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Hailing from the land of frigid winters, Prince, Rhymesayers and a quickly blooming hip-hop scene, Minneapolis, Minnesota native Rocky Diamonds is quickly developing into one of the Internet’s most promising young rising stars. Just three years removed from high school, this young spitter has already dropped a collaborative mixtape with Diamond Supply Co. and he just recently got off tour with the Sneaker Pimps. Now Rocky has the majors in a seeming bidding war and its clear that he is primed for a major debut in the future.
With pending songs with Kendrick Lamar, and the who’s who list of up and coming artists right now, Rocky Diamonds is putting the city of Minneapolis on the map for good. But while some hip-hop heads may not be familiar with what kind of sound to expect from Minnesota, or if Rocky has street cred coming from a relatively obscure Minneapolis, it hasn’t seemed to slow this kid down. With plans for a several month long Midwest tour and a few select dates around the country. Rocky Diamonds has big plans for 2012. Welcome AllHipHop.com’s newest Breeding Ground Artist, Rocky Diamonds.
AllHipHop: So tell me a little bit about where you’re from a little about your upbringing, we don’t have a ton of rappers from Minnesota.
Rocky Diamonds: Well basically I’m from Minneapolis, Minnesota, the worst part of the city, the hood of the city. Ummm…. s###… Its just like any other city, its just real small. Every city got the hood man, and me growing up was just on some normal kid s###. Me growing up – I didn’t know my pops, but I was living with my Mom and played basketball. That’s what I really did for the most of my life, but senior year of high school is when I really started taking the music seriously, and that was like three years ago.
AllHipHop: Explain to me your role in the Minnesota hip-hop scene and explain to me what the Minnesota hip-hop scene is like.
Rocky Diamonds: There’s definitely talent there and I know a majority of the talented artists and most of them are my friends so…. We all homies and there’s talent there, its not big and exposed to the world yet, and I think that’s my role, and I’m not gonna say who is the best, or nothing like that but I think that’s my role to open up the door to everyone else. So its like, with that being said, it’s like what I’m really trying to do, is to show that Minnesota is not just a f#####… you know what I mean, whatever they think it is. My role is to show that there is actually talent here, and be the first n#### to do it.
AllHipHop: How did your relationship with Diamond Supply develop, and how you linked up with them.
Rocky Diamonds: Well at first, last year my stage name was Young Rocky, and I when I had turned 18, I was like, “I want to drop that s###,” because I wanted to drop the “Young”. So I didn’t know who my homies was at Diamonds Supply Co. was yet, Nicky or Brock, so I was just going to the store and buying it and wearing it . Then one of my friends was just like, “You should be Rocky Diamonds,” and I thought it was cool and so that’s what we ran with. I had a shirt and it said “Diamond Life” on it and I was like, “Ima name my mixtape that s###.” But me being blind to who Nicky and Brock was, I didn’t know it was a movement already because I was all the way in Minnesota. So I got on Twitter and someone asked me if I knew who they were and I kind of freaked out because I didn’t want people to think I was trying to take their stuff and I reached out over Twitter and luckily they liked the music and s### and they told me to hit them up whenever I got to LA. I flew out to LA a few months ago and I spoke with Nicky and Brock and we just mapped everything out with the mixtape and how its supposed to go and now I am working on the next “Diamond Life” mixtape and it worked out and it just happened and out of all the people that hit him up he hit me back and I just thought that was dope.
AllHipHop: How do you pick out your beats? Who are some producers that you like to work with?
Rocky Diamonds: I’m a huge J Dilla fan, I think he is the best producer if not the one of the best producers ever. His beats were a super chill vibe and that what I look for musically. But I find when I really go in, I rap on those types of beats and then you have the “Ballin Track”, then you got “Number One”, then “Get Yo Ass Out” and its all about how I might be feeling and its all a vibe about how I’m feeling that day and when I record a song an s###.
AllHipHop: Since your success with this “Diamond Life” mixtape, explain how this has brought on more work with other artists and how it has helped your music.
Rocky Diamonds: It definitely was a steppingstone for me, just because it was kind of out of nowhere. I put out mixtapes back home, but I never put them out nationally and when we put this out, we promo’d it to a different crowd, like a larger crowd I would say. And kind of built up respect through other artists and being a part of Diamond Supply, its really serious though and now I’m working with hella producers and artists and on the second one, its going to be bigger than the first one. We put this one out just as a stepping-stone and its great and exactly how we planned it to go.
AllHipHop: Any tour plans coming up for the winter?
Rocky Diamonds: I just got off tour with the Sneaker Pimps and I did a few dates with them and I’m setting up this Midwest tour with this booking agency called Moodswing, they do work for LMFAO, Travie McCoy, Kevin Rudolph and a whole bunch of other pop artists. We had a meeting with them and we got everything set up right around when my next project drops and we are just setting that up and I’m just doing small dates here and there that I am posting on my Twitter and Tumbler.
AllHipHop: What can we expect from the next project?
Rocky Diamonds: Man! The next project is just more complete songs and better production and just taking more time to work on the mastering, really going in on the quality of the song and just better music I would say. Same feel just an upgrade of that, more professional and I think fans can expect a better quality of production.
AllHipHop: Def looking forward to seeing how the sound evolves, who you working with going forward…. Any talks with labels at this point?
Rocky Diamonds: I had a meeting with Jive, a meeting with Def Jam, Atlantic, Sony in a couple of weeks, my managers met with Universal. Now we got them all watching and we have had some deals tossed out there, but we are just taking out time and we are good just chilling, making music, doing shows and we aren’t anti-major or anything like that but we are just waiting for the right deal.
AllHipHop: Do you think that you will stick on the independent route or major?
Rocky Diamonds: I don’t want to remain independent, because I don’t feel like independent artists are put on the same stage as the major artists and I want to be one of the greats. All of the greats are major artists, so I don’t want to just be ….. I want to get as big as possible and I want to keep doing what we do on a commercial scale. If you are a true artist you can stay yourself and still put out commercial music. Look at Jay-Z… we def aren’t trying to be small.
AllHipHop: Where do you get inspiration? Who have you been listening to recently?
Rocky Diamonds: I listen to a lot of Meek Mill and Kendrick Lamar. I listened to Watch the Throne recently and I get inspiration from all of Jay-Z and Kanye West’s albums. I listened to all those albums, Section.80, Kendrick Lamar. That’s what I have been listening to recently.
AllHipHop: How about Prince and Purple Rain?
Rocky Diamonds: Hahahaha, people always ask about that… hahaha
AllHipHop: What kind of presence does Prince have on the hip hop scene out there?
Rocky Diamonds: Not only on hip-hop, but the state period.
AllHipHop: And what about Rhymesayers?
Rocky Diamonds: They are huge out here, underground indie, out here doing their thing, they have one of the largest outdoor festivals in the country, I think now called the Minnnesota Soundset Festival, but they are huge.
Contact Rocky Diamonds here @RockyDiamonds
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(AllHipHop News) Atlanta rapper Lil’ Scrappy has inked a new deal to release his upcoming album The Grustle.
According to reps for Lil Scrappy, the rapper has partnered his G-Sup label with a company named S–Line, which is owned by his manager, Kevin Clark.
G –Sup and S–Line have created a joint venture with Bonzi Records, a label that label is owned by platinum Chicago producer Jay Wells, who has worked with Keyshia Cole, Snoop Dogg, Goodie Mob and others.
The deal will allow Lil Scrappy to release The Grustle, which will be distributed by Universal/Fontana in early 2012.
Reps for Lil Scrappy told AllHipHop.com that The Grustle will feature guest appearances from Twista, Bun B, 2 Chainz and others.
The first single from the album is titled “Helicopter” featuring 2 Chainz and Twista and is currently on sale now on iTunes.
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(AllHipHop News) Queens, New York rapper 50 Cent made a high-profile appearance last night (October 31) on CNN’s talk show “Piers Morgan Tonight.”
Piers Morgan, who took over for legendary journalist/personality Larry King, made a shocking revelation during a lengthy interview with 5o Cent.
Piers Morgan revealed that he’s a fan of hip-hop music, and that he works out to 50s hit single “In Da Club.”
“No one is going to believe me when I say this, but I work out to that song,” Piers Morgan told 50 Cent. “Literally it’s on my iPod. It’s the top of my gym collection. It never fails to get me going. It’s one of the great workout songs ever.”
50 Cent agreed with Piers Morgan and stated that the hit single, which is the most played song on radio in history, is obviously a staple of his performance catalog.
“The problem with that kind of song, Piers, is you got to create something that’s equivalent to it… every day, it’s someone’s birthday, so it’s relevant all over again,” 50 Cent said. “That’s the old reliable. I can’t move the crowd, put it on. It’s going to work.”
50 touched on a number of topics during the interview, including his new anti-bullying book “Playground” and his efforts with his Street King energy shot, which has a program designed to provide meals for 1 billion people who are starving.
In one of the more interesting parts of the interview, Piers Morgan questioned 50 Cent about his father.
According to 50, he has no desire to meet the man who fathered him.
“I never knew my father,” 50 Cent said adding that he was “grateful” that the man has never attempted to contact him, especially since he has become a world famous star.
During the interview 50 also stated that he still has bullet shrapnel in his tongue from a 2000 incident, when the rapper was shot nine times.
“I slur a little bit from time to time. But this is the new voice, the voice that works,” 50 Cent said. “The one that I had before I actually got shot and went through that actual altercation was only strong enough to make people aware of me in the ten-block radius that I grew up in musically. And this voice is the one the world embraces.”
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Harlem’s self proclaimed “pretty mother f*cker” has taken the viral Hip-Hop game by storm as of late. Making his debut on the scene with the infectious ode to Houston screw music, “Purple Swag,” A$AP Rocky immediately raised eyebrows, taking all curious minds away from a slew of fellow recent viral stars, and placing the focus on his Uptown crew – who simply like to hold each other down, get high, drink brew, and kick it.
Then, his follow-up single dropped, the even better tune, “Peso,” which found its way straight to New York radio airwaves as Hot 97 quickly adopted the loose hit. His eclectic grace makes most wonder how a young Harlem cat can bust on the scene with early Houston-influenced flows, “swaggy” bars similar to Wiz Khalifa, and a brotherhood lifestyle last depicted in the early ’90s on the West Coast. Fond of Old English 40’s and tied up gangsta-style bandannas – A$AP Rocky is going in for the kill, and he’s bringing his crew alongside with him.
AllHipHop.com spent some time with the newly-signed artist at the Polo Grounds Music offices in Manhattan. In the first part of the interview, Rocky speaks on his rumored $3 million deal, his new label, A$AP Worldwide, and what venues that book him in the future need to know after his well-publicized Fader Fort performance/debacle during October’s CMJ Music Marathon in New York City:
The rapidly rising star will soon be seen touring alongside Drake and Kendrick Lamar as part of the “Club Paradise Tour.” In the second part of the interview, he shares his thoughts on his tour-mates’ music before he compares Drake to “the modern day Jay-Z,” and Kendrick Lamar to a combination of OutKast and Nas. He then comes up with an interesting comparison for himself involving two Hip-Hop titans and one Rock ‘N Roll idol:
His first mixtape, Live.Love.Asap, released for free on Halloween, mostly features in-house production and guest verses coming from the likes of Clams Casion, A$AP Ty Beats, Spaceghostpurrp, and more. Aside from being a collective of rappers and producers, “the new kids on the block,” as Rocky refers to all of the A$AP crew, includes a number of “fashion n*ggas,” too. In the last part of the interview, he speaks on his mixtape and the entire A$AP movement:
During the interview, Rocky also revealed that he had recently directed the music video for Fool’s Gold rapper Danny Brown’s new single, “Blunt After Blunt.” On the set, he shared that artists like Mos Def and Kendrick Lamar made appearances, as did comedian Dave Chappelle. You can check a video of Rocky sharing some advice that Chappelle gave him here and also see and hear his thoughts on the rumored Odd Future beef here.
Download “A$AP Rocky – Live.Love. A$AP.” Now!
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