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Leon Darryl – HighWay

Leon Darryl, emerging Hip-Hop artist from the Bahamas. He has recently released his new break-out single called HighWay. With an old school infused 90’s Hip-Hop style beat attached to his witty metaphorical lyrics, Darryl has caught the attention of many record labels and executives including celebrity DJ and producer Necterr. In HighWay, Leon Darryl relates to a lot of people who want a change in their lives whether it involves a job, relationship, finance etc.

Hip-Hop Rumors: Check What Biggie Song Rick Ross ReMakes On Masterpiece!

Well, well…well!

Rick Ross is about to drop a new album on March 4, called Masterpiece. A lot of people are excited. So, it all went down last night…the listening session. He let a BUNCH of people in the music industry come out and listen to the album. They also included fans too so that they could go out and tell the people what they heard. First of all, the security was reportedly off the CHAIN. They made it hard for people of note to get in. But, people eventually made it in to party up.

Soon, they were album to see the MASTERPIECE. When I say see, I mean I heard they were privy to a big movie that Rick Ross put together for the album. Since I wasn’t there, I don’t have much more to offer.

BUT…I heard Rick Ross did a remake of this classic Biggie song.

I don’t know if Rozay should be putting this energy out there, but I can’t wait to hear it.

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

Illseed, Out.

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Phife Dawg Honors J Dilla With New Video

Phife Dawg from the legendary group A Tribe Called Quest, held an exclusive video premiere at The Landmark Midtown Art Cinema in Atlanta, Ga debuting the visuals for his new single “Dear Dilla”.  The private video screening also featured a short Q&A session with Phife as well as with the video’s director Konee Rok.  The song which pays homage to legendary Hip Hop producer J. Dilla, is Phife’s first solo release in 14 years and it is the first single off of his upcoming album “MUTTYmorphosis”.  While at the screening, we had a chance to catch up with Phife to see what he’s been up to.

Check out the Interview below:

See the “Dear Dilla Video here

Drake: Macklemore’s Apology Text To Kendrick Was “Wack As F*ck”

(AllHipHop News) Drake has never been one to hide his emotions from the world and decided to let Macklemore know how he felt.

In an interview for an upcoming issue of Rolling Stone, Drake described Macklemore’s text message apology to Kendrick Lamar following his Grammy wins as “wack as f*ck.” Drake felt the text message “didn’t feel genuine” due to the fact that Macklemore shoul

I was like, ‘You won. Why are you posting your text message? Just chill. Take your W, and if you feel you didn’t deserve it, go get better — make better music’. It felt cheap. It didn’t feel genuine. Why do that? Why feel guilt? You think those guys would pay homage to you if they won?

Drake does not say that Macklemore did not deserve to win Best Rap Album or Best Rap Song awards because “He made a brand of music that appealed to more people than me, Hov, Kanye and Kendrick.” However, Drake did take offense to Macklemore only apologizing to Kendrick:

To name just Kendrick? That s### made me feel funny. No, in that case, you robbed everybody. We all need text messages!

NY’s Mayor Bill de Blasio: “A Promise Kept: Ending the Stop-and-Frisk Era”

New York City’s Mayor Bill de Blasio has exclusively given AllHipHop the following editorial, where the progressive leader proclaims an end to Stop N Frisk. Read below.

stopandfrisk_protest

I made a vow that we would end the stop-and-frisk era that unfairly targeted communities of color. It was a promise I made to the people of this city, and to my own children.

And on January 30, less than a month into our administration, we kept that promise. Standing on a basketball court at a rec center in Brownsville, Brooklyn, we turned the page on one of the most divisive problems facing our city.

Alongside our new police commissioner and our city’s top lawyer, I announced we had reached an agreement with the plaintiffs from the landmark lawsuit that found the overuse of stop-and-frisk to be unconstitutional. We announced the beginning of real stop-and-frisk reform.

And those same people wronged by our broken stop-and-frisk policy stood shoulder-to-shoulder with us to make clear this was a new day.

One of them, Nicholas Peart, was a young man who had been stopped and frisked five times by the time he was 23. The stops never led to any charges of wrongdoing, but that didn’t mean Nicholas walked away from them unscathed. As a boy, Nicholas admired the police. As a young man, he grew to fear and distrust them. And it was those repeated experiences—visited on him and his friends—that led him to take legal action against stop-and-frisk.

What we announced together is aimed precisely at changing the way police interact with young men like Nicholas. With new oversight and an inclusive reform process that gives the communities most affected by stop-and-frisk a voice in changing the broken policy, we are setting a new course for New York City that will ultimately make us all safer.

We have the best-trained, most dedicated police force in the world. They have driven crime down to record lows. And their safety is one of the reasons why we have taken this path of reform.

Our police cannot do their jobs without the help of the communities they protect. I have heard it from beat cops and precinct commanders—they want to build trust, so neighbors will confide in them where the real criminals are, where the guns are hidden, and where gangs are most active. That information is critical to preventing crime, but its flow has been undermined by years of excessive and unconstitutional stops by police that have disproportionately targeted young men of color—90 percent of whom were innocent of any crime whatsoever.

Our new police commissioner understands this. In Los Angeles, where he served most recently, Bill Bratton took a police department seemingly at war with communities of color and steadily—year by year—rebuilt trust and cooperation. And crime dropped dramatically in the process. Commissioner Bratton is focused on bringing police and community together in mutual respect. As he said in Brownsville, “We will not break the law to enforce the law.”

Our agreement with the plaintiffs in the Floyd v. City of New York lawsuit is going to fix the underlying problems that allowed stop-and-frisk to spiral out of control to nearly 700,000 people stopped just two years ago. We will have a monitor in place to ensure reform is delivered, and we will have communities at the table to guide those efforts.

January 30 was a great day for New York City and for millions of families. It was a great day for the activists who stood up in the face of injustice, and the people who marched on Father’s Day down Fifth Avenue in 2012 to protest the wrongs of an excessive stop-and-frisk policy. Now we begin the hard work of fulfilling this moment of progress, and delivering concrete reforms that will ensure every New Yorker’s constitutional rights are protected, and every community is kept safe at the same time. That change won’t happen overnight. But it will come both from the very top of the police department and from the grassroots of communities. That’s a powerful combination that can—and will—succeed.

It is time to mend the fabric of police-community relations, and start down a new path that lays the groundwork for real and lasting public safety.

Oakland Mayor Dedicates Day To Mistah F.A.B.,

(AllHipHop News) One of the Bay areas most celebrated and beloved Hip Hop artist will now have his own day to commemorate his legacy. Oakland mayor Jean Quan declared February 8th “Stanley Cox aka Mistah F.A.B. Day”.

F.A.B. hails from North Oakland and hosts a Thanksgiving turkey giveaway on 45th and Market Street. He also will be hosting his 4th Annual “Love Shouldn’t Hurt” Luncheon on Valentine’s Day for victims of domestic abuse. F.A.B. spoke on his charitable ways:

It is such a huge honor for me to be recognized by the Mayor!  I’m so proud to be from Oakland and I think it’s important for those of us who have been successful to come back and help to uplift the community. Giving back is part of what defines us as a community and I am proud of the example that I and my team continue to set in terms of our charitable endeavors and advocacy for social change within our city.

F.A.B. released the Hella Rachet mixtape and Da Bac Of Da Bus Rydah album last year.

Five Michael Jackson Fans Win $1. 36 In “Emotional Distress” Case Against Conrad Murray

(AllHipHop News) The law finally gave Michael Jackson’s former physician Conrad Murray what he deserves…in a way. Five of the 34 European Michael Jackson fans to sue Murray received one Euro for “emotional distress” they suffered due to Michael Jackson’s death.

Murray was released last October after serving two of his four year sentence in the involuntary manslaughter case involving Michael Jackson’s death. A judge in Orleans, France declared that five Michael Jackson fans had sufficient medical reports and witness testimonials to prove they suffered emotional distress due to Murray’s actions. All five claimants were members of a French-based Michael Jackson Community fan club

While the monetary reward for each claimant may only be one Euro ($1.36), the legal precedent this sets in the music industry could prove to be monumental. According to the fans’ lawyer Emmanuel Ludot comments to AFP News, this ruling is a first:

As far as I know this is the first time in the world that the notion of emotional damage in connection with a pop star has been recognized.

The five claimants are not pursing to claim the $1.36 from Murray but instead want to be able to visit Michael Jackson’s private grave site in Los Angeles.