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Wednesday Fashion Feature: “Trend Alert: Windbreakers”

Brave the wind in style with this season’s nylon stylish windbreakers.If you’ve been killing the cardigans and hoodies, a windbreaker is a

stylish way to change things up this season.

They give you an effortless breezy look as they provide you with just

enough warmth for summer nights, with some being waterproof.

Pick one with or without a hood that can be dressed up to achieve the

runway look below, or go casual and pair it with jeans and sneakers.

Nas in Complex

Many come in punchy colors and glossy finishes that you can dress up or down.

Crispy Clean Windbreaker by Artful Dodger

Windbreaker by Patrick Ervell

Flight Control Windbreaker by Artful Dodger

Abstract Jacket by Nikita

Ape Head Mac by Money Clothing

Jelly Belly Track Jacket by Rocawear

Images: Swife Life, Hypebeast

Lil Wayne Appears In Court Over Drugs, Gun; Next Hearing Aug. 11

Multi-platinum rapper Lil’ Wayne was in Yuma, Arizona Tuesday afternoon (June 23) to attend a pre-trial update in relation to his January 2008 arrest outside of the city.

 

The Young Money boss was ordered to be present at this preliminary hearing regarding the investigation into drug & weapons charges he faces.

 

The rapper previously pleaded not guilty of possession of drug paraphernalia, possession of dangerous drugs and weapons misconduct.

 

Wayne and two members of his entourage were arrested in January of 2008 at a U.S. Border Patrol checkpoint on Interstate 8, just east of Yuma.

 

Upon searching his tour bus, authorities reportedly found cocaine, Ecstasy and a handgun.

 

Though the weapon was registered in Florida, Wayne was charged for taking across state lines.

 

During Tuesday’s hearing Wayne attorney, James Tilson told the presiding Superior Court judge that the U.S. Border Patrol has yet to honor the defense’s request for records tied to the arrest.

 

According to Tilson, border officials told the Yuma County Attorney that they have no intention of releasing the training record of the drug-sniffing dogs used during the search.

 

Wayne’s next court appearance is August 11.

 

Before then, his attorney plans on submitting a new request for any video footage captured by border cameras on the day of the arrest.

PRODUCERS BREEDING GROUND: Illfonics

Illfonics: Time To Get IllHometown: Bronx, New York

Clientele: Jim Jones, LL Cool J, Mickey Factz , Fat Joe , Jackie Chain, Young Dro, Sheek Louch, Daytona

Equipment: Logic Pro on a Mac, Some analog synths, Juno-106, MS-20, Guitar and Bass

 

Everyone knows the story of grinding out until you finally get recognition. It takes some people a very long time before they reach a plateau of substantiality.  The Illfonics have been patiently working behind the scenes with television shows such as Rob and Big, underground artists like Mickey Factz and video games like NBA ‘07. With the recent success of their current beat with Jim Jones “Na Nana Na” it seems like they are finally going to get the credit they been waiting for.

 

AllHipHop.com: What initially got you guys into beat making and then becoming overall producers?

Jed: We both had been playing guitar since we were real young. We met at school, NYU, we were studying music technology. The transition from beat making to instrumentalist just kind of happened.

Matt: We went to school for music technology and focused on production. We were into the more electronic sounds and weird instrumental stuff. What we were making were beats, but, no one could necessarily rap over them. They were really hectic musical stuff. In 2002-2003 we decided to go more main stream with our stuff.

AllHipHop.com: Why are you guys called the Illfonics?

Jed: A friend of ours actually thought of it. It’s kind of like a play on the Delfonics.

Matt: We were just trying to come up with names and we hated everything we came up with. A friend said you guys should call yourselves the Illfonics. We were like alright cool. It’s not that deep honestly we just kind of went with it.

 

AllHipHop.com: Do you guys use a lot of guitar riffs and stuff when making beats?

Matt: In some of them. We use more electronic “synthy” stuff.

Jed: We do Rock stuff and Pop and R&B as well. Rock stuff is all guitar and bass most of the time.

AllHipHop.com: Do you think it’s harder to be in a partnership than it would be if you both worked individually? How do you guys conduct business?

Jed: In terms of what?

 

AllHipHop.com: For instance since you guys are considered as one entity is it harder? Does one guy come in and make a beat than the other might come in later and tweak it?

Jed: It goes both ways. We make beats together for the most part. There are joints that we’ve made completely separate. There are things one may start and the other person comes in and finishes it.

Matt: We all kind of cover the same basis. We both use program drums or play drums. We play guitar, bass, keys and stuff so we can both take something from start to finish. Sometimes we’ll just start something together completely and finish it. As far as the business end of things, we let our manager Toshi handle that and our lawyer Paulina.

Jed: We’re just doing the music.  

 

AllHipHop.com: What was your first piece of equipment? 

Jed: It was the MPC 3000

Matt: I don’t even remember…wow. I think it might have been the MPC 2000. Yet I’m almost positive I was tinkering around with other stuff as well before that. 

 

AllHipHop.com: What’s your favorite piece of equipment to work with?

Jed: The computer.

Matt: We do everything in Logic. There’s a lot of stuff in there, a lot of sounds in there that we can use. We have a lot of analog synths and stuff.

Jed: There’s a virtual MPC in the bottom.

 

AllHipHop.com: I bet everyone asks you this question, but, how did you link up with Jim Jones? What was it like working with him?

Jed: Our manager is cool with Jim’s publicist. That’s how the initial connection was made. He gave Jim’s A&R a beat CD and he really felt this one beat. The beat later became the “Na Nana Na” track. He just kept playing it. Jim was in the studio and he just had the beat on repeat.

Matt: He wrote down his stuff. The whole thing happened real quickly. It took about four days.

AllHipHop.com: He was here in your studio?

Jed: No he has his own.

Matt: They started on a Saturday or something like that. He laid down his thing and then they hit us asking us if we’re still doing this. They invited us to his studio and we met Bree as she added her vocals. We all just hung out and stuff and met Jim. That night into Sunday morning we were awake doing a mix session until 6 a.m. By Thursday it was on the radio. It was nuts because the album was already closed already.

Jed: They bumped somebody’s track for ours.

 

AllHipHop.com: So the track wasn’t even supposed to be on the album?

Matt: I know the album was supposed to come out earlier, but, I think there were other reasons as well. The album got pushed back and stuff.

 

AllHipHop.com: Jim liked the track enough to get it pushed on the radio and stuff?

Matt: Yea. He liked the single and I think they were floating two other tracks before that and testing them out. He just really liked “Na Nana Na.”

 

AllHipHop.com: Where are you guys going next with producing and who do you have lined up to work with?

Matt: We got a track with this guy Jackie Chain. He’s on Universal and the track will probably come out in the Summer with his project. Nipsey Hussle is another one. We’re doing a real West coast track.

Jed: Honestly we’re going to keep the rest f our endeavors quiet. Keep our mouths closed…haha.

Matt: We got stuff in the works. We have a lot of projects we’d love to get on.

 

AllHipHop.com: When it comes to music do you want to stick with just Hip-Hop?

Jed: No not really.

Matt: It’s pretty funny because we started off doing hip hp stuff for the longest. It just wasn’t happening. We started doing pop stuff and got such a strong reaction from that. We kind of left the hip hop stuff behind and then the LL Cool J stuff happened. After that things started to pick up and we went back to it. We are definitely trying to get the pop stuff off the ground again. Some rock stuff as well.

 

AllHipHop.com: What else outside of the music industry are you involved in?

Jed: We did a lot of TV stuff. We got some tracks with Everybody Hates Chris. We did a lot with Rob and Big on MTV. We did a track for Entourage on HBO. We have a lot of stuff we’ve made in the past that still might get used. Music supervision companies will have it and will take it when they feel.

Matt: MTV has a bunch of our tracks and they’ll throw it on there. We’ll get ASCAP checks months later in the mail.

Jed: There are a few tracks on Rob and Big that I didn’t even know were placed on there.

 

AllHipHop.com: What’s the difference in making a beat for an artist and a video game? I know you guys made a beat for NBA ‘07.

Jed: The video game situation is a more hectic time constraining situation. We had to make about 60 beats or rather 30 second snippets in about a month.

Matt: It was actually more like 2 weeks. They than gave us an extra week.

Jed: So basically 3 weeks total.

Matt: This is all while working full time jobs. It was pretty hectic.

Jed: We were just banging em’ out. They would give us direction as well. We also made the theme song for that particular game.

Matt: The difference with an artist is it has to sound like a record. It has to have a certain quality. Videogames don’t always have to sound like a real record. Some do, but they can be more abstract. Another thing with video games is there is no sampling. You have to make each one different. You can start t run out of ideas.

Jed: Quality is compromised with time constraints.

Matt: That was dope for us because we learned in two weeks how to pick up a lot of tricks and stuff. Trying to model beats out of what was out already.

Jed: We needed Dre sounding beats and stuff like that, in the club sounding joints. In the process of recreating those sounds we learned a lot and it came through in our future creative processes.

Matt: Basically to make a beat for an artist it’s different because they will just ask for a hit. With the TV or videogame stuff they will give you references. They tell you what they’re looking for. Making it for an artist is much more vague and elusive.

Jed: Most of the artist situations we’ve had they didn’t specifically ask us to make a beat. They just heard a beat they liked. The LL joint we made for him. He felt it. We already had one track placed, but he heard a different beat and went with that one.

Matt: Artists always pick the beat you least expect them to. I won’t want to play something for them, yet we do it anyways and they pick it.

 

AllHipHop.com: Are ringtones a viable option for producers?

Matt: In terms of making stuff strictly as ringtones? We never actually did a deal to just make ringtones. I’d be open to it. It’s more the Jim Jones track will be a ringtone.

Jed: As far as revenue goes it is a viable option. It is something to think about when making a track. Would it be a good ringtone?

Matt: It seems like Timbaland could do a deal with Verizon to make 40 original ringtones and that’s a pretty sweet deal. Once you get to a point where your name counts for something it can get a company to want to use you to market.

AllHipHop.com: What’s your take on the current rap game?

Matt: I think there is a lot of cool stuff going on. There’s stuff that gets boring and monotonous. There are a lot of guys trying to do new and interesting stuff.

Jed: I think something is going to happen at some point soon. I think it’s been a bit oversaturated with the down South 808 sound. I feel like a new sound is going to break sometime soon. It has to.   

Matt: I like a lot of the dudes coming out now. I like Mickey, B.o.B. or Cudi. They seem like the guys that care less about being rappers as opposed to being artists or musicians.

Jed: I think one of those dudes is going to come out and set a new wave of creativity.

Matt: I think it’s where people are at with music in general. The genre line gets blurred more and more and it matters less and less to be a certain way. There will always be rappers.

 

AllHipHop.com: Any advice for someone who might want to be a producer?

Matt: Don’t do it…haha. It’s hard. You have to be patient.

Jed: Send your music out to everyone. The biggest mistake for a lot of up and coming producers is they worry about their music getting taken. You just gotta send your stuff out to as many people as possible. You have to expect to get ripped off. It’s gonna happen at some point. Most new artists and producers have that happen all the time.

Matt: You have to be patient and believe in what you’re doing. Get a good team. Get a manager. Get someone to help you put your stuff out there.

Jed: Get someone to handle the business side too. When you meet up with the artist and talk music the business end doesn’t fit. It’s hard to do both. It’s much better having someone else handle the business stuff.

Visit Illfonics MySpace page at www.myspace.com/ILLFONICS

Naughty By Nature Teams With Microsoft To Promote PDA

Software giant Microsoft has tapped Grammy Award winning Hip-Hop legends Naughty by Nature to help promote the newest PDA device to feature the Windows Mobile operating system.

 

The group is at the center of Microsoft’s promotion for the new HTC Touch Pro 2 Windows Mobile Device, which is scheduled to roll out later this year on all four major mobile service carriers.

 

The new Touch Pro2 is the latest in a series of phones to feature a fully functional touch screen and a slide-out QWERTY keyboard. Billed as “a palm-size professional conference phone,” the Touch Pro2 features an enhanced speakerphone and noise cancelling microphone.

 

It also features the ability to break away from a conference call for a one-on-one conversation with one participant without disconnecting the conference.

 

HTC’s website also points out the phone’s one-touch functionality, allowing users to reply to emails or launch conference calls and other features with just one touch.

 

“As a fan of Microsoft products, I’m super pumped about Naughty’s promotion with Windows Mobile,” Vin Rock told AllHipHop.com. “I’m a Windows Mobile power user and eager to educate others about the future of mobile computing. This is just the beginning.”

 

After a brief breakup, Naughty by Nature reunited in 2006 and returned to the forefront nearly two years later, when the group was selected as one of the recipients of the Fifth Annual VH1 Hip-Hop Honors.

 

Shortly before the award show, the group told AllHipHop.com that they were working on their first album featuring Treach, Vin Rock and DJ KayGee since 1999.

 

“The past two or three summers, we’ve started talking about it, and we started and stopped,” Vinnie said in a previous interview. “This past summer, we finally got serious about it. And as we started doing the work, then VH1 called us for the Hip-Hop Honors.”

 

The new album, tentatively titled Anthem, Inc., will the follow up to 2002’s IIcons, which has been the only Naughty by Nature release following KayGee’s departure from the group in 2000.

Snoop, Kweli Record Track With Famed Astronaut Buzz Aldrin

The challenge of promoting science and exploration has taken a hip twist for legendary astronaut Buzz Aldrin.

 

The 79-year-old former space explorer has enlisted rapper’s Snoop Dogg and Soulja Boy for the video to his new single, “Rocket Experience.”

 

Although he’s not known for his musical skills, Aldrin didn’t think twice about collaborating with Snoop Dogg and fellow rap star Talib Kweli for the song, which deals with the first lunar landing 40 years ago in July.

 

Aldrin is credited with being one of the first men to walk on the moon as a lunar module pilot on Apollo 11.

 

The New Jersey-born spaceman’s image on the moon later served as the model for the MTV Video Music Award moonman.

 

 “I’m not too good at carrying a tune, but I do have rhythm,” Aldrin told USA Today while revealing the motivation behind “Rocket Experience.”

 

“I want kids interested in space. It’s their future.” Snoop Dogg echoed Aldrin’s desire to expose youth to space exploration while mentioning how “(Aldrin) pushes kids to achieve their dreams” as his reason for getting in the studio with the astronaut.

 

“Buzz has got the biggest buzz on the streets right now,” Snoop said. “He’s got Talib Kweli and (me) in the studio with him, and I only work with the best.”

 

The idea for “Rocket Experience” stemmed from one of Aldrin’s family members, who felt the tune would result in a broad reach for the space and science genre.

 

The song’s video is a “making of Rocket Experience” spoof that features music icon Quincy Jones riffing about Aldrin’s “great groove.”

 

The experience proved to be a memorable one for Aldrin, who had his share of challenges while rapping with Snoop Dogg in the studio.

 

“Snoop had this great hand language going as he sang, which was hard for me,” he admitted. “But when it comes to getting people’s attention, comedy goes a long way.”

 

“Rocket Experience” comes amid the release of Aldrin’s new autobiography with Ken Abraham, Magnificent Desolation: The Long Journey Home From the Moon.

 

Buzz  Aldrin’s “Rocket Experience” single is available now on iTunes.

 

Proceeds from sales of the song will go to three charities, including the astronaut’s ShareSpace Foundation.

Fan Stabbed During GZA Concert

A 25 year-old man is in stable condition after being stabbed following GZA’s performance at Toronto’s North By Northeast Festival.

 

According to initial reports, the victim got into an altercation with a suspect whom allegedly threw an item at his girlfriend.

 

After chasing the suspect through the crowd of over 2,000 people, the man was apparently stabbed in the lower back, and underwent emergency surgery at nearby St. Michael’s Hospital.

 

Descriptions of the suspect are vague, stating only that he is an Asian man in his 20s, who wore a blue baseball cap and jeans.

 

The rest of GZA’s set was completed without incident.

 

The premier lyricist’s latest album, Pro Tools, was released last year to critical acclaim.

 

It featured production from Black Milk and RZA, and the 50 Cent diss “Paper Plate.”

 

At press time, police could not verify if any witnesses to the stabbing.

What Will You Die For?

“I’m Ready to Die, Tell God I Said Hi”  – Notorious B.I.G.America is known for many things but breeding martyrs isn’t one of them. Sure we have innocent people lose their lives everyday. Good people, be they parents, honor students, teachers. Thing is, they lose their lives by a stray bullet, jealous exes, hit and runs, swine flu. When they die we say, “What a shame” and keep it moving. But how would be respond if those deaths were because they stood up to a gang, drug dealers or dirty politicians?Would we march the streets with a poster of their face and bury them as heroes? Would we celebrate their lives and the sacrifice they made? Have you noticed that Americans don’t throw around the word martyr nearly as much as they should. Not everyone’s life should be in vain.  I guess we are just too damn hard to impress. I do recall folks trying to call Tupac and Biggie martyrs. I wouldn’t go that far. We’ve become accustomed to death but senseless deaths. What about taking a bullet or blowing yourself up for something you believed in? Why aren’t more of us heroes in death?These questions came to me after witnessing the death of Neda Agha-Soltan, an Iranian woman shot down in the street by a sniper’s bullet. If it had not been for the blurry video clip (which has been broadcast all over the world) we wouldn’t have known her name. She would have been just another body in the death toll. Instead there is a massive viral movement springing from her death. It wasn’t her intention to die that day. Yet her death is now the example of just how dire the situations is in Iran. Once you put a face to a blood stain it becomes all the more real.For over a week Iranians have been protesting the outcome of the presidential election. Millions have risked their lives to take to the street and be heard knowing at any moment their government could order they be shot, gassed or arrested.In 2000 many Americans were in arms about the Bush vs. Gore election outcome. Yet we only bothered to protest from the comfort of our living room couches, cursing at the TV screen or with a lower head in disgust as we went to work the next day.When did we move from a country that walked out, went on strike, protested, rioted to silence?Seems like the only Americans still taking it to the streets and dying for what they believe in are gays and lesbians. The rest of us have tuned out, medicated by a world of TV, entertainment gossip and social networking. Oh, and for the record signing a petition online is not protesting! It’s a kind gesture but really you can do better than typing in your name for cause X and hitting submit.Neda’s death for something she believed in got me to thinking of martyrdom and the desperation for change a person must feel in order to lay their life on the line.When I hear the word martyr I think of Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, Joan of Arc–people whose lives were ended by an outside force because of what they believed in and fought to accomplish.Then you have martyrs who are celebrated for killing themselves and others–the “enemy”–by taking their own life.  Muslim suicide bombers are celebrated in their countries as martyrs fighting in the Jihad. Think of how much faith they must have to strap explosives to their bodies and detonate it with the hopes of being rewarded in the afterlife. I still marvel at Japan’s Kamikaze pilots who said f### it and just crashed their whole planes into U.S. military ships and aircrafts during World War II when it became clear they were losing the fight.We are faced with social injustices everyday in the U.S. How do you speak out? We march for a couple hours. Call up Al Sharpton and get him riled up. Hold candlelight vigils. Most times we simply do nothing.

The X Fact(her) is a weekly column that appears on 99problems.org. Started on Inauguration Day 2009 by the League of Young Voter’s Education Fund, 99problems.org is a non-profit initiative that aims to keep young people engaged in the political process through activism and community involvement. Please visit 99problems.org to find out how you can get involved right now! For more on Chloé A. Hilliard visitwww.chloehilliard.com

Dr. Dre’s Chronic Gets ‘Re-Lit’; New Album From Tupac Coming

An album of unreleased music from Tupac Shakur will be among a series of new releases coming from WIDEawake Entertainment Group, the owner of Death Row Records.

 

The Canada-based development company will allow music publisher EverGreen to serve as the worldwide administration company of Death Row via a recently signed deal.

 

Under the long-term agreement, EverGreen will administer and handle licensing for all Death Row music catalog compositions and master recordings.

 

In addition, the company will process all mechanical and performance royalties in the catalog. EverGreen’s rights to market, promote and collect royalties on all copyrights and master recordings in the Death Row catalog will be extended from the joint venture.

 

Among the material affected will be more than 10,000 released and unreleased songs by Shakur, Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg and Tha Dogg Pound, Kurupt, Daz Dillinger and Nate Dogg as well as never-before released albums by Crooked I, Lisa “Left Eye” Lopes, RBX, The Lady of Rage, Warren G, K-Solo, Danny Boy and DJ Quik, among others.

 

The WIDEawake/Evergreen alliance comes after WIDEawake’s $18 million purchase of Death Row in January.

 

In the coming months, the resuscitated label will release new music, including Shakur’s unreleased work.

 

The release of the late rap icon’s material will commemorate Shakur’s birthday in 2010.

 

Unreleased material from Shakur will not be the only music to surface from Death Row’s return.

 

The label is gearing up to re-release Dr. Dre’s classic album The Chronic.

 

The Chronic re-release, titled The Chronic Re-Lit, will include four unreleased bonus tracks as well as a DVD of never before seen video footage of Dr. Dre and other artists.

 

The Chronic Re-Lit is slated to hit stores on September 1, while the Death Row box sets will arrive in time for the holidays.