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Rakim, Ghostface, Brother Ali Hit The Road on Hip-Hop Live! Tour

Rakim, Ghostface Killah and Brother Ali will hit the road for the 1st Annual Hip Hop Live! tour, a nationwide trek kicking off this month in Los Angeles that features each MC in front of a live, 10-piece band.

 

The tour, which starts on October 29th at the House of Blues in Los Angeles, will feature The Rhythm Roots Allstars as the 10-piece backing band.

 

The Rhythm Roots Allstars is a Latino/Cuban funk soul band, that has worked with rap groups like Outkast and The Black Eyed Peas.

 

“Hip-Hop’s roots are nourished by live music,” said Rakim. “For artists who dug through crates searching for the perfect sample, always trying to replicate the sounds of a full band, standing on a stage, moving the crowd in front of this talent is both the nexus and the pinnacle of what we do.”

 

The legendary emcee is touring in support of both an upcoming live DVD and a new album, The Seventh Seal.

 

The rappers will hit 19 cities, starting with the Los Angeles date at The House of Blues.

 

The tour winds down at The Trocadero in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania on November 21.

 

Tour dates are listed below:

October 29 – Los Angeles, CA – House of Blues

October 30 – San Diego, CA – 4th & B

October 31 – Long Beach, CA – The Vault

November 1 – Santa Cruz, CA – The Catalyst

November 2 – San Francisco, CA – Mezzanine

November 3 – Portland, OR – Roseland Theater

November 4 – Seattle, WA – The Showbox

November 7 – Park City, UT – Harry O’s

November 8 – Denver, CO – Ogden Theatre

November 9 – Aspen, CO – Belly Up

November 10 – Kansas City, MO – The Beaumont Theatre

November 11 – Minneapolis, MN – First Avenue

November 12 – Chicago, IL – House of Blues

November 13 – Bloomington, IN – Bluebird Theater

November 15 – New Haven, CT – Toad’s Place

November 16 – New York, NY – Nokia Theatre

November 17 – Baltimore, MD – Sonar

November 18 – Washington, DC – 9:30 Club

November 21 – Philadelphia, PA – Trocadero

Game Review: The Orange Box

 The Orange Box, released by Valve, is a collection of 5 games, including Half-Life 2, Half-Life 2:Episode One, Half-Life 2: Episode Two, Portal, and the long-awaited

Team Fortress 2. Originally released as a Windows PC package, it has now being released on gaming consoles, first on the Xbox 360 and subsequently on the Playstation 3.  Any of these games are worth the price of admission. Throw in all five spectacular games, and you have a Game of the Year contender that is worth being in everyone’s library.

    

 

Half-Life 2 , once voted 2004’s Game of the Year, the game’s gripping story, tough characters and challenges have been preserved in the port, and with it are controls that are almost as tight as they are on the PC. Even if you have beaten it before, those perfectionists will be back in City 17 for the achievements that are available.

           

 

Episode One is more of the same, as it doesn’t add to much to the actual gameplay elements ( There are no new weapons and only one more creature), but , it adds a change of pace and makes the story more relatable to the player.  Alyx, now your companion, serves as your backup through the game as you try to escape City 17.As the length of the game isn’t that long, it feels more like a link between Half Life 2 and Episode 2, instead of a full game.

           

 

Episode Two however, is simply a blast. The pace picks up, the graphics are superior, there is a new weapon and a new creature, and more importantly, the skill of Alyx picks up as well. The action engages you and is a breath of fresh air. If you go through the game completely (Half Life 2, Episode One, and Episode Two) you really get to see what Valve has been working on. It makes it that much more satisfying to get to the ending.

           

 

Portal is a complete change of pace from Half Life 2, as it is a First Person Puzzle game instead of a shooter. The first levels are easy, and will give you confidence, until you make your way into the final few, and this is where the game shines. You really have to think as the puzzles begin to tax you mentally, and the joy of completion really makes each experience worth it.

           

 

Team Fortress 2 is where this game earns its bread and butter. Veterans of the previous Team Fortress have an idea on just how fun this can get, with 9 classes of completely different skill sets set in a world based on objectives. The difference between this game and other class based games is the balance that comes with it. All classes push your team to victory, and there is no class that is overpowered. Teamwork is the name of the game as going solo is a quick way to have your team lose. It is definitely a change of pace for console owners who are used to just outclassing the competition using the same guns and tactics. If you can find a group of players and a full map, be prepared for an afternoon of mayhem that will run for hours. 

           

 

 

The Orange Box has everything a gamer could want, the controls are tight, the interface is sleek, and the live matches are pretty solid.  Critically acclaimed, hood tested, and gamer approved. Each one of these stands alone as great gaming. All five together is gaming ecstacy.

 

Jim Jones, Lil’ Mama, Rich Boy On Board For Stay In School Concert

Rappers Jim Jones, Rich Boy and Lil’ Mama will hit the stage for a purpose, when they join various entertainment and sports celebrities for the Entertainers 4 Education Alliance’s (E4EA) 2007 Stay in School concert tonight (October 17).

 

The second annual event, hosted by the E4EA, New York radio station Hot 97 and leading online, at-home tutoring provider Catapult Online, will take place from 5 p.m. to 8 p.m. at The Manhattan Center in New York.

 

Performances from hip-hop and R&B artists will be featured, as well as a fashion show from Stay in School concert co-sponsor Lot 29.

 

For E4EA co-founder Tonya Lewis, the Stay in School concerts serves as a way “to show our children through entertainment that education is important.”

 

“We’ve brought together some of the coolest music, sports, hip-hop and R&B artists who support education and we’re especially excited that Hot 97 and Catapult Online have chosen to partner with us along with our many sponsors including fashion company, Lot 29, who are all encouraging our children to stay in school,” Lewis said.

 

Founded by Lewis and J. P Taylor, the Entertainers 4 Education Alliance is a nonprofit organization dedicated to empowering youth by utilizing resources from the music and entertainment community to promote education and positive decision making to young people while providing support and encouraging messages.

 

The E4EA’s creation came amid reaction to a USA Today report which revealed that among the nation’s 50 largest districts, New York City, Baltimore and Detroit graduated fewer than 40 percent of their students.

 

The study further stated that out of the approximately 7,000 students who will drop out of school per school day nationwide, 500 of them will come from New York City high schools.

 

As a result, Lewis and Taylor sought out celebrities to help encourage kids to stay in school.

 

“We are always looking for innovative ways to engage students and get them excited about school,” Taylor added. “This is another way to utilize those celebrities our students admire to inspire our children.”

 

Other celebrities scheduled to appear at the event include Joseph “Rev. Run” Simmons, Bronx Borough president Adolpho Clarion Jr., Juelz Santana, New York Knicks Legend John Starks, Warner Music Group Executive Vice President Kevin Liles, Nina Sky, Papoose, Red Café, DJ Envy and Jason Fox.

 

Lot 29 celebrity spokesmodel and America’s Next Top Model winner Jaslene Gonzalez will also be on hand to lead the apparel brand’s fashion showcase, which will feature 16 looks from the Lot 29 Fall/Winter ’07 Collection.

 

Stay in School concert sponsors include AllHipHop.com, Hot 97, Music Choice, Right On Magazine, Black Beat Magazine, and Vibe Magazine. Tickets for the event are available now at www.ticketweb.com.

J. Period: Project Overload

 J.

Period would describe himself as an old school A&R, the overseer

of the artists’ project that made sure the album got finished as well

as making sure the album remained true to the artists’ vision. Today,

A&Rs aren’t really known for that process. J. Period says he sees

today’s artists send their mixes and demo tapes to DJs instead of

A&Rs.The

ironic thing about hearing J. Period say all of this is that he himself

isn’t working toward one goal, one vision and the completion of one

album. He takes on no less than five projects at a time because he says

as someone who doesn’t know where his career is going, he wants the

freedom to do more than simply be a mixtape DJ or be labeled as a producer.

He wants to try both … and then some.

  In

addition to putting together mixes for Pusha T and Talib Kweli, much

in the same vain as 2006’s critically acclaimed Best of the Roots

album, he is also talking with Alicia Keys about a “best of” album

and Virginia hip-hop artist Skillz for production.

J.

Period is also working with unsigned Brooklyn hip-hop/rock group Game

Rebellion. The sextet plans on releasing a conceptual album based around

the “search for Rick Rubin,” where the group has revisited older

hip-hop records the legendary producer put out from his days working

with Public Enemy and the Beastie Boys. And J. Period ended up sitting

down with Game Rebellion and producing the group’s forthcoming album.

As

if it couldn’t get anymore interesting, J. Period could have a production

credit to the upcoming Denzel Washington film “American Gangster”

where one of J. Period’s songs might be heard in the next round of

trailers for the film. He’s also putting together a new “best of”

mixtape featuring music from an as-of-yet-to-be-named hip-hop collective.

J. Period doesn’t want the name revealed just yet, so that’s the

only hint readers get.

There

is also the best of Mary J. Blige album that he put together, which

has been sitting on the shelves of major label bureaucracy. What started

as a sort of follow up to 2005’s Best of Lauryn Hill

release that J. Period put together, Mary J’s album is a monster,

to say the least. Its three discs long, including a third disc of strictly

ballads and slow jams. Even more startling is the idea that Blige’s

label, Geffen Records, wants to put out the album as an official release,

which is why it’s taken almost a year to put together the album.

That’s

a big step for J. Period and for DJs across the country. No longer bound

by the rudimentary idea of putting out mixtapes underground and selling

them through street vendors or the Internet, should Period’s new Mary

J. Blige album come out on a major record label, it will mark a turning

point for Period’s career and for the careers of many of today’s

most successful and revered DJs.

“It’s

about creating a brand and being authentic,” says J. Period. “For

me, it’s about pushing as many envelopes as possible to see what the

feature of deejaying is. I work on five projects because I don’t know

what the future will hold.”

It’s

a major stepping stone for one of hip-hop’s DJs to release material

on a major label. It’s not just putting together a collection of exclusives,

rarities, remixes and freestyles, and then calling it an album. In today’s

world of maintaining versatility and remaining sharp so as to keep a

step ahead of the curve, it’s about producing music, interviewing

the artist’s who’s songs will be on the album and truly understanding

how a collection of tracks should sound together when they’re revamped

and released.

“It’s

about creating a cohesive, listening experience,” says J. Period.

“I’m trying to create something you can pop in and based on a certain

vibe from the artist, you can listen to it from front to back. I think

that if you can get inside the feeling that artist puts out, you can

wrap your head around what the artist is thinking.”

Born

Joel Aspman, the 32-year-old Los Angeles to New York transplant says

that what started him in deejaying and mixtapes was the pause tapes he

used to make when he was growing up in southern California.

 “I

applied the same perfectionism then as I do now. Now, I’ve just got

more tools,” says  Period. “Back then it was cassette to cassette,

and I would make intros and interludes of James Brown doing the ‘seven

wonders of the world’ speeches, and then go into something like a

Busta Rhymes verse.”

And

when he got to Stanford University in Palo Alto, Calif., J. Period ended

up having such a diverse album collection he became the de facto DJ

for campus parties. Though he was on track to become a teacher like

his parents when he graduated in 1997, he ended up moving to New York

two years later as a graphic designer, deejaying at nights on the side.

The

graphic artist in him is evident in all of his releases. Up until about

the last five mixtapes J. Period has put out, he was designing all the

artwork. Those early releases include Beats from N.Y.: Classic New

York Hip-Hop, a collection of early 1990s rap, Soundclash Dancehall

Vol. 1, a reggae mix, War of the Worlds, an underground German-bass

album that’s extremely difficult to find, and Dark Dayz, an

album of music J. Period put together following the events of Sept.

11, 2001. Things got even more serious for J. Period with the release

of Best of Nas, which J. Period says is the album that really

got the attention of hip-hop heads.

“There

was a listening session for God’s Son [in 2002] and I went

in someone else’s place,” says J. Period. “Nas showed up. There

were all these college radio DJs and I was like the infiltrator. I interviewed

him. I went up afterward and pitched the idea of me dropping everything

remixed and his interviews for a mixtape. I make the mixtape and the

next thing I know people are calling me for these CDs. And from there

it just sort of progressed.”

It

was Big Daddy Kane. It was the Isley Brothers, CL Smooth, The Roots,

Lauryn Hill and Kanye West. Whatever project came his way, J. Period’s

stock began to rise as both a DJ and producer. But instead of picking

one profession over the other, he chose the middle ground, opting to

do both, and has done so successfully ever since.

“Freedom

is a big part of it,” says J. Period. “Everyone I know complains

of having someone look over their shoulder when producing. And with

production now, it’s so big legally and there are so many sample issues.

I can produce beats and do raw samples that I would otherwise have to

clear. Danger Mouse famously got in a lot of trouble for using those

Beatles samples. People that know my mixtapes know that certain songs

I produced, the artists would have never cleared the samples.”

The

artist who used to simply go by “J” … period, and one can understand

how it’s turned into its present moniker, is now a producer, DJ, the

go-to guy for mixtapes and “best of” albums, and is an example of

what’s needed for the future of DeeJaying.

 J.

Period doesn’t want to make it seem like he’s the only one doing

this. Where he sees constant opportunities and chances to create new

music, for J. Period, the future of hip-hop and deejaying might seem like

a blank slate. But it’s DJs such as J. Period who are carving their

own interpretation of the culture, of hip-hop and all of music. And

if he is reinventing music, well then at some point J. Period does have

a vision, and he is the A&R he half-jokingly makes himself out to

be.

Smif N Wessun: Wrekonize

Do the math. New York’s own Smif N Wessun has been putting in that work for a long time. Making their introduction on Black Moon’s Enta Da Stage, the duo hit hard with their gritty back and forth Brooklyn hard-rock swag. Tek and Steele dropped the single “Bucktown” and instantly had the underground on smash.  Entirely produced by the Beatminerz, their subsequent debut, Dah Shinin’, spawned several BK anthems, making their debut a certified classic. The pair would attempt to up the ante under their new Cocoa Brovaz moniker with their second release The Rude Awakening, but it would fail to live up to its predecessor.

 

In ’05 their third joint Smif N Wessun: Reloaded let heads know the group didn’t lose their moxie. Now almost twelve calendars into the game the Boot Camp brethren return hungry. Rather than go through your standard question and answer routine we get the scoop on some of their seminal singles, a brush up on their slept on burners, and a small peek into their latest project, The Album“Black Smif-N-Wessun” from Black Moon’s Enta Da StageTek: Buck [Shot] had just finished performing a show.  Everybody was all hyped. We were all in the limo in the back drinking; blowing on that Hawaiian cess.  Ni**a’s was like, “Yo we need to get on a song together.”  We hadn’t even recorded one song together; we were just doing shows together then.  We [Smif N Wessun] were still opening up for them and things like that and from there we were just brainstorming like what are we going to call it?  It was like “Black Smif N Wessun.”  Black Moon and Smif N Wessun and we put it together.  From there it was magic.  We were so wrapped up in Beatminerz music at the time, we only felt one way about their tracks and that was good.  We fell in love with a Beatminerz beat as soon as we heard it.  We didn’t give a f*** how it sounded.  We recorded that session in an old studio.  It used to be so f***ing cold in there we used to had to keep our Northfaces and Timberlands on while we were listening to it, while we were tracking the beat, when we were doing the vocals.  It was rough in there, B.  We used to use the piano covers to cover up for heat sleeping in the studio until the sessions got done.  Steele: I tell you one thing. Once we heard that, we knew that was a Smif N Wessun track.

“Bucktown” from Smif-N-Wessun’s Dah Shinin’Tek: Home of the Orginal Gun Clappaz.  Steele: That set it all off for us.  We always had that waiting in the background.  Our thing was that we were always Bucktown / Bootcamp Clik, so our first song we knew we had to pop off appropriately. We had another song called “All About The Cash.”  We came out and we was back to back throughout the whole sh*t.  We had a sample that we couldn’t get cleared for sh*t.  So the runner up was “Bucktown.”  We got to give Beatminerz a lot of credit because we knew they did their thing before and we knew we had to make an anthem.  We wanted to include everyone around us so we went with that hook.Tek: That all describes Brooklyn.  Steele: You got to remember back in that time in the 90’s, Hip-Hop was explosive at that time.  You had the Wu-Tang Clan, you had Onyx out there doing their thing and Loud Records was out there doing their thing.  And here we come these young grimy little ni***’s straight from high school.  All we knew is running through those Manhattan streets, Queens’ streets, and running through Brooklyn streets.  That was Bucktown to us.  Everything was exciting to us and new to us so we just let the guns go.  We did the remix with M.O.P.; one of Brooklyn’s finest duos.  We tried to keep the energy going; we had another Bucktown [“Welcome to Bucktown USA”] on The Chosen Few album.  [Bonus]

[“Bucktown” Video – Story continues below…]

“Sound Boy Bureill” from Smif N Wessun’s Dah Shinin’Steele: That came from my heavy influence in the West Indian Caribbean culture.  When you in Brooklyn, you surrounded by a lot of different islands.  A lot of us have family members from different backgrounds.  That was a natural progression so we had to add that in.  Tek: At one time the homosexual community was riding us about that song, pause.  But anyone that speaks their mind is going to catch some flack.  We been dodging and dipping bullets and sending them right back since we came out.  That’s why we always in the trenches and that’s why it’s Boot Camp. 

“Won On Won” from the Soul in the Hole SoundtrackTek: Soul In The Hole [Basketball Tournament].  That’s right around from my way in the [Bed] Stuy in the park.  We used to go to the park and Skip [To My Lou] and all of them used to come through to the Soul In The Hole.  Big Uncle Ralph McDaniels shot the video for it, that sh*t was sick right there.  Steele: We’re trend-setters man.  Shout out to Sean Cane.  Nobody was able to make no beats like that since then and it needed a duo to go back and forth like how we split that beat up.   That’s not average boom bap beat, nah mean?  We were just going in on that and before you know it there wasn’t no more beat left!  That’s one of them songs that just had you energized.  Actually I wish we had the video taping the room because that particular song we only had one mic.  We literally did our sh*t on one mic at D&D studios.  We ran things in D&D studios.  Everything in D&D was crazy.  That was one of the places where Hip-Hop was living.  For us being in the studio with one of the greatest producers of all time Premier and Pete Rock coming through to all these places; being in that cipher with them and knowing you amongst greats you can’t let nobody down.  D&D was great, especially the pool games.  We definitely cracked a couple of cats in the head for a couple of dollars.  Big up to the dread who used to bring us that exclusive ganja.[“Won On Won” Video – Story continues below…]

“Black Trump” f/ Raekwon from Cocoa Brovaz’ The Rude AwakeningTek: You know that was something we laid down with the family.  We weren’t in D&D for that session, we were at another studio.  Steele: Rae[kwon the Chef] was actually there.  We were burning black weed, we were burning the original black weed.  We were getting toasted.  We actually got some of that footage, we did the video.  Son actually showed up, it wasn’t a super imposed image.  It was definitely an honor for us since you know Wu Tang came in the game people been comparing us to them.  We’re distant cousins so it was an honor to do a song with him.

“Spanish Harlem” f/ Hurricane G & Tony Touch from Cocoa Brovaz’ The Rude AwakeningTek: Big up to our peoples in the Barrio up, Hurricane G, the boy Tony Touch.  In that video we had Rev Run, we had [Big] Pun, we had everybody!  That’s when the Hip-Hop community was showing love to each other.  The beef that was running around was real minor sh*t.  It was nothing major like when I see that ni**a I’m smashing him.  Or if it was like that, you didn’t hear about it, it was kept between them crews.  But “Spanish Harlem” was crazy. We shot that video on 116th street right in the projects.  We used to shut down that weed spot.  [“Spanish Harlem” Video – Story Continues below…]

“Super Brooklyn”Steele: That one we recorded in Queens.  My boy DJ Rob did that beat.  He played a couple of beats for us and we heard that and it was like dam that’s a hit; everyone knows that one!  We just figured we had to go in hard on that one.  As kids we all played Super Mario [Brothers].  We made it “Super Brooklyn” and we kept it simple.  We did the remix with Mr. Cheeks because the dude DJ Rob had a relationship with him.  We got stressed out by the video game company.  That’s one thing that held us back but pushed us forward at the same time.  You competing with a big company [Nintendo]; you seen what they did to [Lil’] Flip.  Even though the song was under the radar, a lot of people heard it and we got chances to meet with a lot of big companies behind that sh*t.

“Get Up” from the Lyricist Lounge, Vol. 2Tek: Oh that’s when we were riding in Cali heavy with that one.  We flew out there to shoot to the video, production by the boy Hi-Tek.  We performed that on the Soul Train they had popping off.  That was a good look for your boys.Steele:  I almost died ni***! I almost died in Cali that day!  I was sick as a dog man. I caught a virus bug or something.  I was f***ing around with my Mexican homeys, they was bringing me all type of funny corn soups and sh*t.  It probably had something to do with all that Hennessy I was drinking the day before.  That was our first real introduction to Rawkus Records.  “Super Brooklyn” lead us to Rawkus [Records] eventually.  We were about to get into [a deal] with Rawkus if they had kept on going.  Tek:  The deal was inked[“Get Up” Video – Story continues below…]

“My Timbz Do Work” from Smif N Wessun’s ReloadedSteele: That song is off the Smif ‘n’ Wessun Reloaded album.  That whole album was straight hardcore cuts.  We basically were talking about we trend setting the game and coming and putting the boots up dudes a####, it’s just stabilizing your position.  Tek: Reloaded was one of them sleepers, it did what it did.  It enabled us to keep doing what we doing the only way we can do it.  It was a lot of good joints on there the same way there were a lot of crazy joints on The Rude Awakening

“Stomp” f/ Rock & Joell Ortiz from Smif N Wessun’s The AlbumSteele: Why we used a brother like Joel Ortiz, he got it popping in the streets and in the industry.  It’s only right that men of respect deal with men of respect.  From then to now we show you that our game has never changed.  We always continue to f*** with raw artists and him just doing its only right because he representing Brooklyn.  Tek: This new album, Smif-n-Wessun The Album, comes out October 23rd [and] is off the chain.  It’s crazy joints on there.  Steele:  This is our fourth album as Smif-n-Wessun and we still with Duck Down; it’s family.  It’s officially known that we are a legendary group because a lot of groups haven’t lasted in this game like us and haven’t been consistent with the music as we have.  We bringing forth the evolution of all of our experiences.  Theoretically this album is like a photo album, it allows you to look back and look forward at the same time.

[Smif N’ Wessun “Gotta Say It” Video”]

C-Murder Re-trial In Murder Case Set For February

Rapper Corey “C-Murder” Miller will stand trial on a second-degree murder charge for the second time in February a judge ruled yesterday (October 16) in New Orleans, Louisiana.

 

Judge Martha Sassone set a trial date of February 11 for Miller’s trial, which stems from a Jan. 2002 incident in which Miller is accused of shooting 16-year-old named Steve Thomas to death, at a defunct Harvey nightclub.

 

Miller was originally convicted and sentenced to life in prison for allegedly shooting Thomas in September of 2003.

 

The rapper appealed the verdict and his conviction was overturned in March of 2004, after it was discovered that prosecutors had bolstered at least five prosecution witnesses credibility, by expunging their criminal records.

 

In 2004, Judge Martha Sassone ordered a new trial date for the rapper, which was finally settled agreed upon on Tuesday.

 

If convicted, Miller faces a mandatory life sentence.

 

Hip-Hop Rumors: 50 Disses Wayne Again! LL Records Diss? The Game’s New D.O.C.?

IS LL COOL J GOING TO DO IT?

Straight up, I heard that LL Cool J recorded a diss against Jay-Z yesterday. Now, that I got that out, I can add on to the nothing that I know. I heard that LL recorded this song in the studio of another well-known rapper/producer. If/when this comes out as fact, people are certain to be shocked and amazed. I just can’t say who it is just yet. More on it later.

WHAT’S IT GONNA BE, N***A NAS?

Big time rap fan will recall that Nas was originally going to call Hip-Hop is Dead N***a, but must have had some change of heart. Now, that Nas has decided to go through with it this time, the controversy explodes. But, well Def Jam let him do it? According to my sources, that’s the title of the album and that’s that. (I’m saying my intel goes against AHH’s  news story.) On the other side of things, other sources at Def Jam are saying that 1) Nas isn’t even on the fourth quarter release schedule and 2) that there will be no Def Jam CD called N***a coming out under their umbrella. I can’t really say what’s what, but I can say its pretty crazy.

Jesse Jackson, Mr. Fa’ Shizzle My Nizzle himself dissed Nas:

“The title using the ‘N’ word is morally offensive and socially distasteful. Nas has the right to degrade and denigrate in the name of free speech, but there is no honor in it. Radio and television stations have no obligation to play it and self-respecting people have no obligation to buy it. I wish he would use his talents to lift up and inspire, not degrade, making mockery of racism.”

– Rev. Jesse “”Hymietown”” Jackson

THE GAME RESPECTS HIS ROOTS!

I heard that The Game has found a new name for his next album. I heard its called D.O.C. Guess what that means? I heard D.O.C. stands for DIARY OF COMPTON! Now, that’s pretty slick considering The D.O.C. was one of the main dudes behind the N.W.A. scenes. Even though he wasn’t from Compton, this is certainly cool.

KING 50!

In the next issue of King magazine, 50 Cent talks wildly about Lil’ Wayne.

You went after Lil’ Wayne on “Part-Time Lover” with the rhyme “You make me want to kiss you like Baby do Wayne/And make you call me Daddy like Baby do Wayne/Damn, that s### sounds gay, it’s insane/I guess that’s the price a lil’ n#### pay for fame.” What’s that about?

I’ve already baited Lil’ Wayne to come on out so I can break his little neck. My consistency will break his neck the same way LL’s consistency broke Canibus’. Lil’ Wayne is a talented rapper but not a great songwriter. He has had great verses on other people’s projects, but they were not his complete ideas over production that he picked. He’s not marrying the right production and lyrics to make classic hit records.

But if he’s not coming after you, why bother him?

Why not break his neck? I got nothing else to do. If they set you up to believe you are in a situation you’re not actually in yet, then you go out there… See, he’s saying what he’s saying to Jay because Jay didn’t respond to him. I’m giving him something to work off. Is that one of 50’s laws? Yeah. Sometimes the best defense is a good offense.

DEELISHUS TALKING RECKLESS!

Deelishis is buggin’ out and dissin’ my girl Ashanti! Just click here and listen to her put both Nelly and Ashanti on full blast.

http://www.zshare.net/audio/4256070544d592/

HERE IS A LETTER I GOT REGARDING LUPE/TRIBE!

I found this letter to be hilarious. Check it out. I only edited the cuss words.

F**k you illseed for getting at lupe all because he sayd that a tribe called quest wasnt that known witch nobody knows them and lupe is a way better then them either way he would kill them in 2 bars. you internet geek f**k you and get a life cause i know you cant get p***y b***h so thats why u on the internet 24/7.

Get it all out, lil’ guy.

ILLSEED’S QUICKIES

Shout out to the homey O.D.D.$.

I’m still getting word that Tiny, T.I.’s babe is preggers. I hope she can maintain under this stress. Did you know T.I. made over $18 million last year? Frorm what I understand Tip is facing 20-40 years.

I heard that Jay-Z isn’t mad at all about what Dame and Biggs have done with the “Beyond Reasonable Doubt” mixtape.

There is a rumor that Ciara is going to record a track with Aaliyah. Ciara is like a modern day version of the late, great A.

Great luck men have. I heard that Kim Kardashian has another sex tape about to hit the market.If you get a chance, check out the ill pics of Fantasia on a fantasy BBQ in her bathing suit. What cracks me up is all the people dissing her, but she doesn’t look that bad in these pics.

Not a rumor: JD had a book signing for his book, “Young, Rich and Dangerous: The making of a Music Mogul,” yesterday at Hue-Man Bookstore & Café in Harlem.

GUERILLA BLACK IS THE NEW BIG!

I know, I could be wrong, but I heard that all those Biggie movie wanna-be’s can give it up. I heard that all roads lead to Guerilla Black. I cant say if he won, but I can say that I heard he’s the favorite. Check out his video and you tell me he’s not the one.

Shout out to the D.O.C. Here is a couple of his videos!

“Funky Enough”

“The Formula”

“Mind Blowin'”

You already know, more illseed BS later in the day.TOMORROW, WE LOVE YOU!

They keep us talking, but if we stop talking about them then they should worry!-illseedWHO: illseedWHAT: RumorsWHERE: AllHipHop.com, MySpace.com/TheIllseedHOW: Send your rumors and ill pics to illseed at [email protected].– allhiphop rumors

Def Jam Says No Date For Nas’ ‘N####’ LP; Imus’ Camp Supports Title

Representatives for Island Def Jam have denied that Hip-Hop superstar Nas will release an album with the controversial title N#### in December.

 

The rapper made headlines on Friday (October 13), when he announced the controversial title and release date of December for his next album, during a show at the Roseland Ballroom in New York.

 

According to FoxNews.com, representatives close to Island Def Jam Chairman Antonio “L.A.” Reid have denied that they will release the album by Nas in December.

 

Additionally, the representative claimed the only album for Nas on Def Jam’s release schedule is his Greatest Hits compilation, which is due in stores in November.

 

“There is no album release by Nas on the release schedule at this point,” a source told FoxNews.com.”And they would be unlikely to release an album with that title. How would that look at Wal-Mart?”

 

While the release date is in question, representatives for Nas and a PR representative at Def Jam confirmed the controversial name of the album with AllHipHop.com.

Nas’ album title N#### has sparked controversy and debate throughout the Hip-Hop community.

 

The title was also condemned by Reverend Jesse Jackson.

 

“The title using the ‘N’ word is morally offensive and socially distasteful,” Jackson said in a statement. “Nas has the right to degrade and denigrate in the name of free speech, but there is no honor in it. Radio and television stations have no obligation to play it and self-respecting people have no obligation to buy it. I wish he would use his talents to lift up and inspire, not degrade, making mockery of racism.”

 

Nas found support from an unlikely ally – Don Imus.

 

A representative for the shock jock, who was fired for calling female members of the Rutgers University Basketball Team “nappy headed hoes,” told FoxNews.com that the album title was a “good thing.”

 

“It’s a good thing,” Imus’ representative Martin Garbus said. “Words like that should be deprived of their meanings, and then they can’t hurt.”

Former Friend Proceeds with Diddy Lawsuit

Despite reports of a resolution, Sean “Diddy” Combs may remain at the center of an assault rap from a man the Hip-Hop mogul allegedly punched in the face over the weekend.Steven Acevedo confirmed to The New York Post that he still plans on taking the Combs to court over the incident, which stemmed from a heated exchange between the two men around 3:30 a.m. on Saturday (Oct. 13) at Upstairs nightclub, not at Kiosk as originally reported.When asked if Acevedo planned on dropping the charges, he ran his finger across his neck and said “definitely not.”According to reports, Combs and Acevedo argued once during the evening and continued to argue after being separated during the earlier skirmish.The men clashed again as Combs allegedly screamed “I’ll kill you, punk!” and punched Acevedo twice in the face, bloodying his nose and giving him a fat lip.Acevedo, who works in the clothing business, told police he then saw one of Comb’s bodyguards lift his shirt as if to signal that he had a gun.Acevedo then left and filed a police report. Although police sources cite a woman Diddy escorted to the Cannes Film Festival last summer and that Acevedo had dated as the reason for the dispute, other sources said the fight stemmed from another issue, but did not know what it was.In the meanwhile, efforts to question Combs have been a challenge as prosecutors and detectives met Tuesday (Oct. 16) to discuss how to proceed with the case. The music executive was a no-show for a scheduled meeting with detectives at the 1st Precinct station house Tuesday afternoon.Acevedo and Combs made headlines once again, when footage of the two men meeting at New York club Butter surfaced on TMZ.com.Witnesses are being contacted to be questioned about the incident, while police are reviewing surveillance cameras to see if the alleged assault was captured on tape.”We hope this matter will be resolved without the filing of any criminal charges as it was a disagreement among acquaintances, not a criminal assault,” said Combs’ attorney, Benjamin Brafman.

Foxy Brown Pleads Innocent; Faces Seven Years In Prison

Foxy Brown appeared in court today (October 16) where the 28-year-old rapper pleaded not guilty to felony assault charges.

 

Brown, who is jailed on Rikers Island for violating the terms of her probation over a 2004 fight with two manicurists, is accused of hitting Arlene Raymond in the face with a Blackberry during a neighborhood dispute.

 

The women got into a fight over the volume of Brown’s car stereo.

 

Raymond accuses the rapper of striking her in the face with a Blackberry, which bruised her eye and chipped her tooth.

 

Brown, born Inga Marchand, is charged with assault, attempted assault, menacing and criminal possession of a weapon.

 

She faces up to seven years in prison if convicted on all the charges.

 

Brown’s lawyer John Sampson, told reporters outside of the courtroom that Brown was jealous of Brown’s success.

 

Judge John Ingram extended an order protection for Raymond until December 18.

 

Foxy Brown is due back in court on December 17.

Jermaine Dupri Details Ups and Downs of Success in New Book

Award-winning producer/rapper Jermaine Dupri is opening up about his rise to the top and the consequences and joys of fame in a new book.Titled Young, Rich and Dangerous: My Life in Music, the book chronicles the current Island Records Urban Music president’s beginnings as an opening act dancer for the New Fresh Fest tour as well as his discovery of rap duo Kriss Kross and the journey towards becoming an established force in the music industry.For Dupri, the pair’s individual personalities stood out when hediscovered Kriss Kross members Chris Kelly and Chris Smith in the Greenbriar Mall in 1990.”What struck me about the Chrises was the way their personality came through. . . It was like those kids were waiting to be discovered ever since they became friends in the first grade,” wrote the mogul, who revealed details about the first Kriss Kross album as well as how he persuaded Smith and Kelly to braid their hair and wear their clothes backwards, created the group’s image and wrote, produced and recorded all the music on a secondhand four-track recorder. “I saw something in them that I could bring out with some hard work and imagination.”Dupri’s success with Kriss Kross resulted in collaborations with numerous artists such as Mariah Carey, TLC, Bow Wow, Elton John, Bobby Brown and Usher. Additionally, Young, Rich and Dangerous details Dupri’s progression to record label head with the creation of So So Def Productions.Although he reminisces over his triumphs in Young, Rich and Dangerous, Dupri also exposes the other side of his success as he revisits his experience with an overly ambitious musician, the backlash he’s received from those who were skeptical of his artists’ fame and competition within the music industry to stay on top.Readers can also check out never-before-seen photographs from studios, parties and awards shows as well as get the mogul’s take on the birth of his daughter, the story behind his relationship with girlfriend Janet Jackson and the artists he’s collaborated with.”Usher loves real hard. I’ve seen him in the studio where he’s so into a girl he can’t even record,” Dupri wrote.Young, Rich and Dangerous, which is co-written with Samantha Marshall, features a forward by famed producer Teddy Riley.  The Atria Books published work is currently available in bookstores.

Fans Asked To Support ‘J. Dilla Project’ For Lupus Research

The family of J. Dilla is calling on fans to support the J Dilla Project, a new initiative designed to raise money and awareness about lupus, the disease which took the famed producer’s life on February 10, 2006.

 

Fans are being encouraged to start their own “J Dilla Project” teams across the United States to join The Alliance for Lupus Research’s annual Walkathon, which raises money and awareness to treat lupus, which is an incurable blood disease.

 

Frank Nitty, of Detroit rap group Frank N Dank, was a childhood, life long friend of J. Dilla. The group recently released the DVD Frank N Dank & J. Dilla’s European Vacation, which chronicles the producer’s last tour, as well as his final days alive.

 

“It’s always a good thing to support a good cause and for the fans of Dilla you are not only supporting Lupus research but also the legacy of one of the greatest producers of our time, J. Dilla,” Frank Nitty told AllHipHop.com. “You can’t go wrong, so just go support.”

 

J. Dilla, born James Dewitt Yancy, suffered for with Lupus for three years.

 

Fans are also being encouraged to sponsor individual walkers and to give donations to help further the cause of Lupus research in an attempt to find a cure for the deadly disease.

 

The Alliance for Lupus Research was founded in 1999 by Robert Wood Johnson IV with the support of the Arthritis Foundation.

 

Johnson is an heir to the Johnson & Johnson fortune and since its inception, the foundation has raised over $42 million dollars earmarked for lupus research.

 

Fans in almost every major metropolis in the U.S. who wish to support The J Dilla Project and ALR’s Walkathon can participate, as events are taking place in New York (October 13), Chicago (October 20), Atlanta (October 20), San Francisco, Washington D.C., Los Angeles, Houston and other cities.

 

A listing of cities fans can join or create “J Dilla Project” walking teams for ALR’s Walkathon are listed below.

 

For more information visit: http://walk.lupusresearch.org/site/PageServer

 

Saturday, 10.20.07ChicagoCheck in begins at 9:00 a.m.Walk beings at 10:00 a.m.Rain or Shine | Distance: 5k (3.1 miles)@ Lincoln Park at Montrose Harbor

Saturday, 10.20.07AtlantaCheck in begins at 9:00 a.m.Walk beings at 10:00 a.m.Distance: 5k (3.1 miles)Participants do not have to walk the entire distance to participate inthe event.@ Piedmont Park Picnic Pavilion

Saturday, 11.03.07San FranciscoCheck in begins at 9:00 a.m.Walk begins at 10:00 a.m.Rain or Shine | Distance: 5k (3.1 miles)@ Justin Herman Plaza

Saturday, 11.03.07Washington D.C.Check in begins at 9:00 a.m.Walk begins at 10:00 a.m.Rain or Shine | Distance: 5k (3.1 miles)@ The National Mall

Saturday, 11.17.07Los AngelesCheck in begins at 9:00 a.m.Walk begins at 10:00 a.m.Rain or Shine | Distance: 5k (3.1 miles)@ Crescent Bay Park, Santa Monica

Saturday, 11.17.07HoustonCheck in begins at 9:00 a.m.Walk begins at 10:00 a.m.Rain or Shine | Distance: 5k (3.1 miles)@ Jewish Community Center

Jagged Edge: Staying Power

This music industry has witnessed countless crazy events in the lineups of our favorite groups. We’ve seen them start out with four members and swap out two of their members; trading them like baseball cards. We’ve witnessed a four-person group become a three person group, then go on to do better than the original quartet. We’ve also seen groups that only give us one album, because one person decides they want to go solo after just one trip on the musical merry go ‘round. With this being said, nothing really should shock or surprise us except for a group that somehow managed to stay a group and never departed from this formation. Ladies and gentlemen, Jagged Edge!First introduced to us in the late ‘90s by super-producer, Jermaine Dupri (through his then So So Def/ Columbia imprint), these Atlanta-bred crooners have been serving us with hit after hit and doing their part to help men and women everywhere conceive children for the past ten years. It’s no wonder that their latest album is titled Baby Makin’ Project. However, their road in this industry has not been without its potholes. Their silence the past few years can be attributed to the parting of ways with their former label (Columbia).Now, with all the drama behind them, Jagged Edge are finally ready to re-emerge; with a new label (Def Jam), a new album, and an old, crazy idea that seems to work for them – sticking together through thick and thin.    AllHipHop.com Alternatives: Who is Jagged Edge today? You guys have been in the game a minute. How different are you guys now from when you first came out?WATCH VIDEO Jagged Edge-Wingo: We know the business a little better…a lot better. We’re better businessmen now than we were when we first started. Back in the day, they were signing cats to seven album deals, eight album deals. Now you might get a single deal. You know what I’m sayin’? And it is what it is. I think the industry has gone back to the artist getting out and getting on the grind. Like workin’, workin’, workin’. You get your one hot song, you gotta go with it. Point blank, all around the board. Promote and sell that record like it’s your last. Like back in the day when we got signed, we signed a seven album deal. The industry has changed but it’s better for the artist, because at the end of the day you can promote your own…JE-Brian [to Wingo]: You think the grind role is better for the artist….JE-Wingo: Yeah the grind role is better for the artist, because at the end of the day it makes you work.AHHA: You said that you guys are better businessmen. That brings me to my next question. Tell me something about 581 Music?JE-Brian: 581 Music Group is our label. It’s our first shot at being CEOs. This Jagged Edge project is our first offering from the label. It’s something me and my brothers have been trying to do for awhile. We’ve been working hard to even get into a position where we can even get somebody to even consider trying to make that happen for us. We kept trying to position ourselves and it just finally happened. We got a group called Bad Girl. Soon as our album comes out we’ll start their album probably October or something like that. Maybe y’all will hear something from them in the near future like spring, hopefully summer….something like that. 581 stands for where we come from. It’s the address of our old crib where we used to rehearseAHHA: Is this something you guys have wanted to do for awhile, or is this something that came about out of spontaneity and you guys wanting to take more control of your careers?JE-Brian: We have been working towards it, but we have been trying to take control from day one. We were just in another building that – [pause] In a lot of buildings, when you had the kind of success that we were blessed to have, a lot of that success would equal certain opportunities in other buildings. We were just in a building that no matter what type of success we had, no matter how much writing we did, no matter how much producing we did, we just couldn’t get those opportunities over there. So that’s one of the reasons we opted to get out of that building and out of that contract. The whole Def Jam situation has been a blessing…just being able to get back with JD [Jermaine Dupri], somebody we know believes in us has been a blessing. At the same time, his belief in us is what’s helping us to have this opportunity right here.AHHA: People have not heard from you guys in a little while. So personally and professionally, what’s been going on with you guys the past couple of years?JE-Wingo: Working! We were recording. If we were not on the road, we were in the studio creating something new. And that’s our lifestyle at the end of the day. We’ve accepted it. Anytime someone says that Jagged Edge has been on a little hianus…or whateverJE-Brandon: Hianus? It’s hiatus man! [laughter]JE-Wingo: So anytime anyone says Jagged Edge has taken a…break, honestly we’re just getting ourselves back in the right position so we can do what we have done for years, what we love to do – music! Music is our life! So trust me if you haven’t seen Jagged Edge, trust me we’re coming!AHHA: So what’s been going on personally?JE-Brandon: Wingo got married. I had a baby; my second baby.JE-Wingo: Yeah he had a beautiful little girl. That’s my boo right there! I’m gonna raise her!WATCH VIDEO [laughter]JE-Brandon: The professional always kind of takes a toll on you personally. And the transition from Columbia to Def Jam was definitely a big personal change. And one for the better we feel, not to knock the other label, but like he said it is what it is. For years even after success, we were never really welcomed like that. We never had opportunities. Like for example, over here I saw that as soon as Ne-Yo became a name over here [Def Jam], a hit artist, he was afforded other opportunities to write for other Def Jam artists and we never had those kind of opportunities at Columbia. We had number one records, a couple multi-platinum selling records and for whatever reason we never got those opportunities. Even though [the label change] was a professional change, it was a big personal change for the better. Our spirits are raised; the morale is back. We’re rejuvenated. It’s nothing like being somewhere in terms of this industry being in a system where what they do is what we do. Columbia is a pop and rock-geared label, and we’re urban. You can’t get past the fact that Jagged Edge is an urban group. We’ve had some mainstream success, and we make music for everybody, but we are an urban group. And finally to be somewhere that understands urban music is definitely to our benefit.AHHA: Going forward, what is going to make this situation different than your situation at your last label? How exactly did the resentment start to build between you guys and your former label?JE-Brandon: Resentment starts to grow when one side of a relationship is giving all they got and the other side is nonchalant about the whole relationship. I think the resentment built from us ‘cause like I said we were putting 150% in every project. And here, they respect the 150%. They say if you give me 150% we are going to take it as far as we can take it. Whereas in the other system it just was not like that. It didn’t matter what we did. We never had the whole machine behind us like an artist needs to be a huge artist.AHHA: So I’ve been hearing that the album for the most part will be a collection of ballads. Was there any particular reason that made you guys go in this direction?JE-Brandon: The state of music! I think when everybody is doing the same tempo, then there is a lane wide open to change the tempo and give you something new. Even though it’s what we’ve always represented, to this generation it’s new. We came up where it’s seven, eight maybe nine ballads on a record, and if you were trying to set the mood then that was your soundtrack and lately we haven’t had records like that. So we felt like it was time to give that to this generation.AHHA: Well with the state of R&B being what it is; R&B is Hip-Hop for the most part. You guys in the past have been that Hip-Hop friendly kind of group who was able to bridge that gap. There are a lot of people coming out now who are saying they are bringing real R&B back. What makes it different when you guys say it?JE-Brandon: I don’t think we are actually doing anything different. We are doing what we’ve always done. It might be perceived like bringing R&B back because it hasn’t been as prevalent in the last five or six years. But for us, it’s the same grind. It’s not about changing anything for us. It’s not about coming with a new slogan or a new push. Our new slogan is our old slogan; it just might be new to this generation.AHHA: Aside from a slower tempo…content-wise what can we expect from the Baby Makin’ Project?JE-Brandon: Content-wise you can expect songs that are more like “Put a Little Ummph In It” as opposed to a “Promise” or “Let’s Get Married.” More lighthearted; more [songs with a] sexual connotation. We not really being freaky. It ain’t raunchy, but it’s definitely more suggestive. It’s more of a bedroom music mood than ever. It’s definitely for people who are trying to set the mood. AHHA: You guys have been together for a while now. You guys seem to have a certain camaraderie even after all these years. What has kept you guys together all this time when many groups are not deciding to stay together?WATCH VIDEO JE-Brian: I think the main thing that has kept us together is that camaraderie, that bond, that respect and real love that is there between the four of us. We all four cats who were friends anyway. It’s not like we only know each other cause we sing. We were cool; we were friends anyway. It just so happened that we had the same interests. I think at the end of the day, that bond that we formed that didn’t have anything to do with music it keeps us able to do this music together.JE-Brandon: Also we’ve discussed it plenty of times amongst ourselves. Everybody in our group wanted to be in a group. I see a lot of groups – everybody sees – somebody looked at the group as a way to get they foot in the door, as opposed to saying I want to be in a four man group. I want to make history with three other guys; I believe in the strength in numbers. It’s a whole different mentality When you have the mentality of just wanting to get your foot in the door, then yeah you’re walking through it and leaving everyone else. And for us we wanted to walk through together. We wanted to stand together. We wanted to make a stand together.AHHA: When you guys hit the scene, there were probably only a couple other acts that were based out of Atlanta. Since then, Atlanta has had a number of acts hit it big. What are your feelings on that?JE-Brandon: It’s a great thing. Anytime you know somebody personally and then you see them have success, unless you a hater you ain’t going to do nothing but feel good for them. Half of the people that came out the past six or seven years, we probably known for years and knew they were coming.JE-Wingo: Yeah Atlanta’s so close knit. We’ve seen all these cats come up. The Bobby Valentino, Usher, Youngbloodz, Monica, Outkast. We went to school with half of these people. We went to school with India Arie. JE-Brian: And Youngbloodz used to stay at my house.AHHA: So you guys have a pretty good relationship with some of the other acts that came out of Atlanta?JE-Brian: Yeah the intermingling in Atlanta goes back forever. It’s a few names that had something to do with almost every artist’s careers. From Jermaine Dupri to Kevin Wells, Dallas Austin, Ian Burke. It’s a few names that have probably touched just about every artist coming out of Atlanta.JE-Wingo: LA Reid!JE-Brian: Yeah sure don’t want to forget him! AHHA: You guys will probably have different answers for this. But what would you say has been the highest point or the happiest moment in your careers thus far?JE-Brian: One of my happiest moments period, was just being able to feed my son. Just being able to establish and provide a life for my family. We’ve never been a group that has won a lot of awards, [but] we’ve met our idols. To meet some of them and them to be almost friends of ours and admire our music, those are some of my better memories.JE-Brandon: For me, it would be just realizing a dream. The fact that we make a record… you dream about it, you damn near obsess over it for a long time. Just to say Jagged Edge, ten years standing, it’s a household name, it’s a brand name. That’s what we asked for.AHHA: Lastly, at the beginning of this interview I asked who was Jagged Edge today in comparison to who you guys were in the past. If someone were to ask you that same question in 10-15 years, what do you hope would be the answer then?JE-Brian: 10-15 years I would hope that we get some distinction amongst not just the cats that we came out with, which was a lot about ten years ago, but just any groups you can think of in the 10, 15, 20 years. Our goal has been to put our name in that conversation about who the greatest groups were. In the beginning it was kind of ambitious, but it was our real goal. So I just think another 10, 15 years from now we’ll finally be in that position where what we have done, people can weigh in on, and hopefully it will put us on top when you have that real conversation. JE-Brandon: Our first album was called A Jagged Era and that’s exactly why. And I feel like the path has been laid, all we have to do is stay on it.

Hip-Hop Rumors: THE ILL PICS : Fantasia’s BBQ, The Biggies, Reader Pics!

Hey, this is illseed! Somebody sent me some ill pictures of my baby Fantasia at some sort of pool party or BBQ. Check them out in all it’s chocolate glory! I wonder what that tat says down there.

Peace to you as well, baby boo!

This guy could enter the Biggie contest (see below).

Aw…these are the hot thangs that Prince once sang about.

THE BIGGIES – I KNOW THIS IS OLD (BUT I FORGOT TO POST LAST WEEK)

These are some of the guys going out for the Biggie movie. Kind of Close….

Not too bad…

Ummm…I think he could play Lil’ Cease…

He could play “the Leader.”

STARGAZING WITH ILLSEED!

Damn, DeBarge Lost. JD Won.

ILL PICS FROM READERS!

Hey, this is the same guy from above!

TOMORROW, WE LOVE YOU!

They keep us talking, but if we stop talking about them then they should worry!-illseedWHO: illseedWHAT: RumorsWHERE: AllHipHop.com, MySpace.com/TheIllseedHOW: Send your rumors and ill pics to illseed at [email protected].– allhiphop rumors

DJ Drama Shoots Video After T.I.’s Arrest; Artists Lend Support

DJ Drama filmed the video for the first single “5000 Ones” from his major label debut album Gangsta Grillz: The Album, at Atlanta’s Compound nightclub during the BET Hip-Hop Awards over the weekend.

 

“This is just the beginning of my movement,” DJ Drama told AllHipHop.com. “Willie Da Kid is on six or seven songs, and we basically felt as though we were giving a set up inspired by Chronic and Doggystyle. I look forward to a lot of big things off this album.”

 

DJ Drama, who’s T.I.’s official DJ as well as an artist on the rapper’s Grand Hustle label, proceeded with the shoot along with Atlantic Records on Sunday, in order to get the guest appearances.

 

“The video has been crazy,” Drama told AllHipHop.com. “Under the circumstances, we’re holding strong for TIP [since] he wasn’t able to make it.”

 

The previous afternoon, T.I., born Clifford Harris Jr., was arrested after he was caught trying to buy machine guns during an 11-day, undercover investigation.

 

T.I., 27, will be charged with possession of unregistered machine guns and possession of firearms by a convicted felon and ordered held without bail.

 

“We’ve had a lot of release dates [for the album],” DJ Drama said. “My sh*t done been pushed back like hairlines. December 4th is the actual date,” DJ Drama revealed.

 

While T.I. missed DJ Drama’s video shoot because of his incarceration, dozens of artists flooded the set of the video shoot for cameos appearances .

 

Rappers like Freeway, E-40, Twista, Young Dro, Big Kuntry King, Jackie-O, Princess of Crime Mobb, Jody Breeze, Gorilla Zoe, Jeezy, DJ Khaled, Fabolous, David Banner, Nelly, Jazze Pha, Lil Webbie, Jim Jones, Juelz Santana, Freekey Zekey, Swizz Beatz, The Runners and others showed up to the video shoot.

 

Even T.I.’s girlfriend, Tameka “Tiny” Cottle visited the set briefly as well.

 

“5000 Ones” is the first single from Gangsta Grillz: The Album and was produced by Jazze PHA, and features T.I., Nelly, Diddy, Yung Joc, Twista, Jeezy and Willie Da Kid.

 

“At the end of the day, as a whole, I represent DJ’s,” DJ Drama said. “I’m proud to be in a position to put an album out and do my thing. I’m just trying to be the greatest.”

Other guest appearances on the album include Outkast, Lloyd, Pharrell, The Clipse, Jadakiss, Lil Jon and Katt Williams.