To follow-up the well received Painkilling: Summertime Sick project he dropped last summer, Sikai returns today with the first official single from the upcoming third installment of his Painkilling series. Produced by Bobby Music, “Spring Cleaning” is a song based around the “out with the old, in with the new” adage, infused with Sikai’s passion for women and capacity for drugs.
Painkilling: D.R.U.G.S. In America arrives later this summer.
I heard another rumor, rooted in the rumor that Beanie Sigel is out of jail! I heard the Jay Z might be getting back in the studio to help Beanie get back in the mix. I don’t know how true this is, but this is what I am hearing. Now, this reunion of sorts may not just include Beanie, but I am hearing Freeway may be in this mix too. Honestly, I haven’t heard that any of the other members of State Property proper will be included in this. But, I think this is good new for Jay. He needs to get back with the people like myself that live on the hardcore side of life! Most of these rapper’s today aren’t big enough or don’t have the pedigree to hang with Jay. More on this in a few….
Its that time!
“They keep us talking, but if we stop talking about them then they should worry!” -illseed.
(AllHipHop Features) Though many have tried, the list of actors that have been able to successfully jump into making music professionally is a rather short one.
Jamie Foxx, Jared Leto, and Jennifer Lopez are a few award-winning music artists whose faces became famous first for their roles on television and film, and now Mack Wilds is one young star that is off to a great start to adding his name to that conversation.
Appearing as Tristan Wilds, the Staten Island born entertainer first broke on the scene as one of the bright teenage talents on season four of HBO’s The Wire. He later starred as Dixon Wilson on The CW’s reboot of 90210 and was seen in major motion pictures The Secret Life of Bees and Red Tails.
Last year, Wilds dropped Tristan and picked up Mack when he made the decision to pursue a career in music full-time. Mack Wilds’ turn as a Hip Hop/R&B performer was a hit right out the gate as his Salaam Remi-helmed debut album New York: A Love Story earned the 24-year-old critical acclaim and a Grammy nomination for Best Urban Contemporary Album.
The “Own It” singer did not take home the Grammy in January, but Wilds is up for Best New Artist against Ariana Grande, August Alsina, Rich Homie Quan, and Schoolboy Q at the 2014 BET Awards this month.
AllHipHop.com spoke with Wilds about his impressive year, his New York album, and his experience with a crazed fan of The Wire in part one of an exclusive interview.
Congratulations on all your success. It’s been a big year for you.
Thank you. It’s crazy. I feel like I’m just now starting to scratch the surface for real. So honestly, it’s been a crazy ride, but I’m loving it.
You’ve gotten some big award nominations this year – the Grammy nom, the BET Award nom. When you first decided to make that transition from acting to recording music, did you expect your first album to make such an impact?
Honestly, I didn’t. I’m not even going to lie to you. I didn’t know what to expect. It was a toss-up, because I knew the music that we were making was completely different from anything that was on the marketplace at the moment. With that being said, it was like the people will love this or I’m not going to hear anything from this. Thank God it was the first and not the latter. It took time though.
I think me in my artist ways – the whole artist mindset – I changed my name because it’s more personal and people were going to appreciate the first [album] being more close to me. It actually worked in my favor as well, giving people a fresh chance to digest the music instead of automatically saying, “Oh, this is another actor doing music.” They didn’t get a chance to, because they didn’t know Mack Wilds was Tristan Wilds.
Speaking of being an actor who became a musician. A lot of entertainers have tried that in the past to varying success. Was there anyone who said to you, “Tristan, you’re crazy. People aren’t going to accept you as a singer”?
Yeah, I’ve gotten that a lot, and not even from regular people. I’ve gotten that from friends and family. I was like, “Really? You guys are scared that they won’t accept me?” I’ve always been the kid that does what he wants, so that’s one of the things that I always wanted to do. So as soon as the opportunity came – and I already knew the caliber of music that I could make – I kept going to see how that would translate into working with someone who has been a mentor to me since the age of 19 – Salaam. It turned out amazing.
The album features production from a lot of well-known producers in Hip Hop and music in general. Did you have an idea of what you wanted it to sound like before you started recording or did you listen to the tracks and that then motivated you on what direction to take?
I didn’t. Salaam is a genius, so maybe he knew. Honestly, I don’t even think he knew. Our main thought was we wanted to make music that no matter where we are in the world – because we were both traveling like crazy – this album would bring us right back home. It would transport us back to New York. That’s what we wanted. We wanted something that feels, smells, tastes, and looks like New York. We wanted to make an album that’s an ode to our city. Something that you can listen to no matter where you are in the world, and you’ll be transported right back to New York.
One of the standout tracks on the album is your remake of Michael Jackson’s “Remember The Time.” His fans are very protective of his legacy. Were you ever apprehensive about covering such a classic MJ song?
Absolutely! 200%! I myself am a huge Michael Jackson fan. I know how we protect his legacy. You know how they say online, “I ain’t with it” – I ain’t with it. If it’s not Michael, it’s not it. Don’t try to recreate it.
With that being said, it was right in the beginning of me writing “Henny,” and I remember Salaam telling me, “Stop, just relax. Why don’t you sing ‘Remember The Time’ over this beat first? Just to clear your head. Get yourself warmed up to what you have to do.” I said, “I don’t got a problem with that. Let’s do it.” I did it, and we had fun with it.
I didn’t hear nothing about it for maybe three months or so. Next thing you know we’re putting together the album, and Salaam said, “We’re going to use this song. We’ll probably put this here. And we’re going to do ‘Remember The Time’.” I said, “I don’t remember doing a song called ‘Remember The Time’.” “Yes, you do. The Michael Jackson song.” I was like, “Wait a minute. You know these Michael Jackson fans will rip me limb from limb?” He said, “Listen, you did a good job at it. The people want to see ‘the real,’ so we got to show them ‘the real’.” I said, “Alright, I trust you bruh.”
So I can’t even take credit for that. That was all Salaam. It was one of those – he threw me in the pool and hoped that I swam.
As a fan, what did you think about the Michael Jackson hologram performance at the Billboard Awards?
I give them an “A” for effort. Again, I’m a fan, and it felt good to see something like that, but I felt bad after watching it. This isn’t Michael. It was just weird to me. You know what it felt like? It felt like the first time I heard Rick Ross do “You’re Nobody (Til Somebody Kills You).” I liked it, but it’s weird. That’s B.I.G. You’re not suppose to touch certain things.
Was that coming from a New York resident’s perspective – growing up on New York Hip Hop and Biggie, and then you hear another artist try their take on it?
Yeah, Ross did an amazing job at it, so hats off to him. Again, I’m a New York Hip Hop head. So the first time I heard it, I kind of turned my nose up at it.
The Boys Of Summer: Jermaine Crawford, Maestro Harrell, Tristan Wilds & Julito McCullum From “The Wire” Season 4
Speaking of a devoted fan base, I wanted to go back to “The Wire.” What’s one of the craziest things a fan of “The Wire” has ever said to you about the show?
It’s nuts. Even years later people love [the show] still. It’s a part of popular culture now. The craziest thing a fan has said to me about it? I don’t know. I had a lady stalk me one time when I was about 16 or 17 off the show. That was weird. I was 16-17, and she was like 30-something. She was definitely at every event that I went. It was very, very weird.
Do people still call you “Michael”?
Absolutely. People call me “Dixon” now just as much as they call me “Michael.” When I’m walking up to somebody I never know which I’m going to get.
Do you have any plans to return to movies or television?
Yeah, I’m still very active in the acting world. There’s some things coming up that I’m not at liberty to discuss as of yet, but just know that I’m still very active in acting.
Download Mack Wilds’ New York: A Love Story from iTunes.
(AllHipHop News) For the past 13 years, former Terror Squad members and friends Cuban Link and Fat Joe have had public disputes over private .In a recent interview, Cuban Linx explains why Fat Joe is the reason there will never be a Terror Squad reunion, one time Big Pun faked his death and more.
Back in 2003, Cuban Link alleged that he sustained a knife laceration to face due to attempting to break up a fight between Fat Joe and rapper Sunkiss. Link alleged that Joe punched him as a result of his attempts at breaking up the fight and after Link retaliated with a punch of his own on Joe, a member of Joe’s entourage slashed his face with a knife. During his interview with Hip Hop DX, Link stated that no Terror Squad reunion can happen if Fat Joe is involved:
Yeah, I told him I could do it but without the fat dude there. I told him the Fat Joe situation ain’t gonna ever be resolved. I can’t do business with a man like that. I’ve seen his businesses practices before in the past, and it led us all to be a ruined empire just by a personal association with him. Besides being a friend with him back in the day, the business dealings, I didn’t ever agree with him. I don’t think that could happen in a business sense with Joe attached to it. I told him if it was just the rest of the crew, I’d be more than willing to do it as long as the numbers is right.
Later in the interview, Link alleges Joe of influencing executives to not sign him and was taking higher percentages from Big Pun and Terror Squad’s work than he felt was just.
Big Pun’s jocular nature has been well documented in his lyrics, but more so in the in retelling of his exploits outside of the mic booth. Link retells a time during 1998 in the Poconos where Pun faked his death in order to get a laugh:
We were all on quads and we following Pun all day like he’s the leader. He had the big ass quad, the 800, it was funOut of nowhere he left all of us. He just jetted, and we couldn’t find him. And out of nowhere I see the f###### quad turned over by a tree. Over the tree was a big ass hill so I’m like, “What the f### happened to my brother?” I’m getting nervous, and we find this n#### on the side of a tree. It was a tree that leaned over the mountain, but he was on top of the tree with blood on the side of his lip. It was me and Sunkiss there at the time, and we’re looking for help and yelling, “Yo, Twin, yo, yo!” and this n#### just pops up and start gigging on us [laughs]. He caught us and s###. He was playing dead, and it was funny to us, but for a second it was real serious.
I heard a recent rumor that disturbed me a in a great many ways. One of the great lyricist of our times, Pharaohe Monch, may be on the verge of retiring, according to rumor! I don’t have a lot of details on this, but here is what I am hearing. Monch quite possibly may be leaving the rap game, but not music altogether. Like Scarface, Monch as been in the game for a couple decades. You may have seen Scarface said he’s absolutely finished with rapping after his new album coming up. I don’t know exactly what Monch may be up to, but its something…something indeed.
Here is the new Monch song, which is different for him.
Anyway, here is Scarface talking about retiring and no more Geto Boys albums.
“They keep us talking, but if we stop talking about them then they should worry!” -illseed.
Animal Ambition is 50 Cent’s first proper album in almost five years, and it has been even longer since he has sounded as focused as he does now. On the Ky Miller-produced “Winners Circle,” he raps, “Consider this the theme song for victory / The s**t you say to yourself when you make history / I’m trying to make it feel like the first time / Like a junkie, I’m sort of chasing my first high.” And it is precisely that juxtaposition of accomplishment and aspiration, as well as everything which comes with it, that makes Fif’s latest release a captivating listen.
Take, for instance, the records “Hold On” and “Twisted.” On the latter, the song plays like a 2014 version of Biggie’s “Juicy” in that an individual’s success is also a metaphor for Hip-Hop as a whole. “This is more than champagne, this is more than just a glass / This is a symbol of accomplishment we rarely ever had.” But then, on the flip side of that, “Hold On” is all about how a byproduct of success as a hustler is that one becomes a target for all those around them: “These n****s, they watching every dime we make.” While 50’s earlier albums found him contradicting himself (e.g. “P.I.M.P.” and “21 Questions”), Animal Ambition finds him discussing opposite sides of a subject. It’s a fine line, and 50 Cent walks it well.
The rest of the album finds Curtis Jackson between the two aforementioned extremes of prosperity and paranoia. Tracks like “Chase the Paper,” which feature Prodigy, Styles P, and Kidd Kidd, and “Hustler,” with its brass stabs in the beat courtesy of Jake One, are self-explanatory in terms of subject matter. However, they do a good job of depicting the middle ground where so many people are on their grind – whatever grind that may be. 50 Cent has been criticized for being a multimillionaire who still talks about hustling in the streets, but how far out of touch can one really be with his or her own own story? Lots of music on this album will reaffirm 50’s credibility to naysayers and introduce it to people who have only ever known him as a mogul. Along those same lines of more aggressive content, Jadakiss delivers a solid verse on “Irregular Heartbeat” atop minimalist production from G Rocka and Medi and Schoolboy Q keeps up the tough talk on “Flip on You.”
For as much direction as Animal Ambition has, that’s not too say it doesn’t fall short in some respects. The song “Don’t Worry Bout It,” a track with Yo Gotti, is nothing more than the two of them talking about material possessions. In the context of the overall album theme, “an untamed desire to win,” it makes sense. But the song itself has little to offer and feels like the commercial type of music that he was eager to get away from at Interscope. “Pilot” too falls victim to a similar fate, and the lyrics in the chorus, “Me, I’m like a pilot, G5 Jet I’m fly as s**t / You cannot deny it,” say it all. Even though it is a bonus track on the deluxe edition of the album, “The Funeral” should have replaced either of those two songs on the official track list because it’s simply a better record.
The other thing that should be changed about the album is the sequencing. It could play like a chronological rags-to-riches story, but it instead jumps around a bit. Fortunately, the project’s message isn’t lost, yet the shaky song order does leave room for some things to get missed as a result of how material is delivered. Then, there’s Kidd Kidd. He appears on three songs, but only makes a lasting impression on one of them. With “Everytime I Come Around,” he spits, “ If I get caught I don’t boo-hoo, I pick up the phone call BooBoo / He gonna bail me out in seconds, please don’t let this rap s**t fool you / I send shooters to your home, see I don’t need no songs to move you.” Therefore, he has promising skills; they just haven’t been realized enough yet for him to fit comfortably on this album. It’s a mere 11 tracks, and so Kidd Kidd’s contributions carry a significant weight.
One of the songs which does break away from the project’s motif is “Smoke.” Dr. Dre’s synth-driven instrumental for the Trey Songz-assisted record sounds a little dated, but the song still succeeds because of its smooth hook and 50 rapping lines like, “But when she get to working her hips, you know the temperature rise / Oh lord, soon as she see the d**k in her thighs / She like the stones in my cross, she flawless / I’m thinking, ‘Damn, why would God give one woman all this?’” It certainly isn’t breaking any new ground, but it again shows improvement on 50’s part, this time lyrically, from other sexually-oriented songs in his past.
Even with the few missteps, Animal Ambition is still a good album. In this writer’s opinion, it’s 50 Cent’s best one since GetRich or Die Tryin’. It’s vintage 50, and, just like how Guess Who’s Back? set up Get Rich so well, this set of songs has the potential to do the same for Street King Immortal. 50 Cent may have struggled for relevancy the past few years in terms of his music, but this new independent release is the sign of a strong second wind. Hate it or love it, the underdog’s on his way back to the top.
Production: 7/10
Lyrics: 8/10
Flow: 7/10
Originality: 8/10
Replay Value: 7/10
Overall: 7.4/10
What do you think of 50’s new album? Please share your thoughts in the comments section!
(AllHipHop News) Slowbucks have seemed to put their nose in the wrong family’s business. Accord to reports, 50 Cent ordered Slowbucks to be assaulted and robbed during his Summer Jam performance last night (June 1st) due to their recent social media endorsement of 50 Cent’s son, Marquise Jackson.
On April 23rd, Slowbucks performed at SOBs as a part of Hot 97’s Who’s Next showcase. The crew posted a picture on their personal Instragram account with Marquise:
50 Cent has been quoted in recent interviews as stating that he does not have a relationship with his son due to his mother, Shaniqua Tompkins. AllHipHop has the clearest and closest footage of the actual chain snatching as you can clearly see 50 Cent watch as his entourage robs Slowbucks at last night’s Hot 97 Summer Jam concert.
(AllHipHop News) R&B singer Chris Brown is no longer behind bars. According to reports the “Loyal” performer was released from a Los Angeles County jail early this morning (6/2). Brown was sentenced to 131 days in jail in May for a probation violation after he was arrested in March for being kicked out of court-ordered rehab.
Fortunately for Brown, the judge credited the 116 days he spent in rehab as part of his sentencing as well as 59 days of time served in jail.
He still must complete the remainder of his community service hours, and he must face separate charges in Washington, DC for an alleged assault.
(AllHipHop News) Some people were shocked when Los Angeles Lakers great Kobe Bryant tweeted out a picture of what was perceived to be the cover art for Lil Wayne’s upcoming album Tha Carter V. Wayne spoke with ESPN to talk about how the All-Star and the rap star connected to make that promotional tactic happen.
“My homey Cortez [Bryant] came up with it: What do you think about Kobe tweeting the album art? I’m like, what do I think? That’d be dope,” said Wayne. “So I had the homey hit him up simple procedure: Hey, can you tweet this? And he did. It wasn’t planned or paid. I only went to the homeys as a favor for a friend.”
The Young Money leader also revealed that it was Kobe that came up with the “Carter V Season” theme for the rollout of the project. That led to Wayne reaching out to boxing champion Floyd Mayweather to assist with the campaign.
“We knew Floyd had a fight coming up. So all eyes were on him. I have his number, so I had my homey hit him up: Can you put this video of Drake out, as a little tease? He did. And it worked,” added Wayne. “That s**t was crazy. I told him I appreciate him. He said he’s down for whatever else. That’s Floyd – down for whatever.”