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Diamond From Crime Mob Inks Deal With Battery Records

(AllHipHop News) Battery Records has announced that they’ve signed former Crime Mob rapper Diamond to their label, which is distributed by Jive Records. This summer, Diamond will debut her lead new single “Lotta Money” which was produced by Recka on the Beat.Diamond split from Crime Mob around 2007 and inked a management/record deal with Polo Grounds Music, another label distributed by Jive. Most recently, Diamond has had a strong presence on radio airwaves with appearances on Ludacris’ “My Chick Bad Remix” with Trina and Eve, as well as the “Bedrock Remix” with fellow female talents Rasheeda and Lola Monroe. “I can be more of an individual, say what I want to say. I also have to be much more responsible and make sure my business is taken care of,” Diamond told AllHipHop.com of her solo career. She has also parted ways with Polo Grounds, as her career is now being handled by veteran Dallas, Texas based executive, Mic Moodswing.“We welcome Diamond to the Battery family,” Battery’s CEO Neil Levine said. “Her ability to constantly evolve makes her an exciting and remarkable artist that has proven that she can shine as a solo artist. We look forward to introducing Diamond and her new single ‘Lotta Money’ to the world.”The news comes on the heels of a recently announced deal between Battery Records and Mickey Factz.

Hip-Hop Rumors: Rappers Diss Rick Ross, Drake, T-Pain, Gucci Mane…and others

DISCLAIMER:

 

All content within this section is pure rumor and generally have no factual info outside of what the streets have whispered in our ear. Read on.

Send your rumors, sightings and ill pics to illseed at [email protected]. Also, if you are sending me a female MC, please use youtube. Thanks!

THE NEXT 48 HOURS – NAS AND DAMIAN MARLEY – PART 2

The AHH original series continues.

video platformvideo managementvideo solutionsvideo player

You know Jasiri X by now, he’s been on the site and in the rumors before. He and others, including Paradise of X-Clan have put together a rap video where they are dissing the mess out of a lot of rappers… The song is called “Just A Minstrel” and they are going in – naming names in the video form.

Peep it. Do they have a valid claim?

 

 THE REAL LIL KIM?

 There is somebody calling herself the “real” Lil Kim and she/he went off on Twitter last night. Some entertaining stuff but we know this isn’t the Kim we all know. I KNOW this isn’t the real Lil Kim because the real Kim told my girl Kendra G her real Twitter account the other day and it wasn’t this one. Just for fun, here are some of the tweets the fake real Lil Kim said:

 @iHateKatStacks  lmfao b#### lift up your bangs have you seen your face you look like the corn on my pinky toe from my $1400 louboutins

 Now that I have my twitter account back..can some one please ask @nickiminaj opps I mean Onika Tanya Maraj if I can get my style back

 but I heard @iHateKatStacks  has seen more black D*icks than bathroom stalls at The APOLLO

 Just got off the phone with Rob and he said my twitter account will be verified ASAP

 That last one was pretty funny…verified my a###.

 For the real Lil Kim and her real Twitter, peep this!

 

FAKE LIL KIM, WE LOVE YOU!!!

They keep us talking, but if we stop talking about them then they should worry!

-illseed

WHO: illseed.com

WHAT: Rumors

WHERE: AllHipHop.com, MySpace.com/TheIllseed

HOW: Send your rumors and ill pics to illseed at [email protected].

Jay-Z Signs UK Rapper Tinchy Stryder To Roc Nation

(AllHipHop News) UK rapper Tinchy Stryder has reportedly become the latest artist signed to Jay-Z’s Rock Nation imprint. Stryder, 23,  is said to have inked a deal with Roc Nation to form his own imprint, Takeover/Roc Nation. Takeover Entertainment is the imprint that released Stryder’s 2007 debut album, Star in the Hood. Under terms of the new deal, Roc Nation will handle areas of Tinchy Stryder’s career, including management, music, merchandising and live shows. “I’m still focused on the UK and not losing touch with my roots, but I want to take on the world as well,” Tinchy Stryder told the UK’s Daily Star. Other artists on Roc Nation include Jay-Z, J. Cole, Rita Ora, Hugo, Bridget Kelly, Tinchy Stryder is working on material for his upcoming third album, in addition to gearing up for a high profile performance at the Glastonbury Festival on June 27th.

X-Raided: “When Rappers Go to Jail”

I find it interesting that everyone finds it so shocking that most if not all famous people are placed in segregated housing when they get locked up. Even here in prison, when the Rolling Stone with Lil Wayne on the cover came out saying that he would be in protective custody at Riker’s Island, I heard grumbles like, “He talks all that blood s### but he’s in PC.” What does everyone expect Lil Wayne to do? This is a guy who can’t even walk through a mall without security just because of too much love and too much hate. A famous person can’t walk through a club or any other public place where they may be recognized. Why would anyone think that doesn’t apply to famous people in prison?The purpose of trying to get rich is to improve your life and the lives of the people you love. You don’t get money then stay in the hood. You move somewhere better, more peaceful, ASAP. That goes for all people but especially the famous. LeBron James moved out of the projects when he got paid, he didn’t fix it up and stay. Famous people cannot allow themselves to be accessible to everybody. That’s just a fact. Now imagine if 100% of the population were criminals, ranging from kidnappers, extortionists, killers, thieves, etc. Gangsta rapper or not, that’s just asking for trouble. The famous guy either has to build a crew or try to go it alone but that means fighting and catching more time, possibly being labeled a troublemaker by the staff. That creates even more problems. You end up on 24 hour lockdown with no phone access or contact visits, all for trying to prove how tough you are to some nobodies. What good is the respect of someone whose respect is worthless? They’re going to hate anyway just because they’re broke and you’re not. Inmates try to recruit you into their cliques. They ask you to buy dope for them or help them get it in. They try to get you to use dope so they can get in your pocket. You’re constantly dealing with some type of hustle. It gets old fast. Then you have haters, who can be staff, inmate, or visitor, but the worst are the wannabe rappers. It’s like American Idol when they really believe they’re good but they’re garbage. They get mad at the judges for not picking them! Man, I have dudes trying to rap for me at 6:30 a.m. on the way to breakfast. Practiced all night then walks up and starts rapping. I get that on the yard, dayroom, visiting, everywhere, across racial lines, gang lines, even staff sometimes just f#####’ around. I end up having to be an a###### about my space. That just breeds more hate. “He thinks he’s too good to listen to me rap.” I explained it to a friend of mine like this: When I can just say hello, sign something, boom five minutes, cool; but if I give up 30 minute chunks of time because a guy wants to rap and tell me his life story, if I do that ten times a day it adds up to 5 hours of my life I can never get back. The fans are cool. They say hello, I sign something, they bounce. But the obsessed guys, wannabe rappers, and haters never bounce. They just try to get closer and closer.Rappers go to segregated housing to do their time in peace and go home. They lie out of fear of judgment but in reality everyone should understand. Being famous, you’re segregated even on the streets. If you have to use security in public you’ll need it in prison, too. If your name is hot for fame and money, you’ll need security anywhere you go. Quit hatin’. We don’t need to lose Lil Wayne, Gucci, Lil Boosie, or whoever else in prison just so you can say they’re hard. That’s b#######. I know all the little rappers with no names who have been in prison will try to say they weren’t segregated but that’s probably because they were level one or two, on the softest yards in the state. Level 3 and 4 is a different ballgame. You got a baller cat, famous, locked up with hopeless fools doing life without the possibility of parole, starving. Next thing you know, you’re in a riot fighting a clown with a knife, mad because you won’t help him be a rapper. That’s what I just went through on a segregated yard, so just imagine general population.”X-Raided is currently serving 31 years in prison for taking part in a deadly gang related shooting in 1992 that left one woman dead.

Open Letter To Slim Thug

In a recent interview, rapper Slim Thug unleashed a very disturbing attack on Black women, here’s an excerpt:

…Most single Black women feel like they don’t want to settle for less. Their standards are too high right now. They have to understand that successful Black men are kind of extinct. We’re important. It’s hard to find us so Black women have to bow down and let it be known that they gotta start working hard; they gotta start cooking and being down for they man more. They can’t just be running around with their head up in the air and passing all of us.

I have a brother that dates a White woman and he always be f###### with me about it saying, ‘Y’all gotta go through all that s### [but] my White woman is fine. She don’t give me no problems, she do whatever I say and y’all gotta do all that arguing and fighting and worry about all this other s###.’…

While many people dismissed it as a publicity stunt or the rant of an ignorant rapper, I felt compelled to respond to him in the form of an open letter.

 

Slim,

 

A few days ago, you made comments in Vibe magazine that have caused a great deal of controversy. While I appreciate your willingness to offer your opinion in public, you made several statements that were not only unfair and untrue, but deeply damaging to our community. Normally, I would reach out to you privately, but since your comments were made in a very public place, I feel compelled to respond in the same manner.

 

As an artist who is respected by millions of fans, particularly young ones, I found your comments to be hurtful and irresponsible. For good or for bad, our children follow the lead of you and other artists for everything from fashion and slang to self-esteem, body image and relationships. Imagine how a young black girl feels to hear from you, her role model, that her “standards are too high” and that she should “bow down” and “settle for less.” Consider the pain that our beautiful brown skinned babies feel when Yung Berg says he doesn’t date “dark butts.” Think about the self-esteem of our community when Nelly refers to our mothers, sisters, and daughters as “Tip Drills.”

As celebrities, your public comments are not just your own. Instead they influence the choices, beliefs, and lives of an entire generation of young people who look to you for direction.

 

Of course, you have every right to say things that you think are true. The problem, however, is that there was very little truth in your comments.

 

In your interview, you talk about how much better white women treat their partners than black women. If what you’re saying is true, why do Whites have the highest divorce rate of any group? Do white men get tired of being treated like kings? In reality, it seems that you are buying into (and selling) a stale but dangerous ideal that constructs White women as ultra-feminine, loving, queens, and Black women as angry, selfish, and untrustworthy hoes.Even more disturbing was your comment that “Black women gotta start being down for their man more.” Since slavery, Black women have had to withstand rape, torture, and humiliation (from both white and black men) in order to sustain their families. Now, in 2010, 1 in 3 Black men between 20 and 29 years old are incarcerated or otherwise under criminal supervision. Every day, Black women are raising children without men in the house, working multiple jobs (for less pay!), and supporting brothers as they finish their prison bids. 

With Black male unemployment as high as 50 percent in some cities, sisters are often holding down households without child support or other financial assistance. Black female incarceration rates are skyrocketing, partly because Black women are “riding” for their men, hiding guns and drugs, operating as mules, and refusing to snitch to authorities. In addition, Black women are the group most likely to be victims of domestic violence and the least likely to be married. Still, in spite of all this bad news, Black women are less likely to date outside their race than Black men.

 

How much more “down” do you want Black women to be?

 

I agree with you that both brothers and sisters have work to do. Over the last year, we’ve seen countless TV shows, movies, and bestselling books telling Black women how broken they are, how ugly they are, why they don’t have a man, and how they need to  behave. Instead of adding to this pile of pain and ignorance, I would encourage you to turn the mirror on yourself. How does the image of the pimp/player/baller/dopeboy promoted in your music help to create the “gold diggers” that you badmouth in your interviews? How might your own admitted failures at monogamy undermine the type of loyalty that you find missing in Black women? Criticizing the vulnerable is easy. Working on yourself is the difficult part.

 

I hope you don’t take this letter as an attack, but as an act of concern and love from one brother to another. Through your fame and wealth, you have tremendous power. You can use it to hurt or to heal, to injure or to inspire.

The world is watching. What will you do?

 

Your Brother,

 

Marc Lamont Hill

Marc Lamont Hill is Associate Professor of Education at Columbia University. He blogs regularly at MarcLamontHill.com. He can be reached at [email protected].

Rapper Common On Serena: ‘I Am Single’

(AllHipHop News) Chicago rapper Common has officially confirmed his is a single man and no longer dating Serena, as previously reported. The rapper confirmed the news Chicago’s Fox News, during an interview at the 3rd Annual “Stay in School Event.” Common was in town with the Kanye West Foundation, to encourage Chicago area teens to stay in school and focus on education. Common, along with Kanye West and Lupe Fiasco, visited three Chicago Public Schools yesterday, where Common broke the news. “I am single. I am a single man, definitely,” Common confirmed.According to reports, Common and Serena just “grew apart” after a two-year relationship. Common is working on a new album titled The Believer, which is due in stores this Fall.

Lauryn Hill Added to Rock The Bells Festival

(AllHipHop News) Former Fugees group member Lauryn Hill has joined the lineup of the 2010 Rock The Bells Festival. Hill will join acts like Snoop Dogg, A Tribe Called Quest and DJ Premier, who were announced as performers on the bill yesterday (June 9th). Each artist on this year’s 2010 Rock The Bells tour will perform one of their classic albums in its entirety. Hill will perform The Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, Snoop will do Doggystyle, A Tribe Called Quest will perform Midnight Marauders, while DJ Premier will pay homage to Gang Starr member Guru, who died of cancer in April of 2010. Previously announce acts include Wu-Tang Clan, KRS-One, Slick Rick, Rakim, Murs, Immortal Technique, 9th Wonder, Clipse, Wiz Khalifa and others. The Rock The Bells Tour will visit San Bernardino (August 21), San Francisco (August 22), Governors Island (New York) and Washington, DC (August 29). The Rock The Bells Tour will visit San Bernardino (August 21), San Francisco (August 22), Governors Island (New York) and Washington, DC (August 29).

Ja Rule Faces Four Years In Prison This August

(AllHipHop News) Ja Rule must appear in court in August, where he will stand trial for a firearm violation in New York.The rapper was arrested in July of 2007 after a performance at the Beacon Theater. Police stopped his $250,000 Maybach Benz and found a loaded .40 caliber handgun in the car with the serial number scratched off. Ja Rule, 34, has pleaded not guilty to criminal possession of a weapon. Yesterday, Ja Rule suffered a loss in court with Manhattan State Supreme Court Justice Richard Carruthers ruled against his bid to challenge the DNA testing procedure of the weapon. His lawyer Stacy Richman said she will appeal the ruling.  Richman also represented Lil Wayne, who was arrested by the NYPD on the same night in question, in a separate incident. Lil Wayne also challenged the DNA procedure used to test the .40 caliber handgun also found in his car, but eventually pled guilty to attempted possession of a weapon. Lil Wayne is currently serving an eight month sentence on Rikers Island.Ja Rule will stand trial on the gun charge on August 18th. If convicted, he faces up to four years in prison. 

Janelle Monáe: Artistic Android of Excellence

The musical work

of Janelle Monáe cannot be easily defined or categorized.  And while such tasks have grown in

importance on the business side of the equation, the only issue that concerns

Monáe is that she remains fearless in her music-making.

Bridging (and

blurring) the categorical lines that separate music lovers, Janelle has created

a debut album for the ages, which masterfully pushes the limits of “rock and

soul” music.  And at the age of 24,

as a byproduct of the hip-hop generation, the spirit of innovation flows

through her blood, and her music, too.

On May 18, 2010,

Janelle Monáe released the follow-up to her critically-acclaimed EP Metropolis:

The Chase Suite (Special Edition), which

featured the GRAMMY-nominated singles, “Many Moons.”  In the midst of a promotional campaign for The ArchAndroid, the singer managed to squeeze some time out of her busy schedule and

settle down for an interview with Clayton

Perry – reflecting on her early experiences at American Musical &

Dramatic Academy, her emotional attachment to “Smile,” and the kindred spirit

she shares with Erykah Badu.

AllHipHop.com:  Since “Tightrope” served as the lead single for The ArchAndroid, I am curious to learn if there was a particular piece of advice or a

particular life experience that forced you to learn how to “tip on the

tightrope”?

Janelle

Monáe:  Oh, yes, for sure. But really,

just simply being an artist, there are so many highs and lows in the music

industry that I knew early on that I needed to stay right in the middle of all

of that, not getting too high off accolades and praises.  Whenever you let ego come in and stand

front-and-center, that’s a hard to thing to get rid of. And also, just learning

to not get too low over opinions and critiques and all of the reviews and

different things like that. And so, personally, I know that I have to have

balance, and have to pull back and not lean too much on one side. I feel like

when I was writing “Tightrope,” I wanted it to be an anthem for the

people who also are going through being oppressed for just being themselves.

And in those words that I wrote, I want them to recite those words. This is

what you say to those people who are trying to hold you back from being you.

AllHipHop.com:  Since you intended “Tightrope” to serve as an anthem of

sorts, when you reflect on the lyrics of “Cold War,” what do you hope

music lovers will be inspired to fight for when they listen to your music?

Janelle

Monáe:  Well, I come from a working class

family, so I create music for the people. My mother was a janitor and my father

drove a truck for trash collection. 

And my step-father, who is like my father, works for the post office. So

I definitely empathize with those who are turning nothing into something, going

through life struggles, everyday life struggles and just really, whether

they’ve gone through oppression, depression, suppression…and just trying to

stay sane in this world. And so that’s how I craft my music, to inspire and

motivate the people always.

AllHipHop.com:  To date, I have had the pleasure of seeing you perform in

New York City on two separate occasions. And at your album release party, I saw

you perform “Smile” for the very first time. What kind of special

attachment do you have to that song?

Janelle

Monáe:  Oh, man! I’ve been performing

“Smile,” for as long as I can remember. It’s definitely one of the

highlights of the set. I just think, as a human being, I have to ensure that I

stay sane. And sometimes we can really lose perspective and we can get caught

up in some of the negative things that are going on in our lives, and in the

world, and not realize that life itself is just a blessing. And so

“Smile,” when I heard Stevie Wonder’s rendition on With a

Song in My Heart, it made me cry, and I’ve

always wanted to give that same emotional experience that I had with it to my

supporters.

AllHipHop.com:  Although you are a tremendous singer, I just have to say,

James Brown would just be proud of your energetic performance. I know that you

attended the American Musical & Dramatic Academy in New York City, but do

you credit a particular pre-professional experience for merging your love of

singing and dancing?

Janelle

Monáe:  Well, I was always heavily

involved in musical theatre programs, which led me to school for musical

theatre. In high school, I had the lead role in Rodgers and Hammerstein’s Cinderella. I had a part in The Wiz, too. And I wrote plays as well. I was a part of the

Young Playwright’s Roundtable at the Coterie Theatre. And so I was always using

my imagination and just writing. I guess this has been with me over half my

life. It seems the musical theatre is just instilled in my heart. I went to

school for a little while, but I left the American Musical & Dramatic

Academy because I didn’t want to be too influenced by the standardized teachings.

I didn’t want to sound like everybody else. I didn’t want to approach music and

art or musical theatre like everybody else. I wanted to create my own musicals

and bring out the things that made me human.

AllHipHop.com:  For me, it is hard to imagine someone having that much

strength to just walk away from an opportunity like that. What inspired and led

you to Atlanta?

Janelle

Monáe:  Not really an interesting story.

It was just me following my inner compass. Something was telling me to move to

Atlanta, and it was one of the best things that happened to me because I was

able to meet so many like-minded individuals. I started my own recording label:

The Wondaland Arts Society. This is my home. I’m from Kansas City originally,

but artistically I had to make it to grow here, and I’m so glad I made that

decision. I listened and I trusted my instincts.

AllHipHop.com:  Shed a little more light on the Wondaland Arts Society,

especially two of your fellow collaborators, Chuck Lightning and Nate Wonder.

What kind of special relationship do you have with  them?

Janelle

Monáe:  Absolutely. The Wondaland Arts

Society serves as a recording label. We look at it like a Motown. There are so

many artists that we’re going to be putting out. Deep Cotton is next in line to

put out their projects, and I’m excited about those guys. The label and the

collective consists of artists, from visual artists to performance artists to

actors to screen writers, graphic novelists, graphic artists, I mean musicians,

you name it. We just want to help preserve art and create a blueprint for a

generation coming behind us to follow. And we really want to help promote

individuality, celebrating our differences. And we use music as our weapon and

we have a right to our imagination. And Nate “Rocket” Wonder and

Chuck Lightning have been creating all the music that you’ve heard. We’ve been

collaborating together, just us three. Nate usually handles all the music that

you hear and Chuck and I, we write and conceptualize together. So those are my

favorite writers and producers. If you ask me all the time, who do you want to

work with, I’m working with my dream team.

AllHipHop.com:  When you look back on your recording experiences together,

is there a particular word that immediately comes to mind?

Janelle

Monáe:  Fearlessness. We were very

fearless in this process. A lot of the songs came to me, and I think Nate and

Chuck also said they had some of these experiences. But I got a lot of my song

ideas in my dreams. I would literally wake up in the middle of the night. I

would have my iPhone recorder by my bed, and I would just record whatever I

dreamt, whether it was a full song or it was images that I’d seen, or whatever.

We kept ourselves very open, and we tried to be as free as we possibly could in

creating and not doing things just for the sake of being different, and, at the

same time, not trying to allow politics on this album. We just really listened

to our Maker, and a lot of the stuff couldn’t have been planned. We focused on

the music. We knew that we wanted to create music to uplift and motivate the

people. And that’s all we focused on when creating.

AllHipHop.com:  As I encountered your music, it also allowed me to be

introduced to other artists. I actually saw the video for Sun Ra’s “Space is

the Place” for the first time on YouTube just after discovering your work.

And in my conversations with others, they have discovered – and re-discovered –

artists like Fela and James Brown, too. What kind of historical appreciation do

you hope that your fans will generate and pull from the previous generation of

artists?

Janelle

Monáe:  Yes, as much as I love the past,

and I love the past artists, artists like James Brown and whatnot, I think it’s

also important to focus on new concepts and ideas. We really want to have focus

on the future and create something that really hasn’t been done. Those are our

goals. At the same time, we definitely understand those artists who come before

us and who’ve helped open up doors and make it a little more easy for us to do

the type of music that we love doing. People fought for us to have the creative

freedom that we have, and we do pay homage to those artists. You can find that

however you can.

AllHipHop.com:  I know this summer you are hitting the road with Erykah Badu

and you also have a few appearances on the Lilith Fair. As you began to prepare

for these experiences, what conversations did you have with Erykah and other

fellow female artists?

Janelle

Monáe:  Erykah Badu and I are really good

friends. She has definitely been a huge supporter of me at a very early stage

of my career, and I support her evolution. So I am excited be on tour with her.

We both really stand up and want to fight for individuality. I think it’s very

important. So I’m excited to go on that tour. We also are musical theatre

lovers at heart. We auditioned for the same school, the American Musical &

Dramatic Academy. So I’m on tour, and I’m on the Lilith Fair tour that I’m

honored to be a part of. And then I’m also on tour with Of Montreal, and

they’re good friends of mine. I have a song with Kevin Barnes on The

ArchAndroid entitled “Make the

Bus.” If you listen closely, we were such huge lovers of each others’

voices that he was trying to imitate me, I was trying to imitate him, and we

ended up sharing the verses. So one line, I would sing. The next line, he would

sing, and we’d go back and forth like that. So I’m excited to be working with

him because they’re also pretty wild and dramatic. We’re all going to save our

dramas for onstage.

AllHipHop.com:  As you speak on the individuality you and Erykah Badu honor

and appreciate, have you ever felt any backlash or pushback for trying to

maintain your individuality?

Janelle

Monáe:  Thankfully, I have a very

supportive team. I mean from Sean Combs to Big Boi to Atlantic Records,

everyone here can remember when we decided we all really believe in the

message, and we are free. It’s time that, as being a black woman and of the

black people, that people understand that we are not all monolithic. We need to

celebrate our differences. Being a woman in the music industry, I think that

it’s extremely important that somebody is saying that, and saying that we need

to celebrate our differences. Redefining how a woman can wear her hair and how

a woman can dress and the type of music that she can create. I think that

that’s important. I think that sparks the fire and it encourages other young

girls who are deciding if they’re going to be comfortable with themselves and

their unique qualities or if they’re just going to live vicariously through

somebody else and follow somebody else. It helps them to love the person that

God made them to be.

AllHipHop.com:  The

ArchAndroid stands as the centerpiece of

a four-part Metropolis series. 

What reflection do you have on your first encounter with Fritz Lang’s

silent film?  And do you see the

series evolving past the fourth suite?

Janelle

Monáe:  I can’t give away too much

of that information, but we’re constantly

creating music. Suite IV will be out sooner than you think! We’ll

never stop, like a waterfall, and that’s why we try to do what’s right with it,

so that God doesn’t take away our superpowers and if it’s given us, that we’re

very thankful for it. But right now, we’re just focusing on creating the

visuals for every song on The ArchAndroid.

It’s going to be a mini-movie – a mini motion picture that translates the music

to the live experience.

AllHipHop.com:  Recently, I came across a quote from Brentin Mock in the

Atlantic, and I wanted to get your thoughts on his assessment of the ArchAndroid. He wrote: “Monáe has given pop music its first Toni

Morrison moment, where fantasy, funk, and the ancestors come together for an

experience that evolves one’s soul.”

Janelle

Monáe:  I appreciate those individuals who

are listening to the music, from critics to supporters and music consumers, and

their letting it move them. They’re not trying to categorize it and keep

accepting it for what it is. But I try to stay very balanced. I don’t get too

high, I don’t get too low. At the end of the day, I am interested in breaking

boundaries and exceeding all the genres and labels. I want to do away with all

those things. I mean, great music is great music. You either love it or you

hate it, in my opinion. I’m going to continue to create that music, hopefully

lead by example and help promote individuality. Not just being different for

the sake of being different. I think it’s important that you have a message and

that you do the music that’s in your heart. That’s what I’m doing – without

getting too high or low over any comment.

AllHipHop.com:  As more and more people become acquainted with Janelle

Monáe, “the artist,” what would you like for them to know about Janelle Monáe,

“the person”?

Janelle

Monáe:  I’m a doer. I don’t really do a

lot of talking, I guess. But I’m very interested in uniting. I want you to know

that. The thing I love about the Android is that it represents the other. And that’s why I connect with the Android. I think that we are going to live in a world with

androids soon, because of the rapid advancement of technology. I think, though,

that we’ll need a mediator for the other and the majority, of the haves and the

have nots, the oppressed and the oppressor. There’s a saying in Metropolis, the movie, which inspired me. “The mediator

between the mind and the hand is the heart.” And I consider myself the

heart.

AllHipHop.com:  Well said, well said. As you have traveled internationally,

how do you gauge your reception? It is often said that music is the common

denominator for all people. Is there something you have seen in your travels

that might have proven that?

Janelle

Monáe:  Well, I haven’t been able to not

go anywhere and feel at home. I mean, we’ve played festivals with so many

different ethnicities and colors and cyborgs and androids and gays, straights …

All that. If music is making us united, I’m just very grateful that we’ve been

able to create that music that people can bond over and unite on. And that’s

happened across the world. That’s in North America, in Europe and in the UK as

well. I think that people love what they love. Music has no color. So that’s

the thing that I think makes people feel so inviting, and I think their live

experience juxtaposes that. As it pertains to me, it has been keeping people

coming, so that’s a blessing.

For more information on Janelle Monáe, visit her official

website: http://www.jmonae.com/

“Moving On From The Industry (In Order To Mature It)”

You may think this is a strange title for an article at a website devoted to the culture and industry of music. But it has everything to do with the future of Hip-Hop.

Let me explain.

One day, in 1998, within 6 months of my no longer serving as a GM of Wu Tang Management, I visited the offices of both a music industry executive and an entertainment lawyer with whom we had done business.

I was coming to their respective offices after having met with the Ambassador of Indonesia to the United States, who was in New York City that day. I was informally offering advice to the country which was in the midst of a monetary crisis – its currency, the rupiah was losing its value in relation to the U.S. dollar, Japanese yen, and the currencies of Europe. I was in the city having a series of meetings with businesspersons, economists and political leaders who understood that the fall of the currency was part of a larger story – that there was an effort underway to destabilize the largest Muslim country in the world. Not surprisingly, Paul Wolfowitz, an architect of the Iraq war, who had served as the US Ambassador to Indonesia, was an active player working against the Indonesian government for years. It is a story for another day.

That day, when my industry friends saw me – both the lawyer and the executive immediately commented on two things about me – my reading of the Wall Street Journal and my wearing of a business suit. They were impressed and slightly amused at the same time.

It was an interesting reaction that caused me to realize that for over a two year period these individuals although they respected me, and knew other things about me had never really seen me outside of the light of the always business casual side of the entertainment industry.

That day was an important symbol in the process of my ‘moving on’ from the music industry.

I write this because over the last several years I have seen or heard about many past friends, acquaintances, and associates either being fired or ‘laid off’ from jobs in the music business, or forced to have to make life altering career choices as the industry goes through massive restructuring. I have seen individuals – artists, models, producers, executives – absolutely crushed by the experience, struggling for months and years to find balance in their lives, a sense of self, and a career that can fill the financial and emotional void, work in the music business once provided.

I can relate, sympathize, and empathize because I have been through it myself.

When the second Wu-Tang Clan album, Wu-Tang Forever went through its sales cycle in the Fall of 1997, I was faced with the option of either working out separate management deals with individual Clan members or moving on. I was faced with this reality quicker than I ever expected and during a period where the group was in a state of disarray. There was no major in-fighting going on, but the love had gone a little cold, I’ll say, between artists, management, and producers, and I think we were all burnt out and reeling from a non-stop 4-year run at the top that was finally coming to an end.

A few things took place which showed me the direction was not going to change and I thought that the time was ripe for me to move into the field of economics and politics, as I had long intended.

I had no idea how difficult and rewarding this decision would be, nor the stages I would go through as a result of it. Perhaps they provide an instructive example for individuals who today are suddenly going through the the loss of the often intoxicating experience of music industry employment, status and lifestyle.

The Emotional Shock. I had no idea how much my personal and professional identity had become associated and wrapped up with the Wu-Tang brand and identity. It was as if overnight I was learning that people in my personal and professional life were really not relating to me, the person, but rather to my association with the group. As I mention briefly in my bio video (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=j2E5YfuSPik) the phone calls weren’t returned as quickly, meetings did not happen as fast, and people who I thought personally cared for me, could not be found. The experience was painful, depressing, and disorienting. For a period of time I lost confidence in myself and a sense of ‘self,’ though not completely. I could not even muster the strength to listen to the radio. I learned then who my real friends were, and to this day, these individuals are still my real friends. They are the people in my life who were attracted to and loved me for who I am, not who I happened to roll with.

One of the reasons I believe my book, The Entrepreneurial Secret is being received so well is because much of it grows out of insights that I gained when I was at a very low point. In fact, I devote an entire volume to the suffering that comes from the personal struggle of ‘starting all over again,’ or being creative when you are at an emotional and financial low. I argue that it is when you are in that state of mind, if you can give meaning and find a purpose in the suffering and loss, that you can convert that energy into an even greater gain, and more powerful experiences. The individuals who can turn the feeling of emptiness, meaninglessness; the tragic and negative experiences of their lives into opportunities to develop inner strength, improve character and focus on a future goal will transform their personal lows into great achievements. It all starts with a change of attitude toward the painful experience. Thankfully I realized at some point that the end of my music career was the beginning of a new phase of my life. Although a lot of money can be made in the business, I find that most people are attracted to it or even seduced by the non-monetary forms of ‘psychic income’ it can provide a person in the form of instant popularity, social status, and fame. Not realizing that all of these are fleeting and given or ‘loaned’ to you by a professional network and system that you can’t control, many are shocked when the fringe benefits suddenly disappear. Accepting this for what it is can help a person move on. You are not the clothes you wear, house you own, car you drive, or celebrities you know.

The Mental Rebuilding Period. One of the things that allowed me to transition from the rise and fall of my Wu Tang experience on to what I believe are even greater achievements and associations in my life was that I had a core that could not be seduced by the ‘psychic income’ of the music industry. I had a spiritual foundation that gave me a narrative or storyline to my life that a career in the music industry could only be a part of, and not the whole. In other words my industry experience was not the center of my universe, it was only a planet of my life experience that orbited around the center of my universe. Very near the center of my universe were four elements that were greater than any single particular professional experience: a Teacher, a Teaching, my acceptance of a Labor Course and a Broader Life Experience. My Teacher is the Honorable Minister Louis Farrakhan and the Teaching is the Teachings of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad. I know that my life was given to me by a Creative Force and that it has been designed and planned with me having the free will to qualify myself for positions that await me and choose, adapt to, innovate, accept and reject professional opportunities along the way to an ultimate destination, back to that Creative Essence. And I have lived a range of ups and downs, travels, relationships, and been in circumstances which give me a perspective in which I could place the music industry experience and attempt to assign its place and weight in my life.

When I lost my stature in the music industry I did not lose my life’s compass or direction. In fact the experience forced me to re-connect to that compass and I began to study my Teacher and Teachings more (particularly the Minister’s Study Guides, ‘Self Improvement: The Basis For Community Development), listen to my inner voice (rather than looking at a social mirror), respect that I had already enjoyed some incredible experiences which made me special; and recognize patterns in my life and respect the cyclical nature of the personal struggle for peace, security and fulfillment that we all go through. With perspective, I began to accept that my life with the Wu was a great experience but possibly only a blip in the radar of my life’s path. Accepting that the honor of serving in the management team of the Clan would never mean the same thing to me (teaching me life’s lessons about Brotherhood and Business) that it meant to others (who were fascinated by celebrity) was an important part of my transition.

In my opinion one of the best examples of navigating career-changing experiences like this is described in the book, Objective Hate, by Troi ‘Star’ Torian – Star of Star and Buc Wild (http://www.shovio.com/en/professionals/star/). In it he writes of part of the transition process he went through years ago, after his career at Virgin Records ended:

”Virgin was history and I realized that this point in my life was my true test of durability.

“Once again there was no going backwards and there was no mommy and daddy’s house to crash at until things panned out. My name was now mud in the industry, and getting a return phone call about another job at a record label was not happening. This experience strengthened my sense of individualism even more – but in the meantime my rent at Battery Park was piling up and it became clear that there was no way I could stay there. I called cats about jobs – nothing. I called cats to borrow money – nothing. Rather than break down and get a slave job, I was determined to get back in the f****g rat race. I called my aunt Susan, who used to live in Queens but had moved to Freeport, Long Island. I told her I fad caught a hard right to the head and I needed a place to stay. She was always there for me, so I moved out to Freeport.

“My aunt had two young daughters in the house. While there I slowed everything down and decided to build a clubhouse in the backyard for my two nieces. It was another mental rebuilding period for me. I had saved about $2000 from my time at Virgin, but I went ahead and spent half of that buying wood for the clubhouse. I actually talked my nieces into the clubhouse idea. Mentally, I needed to do it. I spent 50 days building an oversized dollhouse in the bleeding cold. My aunt’s new husband, Danny, was a contractor, and he had all the tools I needed to build this monster. On several occasions Danny came out to the backyard and said, “You’re f*****g crazy! It’s below freezing out here.” But every morning I got up and worked. It was my way of getting back to basics. No surrender; no retreat.

It was and is Star’s attitude toward life, suffering, and facing adversity which continues to make him exceptional to me. How many of us know how to get ‘back to basics,’ after a life of industry experiences when people often relate to you as groupies, fans, and lose all sense of rationality?

Earlier I mentioned elements that were very near the center of my universe – a Teacher, a Teaching, A Labor Course, and a Life Experience – I used the descriptive very nearself, I can master the same in my immediate environment, in the universe and in effect become a God. because ultimately I must view these elements as the bridge or the means by which my life is perfectly connected with the Creator of it. The purpose of these elements is to grow me into my own divinity, allowing me to live my life in accord with the laws of human nature and universal order. To the degree that I am able to master or govern the laws, forces, and powers of my

I realized that would not happen until I understood the place of adversity, suffering, and difficulty in nature and all forms of creativity and growth and develop an attitude of receptivity toward it. Individuals unable to find the secret of the purpose of pain in life will not mature beyond a certain level, and never be able to overcome certain setbacks.

Broader Professional Development. Accepting that the music industry was not the height of my personal life or spiritual development, and after studying myself and rebuilding my mind, I became stronger in the view that my professional background in the music business could serve me in other fields. I learned how to use the superficial reaction that people have to my music background to help me in my career as a journalist, economist and political consultant. I did not resent the fact that people were enamored or fascinated by my association with Wu Tang, but I would not allow it to define me either. The honor of serving as GM for the greatest rap group in the world (and in some ways Hip-Hop history) was part of my story, and I decided I would share it honestly for the benefit of myself and others, always keeping in mind and respecting the legacy of Wu-Tang Clan. In fact, my work, in these other fields continues and extends that great legacy and brand in new ways.

Yet, I am my own man and speak in my own name.

It takes time to balance these kinds of dynamics and when I see individuals who continue to ‘name-drop’ and define their lives by their music industry ties and experiences I know that they are struggling with this and have yet to find a comfortable place with who they are as an individual, and the other areas of life where they can have an impact. Again, when you have been conditioned to operate in a social mirror like the music industry, where people judge by appearances, and when external forces determine who is ‘hot’ or not, it can be very difficult to learn how to make an impact based upon your own merit and be comfortable with yourself.

However, in some ways, when I crossed over into the field of politics and economics, the music industry associations were a negative in the sense that they often would distract people and because of stereotypes people hold of the music industry. In many ways these prejudices have a kernel of truth. The music business can be a very undisciplined work environment, where time is not respected and lateness is widely accepted. It also has a culture where self-destructive habits and lifestyle choices are not just tolerated but celebrated. And it also has a business tradition of stealing and cut-throat practices which can often make individuals paranoid (when combined with the ‘social mirror’) and unable to form lasting relationships based upon trust. This all contributes to people in the music industry conducting ‘transactions’ and not partnerships. I have experienced this on numerous occasions, encountering individuals who have been so burned by past industry experiences that they do things out of caution that are against the spirit of collaboration. You simply cannot work very long with people who are like this.

Therefore some people find it hard to believe that someone such as myself, coming out of that culture and industry would be able to accomplish what I have professionally in fields as challenging as international affairs, campaign strategy, and macro economics.

They don’t understand how the insights, lessons, and tactics of the music industry (and its peculiar culture) prepared me for a broader professional development and perhaps, allow me to see things in other fields that those who have gone to school for many more years than I, and been professionally trained at very prestigious institutions are not able to recognize.

But I humbled and disciplined myself, obtained mentors, and applied my mind, heart, and soul to learning new things in new fields that would allow me to achieve things in other areas of life. I developed a form of credibility in new areas that stand on their own merit. And I have only begun to scratch the surface of my potential.

What I find in many individuals who have been in the music industry and are trying to move on to other fields of endeavor is that they have been infected by the culture of vanity, superficiality, and even arrogance (which is not the same as justified confidence) which they have been led to believe made them ‘successful’ in that arena. This misconception and confusion is what prevents them from practicing valuable skills like subordination (the ability to lift others up by downplaying yourself) and learning to follow the etiquette and rules of a new culture (in which I once got a humorous lesson from Method Man and Raekwon) which I write about in Volume II of my book.

*****

So, now I close with why I would write about moving on from the music industry at such an influential music-oriented website as AllHipHop.com. It is partly because the music industry has many of us have known it is over, or dying. And it will only be two kinds of persons, currently in it, who will survive the transition we are undergoing – those who are able to accept change and adapt their personalities and minds to new concepts and speak new languages, and those persons who are able to mature and accept that the ‘industry’ experience has qualified them for greater responsibility and leadership, inside and outside of the industry.

I am now returning to the industry because I want to change and improve it, not because I want popularity and not because I want to hang out with celebrities or appear in somebody’s video. The only place or status I want is that which is rightfully mine, which I discover through the knowledge of Self and earn through the application of wisdom, and which cannot be taken from me.

If there is a contribution that I hope to make to the industry and culture, it is to help bring more reality and sobriety to it. Because I’m not moved as much by psychic income and because I don’t worship personalities or get caught up in trying to be down with anybody just for the sake of it, I can speak more truthfully and steer away from certain pitfalls.

The music industry is potentially influential but really not as important as many of us think in the grand scheme of things, even in terms of the world of business (just look at how relatively small the industry has historically been in terms of other sectors of the economy).

I hope to relieve many of us (especially impressionable young people at a certain age) of the illusion that we in the culture and industry ‘own’ something that really has only been ‘loaned’ to us by others, who are outside of it and could care less about rap music. On this latter point, I’m reminded of an interview the Honorable Elijah Muhammad gave noted journalist Irv Kupcinet where he was asked why he did not admire or look up to ‘Negroes with fame and fortune,’ as Mr. Kupcinet put it. To this the Honorable Elijah Muhammad cracked a smile and said, ‘But the fame and fortune is not theirs.’ And this is one of the reasons why the music industry and Hip-Hop culture is not as powerful as it could be – it accepts definitions of fame and fortune that come from outside of itself (even the idea or concept of what is ‘street’ in Hip-Hop is being determined by industry personalities and not the public.)

Anyone who cannot see what the Honorable Elijah Muhammad is saying about ‘fame and fortune’ should simply think through how the most popular of celebrities can be lose their appeal by scandal and the public display of their imperfections, lifestyle choices or personal habits. Hip-Hop has not really experienced this publicly with its biggest stars yet, but things certainly do go on behind-the-scenes. If you have ever wondered why certain artists do not take political stands or aren’t more revolutionary with their artwork, part of the reason is because aspects of their personal lives which their audience does not know, are known to some very wickedly wise persons who have even gone so far as to place them under surveillance. Many artists have been ‘tricked’ and led into doing some very freaky things that would cost them their ‘fame’ and fortune,’ if revealed. This is real (The role that intelligence agencies and powerful interest groups have played in manipulating the personal lives of music industry figures should be investigated by Hip-Hop scholars and journalists more than it has been).

In some cases the rumors about certain celebrities are outright lies or only exaggerations deliberately spread to undermine not only their music industry standing, but really, their reach and influence in the world of politics, economics, religion and popular culture. The best presentation I have ever seen on how this process works is Minister Farrakhan’s talk on Michael Jackson, (http://www.finalcall.com/artman/publish/Minister_Louis_Farrakhan_9/Farrakhan_on__Crucifixion_of_Michael_Jackson_Black_Leaders.shtml). In it he says, “Do you notice how every one that got crucified got first crucified in the Media? The Media is used to de-magnetize the person who has attracted large crowds. So, ‘to de-magnetize’ you means to make you, now, unattractive to the people that once were attracted to you.”

Think seriously about what the Minister is describing in terms of your favorite rap star, mogul, and celebrity, and their sudden ‘rise’ and ‘fall.’ Think seriously about it in terms of your own life and what happens when you suddenly become ‘unpopular,’ on the basis of lies, slander, innuendo, and controversy. Does any of this really happen outside of the actions of other people and the Law of Cause and Effect? Listen carefully to Brand Nubian’s classic, ‘The Meaning of The 5%:’ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YLAmKnCfAnw and how the 10% are able to turn the 85% against the 5%.

How do you handle the loss of fame and fortune, and regain your magnetic attraction, inside of the industry and outside of it?

Every single one of my Hip-Hoppreneur ™ columns at AllHipHop.com is dedicated to evolving and maturing those of us in this culture and industry, whether artists, professionals or executives. From one angle I describe it in a piece I wrote at BlackElectorate.com in 2007 called, “From Fan, Consumer And Generation To Power Broker, Leader, And Community: The Age Of The Hip-Hoppreneur.” (http://www.blackelectorate.com/articles.asp?ID=2007). From another perspective Jay-Z put it quite well, as reported in an excellent article in the Canadian news outlet CBC entitled, “Jay-Z Seeks Maturity In Hip Hop Genre.” (http://www.cbc.ca/arts/music/story/2009/11/02/jay-z-invu.html) In it he says:

“The challenge with rap music is, you know, the place where it’s white hot is with 16- and 15-year-olds. You have a lot of people who are 30-something, 30-plus, still recording music like they were 15 because that’s where the most urgent buyer is…There’s been this reluctance to mature in hip hop and when you do that, you leave the audience very narrow. My whole thing is to expand the audience and the genre of music in any way, because music is music…If I’m 35 years old and I’m talking like I’m 15 — the kids at 15, they change slang every week. They know that’s not being authentic. I live in Teaneck, New Jersey, somewhere, I’m not on the streets…I felt like that was my calling and that was my direction in life, to show artists in a different light, that we could ascend to executive positions of record companies….In the beginning, it was at its purest form because everyone was struggling. All great music and all great art, I believe, comes from pain. As hip hop started to get successful, and really successful — you had these guys coming from these neighbourhoods that were now millionaires — it’s tough to draw back to that place [of creativity]…. Now people are having those types of feelings: ‘You’re sounding lazy, you’re sounding formulaic, you’re sounding like the same subject matter. So what are you going to do?’ Now we’re facing that challenge to make great music like every other genre.”

Jay-Z’s points about the relationship between pain and creativity (‘all great music and all great art, I believe, comes from pain’) and moving beyond ‘the most urgent buyer’ and making ‘great music like every other genre,’ are intertwined and revolutionary and represent a form of consciousness that even the most ‘political’ artists seem to lack. I touch on some of the science of this in three very important columns, “The 17 Year Old: The God Of Rap” (https://allhiphop.com/stories/editorial/archive/2010/03/24/22153820.aspx); “The New Synth Pop: Ke$ha, Young Money and Justin Bieber Got This!” (https://allhiphop.com/stories/editorial/archive/2010/04/14/22169549.aspx) and “Don’t Dumb Down: Just Speak The Language Of The People” (https://allhiphop.com/stories/editorial/archive/2010/04/27/22188647.aspx).

One day, I’d like to do a column just on the relationship between these three points Jay-Z makes and what they say about the nature of the human being and the essence of the creative process which marks the universe, and even why pain and pleasure (and even deeper chaos and order) are ‘twin’ companions. All of this relates to why – in this world’s life – comfort and ease can be the enemy of progress. Yup, H.O.V. dug deep on this one.

In my mind those individuals who sincerely love the culture but have lost their place in the music industry and are suffering from loss and shock are in the best position to respond to what Jay-Z and myself are hitting on from different angles. They are going through something I describe in my book called ‘search behavior.’ It is the intense critical and creative thinking process that people go through when they experience loss in the present or anticipate it coming in the future. It is an act of self preservation, which is the first law of nature.

But to all of those struggling to survive and remain relevant in an industry and genre that is in transition or which has left them behind I say – you can’t be part of change until you are willing to change yourself.

And sometimes you really can’t ‘have’ something until you are willing to walk away from it, and return to it, as a different person.

Yes, there is more to life than the ‘industry,’ and there is more that this industry can contribute to life – so much more than we have ever asked or demanded of it.

The sooner we realize it, the better off we’ll all be.

Cedric Muhammad is a business consultant, political strategist, and monetary economist. He is a former GM of Wu-Tang Management and currently a Member of the African Union’s First Congress of African Economist. He’s the Founder of the economic information service Africa PreBrief (http://africaprebrief.com/) and author of ‘The Entrepreneurial Secret’ (http://theEsecret.com/). Cedric can be contacted via e-mail at: cedric(at)cmcap.com

Hip-Hop Rumors: 50 Cent Disses Diddy!? Drake Explains Lil Kim Diss!

DISCLAIMER:

 

All content within this section is pure rumor and generally have no factual info outside of what the streets have whispered in our ear. Read on.

Send your rumors, sightings and ill pics to illseed at [email protected].

THE NEXT 48 HOURS – NAS AND DAMIAN MARLEY – PART 2

The AHH original series continues.When you finish, click

here for Ice Cube’s Top 5 Dead or Alive!

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JIVE TURKEYS!!!!

I cannot believe Jive Records tried to sabotage Big Boi! Here is the song with Andre 3000!

“Looking For Ya” with 3 Stacks and Sleepy Brown!

DRAKE EXPLAINS WHY HE DISSED LIL KIM

He let MTV News get the full skinny on why he dissed Lil Kim the way he did. He also revealed that he and Lil Wayne would be doing an album when Weezy got out of the clink.

“I went to Rikers and we agreed that there will be a Lil Wayne/ Drake album….that will probably be one of the most exciting things of my life. We just make music on another level It’ so fun, it’s so comfortable. A whole album? Just think about what we could do…”

“I feel that’s signs you’re just losing it. I really did take that personally. That bothered me…That just wasn’t G to me at all.”

“I feel like Lil’ Kim is a G in the game. I feel like you’re a part of an era that’s classic, that we’ll never forget as young kids, me and Nick,” he said of his Young Money family member. “You don’t have to do that. You don’t have to get onstage and tell people to pay homage; that’s a given. I’ve watched Nicki pay homage time and time again…”

“I didn’t respect [Kim’s comments] at all. Whoever else was onstage with her, I didn’t respect that at all. You just wearing your heat on your sleeve. You’re showing that you’re upset. Nobody’s done that to me yet. I would never expect Jay or ‘Ye to get onstage and be like, ‘Pay homage to me. You need to respect me.’ They know they command my respect with their music and talent….I feel that’s signs you’re just losing it. I really did take that personally. That bothered me. I really don’t get caught up with the Twitter and Internet stuff, but I did see it. And I feel like you’re supposed to be a G. That just wasn’t G to me at all.”

Here is the vid:

AMBER AND KANYE ARE STILL TOGETHER

Just when you thought it was over, Kanye West and Amber Rose are back in business. We all heard all these bad rumors that Kanye and his Amber Rosazy had broken up and she got a big million dollar check to shut up. But, lo and behold, they are still together, Rose says. I peeped her yappin’ on HelloBeautiful – check out the video below.

Mario ought to be ashamed of himself – using two jawns to keep is press game up.

[Source]

ILLSEED’S QUICKIES

I heard the Philly girl Jasmine Sullivan is pregnant and that’s why she isn’t out.

Hmmm…still hearing rumors about Nicki and Diddy and there’s word that Cassie is still in the picture. One top of all that, Cass and Nicki are supposedly friends! I guess, Daddy’s Home…or is that Diddy’s Home?

Allen Iverson and his wife have reportedly reunited…aka she took him back. That’s good.

Gotta love Gary Coleman’s ex-wife-if you are a Satanist! She sold pictures of him DEAD. SMH. She claims she didn’t sell him, but…why would she give that to the media? SLORE!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

It looks like Limewire is about to be finished. A judge basically ruled they can stay alive for 2 weeks so they can mount an appeal. Not looking too good for them, but great for the recording industry.

EPIC FAIL OF THE DAY

BP is scared of Anderson Cooper! I haven’t seen a boycott of BP…people just know stop going there.

50 CENT COMMENTS ON LIL KIM AND NICKI…BUT DIDDY GETS THROWN UNDER THE BUS!

NEW RICK RAWSE VIDEO!

The Boss and Gunplay are still cool. Peep their new video.

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DRAKE, WE LOVE YOU!!!

They keep us talking, but if we stop talking about them then they should worry!

-illseed

WHO: illseed.com

WHAT: Rumors

WHERE: AllHipHop.com, MySpace.com/TheIllseed

HOW: Send your rumors and ill pics to illseed at [email protected].

Drake on Lil Kim’s Nicki Minaj Diss: “That’s a sign that you’re just losing it.”

In the midst of gearing up for the June 15 release of his highly anticipated debut, Drake has elaborated on his recent on-stage defense of label mate Nicki Minaj.

Lil Kim publicly called out Nicki Minaj at a concert last week over a perceived slight of not “paying homage.” In a subsequent interview with Kendra G, she derided Minaj for failing to create her own distinct identity while appropriating previous Queen Bee imagery.

Drake responded in kind by joining Minaj on stage and proclaiming her to be the best female emcee today, and dismissed Lil Kim’s comments.

The Young Money star clarified his opinion today and acknowledged Lil Kim’s influence on Minaj and himself.

“Lil Kim is a G in the game. She’s part of an era that’s classic, that we’ll never forget as young kids, me and Nicki,” Drake told MTV2. “You don’t have to get on stage and announce your presence and tell people to pay homage. That’s a given. I’ve watched Nicki pay homage to her time and time again.”

The respect remains for Kim’s professional accomplishments, but Drake revealed his personal respect for her was damaged by the unprovoked attack on his friend and label mate.

“I didn’t respect that at all…You’re just showing that you’re upset,” he explained. “Nobody’s done that to me yet. But I wouldn’t expect Jay or ‘Ye to get on stage and be like ‘yo pay homage to me, you need to respect me.’ They know and command my respect with their music and talent. To me that’s a sign that you’re just losing it. I really did take that personally….You’re supposed to be a G, and that wasn’t G at all.”

Nicki Minaj has yet to comment on Kim’s accusations. Her debut is slated to be released this year.

Rapper 40 Glocc Announces Name Change To ‘Big Bad 40’

(AllHipHop News) West coast rapper 40 Glocc has announced that he has officially changed his well known moniker from 40 Glocc to Big Bad 40 (pronounced ‘four O’). According to 40 Glocc, his original name had a deeper meaning beyond its obvious reference to the firearm. “In a country where freedom of speech is number one on our list of Constitutional rights, I recognize yet another clause in the system and I will not give them another opportunity to use their own laws against me,“ Big Bad 40 told AllHipHop.com. “My former name was always an acronym. 40 represented the 40 acres and a mule they never gave us. Glocc represented Ghettos Legally Oppressed with Crooked Cops. A change has come so this change must be recognized.” As 40 Glocc, the rapper’s run-ins with artists like Plies, Lil Wayne and most recently, Miami rapper Rick Ross have made him infamous. Earlier this month, the rapper was put on trial along with at least 60 other men as subjects of a gang injunction against a gang he allegedly belongs to, the Colton City Crips. The trial was part of the San Bernardino’s continued efforts to gain an injunction against the gang to prevent them from operating out of the Arbor Terrace Apartments complex, aka The Zoo. Drama aside, Big Bad 40 has been steadily building his music business. His Zoo Life imprint recently inked a deal with Fontana and today, 40 announced that he would be hitting the road to tour with G-Unit leader, 50 Cent. “Where I come from nothing is free, nothing was just given to me, that molded me into an aggressive person,” Big Bad 40 revealed. “Even as a homeless child on the street for years I believed in myself and I taught myself. I’m a passionate person and what I believe in I stand up for I can’t say the same for many but it’s worked for me as a leader.”Big Bad 40 is currently putting the finishing touches on his upcoming album NWA (New World Agenda). The first single from the album is titled “Damn” and features singer/reality tv star Ray J. Additionally Big Bad 40 is planning to release “Welcome To California,” a new anthem featuring rappers Snoop Dogg, E-40, Mistah F.A.B., MC Eiht, Kurupt, Yukmouth, Messy Marv and Xzibit.  50 Cent Tour Dates with Big Bad 40 are listed below:Jun 10, 2010 – Kansas – City Midland TheaterJun 11, 2010 – Dallas – FairparkJun 12, 2010 – Houston – Arena TheaterJun 15, 2010 – Miami – FillmoreJun 16, 2010 – St. Petersburg, FL – Jannus LiveJun 17, 2010 – Atlanta – TabernacleJun 18, 2010 – Myrtle Beach – House of BluesJun 19, 2010 – New city / venue details forthcomingJun 20, 2010 – Lewiston, ME – Lewiston Urban Civic CenterJun 22, 2010 – NYC – HammersteinJun 23, 2010 – Wallingford – Toyota Presents the Oakdale TheatreJune 24, 2010 -BostonJune25, 2010 -Atlantic City

Mixtape Download: Dolla’s Final Mixtape

Born in Chicago, Illinois as a twin, Dolla’s sibling died at birth.

Still, as the only boy amongst two sisters, the light-eyed MC admits to being

spoiled. “We’d clean the house every Sunday but my only job was to take

out the trash,” says Dolla. As a five year-old Dolla sat on his parent’s

bed with his elder sister, Divinity, as their father took his own life.

Dolla addressed his father’s death and his own mortality in one

of his songs, “Rainy Nights”: “Papa died at 25 so he must have been great, they

say the good die young, I guess I’m on my way.” Overcoming the obstacles of life

Dolla remained persistent on his musical journey Forming a group called Da Razkalz

Cru and eventually going solounder The Gang Entertainment/ Konvict Muzik/Jive while also modeling for Sean John clothing. Upon his return to LA to complete his debut album tragedy took place once more. On May 18th 2009, Dolla’s life was cut short by a cowardly act. Family, friends and fans of the late rapper continue to long for justice and closure. The Miseducation of Dolla is an exclusive mix-tape dedicated to the many supporters of the late rapper, Dolla and his family’s movement for justice.

Download Link: Dolla-Miseducation of Dolla- Download