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Hip-Hop Rumors: @Illseed Knows When The NBA Lockout Will End!

THE END OF THE NBA LOCKOUT?

I know when the NBA Lockout will be over. Over? That’s right. There are people that talk and they have talked to me. For all you freaks from basketballville, I am hearing that there WILL be a basketball season, just truncated. The people I know are telling me that the lockout will be OVER in January 2012 and the season will get started thereafter. I don’t know what the terms of the settlement will be, but that’s what I am hearing. Happy, happy…joy joy.

ILLSEED’S QUICKIES

Demi Moore has filed for divorce from Kutcher. They reportedly got messed up, because they tried to introduce “threesomes” to their union. Fun, but fail.

Justin Beiber has taken a paternity test and soon we will see it dude is a father at like 17.

Rumor has it, Ocscar De La Hoya would put coke in his b####### to get high. An ex-girlfriend said that’s how he got down.

Black Scale & Surf Club Music Team Up With New Era for Hat Line

The clothing brand, Black Scale, has teamed up with the Surf Club music group to release New Era hats and jackets. No release details have been announced yet, but Surf Club member Chase N. Cashe made known on Twitter that, “SFCB x Black Scale hats will be out real soon & the jacket too ya dig.” Peep the pictures below and stay tuned for the release dates.

You Could Learn Valuable Lessons From N.O.R.E.’s Video ‘Scared Money’ Feat. Meek Mill & Pusha T

N.O.R.E. has released a new video for his banger “Scared Money” featuring verses from Pusha T and Meek Mill. When I saw it was featured on WSHH I automatically assumed is was filled with all of the elements that embarrasses my pigmentation and urges me to check “Other” on my Census form. However, when I watched the video I saw valuable lessons that many people (especially men) need to take heed to. Walk with me as I break them down for you.

Continue reading “You Could Learn Valuable Lessons From N.O.R.E.’s Video ‘Scared Money’ Feat. Meek Mill & Pusha T”

More Rappers Join Class Action Lawsuit Against CBS and CNET Over Illegal File Trading Services

(AllHipHop News) Singers, songwriters and performing artists alike are collaborating with Internet media mogul Alki David to file a massive copyright infringement lawsuit, claiming CBS subsidiaries CNET and CBS Interactive possibly earned billions by distributing illegal file trading software.

The complaint is being spearheaded by Alki David and the Justice for Artists Coalition (www.justart.net, to fight for the justice of artists across the world.

David claims that CNET and CBS Interactive fostered and popularized the piracy of copyrighted works.

“CBS Interactive has made billions by inducing the public to break the law, by providing them the file-sharing software and step-by-step guides, on exactly how to do it,” Alki David said in a press release. “No one has held Defendant accountable for this. Until now.”

David accuses CBS Interactive and CNET of maintaining an ongoing criminal enterprise by distributing peer-to-peer file-sharing software and DRM removal software.

The lawsuit claims the illegal software came with many detailed reviews and tips on how to use the applications to copy known protected intellectual properties.

Artists victimized include Lady Gaga, Snoop Dogg, Ludacris, Madonna and Britney Spears, PM Dawn, Slick Rick, Ron Brows, Sugar Hill Music, Luther Campbell aka Luke Skywalker, Pretty Ricky, Dough E Fresh, H-Town and many others.

“We have only scratched the surface. Many more rights-holders are coming forward representing tens of thousands of more intellectual properties but the verification process for identifying ownership is long and detailed, so we will keep on adding as we go,” said Alki David.

Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five Inducted Into Grammy Hall of Fame

(AllHipHop News) Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five’s classic single “The Message” will be the first Hip-Hop recording to be inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame.

“The Message” is one of 25 records selected by the Recording Academy’s strict governing body, which reviewed each record for its cultural impact and historical significance.

Additionally, to even be considered, the record in question must be at least 25 years old.

“The Recording Academy is dedicated to celebrating a wide variety of great music and sound through the decades,” said Neil Portnow, President/CEO of The Recording Academy. “We are especially honored to welcome this year’s selection of some of the most influential recordings of the last century. Marked by both cultural and historical significance, these works truly have influenced and inspired audiences for generations, and we are thrilled to induct them into our growing catalog of outstanding recordings.”

The Message was also the title of Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five’s debut release for Sugarhill Records.

Upon its release, the group consisted of Grandmaster Melle Mel, Scorpio, Kid Creole, Cowboy, Rahiem and Grandmaster Flash.

In addition to Grandmaster Flash & The Furious Five’s “The Message,” a number of other historical American recordings were inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame as well.

Dr. Martin Luther King Jr.’s 1963 “I Have A Dream” speech, Cole Porter’s “Anything Goes,” the Rolling Stones’ album Exile On Main St and recordings by Mahalia Jackson, Bruce Springsteen, Bill Cosby, Leroy Carr and Gene Autrey were also inducted.

Daily Word: Let It Go!

Happy Monday, my Great Ones, and welcome to the first day of the rest of your life! 

Today marks the beginning of a new day - the beginning of a life that only yesterday seemed distant! Today is the day that you say
goodbye to struggle, strife, trials and tribulations! It's time to let life know that you got the message, and you're ready to move on! 

Many of us have the tendency to concentrate on our troubles so long that we don't give our blessings a chance to reveal themselves!! Let Go!!!
What's done is done, what's learned is learned!! Leave your struggles right where they belong and get busy living the life that is intended
for you to live!! This also means letting go off relationships that were meant to be let go of a long time ago! No matter how difficult it
may seem, holding on is most definitely holding you back! People come into your life for a reason, a season, or a lifetime!! Stop giving
lifetime access to seasonal players!!! Know when to separate and understand that not everyone fits into the master plan!! Enough is
enough!! 

Your obstacles are only here to teach you strength and prepare you for your greatness! Don't get too acquainted!! Go to the
next grade once you pass the class!! Life is what you make it..... So, make it GREAT!!!!!!!!!!!!!
-Ash'Cash

“Don't be pushed by your problems. Be led by your dreams.” -Unknown

“Getting over a painful experience is much like crossing monkey bars. You have to let go at some point in order to move forward.” -Unknown

“Some people think it's holding on that makes one strong - sometimes it's letting go.” -Unknown

“The hardest thing in life is to know which bridge to cross and which to burn." -David Russell

“Letting go doesn’t mean giving up, but rather accepting that there are things that cannot be.” -Unknown

“There are things that we never want to let go of, people we never want to leave behind. But keep in mind that letting go isn’t the end
of the world, it’s the beginning of a new life.” -Unknown

“One day at a time - this is enough. Do not look back and grieve over the past for it is gone; and do not be troubled about the future, for it has not yet come. Live in the present, and make it so beautiful it
will be worth remembering.” -Unknown

“We must let go of the life we have planned, so as to accept the one that is waiting for us.” -Joseph Campbell

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.



Estelle: In The Beginning, There Was Rap

You, like many, were probably surprised to see singer Estelle pop up in the Cypher during the 2011 BET Hip Hop Awards. She anchored her set, with strong “rap arms” flailing in time to the beat, and a distinctively British accent that sounded good for MC’ing.

2008-2009 cemented Estelle on the U.S. map – her single, “American Boy” with Kanye West climbed the charts, giving lasting power to her name and face among the new R&B landscape. What will surprise many American fans even more is that, long before Estelle ever pursued singing, she was a rapper in her native London, UK. Her appearance in the Cypher looked right, because it was right. Estelle’s been rhyming since she was a youngster, and later divulged that her mic-ready voice could carry a “bloody good” tune, too.

Estelle is a woman on the move. She fields this exclusive AllHipHop.com interview from the back of a chaffeured car, in between lamenting over the London riots, the recent loss of Heavy D, and yelling at her driver, “ I need to find a bank! Can we find a bank?” Bank is right – Estelle is hoping to cash in on her forthcoming album, All Of Me, and she recently released a mixtape, AOM: The Prequel, to keep fans satisfied in the interim.

While her new uptempo ballad, “Thank You,” currently climbs the R&B charts, AllHipHop.com checked in to get the inside album scoop and learn more about the UK Hip-Hop scene from someone who has studied it well – Estelle:

AllHipHop.com: Hi Estelle. How are you?

Estelle: I’m good, Seandra. How are you?

AllHipHop.com: I’m great. Thanks for taking a few moments with AllHiphop.com. You’re in New York now, so what are you up to?

Estelle: I’m doing a little of everything, some events and things.

AllHipHop.com: We’re in the midst of celebrating UK Week on the site, and I had to make sure that the “London Lady” herself was on the list of people that we profiled.

Estelle: Ohhh, thank you!

AllHipHop.com: Of course! What does celebrating the UK’s Hip-Hop and urban scenes mean to you?

Estelle: I mean, I think we have one of the most original scenes, one of the most eclectic scenes. You know, Hip-Hop isn’t strictly made up that “boom-bap.” It’s made up of many different genres, many different styles, different energies, you know? I think it’s one of the best. And, I think New York is one of the best.

AllHipHop.com: Okay, so the scene there has evolved, I would say, over the past two decades especially. What are some of the early Hip-Hop influences that helped to create your style, do you think?

Estelle: It goes back to like Monie Love and Roxanne Shante and them, to like Queen Latifah to Rodney P to Skitz, Jay-Z, early Jay, late Jay, now Jay. [laughter]. All of that…everything. I’m a big fan of music, so I listen to everything, as well as reggae, as well as different parts of Hip-Hop…Heavy D being one of the influences…Salt ‘N Pepa. And, some R&B stuff as well as the Hip-Hop stuff, you know?

AllHipHop.com: Were you familiar with Heavy D back in the day?

Estelle: I was, back in the day and presently. He’s heavy on my mind right now, definitely. It’s really sad. Really sad.

AllHipHop.com: Yes, it is a sad time. But, I want to talk to you about the pleasant surprise people received by you in the BET Cypher last month. That was shocking. We were in the audience and saw you, and we were like, “Whoa! Estelle’s about to spit? Okay!” [laughter] So, how did that come about?

Estelle: [laughter] I started as a rapper! Like, this isn’t anything brand new that I brought out. Anyone who knows me and is a real, real, for real fan, or if people Google me, they can see what I do. The first records I ever recorded were rap records, you know? All of the artists I’ve worked with know me as a rapper. So, the singing is kinda like, ‘oh, she sings, too.’ So they know me as a rapper from my first records.

[In 2002], I had a song called with Blak Twang called “Trixstar.” I was with a few other girls. I would do the singing on my own records because I couldn’t find no one who wanted to. So yeah, like, I’m a rapper! For me, I think it’s great that America’s finding out that I rap. You know, ‘cause I think people weren’t expecting it. They thought I was only a singer. They’re like, ‘is she gonna have bars, or any kind of soul or swag or anything with it?’

That’s like second nature to me. Before I go in the studio, my preparation is like a rapper. I don’t write like a singer; I write from a rapper’s perspective. Melody is just happens to be a detail that I have, you know? I think that’s the reason people like what I do…it’s very literal. I write from a rap perspective, very literally.

AllHipHop.com: I think people were surprised. I don’t think there are a ton of Americans who know you as a rapper. I watched the Cypher again, and in one of your lines, you said, “I came to America/ My shoes and my dream…” I love that line. You also said, we’re all dealing with the same problems, no matter where we’re from. So, tell me about your background.

Estelle: People who know me know that I had a career in London already. I just didn’t have a record deal. I had a career already…I was just in the UK. I have a healthy shoe habit! [laughter] I couldn’t move everything that I wanted with me, so I took all my clothes and I took all my shoes, and I moved, you know, to get it poppin’ over here.

So I know to some people I look crazy. I still have that underdog mentality, that hustle, even though I’ve “made it.” My faith and my energy wasn’t like, ‘I’ve done this already, I’m entitled to it.’ I was like, ‘I work; let’s go. This is what I do.’ You know what I’m saying? I think people didn’t quite know how to take me, so I said “I came with my shoes and my dream.” It’s like I came halfway established, but I still kept working ‘cause I had a dream. I knew I was going to have to work for it. That’s what that was.

AllHipHop.com: Well, I think you’re got a great rap voice and that really cool English accent lends to that really well. You even have the rap hands, you know, the awesome rap hands?

Estelle: [laughter] That’s what I’ve been doing…my whole life, that’s what I’ve been doing. People would be like, “Why are you doing that?” It just happens! I don’t know, it just happens. [laughter]

AllHipHop.com: Have you considered rapping more? Here, we primarily know you as a singer…

Estelle: Well, I do, at my shows, I rap a heck of a lot. I always bug out, like people don’t know. I halfway rap my songs. It’s like I sing on the records, and then I get on live, and because all I’ve done live are my shows, it shows me and that I’m really into rap music. I’m a rapper, and that’s all I’ve been, so everything I do, it has that energy. But I do, at my shows, on this new album…

This new album was like going back in time to when I first got in the game, and that was a far as like, being a rapper – writing bars and competing instead of saying stuff for the sake of saying it. I never got in the game to be famous, if that makes sense. I just enjoy that energy and the vibe that I would get when I went to do rap shows.

I used to work in a record shop, and it was just good vibes. It wasn’t about, ‘well, I want to be famous. It was a way to get my career poppin.’ It was about that, you know? For me, the whole energy comes from coming into the game like that. It hasn’t left me in my whole career; I don’t know how to do it any other way. Like I said, on the new album, I found the joy in it, why I started doing this in the first place. I enjoyed the energy, the battle, the competition of rap. It wasn’t about what prizes can I get today. I love this! This is what I do!

AllHipHop.com: That’s awesome. Well, I want to switch gears a little bit and ask you more about the UK. 2011 was sort of a monumental year of there with the London riots and revolution. So, in your opinion, what are some of the top issues facing young people in the UK today? What are they upset about?

Estelle: Well, it’s six in one hand and none in the other. They want to get on, they want to do things, they want to get it poppin’. On the other hand, [the government] wants to tell you you can’t get on, you can’t do this, you can’t do that. At the same time as they’re saying, “look, the opportunities are here,” they say, you can’t have access to them, you’re not qualified to go there.

There should be a level of respect, and it’s not given, especially to the young people, and I think that’s why they burned the place down. That’s why. They’re not given that respect, like, “look, we’re coming up next; we need to get on.” There’s a sense of hopelessness as well. Every single time I go home, every time, people are like, “Yo, I can’t get on!”

You can’t get on because everyone’s telling you you’re not the right shade. Everyone’s telling us that we ain’t from the right area, can’t get on because everyone’s telling us that there’s no money. What the hell?!? We’re young, and we’re just trying to get ours! They’re trying to tell us we’re nothing. I know, I feel the frustration. It happened 10 years ago; it happened 20 years ago. I feel it, I lived it, and I chose to move. [laughter]

But for the ones that don’t have the head space or the money to get up and do something like that, it’s hard. I get it. It’s really f*cking hard. Imagine being told, “You ain’t sh*t, you ain’t about to be sh*t. Your people may have made it, but f*ck you.” That’s the most frustrating thing to be told, and to be faced with everyday. I kinda don’t blame them. But I kinda am upset at the ones that want to mess with other people’s lives. They’re dumb. That wasn’t the way to do it. There has to be another way, because I don’t think that was the way to do it. But I can understand their frustration.

AllHipHop.com: Yeah, definite frustration. So do you consider yourself an ambassador? Do you think your music can help heal your nation?

Estelle: No, I don’t get myself in that, but I kinda let other people see what they see in my music. I feel like I’m a valid voice. I feel like people listen, I gues, when I talk, based on my celebrity. But no, I don’t want to put myself in that position of being the one to speak up. There are people out there that are doing a great job at it, and I support the hell out of those people.

There’s other rhymers that do a great job. You know, Kanye does an amazing job. Sometimes he’s too deep for the people [laughter], but he does an amazing job at telling the truth and things people need to hear. A UK MC named Kash, I think he does a great job as well. I give them guys that space and give them the props, because they are the ones doing it, you know?

AllHipHop.com: AllHipHop.com had some footage of you from back in the summer with 9th Wonder. What were you working on with him? And, tell me more about your album.

Estelle: The album is done. I got with 9th Wonder to do a couple of records for his rap CD… We’re real good friends, me and 9th. So it’s all love, always all love over there.

AllHipHop.com: So, tell me about the album, All Of Me.

Estelle: I got to work with a couple of UK producers. I worked with one guy called “Wood”; it’s the one I’m rapping on, because I just felt like I should do it. [laughter] It’s called “The Life,” and it’s like, “…what if I could go back again/ What if I could rap again?…” It’s about that energy and that period where I came from. Which is London, which is Hammersmith. It’s about why I got in the game, and he’s is one of my favorites. He’s a favorite.

The album is finally done – I’m like, ‘thank God,’ it comes out in February 28. I am excited! I’m thanking God, because I think you grow and you evolve, and that’s what every artist should put on their records – growth and evolving. I’ve done it. It won’t be another two years this time. [laughter]

AllHipHop.com: [laughter] OK, so late winter, February 28, people can’t expect the album. Well, I know you’re really busy and running around in this car right now. I want to ask you one last question. AllHipHop.com always asks people for their Top 5 Rappers Dead or Alive list. So, since this is wrapping up UK week, I want to ask you for your Top 5 UK artists who have influenced Estelle, the musician.

Estelle: Ooooohhhh! [laughter] Alright, ready?

AllHipHop.com: Yes.

Estelle: I better get this right, or they gonna get me! [laughter] I’ll start with Blak Twang. Rodney P. Roots Manuva. This is influential, right? Blak Twang, Rodney P, Roots Manuva, Kano, and Wiley. Yeah, that’s a good list!