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Hip-Hop Rumors: WOW! K. Michelle Gets Evicted! OR Did She?

The news ran wild with the news that K. Michelle was evicted from her apartment. But, there’s more to this. Basically, her landlord charged the following. “I was trying to accommodate her, but she just disappeared and didn’t give me the keys. I don’t even know what the deal is. She didn’t tell me she was leaving and made it difficult for me to sell the unit. She made it miserable for me.” The dude claims she owes him $6,450, plus over $1,000 in other fees. K. Michelle went on instagram to reply.

Looks like her album just got the bump in publicity it needed.
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The sad thing is this really is “breaking news in America” to some.

They keep us talking, but if we stop talking about them then they should worry! -illseed.

Illseed, Out.

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EXCLUSIVE: DJ Camper Breaks Down Big Sean’s “Fire” In The Studio (VIDEO)

Big Sean recently released the newest song “Fire” off his highly anticipated sophomore album Hall of Fame. 

AllHipHop linked up with the song’s producer, Grammy award-nominated producer/songwriter DJ Camper to break down

Video work by @CopperTony

The AHH Interview: DMC Breaks Down the Build Up of “Darryl Makes Comics”

Hearing the passion that Darryl “DMC” McDaniels has when he talks about comics, it’s understandable how one could almost forget DMC the rap icon.  And that’s saying a lot.  As one third of Run-DMC, DMC, Run, and Jam Master Jay (R.I.P.) transformed popular culture in the 80s by taking Hip-Hop to levels it had never seen before.  Among the group’s many accomplishments, they were the first rap act with gold and platinum plaques, the first rappers to get their video played on MTV, and they even invaded the pop charts with their remake of “Walk This Way” alongside Aerosmith.

DMC is now set to again be part of a Hip-Hop first, even after three decades in the industry.  With assistance from art director Edgardo Miranda-Rodriguez and music executive Riggs Morales, he is becoming the first Hip-Hop comic book publisher.  Under the imprint Darryl Makes Comics, they are scheduled to release their first graphic novel, DMC, in the fall of 2013.

AllHipHop.com had the privilege and pleasure of speaking with DMC recently about his new undertaking.  And it’s safe to say, based on the conversation, that he is not only living out one of his dreams with it but that is he is also eager to use it as a way to provide others the opportunity to do the same.

AllHipHop.com: What does this project bring to the respective worlds of Hip-Hop and comics that up until this point had been missing?

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DMC: In my thirty plus years in Hip-Hop, everywhere I went, since 1983, people would always approach me [and say], “Yo, I got this Hip-Hop comic.”  First of all, I’d say none of them broke through successfully because you can’t do a “Hip-Hop comic.”  First and foremost, you have to do a comic that is respectable and legitimate to comic book culture.  That being said, Hip-Hop and comic books always existed simultaneously.  But nobody was able to really bring it together.  Like my comic isn’t the rapper DMC doing a Hip-Hop comic.  It isn’t going to be the rapping super hero, nothing corny like that.  This is an official comic book first.  Likein this universe, Darryl McDaniels is DMC the emcee/rapper guy.  In the comic book, it’s “what if Darryl McDaniels, in this universe, was really a superhero?”  So this comic book is Superman, Batman, Hulk, Iron Man, Spiderman, DMC, first and foremost.  So what this brings to Hip-Hop and comic book culture is the same way that Run-DMC inspired, innovated, revolutionized, and excited music culture by bringing “Rock Box,” “King of Rock,” and “Walk This Way” to the world is the same thing I’m going to do with this comic.

It’s gonna have that graffiti swag.  It’s gonna have that Hip-Hop edge to it.  It’s going to have the look, the vibe, the lingo, and the swag of Hip-Hop culture.  But it going to be relevant to everybody-6 to 60, Black, White, Puerto Rican, Japanese, German, Peruvian, and even the motherf*****s up on Mars!

AllHipHop.com: Please discuss the conversation between yourself,  Edgardo, and Riggs that led to the creation of Darryl Makes Comics.

DMC: I went up to Warner Bros. to meet Riggs about this artist that we wanted to get signed.  So we go in for a music meeting.  And Riggs basically said, “Before we get started, there’s some questions I want to ask you.  What was your childhood like?”  And as soon as I said, “Man, I was a comic book head.”  I saw this light go off in his eyes.  And it was bad for my artist because instead of sitting there meeting about him, we spent the next three hours talking about comic books.  Before I thought about being a Hip-Hop artist, for me, growing up was about doing kid stuff, going to school, and comic books.  He [Riggs] started naming all these guys in Hip-Hop that were big comic book heads.  And just everything he spoke about that influenced, excited, and was part of his life with comic books, I was familiar with it all.  And I told him I’d always thought about doing a comic book.  And he said, “Yo D, if anybody could do it, you could do it.  As long as its respectable and legitimate and it’s honorable to comic book culture.”  The he was like, “I got this  guy you want to meet (Edgardo Miranda-Rodriguez).”  We said if we’re going to do this, it’s gotta be DC, Marvel, Darryl Makes Comics.  And that’s basically how this came about.  More importantly, he [Riggs] said, “D, you can be the guy who opens up the door for all those past, present, and future comic book people who really don’t get their chance.”

“I like Run DMC but I love DMC. No one ever sounded like DMC, no one ever looks like DMC. He’s like a superhero.” Chris Rock, Rolling Stone. 

When you look at the music business, for example, there are lyricists that will put the fear of God in Jay Z and Eminem but they don’t get their chance because when they go meet with the A&Rs and the label heads, they say, “It’s so great that you have the ability of Kool G. Rap rolled up with the flavor of De La Soul presented like Stetsasonic, but could you be a little more like Chief Keef?”  So one of the things that me, Riggs, and Edgardo spoke about was [how] this will give a chance to all of those people- young, old, past, future, present, who want to be an illustrator, a writer, a penciler, who want to be an artist.  I feel it’s my responsibility to represent this industry in a respectable, opportunistic way the same way I kicked down the door with Run-D.M.C.  This universe that we’re opening up in the comic book literally opens up an new industry in a universe of comic book culture.

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AllHipHop.com: On Run-DMC’s episode of Behind the Music you said, “Growing up I’d spend endless hours in my room sitting by the window watching the other kids play, but I was drawing Spider Man, Captain America, Superman.”  What was it like finding out that you’d be working with people like Damion Scott, Dexter Vines, and Sal Buscema who have contributed to superheroes you read about as a kid?

DMC: That’s the most crazy thing EVER!  The whole thing that happened with me is when Hip-Hop came over the bridge from the Bronx to this suburban lower middle-class Catholic school kid, I put all my comic book dreams on hold to pursue this new culture of music and poetry.  Me and my brother Alfred, we had an extensive collection of comic books and Sal Buscema was the backdrop of my whole childhood.  But me and my brother sold the majority of our comic book collection to buy turntables and a mixer because this Hip-Hop thing was so overpowering.  But all of these artists who worked for Marvel (e.g. Damion Scott) have drawn some of my favorite superheroes.  And [as far] as Sal Buscema it’s like, “How the hell do I get a chance to work with God?”  It’s crazy how things go full-circle.  To be able to work with legends who have participated and fought on that front-line of comic book creativity is an honor to me.  It’s a blessing, a dream come true.  True be told, I feel like a twelve year-old kid again.

Like we said before, we rock hardcore/I’m DJ Run, I can scratch. I’m DMC, I can draw

AllHipHop.com: And last but not least, would you talk about your Kickstarter campaign and its significance to the process?

DMC: The Kickstarter thing, I’m not doing it for a handout.  I want everyone to feel involved.  The reason we chose to do a Kickstarter is just for the whole thing of if we do it corporate, corporate is gonna put their ideas in there and it’s not gonna be true to the game.  I want this to be respectable; I want it to be legitimate. It’s comic book culture first.  Secondly, it’s gonna be influenced by Hip-Hop culture because that’s my generation.  My job is to make sure it’s as dope as the Raising Hell album is and as dope the Marvel universe is.

EXCLUSIVE: Young Guru Talks Lincoln Park Music Festival, New Headphones + More (VIDEO)

(AllHipHop News) At last Sunday’s 8th Annual Lincoln Park Music Festival in South Jersey, Jersey transplant Young Guru spoke EXCLUSIVELY with AllHipHop about the importance of the Lincoln Park Music Festival, his TMA-1 Studio Headphones with AIAIAI and more.

Check out the video below:

Jimmy’s Back: Dice Raw Premieres 18-Min Documentary On Mass Incarceration

Today, we interrupt your broadcast to bring you a documentary from The Roots’ own Dice Raw, created to accompany his upcoming album release Jimmy’s Back–a concept album thematically structured around the increasingly impossible to ignore reality of mass incarceration and recorded with input from Jill Scott, Philly community leaders and a good number of ex-felons. Best described as Dice’s response to and interpretation of Michelle Alexander‘s groundbreaking book The New Jim Crow, the doc features interviews with previously incarcerated Philly natives who want to share some their experiences and comment on what they’ve had to do to evade the system’s deliberate traps for black and brown men and boys. With the release of the short film in particular, as well as the album, Dice provides what we believe is an incredibly important platform for stories like these and an equally important voice to the current conversation about mass incarceration and the prison-industrial complex. Hip-hop acts as arguably the most visible representation of the s0-called black criminality that law enforcers are trained to look for and each of the men in the clip embodies that existential struggle, playing out every day on sidewalks and expressways across America.

Joining forces with OkayPlayer.com and RapGenius in the joint premiere of this short film, Okayplayer is calling on the hip-hop community to help us in creating a massive wave of online support and awareness around these critical issues–a wave that kicks off, but does not end, today. Watch the film below and scroll down to find out 5 ways you can get up and get into it.

1. Stay out of prison – Crime never pays–and street life will eventually catch up with you.

2. Be informed – There are root causes behind the unfathomable numbers of black men and women in prison – things like lack of jobs, poor education, inadequate homes and ills within the justice system are leading factors for why people commit crimes.

3. Get involved! – Hundreds of organizations and movements are popping up across the country and working on the issue of Mass Incarceration every day. Join groups like the @ACLU or @WomenOfWAMI to stay in the mix of the solution.

4. Support the Jimmy’s Back LP & documentary – Give ‘em some props, artists and musicians have always been champions for the underdog. Pre-order Dice Raw’s “Jimmy’s Back” on August 4th and look out for the official release on August 19th.

>>>Stream Dice Raw – “Animal”

>>>Watch Dice Raw – Jimmy’s Back [Album Trailer]

5. Love yourself – Creating change is never easy, but it starts within you. Opt for legal hustles, seek self-improvement, and work within the system. Your forefathers already paved the way!

Goodie Mob Reunites For New Music Video “I’m Set”

(AllHipHop News) Cee-Lo Green, Khujo, T-Mo, and Big Gipp are back together as Goodie Mob for the new video “I’m Set.” The track will appear on their upcoming reunion album Age Against The Machine. This will be the first LP featuring all four group members since 1999’s World Party.

The Dungeon Family affiliates also recently released a lyric video for the song “Special Education” featuring fellow Atlanta resident Janelle Monáe.

The reassembled Goodie Mob is set to go on tour this fall. The 12-city trek will open in Washington, DC on August 24 and close out in their hometown of Atlanta, Georgia on September 14th. Other stops include Brooklyn, Los Angeles, Chicago, and Miami.

Watch Goodie Mob’s “I’m Set” video via Noisey and the lyric video for “Special Education” below.


Talib Kweli, Lauren London & More Share “Untold Stories” Of African American History

(AllHipHop News) Brooklyn emcee Talib Kweli, The Game actress Lauren London, American Idol winner Jordin Sparks, and House of Pain actor Lance Gross are all featured as celebrity curators in the new short film series Untold Stories: Our Inspired History.

Untold Stories is sponsored by Wells Fargo as part of the year long celebration of “The Kinsey Collection: Shared Treasures of Bernard and Shirley Kinsey.” The National Medal for Museum and Library Services winning exhibition highlights African American art dating from the 1600’s to the present.

The contributing stars for Untold Stories each give details about an artifact and its creator from the Kinsey Collection. Gross tells the story of Josiah Walls, one of the first African American men to serve in the United States Congress. Sparks covers the accomplishments of Phillis Wheatley, the first African American female poet to be published.

Kweli shares a letter written by Henry Butler who requests the chance to purchase his family’s freedom from slavery. London covers Carrie Kinsey’s 1903 letter to President Theodore Roosevelt asking for help to find her missing brother. The Kinsey letter inspired Bernard and Shirley Kinsey to start the Kinsey Collection.

“The Kinsey Collection strives to give our ancestors a voice, name and personality, enabling the viewer to understand the challenges, obstacles, triumphs and extraordinary sacrifice of African Americans who’ve greatly contributed to the success of this country,” said Bernard Kinsey in a statement.

The Kinsey Collection is touring the nation in celebration of the 150th anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation. It can currently be seen at the Harvey B. Gantt Center in Charlotte, North Carolina. “Re-Discovering America: Family Treasures from the Kinsey Collection” will be showing at the Walt Disney World Resort’s Epcot Center through 2015.

[ALSO READ: The Bronx To Be Honored At The Smithsonian As “Place of Invention” For Hip-Hop Legacy]

Watch Talib Kweli’s “Family First” and Lauren London’s “Tenacity of Hope” below. To view more videos from Untold Stories visit www.youtube.com/wellsfargo.



Drake feat./ 2 Chainz & Big Sean- All Me

“I’m the light skin Keith Sweat”-Drake

Drake recruits 2 Chainz and Big Sean for his new song “All Me”.

Nothing Was The Same is set to be released September 17th.

Check out “All Me” featuring 2 Chainz and Big Sean:

EXCLUSIVE: Gillie Da Kid says “There’s Only One King of Philly”

(AllHipHop News) In the third installment of AllHipHop.com’s exclusive Interview with Gillie Da Kid, the rapper explained his controversial “King of Philly” title, which he says was given to him by the streets.

“Thats not no self-proclaimed title , it’s not like I’m the only one saying the s**t,” Gillie told AllHipHop.com. “The streets say the s**t…so thats what it is…until the streets stop saying it, but they aint going to say it cause there’s only one king. And if you want that title your running late.”

Gillie touched on other artists in Philly and explained that a number of other rapper’s have had memorable monikers to compliment their official rap names.

“Its like another motherfu**er trying to be the Broad Street Bully,” Gillie reasoned. “How you going to be that, there’s only one of them right? That’s like a mothefu**er trying to be Mr. Philadelphia. Last time I checked that was Meek Mill,” Gillie said before saluting popular Philly artists like Freeway and Peedi Crack.

(Note: This interview with Gillie Da Kid was conducted three days before Meek Mill sent out disses at Gillie via social media).

Check out the exclusive, as Gillie Da Kid details being the “King of Philly”

Follow Mikey T The Movie Star on Twitter @MTMovieStar