For all those Cam’Ron fans out there that were waiting for some new music from the Diplomats leader, your wait is over. Cam’Ron announced on Twitter yesterday that he will be releasing a song a day for the next 30 days. Check out what he tweeted below:
“I’ma start releasing the #UNLostFiles 2mr.”
But if you’re looking for some weekend music to rock out to, Cam’Ron is taking the weekends off on this one. Look out for new music from Cam’Ron’s UNLostFiles Monday thru Friday only. Cam is also working on his upcoming album More Gunz, Less Buttah, which is set to include appearances from Wiz Khalifa, Nicki Minaj, and T.I.
(AllHipHop News) DJs, artists, and professionals from around the country will descend upon Indianapolis, for the DJ’s United Conference that is set to get started this weekend (April 20-22).
The DJs United conference features a line up of panelists and workshops that will include industry professionals and executives from around the country.
A number of DJ organizations have combined forces to present the conference.
Crews like Blok Club DJs, Conglomerate DJs, Crowd Rocka DJs, Derrty DJs, Dis SPINsters DJs, Drum Squad DJs, Heatspinners DJs, Hittmenn Midwest DJs, Hub City DJs, KYMP Kamp DJs, Nerve DJs, O-State DJs, Slip and Slide DJs, Sniper Squad DJs, TraKCbanga DJs, and XSquad DJs are involved in the weekend event.
Panelists for the weekend will come courtesy of companies like Epic, eOne, Mizzay Ent., WHHH, EMI, Universal, Atlantic, Selecto Hits, Platinum Hip Hop Trading Cards, Star Quality Firm, MECAP, J Jones Ent, Hip Hop Union, Gracie Productions, KD Staffing, Jus Promotions, Industry Works, and more.
The goal of the conference is to expand attendees’ knowledge on topics such as publishing, digital marketing, management, contract law and how to develop a proper relationship between DJ’s and artists.
eOne will be introducing their latest artists Driicky Graham and Friday 4 Eva at the “Welcome to Indy Party” with Fonzworth Bentley, Huey, Enertia and Miltickit. Conference attendees will get to attend the show at Cloud 9 (5150 W 38th St. Indianapolis, IN).
Saturday night’s Official DJs United Showcase will be hosted by Comedian Mike Samp and will include a prize package to the winner who will be chosen by the DJ Coalitions.
The prize package includes, distribution (Select-O-Hits), a digital marketing package (Tweet My Song and MP3Waxx.com), mixing and mastering for a single, graphics (Eyesee Enterprises), a conference call with each of the participating DJ Coalitions, a write-up in Twenty4seven magazine, H.Y.P.E. magazine, and a package from Industry Works, and Soundcheckny.com (internet radio station 150 spins).
Sponsors for the event include: eOne Music, Rap-A-Lot Records, Platinum Hip Hop Trading Cards, Tweetmysong.com, Intro, Select-O-Hits, Russell Law, Hype Magazine, Twenty4Seven Magazine, Hip Hop Union, Strapped Condoms, Eye-see Enterprises, M.E.C.A.P., Royal Blunts, Nerve DJs, DJ A&R, Stopbeefinradio.com, Brightwood Entertainment, Midwestmixtapes.com, and many up and coming artists.
Pre-registration admission to the conference is $99 and is open until April 19, 2012 at 5pm.
After shocking press last week with her see-through dress, former Pussycat Doll Melody Thornton has released the latest video for “Someone to Believe”, a track off of her new mixtape P.O.Y.B.L.
The inspiring video, directed by Yaro, features intimate home footage of Thornton in her younger days, performing at talent shows, and up until now, performing in state-of-the-art recording studios. The mixtape, P.O.Y.B.L., consists of 10 tracks that showcase Thornton’s vocal ability, while she touches on stories of love, music, and faith.
Editor’s Note: DJs carried the original torch for Hip-Hop – back when there were no MCs! AllHipHop.com is taking a little time out to “Salute the Spin Doctors” this month. Check back for more feature stories and editorials with some of the top DJs across the country.
If you were in the crowd at the South By Southwest Vibe House in Austin, Texas last month, there was no not noticing Timbaland’s DJ during the producer’s set. For a man to keep up with one of the hottest producers of all time on the 1’s and 2’s and not miss a beat was a feat that few talked about but many noticed.
DJ Freestyle Steve was that man, and he has been the man helping Timabaland rock and perform for sold-out crowds across the world for years as the Grammy Award-winning producer’s official DJ. While there is much to hear and be told about how travels, experiences, and working relationship with Tim, Steve’s past is just as integral in his story as his present and inevitable future.
Coming up under Uncle Al in the South Florida music scene, Steve was practically the first DJ to play New York Hip-Hop on the radio in South Florida, and the rest is pretty much history. Literally. No one can tell a man’s story better than the man himself, though. So, AllHipHop.com caught up with Freestyle Steve before he hit the stage to back Timbaland and Missy Elliott in New York City for a special, surprise performance:
In part one below, Steve talks about his come-up, the reaction to him playing “N.Y. Hip-Hop” in Florida, his thoughts on the current role of the DJ and much more:
In the second half of our interview, DJ Freestlye Steve recalls how he first linked up with Timbaland and how their working relationship helped catapult his career, as well as what he thinks about the new music Tim is cooking up, looking back on SXSW 2012, and what he has in store for the rest of the year:
Neema Barnette is the director of Bishop T.D. Jakes’ new film project, Woman Thou Art Loosed: On the 7th Day. Historically, Barnette is celebrated for being the first African-American female director to be granted a deal with a major film studio via Columbia Pictures, which is now a part of the Columbia TriStar Motion Picture Group owned by Sony Pictures Entertainment.
In support of On the 7th Day’s release this past weekend, Neema Barnette spoke with AllHipHop.com about her personal background – as a Harlem native – and its influence upon her professional experiences in Hollywood:
AllHipHop.com: Looking at your resume, I am just astounded. At the beginning of your professional career, you directed 13 episodes of The Cosby Show and A Different World between 1989 and 1991. Two years afterward in 1993, you released two television movies: Better Off Dead and Scattered Dreams. As you transitioned from the TV to film, are there any artistic techniques or professional lessons learned that continue to guide your present-day filmmaking?
Neema Barnette: Clayton, I learned the value and repercussions of sacrifice. When I was doing episodics, I found that it wasn’t really for me. I came out of black theatre in New York, and so I was a storyteller, and I wanted to do things a certain way. I got into film because I feel it’s one of the strongest social and political tools we have. I thought it was a very interesting mind-molding art form. That’s why I got into it, and I didn’t think that working in episodics really allowed me to fulfill my goal. So I told my agents I want to go back. We did Frank’s Place and all these shows. They said: “Well, it’s just episodics. We don’t really know what you can do.” So, I took on [a CBS Schoolbreak Special] called [Different Worlds: A Story of Interracial Love] with Duane Martin and Noelle Parker. They witnessed this murder after high school in this bodega. I shot it on a Super 16. I shot it in five days. And it got four Daytime Emmys. Don’t ask me why. I mean, when I look back on it, I’m going: “Oh, my God!”
And from that project, I got my first feature for television: Better Off Deadstarring Tyra Ferrell and Mare Winningham. I didn’t work for a while. I didn’t want to do episodics anymore. I took some steps back in order to take some steps forward in a direction that I wanted to go to. That’s how I did it. And once I did Better Off Dead, the rave reviews put me on the map. After that, then Robert Greenwald hired me to direct Scattered Dreams with Tyne Daly and Alicia Silverstone, and I was on my way. I liked working in TV movies better because I could hire my own crew. And they embodied “little stories,” as they were small features. In between, I had gotten a couple of deals at Columbia Pictures. David Putnam gave me a deal with his New Directors program and Frank Price gave me a real housekeeping deal when they had me on the front page of The Hollywood Reporter— as the first African-American woman to ever get a studio deal. And I was set to do my movie right after John Singleton released Boyz n the Hood (1991) – with Laurence Fishburne, Cuba Gooding, Jr., and an incredible list of others stars.
I was working on a film called Listen for the Fig Tree, based upon a young adult novel written by an African-American female writer Sharon Bell Mathis. I love that book! And I was so excited – as it was a winner of a Young Adult Pulitzer Prize. I love that story! And just about the time we were ready to get to go, they kicked David Putnam out of Columbia. I’m like: “Okay, so just my luck.” So, I went back to directing TV movies. You know, when you’re young, you don’t really understand the nature of the beast, but I did understand that they didn’t understand the type of storytelling that I wanted to do. They just didn’t get it, and there was nobody in the studio that I could pitch to that could relate to the kind of stories that I wanted to tell. I left there and went back and just directed the TV movies.
I tried to get some features off the ground, but they weren’t interested in the kind of stories that I wanted to tell, though they said they’re well-written, I just couldn’t garner support, because I think that there was some balanced images in there. I think that you have to know how to play a certain game in order to get a studio to fund you money. That’s difficult. That’s very difficult. By me being the type of person whose politics were formed before I left Harlem and came out to Hollywood, I wasn’t about to give that up. Like my momma used to tell me: “There’s always a job at the Post Office.” [laughing] So, I began teaching. This is my fifteenth year teaching in the film department at UCLA – [The University of California, Los Angeles]. I also taught film for seven years USC – [The University of Southern California]. And for a couple of years, I worked with Spike Lee on Miracle’s Boys(2005), a television miniseries.
AllHipHop.com: Ah, yes! I remember. Pooch Hall starred in one of the leading roles.
Neema Barnette: He had done it several years ago. It was an incredible project helmed by Spike Lee, Bill Duke, Ernest R. Dickerson, LeVar Burton and myself. I was the only woman. So, Spike asked me to come back to New York and teach at NYU with him for a term. I did that, and tried to develop my own story. Civil Brand (2002) was a movie that came to me right after my mother had passed away. Initially, I thought Civil Brand was going to be like a TV movie, like six or eight months. That movie wound up taking three years off my life. What a journey that was, you know, because first they were bought by Lionsgate, and then I started get calls saying: “What’s this about slave labor and the prison system? Meanwhile, you’re forcing people to think.” I mean, it was deep. I called Mos Def up – since we had previously worked together on The Cosby Mysteries – and he was in it. You know, once again, this was me trying to get warriors – warriors to come along with me on a journey and make a Black film because that was what we needed. You’ve got to have your tribe, because it’s never going to be easy.
I did the same thing with [Woman Thou Art Loosed: On the 7th Day]. I rewrote the script first with Black acting male American characters, which was very important for me to have strong – and balanced – Black male images in the film. I rewrote David [Ames] with Blair [Underwood] in mind. And out of the blue, I contacted him, and out of the blue, he said: “I’m in.” I was shocked – because Blair is one of our few stars that is so accessible. He said: “Neema, I’ve been a fan of your work.” Then, I was fortunate enough to get Sharon Leal. Sharon is the best-kept secret in New York and Hollywood. That girl’s got skills, and she can go. What a woman! What an actress! And then when they told me they could get Pam Grier to play the detective…
Neema Barnette: …I had a heart attack. I went:, Oh, my God! So of course, I didn’t have enough time to redo her character, but she called me. She said,: “I know you, Neema. You were the first black woman to get a studio deal. I love you.” And I said, “Oh, my God. What an honor.” What a joy! What an icon! And then she said: “Listen. I want to play a Bayou detective that could smell your hand and tell if you’re lying.” I said, “Okay,” and she came down there with her braids and her cowboy hat!
AllHipHop.com: Classic! [laughter]
Neema Barnette: And then I said: “Pam, you know I have to have you beating up some people!” [laughter]
AllHipHop.com: Of course! [laughter] It isn’t every day that you have the legendary “Foxy Brown” on the set! [laughter continues]
Neema Barnette: So, I got her beating up some people – and she does a great job, and what a joy! What an honor for us to pay honor to her.
The preceding is an excerpt from a Q&A conducted by AllHipHop.com contributor, Clayton Perry [@crperry84]. For the entire conversation, as well as Neema Barnette’s insights on race, culture and Hollywood, please visit his digital archive at www.claytonperry.com.
Flo Rida has been ordered to pay $80,000 to a concert promoter in Australia for blowing off a concert at the last minute. The promoter says that Flo Rida threw a “hissy fit” moments before he was set to hit the stage and refused to perform.
According to TMZ, the promoter forked over more than $50k up front to guarantee Flo would appear at the Fat as Butter Music Festival in Newscastle back in October 2011.
After the event, Flo went on Twitter and explained, “I was looking forward to performing for you, but due to unforeseen circumstances, I wasn’t able to do so last night.”
The promoter took his case to an Australian court – which ruled in his favor … and ordered Flo to shell out $80k in performance fees and damages.