If you’ve ever watched “Love & Hip Hop: Atlanta,” you know that producer Stevie J and his artist/girlfriend, Joseline Hernandez, have a very volatile relationship. These two fight and make up like it’s nobody’s business!
As of late the two seemed to be getting along, being spotted everywhere from L.A. to NY – but that all seemed changed last night. Stevie must have done something to really get under Joseline’s skin because she went H.A.M. on Twitter last night and threatened to expose a certain someone and their down low lifestyle. Now I don’t know if this is 100% about Stevie J, but what else does this broad have to tweet about?
Check out a few screen shots of her tweets below:
Wow, she went in! Do you think she was talking about Stevie J?
(AllHipHop News) Award-winning producer Hit Boy has inked a deal with The Blueprint Group, which will co-manage the rap producer’s soaring career.
The Blueprint Group is the new management firm formed after Gee Roberson and how Kyambo Joshua’s company Hip-Hop Since 1978 and Cortez Bryant’s Bryant Management merged to become one entity focused on artist development.
“I believe in the precedence they have set in this industry and know they can and will take my career to the next level,” Hit-Boy said in a press release.
The Blueprint Group now has a roster of artists that includes heavy hitters like Lil Wayne, Drake, Nicki Minaj and others.
Blueprint Group will co-manage Hit Boy with DJ Mormil of Fakework Management and the team will work to develop Hit Boy into a recording artist.
Hit Boy joins the team after creating songs for acts like Jennifer Lopez, Flo Rida, Jennifer Hudson, Rihanna and others.
“Very few artists have the ability to work successfully as both a producer and recording artist. Hit-Boy is one of those exceptions. Blueprint Group looks forward to working with our colleagues at Fakework to provide Hit-Boy with the tools necessary to emerge as an A level artist,” explained Gee Roberson, co-CEO of Blueprint Group.
(AllHipHop News) Producer 9th Wonder is gearing up for a busy November with the release of two collaborative albums, with two Hip-Hop veterans.
On November 13, 9th Wonder’s production will power The Final Adventure by Murs, as well as the solution, which is being released with Brooklyn rapper Buckshot.
The producer said he took two different sonic approaches to each of the individual rappers’ albums.
“I think this is the best way to take two separate brands, one I have built with Murs and one that I have built with Buckshot, and not only expose both audiences to each other, but to take those two audiences together with the sounds that I built with the artists, and expose that to the world,” said 9th Wonder. “This is a great day for myself, Murs and Buckshot, because we make the music we believe in for the people who believe in it.”
The Final Adventure with Murs is the last installment of the pair’s popular collaborative series together, which is totaled five projects.
“I am honored and blessed to have had the privilege of working with my brother 9th Wonder for five albums and nearly a decade. A type of consistency rarely seen in the music world,” Murs said. “We are two very different and strong-willed individuals whose love for music and Hip-Hop culture creates a beautiful common ground. I think the fans can feel the love and respect we have for the game and for one another. And I feel that’s why they in turn have continued to show us the same through the years. So why end it here and now? Why is this The Final Adventure? Well there are many individual reasons but overall we both just felt that it was time.”
As for Buckshot, his album The Solution is the third release with the North Carolina producer, who has also worked with artists like Jay-Z, Erykah Badu and many others.
“9th Wonder & I have always had good chemistry together. This will be our third collaborative album together and it’s fittingly entitled The Solution,” Buckshot said. “The Solution is you because you are the solution to all your problems and to your success or failure, it lies within yourself.”
9th Wonder & Buckshot’s ‘The Solution’ and Murs & 9th Wonder The Final Adventure.
TGI….Everyday!!! Welcome to another opportunity to do it better than ever before!
Today’s Daily Word is dedicated to keeping it simple! Life is easy, straight to the point, and simple…. Live, Laugh, Love… Follow your heart, and do what makes you happy!! Give back and
leave the world better than how you found it….
Despite this simplicity, we often make life more complex and complicated by unintentionally gravitating the magnitude of our human existence, known taxonomically as H### sapiens, to ratify all of our previous teachings!!
What????!! Keep it Simple! Don’t make things more difficult than they are! Life is meant to be enjoyed, not to give you migraines! Leave the complex stuff for the scientists and physicists! LIVE… LAUGH… LOVE!! ENJOY THE SIMPLE PLEASURES IN LIFE AND MAKE YOUR WORLD GREAT!! NOTHING CAN STOP YOU BUT YOU!!
-Ash’Cash
“Life is amazingly good when it’s simple and amazingly simple when it’s good.” -Terri Guillemets
“Be content with what you have, rejoice in the way things are. When you realize there is nothing lacking, the whole world belongs to you.” -Lao Tzu
“The ability to simplify means to eliminate the unnecessary so that the necessary may speak.” -Hans Hofmann
“It comes down to a simple question: what do you want out of life & what are you willing to do to get it?” -Unknown
“The best changes often start as single, simple thoughts. Think big, and discover how to make your dreams real.” -Unknown
“The best things in life are not only free, but the line is shorter as well.” -Robert Brault
“All the great things are simple, and many can be expressed in a single word: freedom, justice, honor, duty, mercy, hope.” -Winston Churhill
“Out of clutter find simplicity; From discord find harmony; In the middle of difficulty lies opportunity.” -Albert Einstein
TO HEAR THE AUDIO VERSION OF THE DAILY WORD – CLICK HERE.
Ash’Cash is a Business Consultant, Motivational Speaker, Financial Expert and the author of Mind Right, Money Right: 10 Laws of Financial Freedom. For more information, please visit his website, www.IamAshCash.com.
“I wanted to capture that unmistakable, unavoidable, unapologetic energy behind epic nights. This video is a wild montage of my favorite moments within a single day of celebration. Real memories created amongst real friends and real family.”
The Carolinas haven’t always been a beacon for producing a large pool of Hip-Hop talent. Aside from Little Brother, 9th Wonder, and Phonte, the scale of the South’s coastal region hasn’t always seen much light. Danny! is a South Carolinian who has encountered a unique sense of struggle.
Recently releasing his newest album Payback, Danny Swain, or Danny! for short, has been praised by people at the top of the industry, while simultaneously being unheard of by people who might normally go for his type of music.
From strange scandals to industry problems and even the somewhat ineffectiveness of major co-signs, it always seems like the cards have been stacked against the Columbia native.
AllHipHop.com recently talked with Danny! about his struggles, his success, and what he has planned next. Danny! says that his co-signs from Jay-Z and ?uestlove should have gotten him farther, and he pronounces his support for artists who want to speak their mind:
AllHipHop.com: What got you into doing Hip-Hop music?
Danny!: I guess I’ve always had a love for it. It was always around, and eventually my parents grew to allow me to listen to it. So, it went from me listening to it, to wanting to create a lot of things that as a child I was experiencing – whether it was cartoons or watching sports on TV. If I saw it, I’d be like, “Man I wanna do that too!” So, I went from wanting to play sports to taking up an interest in drawing and art, things like that. I tried Hip-Hop, and it turned in to a hobby.
AllHipHop.com: You’ve gone through a lot of pain and misery with the industry from label problems, album problems. How have you been able to fight through all of this?
Danny!: I guess I was born with a lot of resilience, but even in that, people wanna vent, people wanna say, “Aww man, this isn’t fair, aww man, this sucks, etc.” Not only has social media been a good part of my success to begin with, but it’s also given me a platform to vent sometimes. Somebody may look and say, “Oh Danny is not big yet, but he sure does whine a lot about things not happening his way.” And that’s just me. I’m a human being, and I want to get my thoughts and ideas out. I’m not just being bitter, it’s just my way of dealing with it. If I’m going through all this stuff, let me vent about it and the next day I should be feeling better so I mean that’s part of it and being able to have a platform whether it’s online or with somebody else you know, to say, “Hey man, can you give me some advice.”
To be able to turn to people and just get some real advice so just getting it off my chest, you know but also what it’s also helped me see with it is just the fact that not knowing the solace and knowing that I’m not the first going though it to know that every Danny! There’s a thousand other Danny!s or whoever else. Trying to be heard and the fact that that I even have some credibility with some of these other people, it’s a blessing. And I have to realize that I do have it made, and I definitely do have it better than most so that also helps me. And then, of course, going and knowing that you’re not going to quit and being more successful the further along I get, which is why I did this in the first place so that’s also kind of helped me as well.
AllHipHop.com: There’s been a lot of people disappointed by the push back of Payback. But what’s it like to finally get this one out there?
Danny!: It’s so funny people think that it’s not coming out. I might joke around a lot, and social media’s been a big platform for me. I like to delay things and have fun with it, because I’m a jokester at heart. I might say, “If you don’t promote Payback, I’m not gonna put it out.” I can’t even do that but people take it seriously, “Ah, my god, Danny!’s not going to put out Payback, I hate Danny! now.” I’m just kidding, come on, I have nothing to do with it, and I’ve known about the Okayplayer thing for months now. They signed me back in April or May, and ever since then, I’ve kind of been coy about the album coming out – more coy and less defiant.
I’ve never seriously been like, “I’m not putting Payback out, but since I’ve known about it, I couldn’t legally say until after they put the press release out. But at the same time, that passion that they want the album to come out so bad that they will curse out the rapper that’s putting it out, I feel good about that. I feel like they really really want it to come out to that degree that they are, and I think it’s special since I’m interacting with them and letting them know so they won’t get mad at me.
How do I feel about it? I definitely feel that I could put out another project. I’ve always had some sort of snafu every time an album comes out. I’ve always had some sort of thing that holds it up or something that gets in the way, for the lack of a better word. But I’m glad that there’s always a light at the end of the tunnel so I’m glad that this is coming out and I’m giving it to my fans and they can hear what I’m cooking up especially now with everything I’m doing.
AllHipHop.com: And you mention Okayplayer. ?uestlove has been one of your biggest supporters. What has your affiliation been, and how has he been able to help you?
Danny!: ?uestlove reached out to me back in January of this year and talked about how he and Jay-Z had this conversation about me. And apparently Jay-Z heard about me, and that was enough for ?uestlove to reach out to me and take me under his wing in a way. But in a way, at first it was like, “Hey Danny!, it’s ?uestlove, Jay-Z likes you a lot,” and it was pretty much that. And then I was talking to people who work with ?uestlove, and they acted as if I was one of their own.
I think one of the conversations Jay-Z and ?uestlove had was Jay-Z asking ?uestlove, “Hey, take Danny! under your wing.” He’s a little rougher around the edges for me now, so what I think he was doing was mentoring me from afar because I don’t live in New York. But [?uestlove] is definitely providing me opportunities that I didn’t have before. He’s definitely put me up as someone to watch, and it’s probably had to do with something ?uestlove’s done for me, and that’s the kind of influence he has. There’s a million people he could be doing this for, so he’s done a lot for me. We have a pretty close relationship for only knowing each other for a year, and he’s definitely looked out for me more than anybody has in the past and he’s done a lot.
AllHipHop.com: How often are you in contact with Jay-Z if at all? Have you ever had a conversation with him?
Danny!: To be honest with you I’ve never talked to Jay-Z. Jay-Z never called me on the phone and said, “Yo dog, heard you like beats or whatever,” or anything like that. Any information I get about Jay-Z is through ?uestlove. He’ll hit me up and say, “Yo, I talked to Jay today, and this is what he said.” And through ?uestlovem I’ve gotten a lot of information that I don’t usually get. I sent Jay-Z through ?uestlove like 20 songs of mine once he heard about me, and he was trying to get him to listen to more songs, and he hasn’t hit me back with like, “Yo this is dope, I like this song or not this so much, or this is too much deviation from rapping. I already have J. Cole I don’t need another rappity rapper.” You know, that kind of stuff for feedback so I’m thinking like, “Okay, I’ll make something now that he can’t deny.”
A lot of stuff I made that we sent him is a few years old, so I may give him some of my new material. So yeah, I’ve never talked to him personally, but there is definitely a stream of communication between the two of us through ?uestlove, in addition to his likes and what he’s looking for and what he thinks an artist should be in 2012. And he’s definitely in the works with me and ?uestlove. What it is remains to be seen. It’s just being patient and giving it time. I try not to bug ?uestlove either. I know that I’ve waited this long. What’s another year? I don’t mind at all.
AllHipHop.com: I read an interview where you said Payback wasn’t payback to the industry that you might have seen has jerked you in many ways, but you said it was kind of tilted, which I think a lot of people can agree with. I think people often times maybe just go with what’s going on, rather than stopping and thinking about it or questioning it. I think you a lot of times you try to question what is going on. How concerned are you about the industry and how it treats its artists?
Danny!: I’m very concerned, so much so that if there was like an advocacy for it or a board of directors like, I would be on that, I would be a member, I would be an officer. I really want to get other people heard. I want to fight so hard for artist’s rights and not just be looked over. They might be in bad deals, or they’re not seeing anything from it. I want to be able to speak out so much, but there’s only so much I can do cause I’m an artist myself, and I feel like I’m criticized. If I say that I don’t like something, it’s, “Oh Danny!’s hating.” If I say, “Seriously guys? Azealia Banks, are we really doing this?”
If I say that, everyone’s going to take it the wrong way. I have to be tactful in an honest way about what I say, and how I say it. But, when I kind of cleared it up for Complex on how it’s not really a harmful industry, it kind of was but it kind of, everything I speak out against isn’t all because it benefits me. I’m doing it to prove a point; I’m doing it to say, “Hey look, if you don’t things seem fair, you should speak out. Look what I do, there are no consequences,” well other than people saying, ‘Danny! is sure outspoken.’
But no one is going to say anything to you; no one is going to come after you, no I’m not going to do anything to you. I want people to not be afraid, because a lot of people are afraid and don’t wanna speak up about situations. But I’m not, that’s just how I am, that’s just how I’ve been. I definitely feel that the original crusade and the campaign to Payback probably would’ve opened a lot of eyes and shed a lot of light on certain things. But, it got to the point that I was just doing a lot of bad stuff myself, it would have exposed things for sure, and it definitely would have been like this is, these guys, what they’re doing is wrong.
But, right when I was about to lose myself and make myself look bad, Okayplayer came along, and I didn’t wanna jeopardize anything that I had with them. So that’s why I didn’t complete my mission, but it’s still there, and it might only be to the trained eye to exactly what it is that I’m doing. But I do it all in the name of trying to get there.
AllHipHop.com: You’ve got two co-signs from not just big artists, we’re talking HUGE artists, figures in the world. Rather than just sitting on that, you continue to hustle. Not to say that co-signs don’t help or aren’t important, but do you think they are overrated and too sought after, rather than artists focusing on making good music?
Danny!: Honestly, I don’t. I really think I got shafted, I really honestly think I got shafted. I think in this instance I got f*cking played. The ?uestlove and Jay-Z thing should have taken on way more than it did. And while I don’t have a conspiracy theory, and I don’t think the powers that be are trying to stop me. I do think that people pick and choose who they want to see win in a sense. A lot of people ran with the story, don’t get me wrong. They did see that and write up about it, maybe not a lot. But I’ve definitely had my moments with Pitchfork for example. They showed me love back in ’08, but haven’t showed love since, and I was really like what the hell’s going on with that?
I figured the Jay-Z/?uestlove thing, okay, now they’ll be posting about me, but nothing, but I feel like if there was any other artist that got that same co-sign, and there are artists that have got that same co-signs that have been talked about all over at this point. So I’m kind of like, man, are you serious right now? I think they pick and choose – “they” meaning the media, “they” meaning the fans. I think they pick and choose to see succeed, and they saw me, a lot of it’s apathy, and I don’t think a lot of it’s ‘let’s ignore Danny!’ I think a lot of it’s just apathy like, ‘OK, Danny!, he’s got his own thing going on, and it’s not really hip. Maybe this is hip, but I don’t know what it is. I can’t figure this Danny! guy out, I can’t put him in a box, I can’t peg him exactly right.’
So they don’t really latch onto it. I don’t know why certain things happen and certain things whatever. There’s plenty of artists ?uestlove’s co-signed, Jay-Z’ co-signed, nut you see all the fanfare, and then when it gets to me, I thought it was going to change my life, and it did in a sense. Don’t get me wrong. I’m not ungrateful by any stretch of the imagination, but I do feel like it could have been bigger news than what it’s been made out to be…and why that is I have no idea. I don’t think co-signs are pointless. I do wish that they didn’t hold as much weight than they do, but they don’t.
To this day, Chief Keef – perfect example. Came outta Chicago, like what the hell? Had a song that had a couple million YouTube views and stuff like that, and got Kanye’s attention and with that co-sign, Chief Keef’s all over the world now. It doesn’t matter what Chief Keef says – clearly Kanye helping him out with the hook or whatever and a verse put him on the map more so than his actual song did. Anybody can make a song that gets YouTube play, but it takes an actual person to be in the song. That’s kind of what Payback was, too, in a sense, touching on that. I wanted to state the fact that people only care about you if you know so and so, you gotta track with this person or that person. And I know that, I see all these things and I’m aware of it.
With Payback coming out, I’ve got guest artists that I’ve never worked with before, so maybe that’ll help out as well. I think people just pick and choose who they want to champion, and who they turn a blind eye to. Maybe I’m uppity or something, I don’t know.
(AllHipHop News) Join Tarik “Black Thought” Trotter of The Roots is joining forces with Okayplayer and AllHipHop.com to raise funds for girls in need in the Newark, New Jersey region.
Co-founder of the GrassROOTS Community Foundation (GCF) and lead MC of Philadelphia’s Grammy Award-winning band, Black Thought will invite New Jersey policymakers and citizens to the Newark Museum on October 6 for a fundraiser and charity concert entitled Power Forward.
The GrassROOTS fundraiser will include performances from Black Thought of the Grammy Award-winning group, The Roots, along with Malene Younglao, Maya Azucena, Nneka Best, and his bandmates.
Hip-Hop journalist and personality Amanda Seales will serve as host for Power Forward, which planners say will bring together business professionals, Essex County city officials, activists, philanthropists, and residents of Newark, East Orange and Orange for a lively night of music and advocacy.
Black Thought will also bring a few of his hometown head honchos with him, as Philadelphia Mayor N##### is confirmed to be in attendance.
Says Black Thought, “I now live in Jersey, and I am relying local hip-hop artists, community members, leaders, and friends in New Jersey to come together and show that they care about what happens to our women and girls.”
In 2011, GCF adopted Georgia King Village (GKV) in Newark as a community of strategic priority, and has been partnering with organizations and individuals to provide health and educational resources to its residents.
“Research shows that 47% of children are overweight or obese in Newark compared to the national average of 36%,” says Janice Johnson Dias, Ph.D. Sociologist, Co-founder and President of GCF. “Because of these alarming numbers, GCF founders felt compelled to galvanize and motivate residents to do something about their health.”
The Power Forward event will be held on October 6 at 7:00PM at Newark Museum. To purchase tickets, please visit http://powerforwardcocktailfundraiser.eventbrite.com/. Proceeds from this event will benefit GCF programs in New Jersey.
GrassROOTS Community Foundation
GrassROOTS Community Foundation (GCF) is a collaborative effort of Tariq “Black Thought” Trotter, co-founder and lead MC of the Grammy Award Winning group, the Roots, and sociologist, Dr. Janice Johnson Dias. The foundation is committed to contributing to the health and well-being of vulnerable populations and disadvantaged communities. Merging the talents of socially conscious artists with those of a rigorous scientific research and creative team, GCF invests their energy into developing the capacity of community based organizations that offer educational and recreational services to disadvantaged women and girls. For more information, please visit www.grass-rootsfoundation.org.
H.E.A.L. is a family program that teaches parents and children about the joys and health benefits of yoga and cooking together. The program welcomes parents with children (K-3rd grade) to practice Ancient Kemetic yoga to experience the benefits of increased focus, agility and higher energy: keys to educational and professional achievement. For more information on the program, please visit
S.H.A.P.E Program
Strong, Healthy, and Powerful Everyday is an after school program for 9th grade high school girls at Central High School in Newark, NJ. The program focuses on health literacy, wellness, self-esteem and professional skill development. Begins Fall 2012. Co-sponsored by Barnabas Health System and the American Heart Association.