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Tracklist
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We can all take a deep sigh of relief that the NFL has reinstated their professional referees. We’ll never see another bad call again (insert ‘Dora stare’ here). The season is well underway, and if you’re a betting person, you’re broke by now. That’s cool, because we still have Rap music. And Rap music will teach you how to invest your… nevermind.
Our “Football and Hip-Hop” series continues on in “The D” with Detroit Lions linebacker, Justin Durant. Justin’s love for the Hip-Hop culture began like many of our beginnings in Rap – our older brother.
The Detroit Lions are currently 1-3. Not the start they’ve expected after a progressive season last year. But the season is still young. We at AllHipHop.com just hope we’re not the new “Madden Curse” following our previous features with Bart Scott and Stan Verrett. C’mon, let’s turn this thing around, for the kids!
Brief Introduction
My name is Justin Durant, linebacker for the Detroit Lions. This is my sixth year in the league. My love for Hip-Hop goes back to my buying Busta Rhymes’ first album (The Coming) on cassette. That was the first full-length album I purchased. The first CD I purchased was Outkast’s ATLiens. My older brother (by 3 years), put me on to Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg years before.
Top 3 Songs that inspire Justin during workouts and on Gameday
DMX – “Look Thru My Eyes”
Pastor Troy – “Oh Father”
Lil’ Scrappy featuring Lil’ Jon – “Head Bussa”
When Music clashes in the Locker room
You have people from some of everywhere. I’m from the South, so I grew up on the Crunk era. So I want to listen to Lil’ Jon, Pastor Troy, Three 6 Mafia. There are guys in our locker room from the Midwest listening to Soft Rock in the locker room. The players from up North want to listen to some Jay [Z], some B.I.G. And I’ll listen to it, too. But this is why you see us wearing headphones. You don’t want to get in the way of what anybody has to do to get ready for the game.
Talking about his writing opportunity for Metro Times
I had a great time writing a few pieces for MetroTimes.com. I wrote a few album reviews, music articles, etc. I wanted to show Detroit Lions fans what it was like to get ready for games, music I listen to when I wind down, and getting through training camp. I’ve been slacking off on the column while focusing more of my time on this season. But I will be picking back up on it.
Detroit, What!!! *Eminem voice*
When I first arrived in Detroit at the beginning of last season, the Lions were coming off a four-game winning streak. I was welcome by the team and the city with open arms. It was all love from the start. Starting off 5-0, you could feel the energy throughout the entire city. Wherever we’d go, people would thank us for bringing something to cheer about back to Lions fans. There’s a lot of history in Detroit, diehard fans. It felt amazing to make it into the playoffs after such a long time for them.
Theme Music, Coming out of the Tunnel
It will have to be Mystikal’s “Here I Go”. Or, Mystikal “The Man Right Chea”
Justin Durant books his Dream Team Tour
I don’t know what’s up with Andre (3000), man. But I definitely want to see him on tour. I was a huge “Lost Boys” fan. So I’d like to see Outkast, The Lost Boys, DMX, and Canibus would open the show.
2012 More and Less in Hip-Hop
I want to hear more of artists like Kendrick Lamar; artists bringing the lyrics and concepts to the table. And I want to hear less of Lil’ Wayne because…he’s trash right now.
Tough Division, High Hopes
Yes, our division is tough. But we have everything needed to take the Detroit Lions to another level. We’re going to be representing for “The D” and try to bring it home.
The 2012 Bet Hip-Hop Awards went down in Atlanta, Georgia this weekend.
Although the latest reporting is strictly centered around the fight between Young Jeezy and Rick Ross, a number of Hip-Hop acts attended 2012 Bet Hip-Hop Awards ceremony to be recognized for their contributions to the culture over the year.
Artists like RZA, Pusha-T, 2Chainz, Future, Fat Joe, Q-Tip, T.I., Wiz Khalifa, Mac Miller, Diggy Simmons, Haitian Fresh, Uncle Murder and French Montana walked the red carpet to talk to media, press and fans.
The staff at AllHipHop.com decided to create a 10 song playlist for your enjoyment, centered around the artists and nominees who attended this year.
This week’s playlist is created by Rdio, a new, ad free streaming audio service, with millions of tracks in the library.
1. Rakim – Eric B. Is President
http://rd.io/x/QXxGwDd2E10
2. Juicy J – Ghost Dope
http://rd.io/x/QXxGwDccHxA
3. DJ Drama and Bun B. – H – Town
http://rd.io/x/QXxGwDdeWBcU
4. French Montana – Money Money
http://rd.io/x/QXxGwDd37kI
5. Pusha-T – The Morning
http://rd.io/x/QXxGwDdeaL-7
6. Q-Tip – Won’t Trade
http://rd.io/x/QXxGwDd0Nbc
7. Wiz Khalifa – Too Late
http://rd.io/x/QXxGwDcupVQ
8. Machine Gun Kelly and DMX – I Don’t Dance
http://rd.io/x/QXxGwDdeUzqr
9. T.I. – Look What I Got
http://rd.io/x/QXxGwDdO-7c
10. Busta Rhymes – Cocaina
http://rd.io/x/QXxGwDd2F1E
Unfortunately, even in death, you can’t escape your bills. The late, great NWA head honcho Eazy E’s infamous “Eazy’s Playhouse” was just sold at a foreclosure auction. The 6,700 square-foot Calabasas mansion was famous back in the ’90s for its crazy all night parties, and even had a black room with fluorescent pillows and a neon sign that read “Eazy’s Playhouse.”
The house was left to Eazy’s E’s widow when he died in 1995, but as of last year, she stopped paying the mortgage on the five-bedroom, six-bathroom home. The house was sold at auction in May for $2.2 million.
Source: TMZ
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Unless you’ve been under a rock all weekend, you’ve already heard about Rick Ross and Young Jeezy getting into a scuffle back stage at the taping of the BET Hip-Hop Awards. If you missed that story, you can click on the link and read it below:
UPDATE: Rick Ross and Young Jeezy Reportedly Fight Backstage at BET Hip-Hop Awards; Shots Ring Out in Parking Lot
Well, footage of the shoving match has finally hit the ‘net. In the video, it takes a boat load of security guards to keep Ross and Jeezy away from each other.
A shirtless Rick Ross can be seen yelling before being escorted away from the scene. Whoever Ross was yelling at tried to follow after him – I can’t tell if that is Jeezy or not, but security stepped in before he could get there.
Check out the TMZ exclusive video below:
That looked intense! Side note, BET released a statement about the violence at the show. Take a look at what they had to say below:
“BET Networks works very hard to bring the best in entertainment to the city of Atlanta. For the past 7 years BET has celebrated the true art form of Hip Hop. Due to some misjudgment of select attendees, it is unfortunate that certain incidents took place. BET Networks does not condone any type of violence. Local authorities are working to resolve the situation as quickly as possible.”
Despite the actions of a few the 2012 BET Hip Hop Awards embodied the true spirit of hip hop and was not impacted at all by any incidents. Tune in on Tuesday, October 9, 8P/7C to watch the 2012 BET Hip Hop Awards.
Do you think BET will uninvite some of these artists from participating next year? Should they be punished for their foolishness?
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“Sophisticated ignorance/ write my curses in cursive” – “Otis”, Kanye West and Jay-Z
When the controversial rap superstar, “2 Shackles,” granted an interview to an investigative journalist at the New Jersey Times, he agreed that it would be no holds barred. When the reporter grilled him on everything from his recent baby mama drama to his beefs with rival rappers, he addressed each question without flinching. Even when she pulled out a copy of the mugshot from his most recent arrest, he just smiled and autographed it for her. But when she asked him about the allegations that he had an extremely high IQ and graduated from college magna c## laude, he stormed out of the office, knockin’ over chairs and mumblin’ something about “birthdays and big booty guhs…..”
If you go strictly by what you hear on the radio, nowadays, you would swear that Hip-Hop was made up of people with low IQs and short attention spans. The music that once prided itself on being the “Black CNN” now sounds more like a pornographic version of Sesame Street. Sad thing is that some of today’s rappers are, actually, intelligent. Now, I’m not claimin’ that they are rocket scientists but they aren’t the bumblin’ buffoons, that you hear on the radio either.
So the question becomes, why do the smartest rappers make the dumbest raps?
Malcolm X once said the difference between a clown and a wise man is “the clown never imitates the wise man but the wise man can imitate the clown.” However, on a three-minute song on the radio, it’s kinda hard to tell the difference.
Case in point is the hottest rapper in the game right now, 2 Chainz. Some may find it hard to believe that the rapper who gave us such songs as “Birthday Song” and “No Lie” is actually Tauheed Epps , a gifted high school student who, in 1996, got an athletic scholarship to play basketball at Alabama State University; thus, putting him in the company of such athletic, scholar entertainers as Paul Robeson.
However, it would be easier to find your favorite rapper’s Illuminati membership card than it would be to find an actual record of 2 Chainz’s academic prowess. So the story goes that he was either an academic genius who graduated in three years with honors, or a college dropout who only attended a couple of semesters at an institution of higher learning. However, the fact remains that he is far more intelligent than the music that he makes. If you ever listen to an interview when 2 Chainz briefly breaks out of character and reverts back to Tauheed Epps, you can tell that you’re not dealing with a dummy.
So why the charade?
One can make the argument that the rappers of today were not the first to make dumb music. Back in Hip-Hop’s early years , there were songs by The Rappin’ Duke and Bobby Jimmy and the Critters. But raps by artists like Biz Markie were seen for what they were – comedy. The songs were just an occasional break from the more lyrically complex Hip-Hop of the time. No no one in his right mind wanted to hear “Pickin’ Boogers” all day, everyday on the radio. But today the airwaves are flooded with mentally-challenged music that has dumbed down the culture.
The defenders of commercial rap are always quick to point out how Hip-Hop is the most influential art form to ever grace the planet, and how it has impacted countries around the world, socially and economically. However, when you hit them with a socio-economic analysis of the music, they accuse you of “thinking too deep,” and all of a sudden, the great culture of Hip-Hop becomes merely “entertainment for kids,” like some Saturday morning cartoon. But the critique must be done.
If we break down the meaning of “2 Chainz, “ we will see that in order to enslave a people it takes two chains – one physical and one mental. Of the two, the most powerful is the mental chain as taught by scholars such as Dr. Na’im Akbar, author of the book, Breaking the Psychological Chains of Mental Slavery. Because even when the physical chain around the wrist is broken, the mental chain around the brain remains.
The emancipation from mental slavery has always been the hardest task for those trying to free a people who have been, as the scripture teaches, “destroyed for a lack of knowledge.” This is made more difficult when those who “reject knowledge” and dumb themselves down are portrayed to the youth as models of success.
However, all youth are not going for the okie doke. Recently, the group Watoto from the Nile released a video called “Letter to Nicki Minaj”, which features a powerful scene where “Harriet Tubman” removes the chains from Minaj’s wrists, symbolically meaning that the chains will eventually drop from her brain. (Good luck with that one.)
It is no accident that the deeper we entered into the information age, the dumber the music became. It was once said that ‘if you want to hide something from a Black man, put it in a book.’ But today, you don’t even have to take the bus to the library, as the information is literally at the tip of your fingers. So, the mental chains had to become reinforced. The music industry has been involved in a “brain drain” where they take our best and brightest artists and turn them into ratchet rappers.
While it may be argued that teenage rappers like Chief Keef are too young to know any better, that’s no excuse for rappers like 2 Chainz who are old enough to be their fathers. They have made a mockery out of the saying “with age comes wisdom.”
It’s time for us to break the chains. Hip-Hop artists must be pressured to stop the musical mumbo jumbo.
Like KRS said on “Still #1”:
“Many of you are educated/open your mouths and speak…”
TRUTH Minista Paul Scott’s weekly column is “This Ain’t Hip Hop,” a column for intelligent Hip Hop headz. For more information on the No Warning Shots Fired lecture series, contact in**@*****************ed.com, visit NoWarningShotsFired.com, or on Twitter (@truthminista).
Happy Monday!
Welcome to the first day of October, First day of the 4th quarter, and the first day of the rest of your life! Today’s Daily Word is dedicated to planning your future! With 91 days until the new year, it is imperative that we begin to start seeing the future now!
Those who fail to plan don’t necessarily plan to fail, but without the proper preparation, that’s the obvious outcome! We all have dreams and aspirations, but in order to allow those dreams to come true, we must be ready to make them come true!
It’s never too early to get what you deserve! Stop prolonging your happiness, and get to work on
the actions that will get you there! Starting today, you must begin to get ready for the success that will be yours! You get out of life what you expect and what you work for! Expect greatness and work your hardest to get there!
-Ash’Cash
“It pays to plan ahead. It wasn’t raining when Noah built the ark.” -Unknown
“Planning is bringing the future into the present so that you can do something about it now.” -Alan Lakein
“Good plans shape good decisions. That’s why good planning helps to make elusive dreams come true.” -Unknown
“A good plan is like a road map: it shows the final destination and usually the best way to get there.” -H. Stanley Judd
“Proper preparation prevents poor performance.” -Charlie Batch
“Men never plan to be failures; they simply fail to plan to be successful.” -William Arthur Ward
“You were born to win, but to be a winner, you must plan to win, prepare to win, and expect to win.” -Zig Ziglar
“Four steps to achievement: Plan purposefully. Prepare prayerfully. Proceed positively. Pursue persistently.” -William Arthur Ward
***BONUS*** “When planning for a year, plant corn. When planning for a decade, plant trees. When planning for life, train and educate people.” -Chinese Proverbs
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.
(AllHipHop News) Rapper Lupe Fiasco made an impromptu visit to a Rap Sessions public forum on “Hip-Hop Activism in the Obama/Tea Party Era” in Philadelphia this past week, where panelists, moments before, had been debating his recent Twitter beef with comedian DL Hughley over the importance of voting.
The Chicago rapper joined the stage at the forum after seeing tweets about the discussion in progress while nearby in the city promoting his new album. He responded to DL Hughley’s claim that “when you vote or not vote, you are saying yes or no,” suggesting the rapper promotes political apathy.
Fiasco explained his belief that political engagement is bigger than the vote, and that during the Twitter exchange, he challenged DL Hughley to put his money where his mouth is and match funds to support a youth program to better the lives of rural and urban youth.
“Taking our community back is not going to happen without money,” Fiasco said reflecting on tweet discussion. “We don’t have to wait til November. We don’t have to wait to vote. Let’s put up $50,000 each right now,” he says he told Hughley.
He told the audience at Philadelphia’s historic Church of the Advocate Wednesday night that Hughley’s response was silence.
“It is difficult to recreate in words the energy in the sanctuary when Lupe – lured in by some live tweeting of panelists discussing his ‘tweef’ with DL Hughley and journalist Roland Martin over his politics – unexpectedly joined the Rap Sessions panel Wednesday night,” said James Peterson, director of Africana Studies at Lehigh University. Peterson, the panel’s moderator, focuses on Hip-Hop artists like Lupe Fiasco, Tupac Shakur, and Nas in his academic research.
“Say what you want to say about whether or not he chooses to vote for presidents,” Dr. Peterson continued. “But PLEASE don’t judge him until you’ve properly heard him out.”
Check out the video below:
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Man, it seems like someone put something in the punch at last night’s BET Hip-Hop Awards, because there was way too much confrontation.
RELATED:Hip-Hop Rumors: VIDEO Of Gunplay Fighting and Getting Maced By Police At The BET Hip-Hop Awards!
An exclusive source tells us that 50 Cent and Diddy almost came to blows while they were backstage at the show. According to our source, Diddy and 50 were backstage laughing and joking with one another when things suddenly got serious. One of Diddy’s jokes hit too close to home with 50 Cent, and he called Diddy a “B#### Ni**a.”
“It was crazy! They were joking with one another one minute, and the next minute, 50 Cent was all up in Diddy’s face calling him a b*tch ni**a.”
Fortunately, Diddy realized that he is too old for BS like that, and according to a Media Take Out snitch, got up and said that he has “too much money” for that and he left. 50 Cent must have been on one last night. I guess now that he and Fat Joe are cool, he needs a new nemesis to bully.
Sydney Lace’s BET Hip-Hop Awards Predictions – Will 50 Cent And Fat Joe Perform Together?!
50 Cent needs to chill out…before he meets his match! Game, where you at?!
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