a return to some of the sounds found on the Yellow Album. After a few album leaks we get the full deal and it does not dissapoint. OpM!
Photo via 50 Cent’s Instagram
Uh oh it looks like 50 Cent isn’t feeling Jay Z’s streaming service, Tidal. Apparently, 50 says he feels that the whole idea was more of a corporate play, and doesn’t see the sense in purchasing a business that provides services that are already out there. 50 Cent is saying people don’t need to pay $9.99 a month for music that will be available elsewhere, including rival streaming services such as Pandora and Spotify. Does 50 have a point?