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Juelz Santana Hooks Up With German Record Label; Label Fights Against Government Ban

Dipset rapper Juelz

Santana is featured on a new German rap single, titled "Gangzta Mucke"

("Gangsta Music"), a track from the album Trendsetter by rapper

Fler.

Trendsetter

is a CD/DVD released by Aggro Berlin, one of Germany’s top rap labels.

which has distribution by US-based distribution company, Caroline.

The project, which

features a DVD of 20 videos titled "Aggro Videos," comes amid efforts

to ban rap overseas.

Aggro Berlin has

become a target of the ban the German government, as six of its albums have

been currently "flagged" due to what is deemed in Germany as "explicit

language" addressing sex, drugs, crime and violence.

The lyrical content

of the music has prompted the federal German agency known as "Bundesprüfstelle"

to "index" Aggro Berlin’s six albums on its official list.

"Bundesprüfstelle"

is responsible for examining media works that is allegedly harmful to young

people and entering these works onto an official list.

The process is

known as Indizierung (indexing) in German

Under German law,

once an item makes the list, artwork of any kind can then be banned at any time.

Despite the concerns,

Aggro Berlin says it supports the music’s expression because the artists

are intimately familiar with codes, violence and stories of the streets.

"I grew up

in a bad part of Berlin which I would describe as a typical German ghetto,"

German recording artist Fler told AllHipHop.com. "The neighborhood was

really bad and most of my childhood I spent hanging out with my homies in the

streets instead of going to school. I saw a lot of crazy things happening in

the streets like thefts, murders, rape, etc. and I also did a lot of crazy things

myself.

"The government

has forgotten about us long time ago, though most of the immigrants in our hood

were invited in the 70s to live and work here," Fler continued, citing

a life of crime as the end result of neglect from school teachers and others

looking down on lower class citizens.

"Thus, much

like that of the birth of Hip-Hop in the United States, rap music still stands

for a way to speak out not only against oppression but also in many cases to

demonstrate to the mainstream consistently the types of citizens it has created

when it elects to marginalize people according to race and class. Whether Germany

or the United States, there will always be those who are considered "outside"

and then even limited in their expression of that exclusion.

Trendsetter

by Fler will hit stores in October and a variety of digital retail outlets.

Rhymefest Sets July 11 Date For ‘Blue Collar’

Grammy Award winning

writer and MC, Rhymefest, has signed to Allido/J Records to release his highly

anticipated album, Blue Collar.

Production credits

on the album, which hits stores July 11, include Mark Ronson, Kanye West, Just

Blaze, NO-ID, Cool & Dre, Mike Payne and John Henry (Animal House Productions)

and Emile.

Rhymefest co-wrote

West’s#### "Jesus Walks," from West’s debut album, The College

Dropout. The song won a Grammy Award for Best Rap Song, while The College

Dropout earned Album of the Year in 2004.

Since the release

of his first single "Brand New" along with countless mixtapes and

a Grammy Award, Rhymefest has been dubbed the "one to watch" by critics

and fans alike.

According to Rhymefest,

the aptly titled Blue Collar is a reflection of everyday, real people.

Rhymefest offers an introspective look into the war in Iraq on the track "Bullet,"

featuring Citizen Cope.

The rapper also

explains the trouble with failing relationships in "All Girls Cheat,"

which features J Records label mate Mario. Other songs on the album include

"Fever," "Devil’s Pie," "Dynomite," "Sister"

and "Build Me Up," featuring the late Ol’ Dirty Bastard.

Rhymefest began

touring in the beginning of the summer with Method Man, Little Brother and Common

to support Blue Collar.

Upcoming tour dates

and venues will be announced soon.

Dallas Austin Arrested In Dubai For Drugs

Revered R&B

and Hip-Hop producer Dallas Austin has been detained in a Dubai prison for allegedly

transporting illegal drugs into the Arab country.

According to the

New York Daily News, the producer was traveling to model Naomi Campbell’s birthday

party last month when he was incarcerated.

The report did

not indicate what illicit drugs the producer was accused of holding.

Austin has crafted

beats for the likes of Madonna, Michael Jackson, Brandy, TLC, Aretha Franklin,

the Indigo Girls and Boyz II Men, Fishbone and owns Rowdy Records.

Campbell’s celebration

was held over the course of three-days at the Burj Al Arab hotel. Dubai has

very little tolerance for illicit drugs.

According to the

Dubai government’s official website, penalties for possession, use or trafficking

of illegal substances can result in jail sentences for the offender.

In extreme cases,

the death sentence for convicted drug traffickers is imposed, while possession

of small quantities of various drugs can result in length jail sentences.

Representatives

for Austin weren’t available for comment at press time.

Rapper The Game To Wed Actress Valeisha Butterfield In March 2007

Compton rapper The Game has confirmed that he is engaged to actress Valeisha Butterfield and

the two will be married in March of 2007.

In a recent edition of Sister 2 Sister magazine, the rapper confirmed rumors that he was engaged. He also revealed that he gave Butterfield a 19-carat engagement ring.

The two have selected March 22, 2007 to be wed, the date being the anniversary of his proposal to Butterfield, who has small roles in Remember The Titans and Road Trip.

“I was just as surprised as my family and everybody was,” Butterfield told Sister 2 Sister when The Game proposed. “I didn’t pass out, but I buckled and he caught me. We never dated, that’s the thing; we went from being friends to being engaged.”

Lil’ Jon, Hilary Duff and others were present at a private engagement dinner that was held in California to celebrate to couple’s union. Butterfield is also the daughter of North Carolina Congressman GK Butterfield, who reportedly gave the gangster rapper “the third degree” upon their first meeting.

Fans of the rapper can see him on the silver screen as “Big Meat” in the movie Waist Deep, which opened yesterday (June 23) and stars R&B singer/rapper/actor Tyrese Gibson Meagan Good and Larenz Tate.

Cham: World Tour

The chant “Ra! Ra! Ra! Ra!” is set to be the new street anthem, all thanks to Cham and his new single “Ghetto Story,” which you can hear blaring from any radio at any given time. Telling the tale of growing up in the streets of Jamaica and the hardships that ensued, “Ghetto Story” is not what you typically expect from a dancehall artist – but Cham isn’t your typical dancehall artist.

The only mainstream dancehall artist not signed to VP Records, Cham is making his official American debut with his album Cham later this Summer. He took the independent route by pairing with David Kelly, one of the biggest dancehall producers, to form Madhouse Records. Through his new label situation with Atlantic Records, Cham is now poised to take over the American market.

Known more for his social commentary on Jamaican politics than for any new dance move his song is introducing, Cham gives you a different side of dancehall and what Jamaica is all about. We recently spoke with Cham about his upcoming album, politics and some of his questionable lyrics, and he had plenty to say about all of it.

Allhiphop.com Alternatives: Where did Baby Cham come from?

Cham: I got it from a friend of mine sister. At the time we were searching for names, this was like 1989. My real name is Damian Dean Beckett, my mom use to call me Deanie. So my friends started calling me Deanie, and when I use on stage and I use to free style for them, they use to call me Deanie Man – but Deanie Man was too close to Beenie Man. So we were searching for names, because there was this talent concert and we were searching for names, because I wanted to come up with the new name. So my friends came up with Baby Champagne.

AHHA: What made you decide to drop the Baby and just go with Cham?

Cham: Nah I didn’t, that’s just the album. When I just got signed to Atlantic in 2003, and we released Vitamin S in Europe there was some problems with a company over there that claimed they had the name from like ’95 or ’94, but we had proof that we had it from before. Just for this album we titled it Cham, but we own the name Baby Cham…Baby Cham is for the females, and Cham is for the rude bwoys.

AHHA: You are the only dancehall that’s not on VP Records, how does that work?

Cham: It’s because we have our own label, and for me to go sign with VP Records I would have to go through VP to get to Atlantic Records. I’m seeing the bigger picture, I wanted Atlantic to come straight to us. So it’s Madhouse Records, and Atlantic came to Madhouse Records.

AHHA: You are usually the first one to get on the riddim, working with David Kelly, so how does it feel to always be the first one to drop?

Cham: I don’t think it’s first. I just always have the most catchiest songs on the beat. I’m just lucky, but it’s good though.

AHHA: Can you breakdown Jamaican riddims? Most Americans hear it and just think it’s the same song – but there is reasoning behind it?

Cham: It’s hard to tell you the breakdown, but I think that some of the drum patterns are the same. Which if you listen over here the drum patterns are the same. Listen to a Neptune’s beat – if you take out the lyrics it’s the same riddim. But I think its changed over the years. If you listen to “Ghetto Story,” that beat don’t sound like normal dancehall beat. Dancehall is normally like a two-beat, but you know ’85 jump button changed totally, but its very different.

I think the reason why they think that way is because they hear one song, and then they hear sing more six songs on the same beat. But that’s our way of making a juggle, because in Jamaica we do it you have one song on the beat and then you have five more artists on the same beat, but that’s the juggling to keep the dancehall session just juggling, instead of playing one song from one riddim and changing, you have like six or five songs on one riddim and you can keep that groove for 15 or 10 minutes, and then the groove changes.

AHHA: You’re a dancehall artist, but you’re one of the few that isn’t really associated with dancing.

Cham: I appreciate dancing, I love it, love to see it. But that’s not me. I’m more like a realist. I write about what I’ve been through, what I face, what my friends are going through. Just to me art is like a mirror of society whatever society reflects I try to reflect it back with words and melodies with music. Sometimes it’s dancing but that’s just not me, so I choose to mix it with social commentary.

AHHA: Is “Ghetto Story” autobiographical?

Cham: 75% of it is my life and the next 25% is just what I’ve read, what I’ve seen on the TV, growing up in Jamaica, what I’ve witnessed in the streets. Fun but hard. Now when you look back on it you have to give thanks, because if you don’t have those experiences there is no way you would be the person you are today. But when we growing up it wasn’t fun, it wasn’t something that we laugh about.

AHHA: But you appreciate it?

Cham: Yeah, you have to, because without that you would have never been. There’s no way you would get a song like “Babylon Boy” or “Vitamin S” or “Ghetto Story,” so you have to appreciate that.

AHHA: How do you feel about the politics in Jamaica?

Cham: Man, I hate politicians, h-a-t-e. Where I’m from we use to do, like chores for politicians. Over here it’s different, way different. Where I’m from we use to get money from politicians to like clean the gully or to whitewash the sidewalks. When you whitewash the sidewalk…on the edge you have a five-inch thick…that shows you that it’s the end of the sidewalk, you going on the road now. In Jamaica you whitewash that, you paint it white and the politicians pay us to do it. That’s the main reason for most wars in the Jamaican communities, in every area…that starts the most violence.

This politician is going to pay me, and then I’m supposed to pay everyone else that worked, but I’m going to look out for my friends. And then how many of his friends is going to say that they got messed over by us? That’s how wars start – which if you look at in next way, that’s supposed to be a job for someone else. They not suppose to just come to the ghetto and say, “Yo, here’s 50,000 Jamaican dollars, clean the gully.” They know that’s going to start a war, like real war. The people not even learning, they not even grasping. They know that that what’s politician are doing, they separating everyone and having everyone is go against each other, but it’s just a poor empty dollar.

AHHA: Do you feel that your music is making an impact and are you trying to make an impact?

Cham: You know I’m trying, but at the same time you have some real fears. Because to him the politicians is paying the bill, so he’s going to be like, “Hey Cham, you out of here,” – you can’t tell me that right now, this guy is me paying my bill. I got cars, I got money. I’m going to do whatever it takes to make this politician win the seat.

AHHA: “Ghetto Story” is the fastest growing record in dancehall history, but it hasn’t really broken the American market yet.

Cham: I love it; it’s a good feeling to know that it’s so huge so quick. We knew that it was going to be big but not so quick. I knew that it would be big, but what I’m seeing it doing over here, on this side that’s strange to me. Because it’s so big, I didn’t know that people get it…but we have straight white people coming up to us with “Ra! Ra! Ra!” But people get it they get it for real.

AHHA: You’re on the cover of The Fader, which is a very hipster magazine. How does that feel?

Cham: That’s a good look though, I love it. It’s a good feeling because at the same time you are working and you trying to get as much promotion as you can get. So at the same time when I heard that it came true I was like there’s higher beings than just use humans here, because if it was just for like human beings I wouldn’t be here now.

AHHA: What are you trying to do in the American market?

Cham: I want to take it over. I’m dead serious. To me its music and music has no boundaries. Over here you have timing and luck, but over the years we knew that we made some of the best song in dancehalls. But some artists they getting them before use over here. So some people are thinking that Cham is a new artist, which we’ve been doing this for 11 years, since 16-years-old. It’s just timing and think this is the right time.

AHHA: I went to a show and you performed the song “Tic Toc” and I’ve been looking for everywhere. When are you going to let the masses hear it?

Cham: You have to wait for the album, because the second single is “Rude Bwoy.” “Tic Toc” is very special, but I was telling them is like no other song, everywhere I perform that song it’s like crazy. This album you’re going to love it. The album, I think shooting for July but I wanted it to come out on August first, because that’s Jamaica’s independence and emancipation day.

AHHA: Are you doing any touring?

Cham: We going to a promotional tour right before the album drops, but right now I’m always on tour four days a week.

AHHA: Why do you only mess with the girls with the “big knocka dem” but not “the girls c### blocka dem”

Cham: When you c### blocka dem, those is the girls that know they aren’t that hot, but they rolling with these hot girls. Because you not calling to them they telling they friend they shouldn’t say hi to you back. But the girl that big knock a dem [laughing] every man loves breast, we love to see dem b###########.

AHHA: You’ve done a lot of collaborations in the past years, is anyone featured on your album?

Cham: We have females by the name of Toi and Trinity, both within the camp, Rihanna, Lady Saw. One rude bwoy, but I can’t tell you because that’s the remix [of ‘Ghetto Story’] and I’ll give it away. But the remix is coming out soon, and it’s off the chain.

Diddy Speaks On Being Honored With Star On Hollywood Walk Of Fame

Bad Boy Entertainment CEO Sean “Diddy” Combs will be honored with a star on the legendary Hollywood Walk of Fame it was announced today (June 24) by organizers. Combs was one of 200 nominations entered for the prestigious award and was among the 23 finalists selected to be honored with a terrazzo and brass star on Hollywood Boulevard in 2007.

The mogul said he was aware that his name had been among nominees two years ago, but revealed he was taken by surprise when his agent informed him of the announcement today.

“That’s just something you dream of, especially being from the East Coast,” Combs told AllHipHop.com. “Being from New York, there’s three things you know about Hollywood. You know about the Hollywood sign, you know about Sunset Strip and Hollywood Boulevard with the stars.”

“It’s a privilege to honor these performers,” noted Walk of Fame committee chairman Johnny Grant. “I’m sure their fans and supporters will enjoy attending the induction ceremonies on Hollywood Boulevard.”

Combs is already making plans to celebrate per Grant’s request.

“The day they give me a star in Hollywood, I’m going to invite everybody from New York out there to see it go down,” Combs said laughing. “I definitely think it’s a big thing for Hip-Hop and hopefully they will recognize more Hip-Hop stars.”

The Hollywood Walk of Fame chronicles the history of the Hollywood entertainment industry and the contributions of various celebrities and icons from the television, motion picture, radio, recording and live performance industries.

“It’s beyond my wildest dreams to think that one day I’m going to be walking down the street and walk past all the different great names, Sidney Poitier to Oprah Winfrey, to Frank Sinatra, Clark Gable, Humphrey Bogart,” Combs told AllHipHop.com.

“Just to see my name down there. It’s really an honor, it’s really humbling.”

Mariah Carey, Jamie Foxx, John Goodman, Time Rice, Lily Talmud, The Doors, Robert Altman, Matt Damon and others from various industries will also be immortalized on the walk of fame include in 2007.

Combs’ star comes during a particularly good time for his label, Bad Boy Entertainment, which is currently experiencing success with rapper Yung Joc and Cassie on the charts and in stores.

“We [Bad Boy] had to take our bumps and bruises and look at the Billboard charts,” Combs noted. “I have two records in the Top Ten [Yung Joc’s “It’s Goin’ Down” and Cassie’s “Me & U”] and on the Rhythmic Chart this week [we have] the number 1 and number 2 records with Cassie and Yung Joc. You know, we are talking about 12 years later [since Bad Boy was founded in 1993]. There were times over the last few years, cats was counting us out it’s a big week. God works in mysterious ways. It’s a huge week to have the #1 and 2 and get a star on Hollywood [Boulevard]. I’m just grateful.”

Diddy is in the studio putting the finishing touches on his new album PD5, which drops October 3 on Bad Boy Entertainment.

The Untold Story of Emmett Louis Till (DVD)

Artist: DVD ReviewTitle: The Untold Story of Emmett Louis Till (DVD)Rating: 5 StarsReviewed by: Sidik Fofana

There once was an ocean of racism, from which we still feel the ripples. The ripples are such events as rappers getting banned from whole countries because they refuse to ride coach, and directors of expensive champagne companies making public remarks that discourage Black people from purchasing their product. The ocean was the lynching of Emmett Till. They say tears are never shed for the dead, but for the living. Well, just imagine a boy younger than Chris Brown tortured to death for whistling at a white woman.

The Untold Story of Emmett Louis Till (ThinkFilm) is the most effective documentary to date that details the circumstances of a horrific event in American History. Emmett Till was a fourteen year old from Chicago, who went to stay with relatives in Money, Mississippi during the summer of 1955. Though he was warned of the backwards ways of Southern whites, Emmett took it as a farce and was reportedly rowdy at a local convenient store. Outside of the store, he whistled at the store clerk, a white female named Carolyn Bryant. A few days later he was found dead hanging from a cotton fan, his private parts cut off, and body disfigured beyond identification. The men accused of Till’s murdered were acquitted of their crime months later.

The film’s director, Keith Beauchamp, does a masterful job of gathering those closest to Till to give their insights on one of America’s ugliest tragedies. Rev. Al Sharpton also gives his thoughts on the misfortune as an interviewee. Influenced by the film’s graphic collage of photos, viewers see how America has both changed and stayed the same in regard to race issues. The film does a superb job of making Till’s story vivid and tangible, showing us that racism is not a distant concept. In fact, not even a lifetime has past since this gruesome murder.

When Kanye compared his physical condition after his car accident to Emmett Till’s in the song “Through the Wire”, it was a very understated lyric. If one does know his past, he is destined to repeat it. After 50 plus years since the death of Emmett Till, racism is still being swept under the rug. But sometimes, it takes a badly disfigured face to show the ugly mug of racism.

New Crack City (Mixtape)

Artist: Clinton Sparks/Busta RhymesTitle: New Crack City (Mixtape)Rating: 3 1/2 StarsReviewed by: The Closer

New Crack City introduces the Aftermath-powered Busta Rhymes to the streets. Gone are the hyperkinetic hijinx associated with Busta in the past. Instead there is a grittier, darker, more conventional music; a stark contrast from his earlier New World Order apocalyptic ramblings.

This mixtape collabo with Clinton Sparks has an inordinate amount of guest appearances, including new labelmate 50 Cent (“I’m Loco”). But Busta seems most comfortable with his longtime crew the Flipmode Squad. After a decade of Busta’s big-ups, followed by mixed results, you could see where familiarity would breed contempt. Not so on New Crack City, and that’s mainly due to some standout verses by Rah Digga, who spits with renewed vigor, and the arrival of newest Squad member Papoose, who demolished his introduction to the group on the standout track “Flipmode B####”. Switching flows and assaulting the beat, Papoose writes the highlight verse of the mix tape: “Rappers is Caucasians and Asian, naw I ain’t a racist/I burn guinea pigs to bacon, I burn chinks to lo mein and it’s not discrimination/ I burn you ni**as down to raisins. Pure sickness.

The mixtape gets a little repetitive and Busta’s newfound machismo can be hard to stomach at times. Clinton Sparks’ production, while gutter, can be monotonous after a while and the songs can blend in to each other. Overall, however, New Crack City provides ample spare ammunition clip for The Big Bang or any summertime whip with big speakers and open windows. 3.5 stars

Nelly and the St. Lunatics Open New Restaurant in August

St. Louis rapper Nelly

and his St. Lunatics crew will open a new bar and grill in August in Hazelwood.

The new restaurant,

called Mack’s Bar and Grill, was originally slated for an April opening but

was pushed back because the rappers were waiting for Mack’s manager, Tony Powell,

to finish his work as a chef and manager at Azio, an Italian restaurant in Atlanta.

As a result of

the delay, the Hazelwood City Council is expected to extend a special land-use

permit for Mack’s next month, according to city officials.

The restaurant,

which takes its name from the first letters of theowners’ names – Murphy Lee,

Ali, Slodown, Kyjuan and Cornell, Nelly’s first name, is now scheduled to open

August 10 at 6827 Howdershell Road.

Powell is confident

Macks’s will become a staple in Hazelwood’s food community.

"I am very

excited about this," Powell told the St. Louis Post Dispatch. "I

am pretty sure this will go smooth. St. Louis seems to support bars."

Mack’s is the

latest nonmusical venture for Nelly, who also owns a clothing line and is part

owner of the NBA’s Charlotte Bobcats basketball team.

The 3,500 square

foot eatery will hold 150 people and seat 74. It will also contain several televisions

that will mostly show sports programs, said Powell, who expects Mack’s to become

a popular establishment because of its high-profile owners.

The group got the

idea to open the restaurant from St. Lunatic member Ali, said Mike Chaffin,

Nelly’s business manager.

The facility’s

walls will be decorated with items and pictures of the Nelly and the St. Lunatics

as well as items from St. Louis sports teams – the Cardinals, Rams and Blues.

Ski Beatz: I’m Feelin’ It

C

lassic albums come along few and far between in the music world. The hunt for the perfect combination of lyricist and production chemistry can sometimes resemble a well-developed scientific experiment. The aim is to get a cohesive effort that gels and soothes listening ears, and at best, you get a mix that combusts to blow the hinges off the laboratory doors.

Jay-Z’s Reasonable Doubt album is one that many consider to have exploded with a devastating combination of a fresh new rapper combined with hot innovative production. While most were familiar with the legendary sounds of Gang Starr’s DJ Premier and Clark Kent, Ski Beatz has offered the right chemicals to open the area to a new style of track mastering.

With his beginning in the group, Original Flavor Ski made his mark as a lyricist and producer through still-revered tracks like “Can I Get Open.” He went on to architect three songs on Jay-Z’s monumental debut. He continued working with Roc-A-Fella among other notables like Foxy Brown, Fat Joe, and Camp Lo. After a successful stint in the Big Apple, Ski has taken his talents and lab materials back to North Carolina to impact the new southern movement. The return to his birthplace, a different approach to music, and a stable of new artists, has the technician once again ready to concoct more classic material.

AllHipHop.com: You’re probably most known for your contribution to Reasonable Doubt, which many consider to be a classic album. What was the thought pattern in making those tracks for Jay on that album?

Ski: I was basically doing music that felt good to me. At the time I was in the group, Original Flavor, and I was making music that I would rhyme over. One of the songs on the album was my song, but I gave it to Jay. The song “Feelin’ It,” I wrote the hook and the way I was flowing to it, he didn’t use my words, but he used my flow. At the time I didn’t know it was going to be a new groundbreaking type of sound. It was just what I felt doing.

AllHipHop.com: “Feelin’ it” was actually one of my favorite joints off the album. That and “Dead Presidents” were like riding music. Is that the type of sound you go for?

Ski: If you notice, all the songs I did, they were mostly like a melodic base. It wasn’t really hard, but it wasn’t really soft. I’m real big on melodies and music.

AllHipHop.com: I hear music that’s similar to that sound now. How do you feel you’ve influenced others in the game now?

Ski: I think that Reasonable Doubt album, me, plus a lot of other producers, pioneered the whole Just Blaze sound, the whole Kanye sound. They just basically grabbed the baton and kept it moving forward.

AllHipHop.com: Do you feel like maybe you should be on a whole other level when you look at those guys’ accomplishments?

Ski: From time to time, I feel like I should be on a whole other level – that I should be labeled as a super producer or legend, but you know, at the time, I was going through a lot of stuff. I had the label, Roc-A-Blok… I think I was in the pot, I was cooking, but I jumped out the damn pot too early. I tried to do my own thing too quickly, when I should have waited and built my name up with the Roc a little more. But I’m not mad, and I don’t have any regrets because that was a classic album and I get the respect of being one of the main producers on the album.

AllHipHop.com: What made you decide to jump out on your own and do Roc-A-Blok?

Ski: Just opportunities man, everybody was coming at me. Ruff House/Columbia came at me and gave me a label deal. Then I had my group Camp Lo over at Profile, they were doing it real big. I just had a lot of stuff going on.

AllHipHop.com: When you started your own label, did your relationship with Roc-A-Fella deteriorate?

Ski: I did music for them, but I didn’t do as much. I did the “Streets is Watching” for Jay, I did “Who You Wit’” for Jay, I don’t know if you heard the song, “I Hear the People Talk,” it’s on the MTV Unplugged album, but it’s a hidden track. To me, that’s one of the hottest records he did in a minute.

AllHipHop.com: Do you know this is the Reasonable Doubt tenth anniversary and they are doing a concert with the music?

Ski: Yeah, they called me and wanted me to come, they’re sending me my ticket tomorrow; I’m flying to New York on Thursday. I hear he’s doing every song through its entirety.

AllHipHop.com: How are you incorporated in the show?

Ski: I have no idea; they just called me. I have to see what happens when I get there. Hopefully, he gives all the producers of the album a million dollar check.

AllHipHop.com: How’s the relationship with Jay and Dame?

Ski: Yeah, me, Jay, and Dame, I talk to them from time to time. We still cool and are friends.

AllHipHop.com: Not to harp on Jay, but he’s turned into an icon. From your point of view, has he changed since the days you worked with him?

Ski: Whenever I speak to him, he’s still the same dude. It’s no arrogance or nothing towards me. I mean, I don’t know what other people say, but he’s cool with me.

AllHipHop.com: What did you think of the break down of Roc-A-Fella and Jay and Dame going their separate ways?

Ski: That was one of the saddest times for me. I wasn’t there physically to see the break up and know what was really going on, but you know, I’m still Roc-A-Fella, and for that to go down, those three guys was like a machine. I think it’s the classic case of everybody in everybody’s ear. Jay had the powers that be kind of pulling him away from Dame. People was in Dame’s ear telling him Jay was doing this and doing that. You know animosity man.

AllHipHop.com: You’ve been out of the limelight for a while, what have you been up to?

Ski: I got an artist signed over at Jive, he goes by the name of MOS. That stands for “Money over Sex.” He’s from Carolina. I have another artist signed over at Asylum. He goes by the name of Hot Wright. I basically been developing acts out of North Carolina. It’s a bunch of kids out here that’s real talented, and they don’t have no outlet to get into the game. I’m originally from North Carolina, so I went back home and started helping people out.

AllHipHop.com: Was your motivation to go to North Carolina business or just to go back home?

Ski: At the time when I moved, I had lived in New York for like 13 years. I guess I was homesick because I just wanted to come back down south. It’s funny, because when I moved back down south, the [artists] started bubbling a little. It wasn’t as hot as it is right now, but the movement was just starting.

AllHipHop.com: Did you have to change your style up to get down with the southern sound?

Ski: I don’t consider it a change, but an evolution to what I was already doing. I can still take a record, chop it up, and do a million things with it, but for the last year, I‘ve been learning hot to play different instruments and things like that. The evolution kind of helped me because it turned me into a musician. At first I was just straight sample, you know what I mean? Now I’m able to pick up basses and guitars and keyboards and play.

AllHipHop.com: Do you still sample or did you just totally move to original stuff?

Ski: Oh nah, nah, that’s in my blood. I got to sample every now and then. It all depends on who the artist is and the mood I’m in. I do like one sample joint and like one live joint a day.

AllHiphop.com: Did you run into problems as far as publishing or clearing them? Is that what made you move away from that?

Ski: Yeah man, definitely. All the records I did, and all the records that were sold, the money definitely didn’t measure up to what I should have got. If that was all original music, trust me, I’d be straight. Sometimes you get people that say well I’m going to take 25 percent, and sometimes you get people that say, I’m going to take 90 percent.

AllHipHop.com: What does that depend on?

Ski: I guess that just depends on the person and their greed. Most people want all their money but then you got some cool people that kind of respect the craft of what you’re doing. I mean they know you used their record but if you flip it so much and they respect what you did, they may say ok I’m going to only take 25 percent. It’s my record, but you totally did something new with it.

AllHipHop.com: Tell me about the Camp Lo album. They were refreshing and different when they came out but then we didn’t hear from them again. What happened?

Ski: They got caught up in the transition with Profile. When Profile got sold to Arista, what happened was they got sold to Arista. It’s crazy because Arista wasn’t gonna buy Profile unless Camp Lo was part of the deal, but when they got Camp Lo, they didn’t know what to do. The best thing that ever happened to Camp Lo was Profile because they knew how to market and promote and get them out there. People don’t know that ‘ Uptown Saturday Night went Gold. The “Luchini” single went Gold-plus. It’s not over for them dudes because they dress and still look the same, and the music is still as hot as it was.

AllHipHop.com: How much of that album will you contribute?

Ski: I’m the third member, kid. They always call me the third member, but I’m their producer.

AllHipHop.com: I’m not trying to be funny at all, but a lot of people speculated that Camp Lo was gay. I’m just keeping it real.

Ski : [Laughs] A lot of n***as ask me that, but nah, they’re not. They got a real funny style with their dressing and s**t; they on their own s**t. But what I respect about them is that when I first met them they was on that. It wasn’t like, “we got a gimmick,” that’s [just] how they are.

AllHipHop.com: Do you think they paved any way for dudes like Kanye, Farnsworth Bentley or other eccentric rap dudes?

Ski: Camp Lo was the originator of a lot of s**t man. A lot of musical styles and fashion s**t. If they get a situation, they could be out of here because they just so different.

AllHipHop.com: Are you a part of the other side of the North Carolina scene where they are more lyrical, like Little Brother, or is it mostly the other element?

Ski: Nah, I’m definitely part of the underground scene – the backpackers. I’m down with 9th [Wonder]; that’s my man, they cool, they right down the street from me.

AllHipHop.com: The music out there is almost ‘90s-ish.

Ski: Yeah, but it’s refreshing. If you’re tired of hearing all that crazy s**t, you come listen to some music, it’s like ‘96 around here.

AllHipHop.com: Anything you want to leave us with?

Ski: I got a website that were working on now, it’s catering to Hip-Hop producers that’s looking for crazy hot sounds and tips and information on how to get it done right. It’s www.skibeatz.com . Also I’m on www.myspace.com/skibeatz you can hear one of the Camp Lo joints on there.

Exclusive: Jay-Z Adds New Show To ‘Reasonable Doubt’ Celebration

Fans unable to get a ticket to Jay-Z’s sold-out concert on June 25 at Radio City Music Hall should have newfound hope.

The Def Jam president has offered the public a new opportunity to see him execute at a special “rehearsal performance” in celebration of his first album Reasonable Doubt.

The newly booked show takes place at the Nokia Theater in New York’s Times Square on June 24 at 8:30 pm and is considered a “Special Preview Performance” of Sunday’s official Radio City date.

Only a limited number of tickets will be made available to the public when they will go on sale Friday (June 23) at 5:00 pm through Ticketmaster. Like the original date, Jay-Z is slated to perform Reasonable Doubt in its entirety and The Roots Ahmir "?uestlove" Thompson will serve as the musical director on both nights.

Both shows are to commemorate the 10th anniversary of his seminal album, which was formally released on June 25, 1996. According to reports, the Radio City date sold out in approximately one minute.

Jay-Z, who is the CEO of Roc-A-Fella Records, has sold more than 40 million albums and amassed several accolades inside and outside of the music arena.

To buy tickets or for more information, go to http://www.ticketmaster.com.

Rapper Styles P Talks New Album ‘Time Is Money’

D-Block member Styles

P is gearing up for the release of his long-awaited sophomore album Time

is Money.

According to Styles

P, who is co-CEO of D-Block Records with fellow Lox members Jadakiss and Sheek

Louch, the new album will hit stores in August on D-Block/Interscope.

"They can’t

stop me," Styles told AllHipHop.com. "I want [people] to know what

the kid’s about. The kid’s about making songs like ‘Favorite Drug,’ ‘Can You

Believe It,’ ‘I’m Black.’"

While fans await

the new disc, Styles said he will continue to grind after the album is released

by maintaining his fixture in the mixtape scene.

"Get the next

Ghost mixtape, if you saying a n***a f***ing with me," Styles boasted.

"Tell him he gotta wake up early. The kid’s about putting out five hard

mixtapes a year."

Time is Money

is Style’s follow-up to his 2002 solo debut A Gangster and a Gentleman,

which spawned the hit single "Good Times (I Get High)," produced by

Swizz Beatz.

Other producers

lending their talents to Time is Money include the Alchemist, Lil’ Jon,

Hi-Tek, Havoc, CoCo Channel, and Scott Storch.

"[The album

is] hard! Beginning to end, you can’t deny it," said Syles. "Everybody’s

beats rip! I been here, been with the best of ’em."

AHH Stray News: Cypress Hill, Juvenile, DMX, Kanye West

Rap group Cypress Hill is being sued in Chicago Federal Court by songwriter Glenn Watts for copyright infringement over a track contained on their platinum-selling sophomore album Black Sunday. Watts penned the song “Is It Because I’m Black,” which was recorded by R&B legend Syl Johnson. The songwriter claims the group illegally infringed on his copyrights to “Interlude,” a track on Black Sunday, which debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 albums chart upon its release in 1993. The song was originally released on Winight Records.

Juvenile has been named in a lawsuit alleging that fans were charged twice for VIP tickets during a concert at a nightclub in Dayton, Ohio. According to the lawsuit, which was filed in Montgomery County Court, fans were charged $100 to attend a VIP area of The Foundry nightclub. When they attempted to enter the VIP area, another $100 was demanded. The Foundry, Hot 102.9 FM, Juvenile, and clothing store Hip-Hop Culture are named as defendants in the lawsuit. Representatives for Hip-Hop Culture told AllHipHop.com they were unaware of the pending litigation.

DMX is filming a new movie in Baton Rouge, Louisiana, titled Death Toll. The straight-to-DVD film centers around gang violence in New Orleans during the early ’90s. According to reports, Baton Rouge was picked because many potential shooting locations in New Orleans were destroyed during Hurricane Katrina. Death Toll is due in October and also stars Lou Diamond Phillips and Keisha Knight Pulliam.

Kanye West will perform during a private concert hosted at Cipriani Wall Street tonight (June 22) as part of the New York nightclub’s Wall Street concert series. Tickets for the event start at $1,500 and tables are fetching up to $18,000 to attend the entire seven-concert series. Proceeds will be donated to the Foundation for AIDS Research. Previous performers include Lionel Richie and Gloria Estefan. In related news, West has been nominated for seven Billboard Awards, while rapper Young Jeezy has earned four nods. The Billboard Hip-Hop/R&B Awards take place during Billboard’s 7th Annual Hip-Hop/R&B Conference, which runs Sept. 6-8 at The Renaissance Waverly in Atlanta.

Limited Action Figures Of B.I.G., Public Enemy Coming This Fall

Toy company Mezco

Toyz has announced a set of new action figures honoring slain rapper Notorious

B.I.G. as well as rap icons Public Enemy with 9" replicas of the rappers.

Mezco, founded

in 2000, has produced the first Notorious B.I.G. figure ever released. B.I.G.,

was gunned down in front of the Petersen Automotive Museum in March 1997.

The rapper is featured

in the trademark white cloth suit worn in his last hit video "Hypnotized,"

along with a removable hat, replicated jewelry and a cane, which he was using

due to an accident that shattered his leg shortly before his untimely demise.

Public Enemy also

has been embodied in a 9" action figure. Chuck D. comes with a gold chain,

signature jacket and hat and is featured posing with his fist in the air. Public

Enemy hypeman and rapper Flavor Flav is featured showing off his signature gold

teeth, along with various accessories including his sunglasses and jewelry.

The new dolls come

on the heels of Mezco Toyz’ worldwide success with their 2002 run of licensed

Run-DMC dolls that featured Run, DMC and the late Jam Master Jay.

Notorious B.I.G.

and Flavor Flav dolls are expected to begin shipping in fall of 2006 on Mezco

Toyz’ official website, www.mezcotoyz.com.

Chino XL, Davey D and Sway Confirmed for Hip-Hop Leadership Camp At UCLA

Rapper Chino XL,

journalist/activist/Hip-Hop historian Davey D and MTV personality Sway are among

the speakers confirmed for the second annual Hip-Hop Leadership Camp (HHLC).

The camp, scheduled

for August 10-13 at UCLA, will feature daily seminars conducted by music and

entertainment figures for at-risk children in the Los Angeles area.

The purpose of

the event is to promote leadership and the empowerment of at-risk youth by introducing

and illustrating career tools via hands-on workshops with DJs, radio personalities,

artists, video producers, business managers, accountants, marketing/A&R

representatives, and lawyers.

"This camp

is more than just a series of classes," said HHLC founder Karen Levy. "The

personal interaction and application of the skills acquired in the program gives

them the chance to experience their potential as future leaders by using their

love of Hip-Hop and entertainment as a learning tool."

Thirty-five inner-city

youth, who will be housed at UCLA, will participate in a five-day apprenticeship

with some of the industry’s top professionals.

Other speakers

for this year’s camp include: Big Paul, senior director Promotion Mixshow Radio,

National, Universal Music Group/Motown; Big Jon Platt, executive senior vice

president Urban Music, EMI Music Publishing; Cynthia Johnson, senior vice president

Warner Bros Records; Gary Jackson, UCLA Hip-Hop business professor; DJ Skee

DJ for The Game and businessman; Angela Sanchez, director, online marketing

Universal Video and Distribution; Myra McCaskill,CPA; director, marketing finance

and planning Geffen.

More are expected

be confirmed for the camp along with special surprise guests.

Rapper E 40 was

on hand last year to discuss the entertainment business, along with world famous

tattoo and entertainment artist Mister Cartoon .

For more details

on the camp, visit www.HipHopLeadershipCamp.com.

DMC Brings DJ Battle To Times Square

DMC, in conjunction

Technics, Ortofon, SoBe Adrenaline Rush and Sam Ash, will hold it’s 21st

annual New York elimination heat in preparation for the World Championships.

The competition features 20 elimination finalists from the tri-state area and

NYC’s ’05 defending champ DJ Unknown. This year’s turntablists will battle

on Technics SL1200 decks and Ortofon needles at the US Final.

“Young new

talent is emerging, as the stakes are remarkably higher. This year, the winner

will receive the world title and $10K cash courtesy of Ortofon,” George

Cabrera, GM of DMC America, told AllHipHop.com.

Each DJ will have 2 minutes to display their skill with the top ten DMC finalists

advancing to the next round.

The DMC/Technics World DJ Championships is an annual competition that features

thousands of DJ’s competing for the worldwide DMC DJ title. The finalists are

chosen through various competitions held worldwide.

Founded in 1986, the DMC/Technics Championships have been held annually for

the last twenty years. Past guests have included DJ Cheese, DJ Q-bert, Rock

Steady DJ’s, Kentaro, A-Trak, D####, I-Emerge and others.

The 21st annual DMC New York elimination heat will be held live on Saturday

June 24th from 3pm-6pm at Times Square Sam Ash Music Store. For more information,

log on to www.dmcworld.com

Hector Bambino “El Father”: History In The Making

It’s been well over a decade since reggaetón first made its entrance into the music scene. Artists like Tego Calderón, Ivy Queen, and of course Daddy Yankee, have been doing it for years before mainstream radio chose to embrace this Latin/Reggae/Hip-Hop hybrid. As reggaetón is just beginning to witness the fruits of its labor, the staying power of the artists who started the movement makes the success that much sweeter. One such contender is Hector Bambino aka Hector “El Father.”

Hector “El Father” stepped to the forefront of reggaetón during its embryonic stage in 1992. Part of the duo Hector y Tito at the time, the group innovated reggaetón with their unique sound and diverse collaborations. Hector y Tito collectively released five albums, including their final work Season Finale in 2005. Despite the end of the group, the two continued to make waves as solo artists. Then, Hector “El Father” made a career-changing decision. He signed a major label deal with Roc La Familia and “El Presidente” Sean “Jay-Z” Carter. His single “Here We Go” combines his pure Latin style with a touch of Jay-Z’s undeniable edge.

As Hector “El Father” gears for the release of his Roc debutLos Rompe Discotekas, he reflects on his fifteen-year career, advice from Jay-Z and his stance in preparing the world for the Roc La Familia takeover.

[as translated to Kathy Iandoli]

AllHipHop.com Alternatives: New York City saw you performing on a float during the Puerto Rican Day Parade. How was that experience for you?

Hector “El Father”: This was my second time at the Parade, but this time I had my whole crew up there with me, so it was a great experience. Plus, with the album coming out it was really great. I really felt the love from the crowd.

AHHA: Explain why you changed from “Bambino” to “El Father.”

Hector: I was Hector Bambino when I was part of a duo, Hector y Tito. When I went on my own I became Hector “El Father.” Since I’ve been around for so long and have helped other reggaetón artists come up, such as Don Omar, the name “El Father” was given to me and it stuck.

AHHA: Is the breakup of Hector y Tito permanent or will there be a reunion?

Hector: No, as of right now, we are both leading careers as separate artists.

AHHA: You’ve been a part of reggaetón for such a long time, what have you witnessed as far as changes, since you first started?

Hector: The music has definitely changed over time. The words, lyrics, have evolved and continue to evolve. The biggest change in reggaetón is that it went from being so underground to being accepted by the mainstream internationally, in both Latin and urban markets.

AHHA: With reggaetón fusing with Hip-Hop so much in recent years, do you feel it takes away from the purity of the music?

Hector: Nah, I think the fusion is just adding to reggaetón and helping it evolve. Mixing Hip-Hop with reggaetón just makes the music that much more powerful!

AHHA: How does it feel to be a part of Roc La Familia?

Hector: I am honored to be signed to Roc La Familia, especially right now, since the label is one of the most influential labels out there in the urban market. It’s just getting started and will get bigger, and I’m happy to be part of it.

AHHA: Who did you have the most fun working with on your album?

Hector: Everyone! Each artist on the album brought their own unique experiences for me.

AHHA: What can fans expect from Los Rompe Discotekas?

Hector: I don’t really like saying it’s going to be the best album, because everyone can say that about their work. But, it’s going to be hot! There is definitely the element of Hip-Hop in it with the reggaetón and the fusion is really powerful on this record. Fans can expect collabs with reggaetón artists like Don Omar, Wisin y Yandel, Alexis y Fido and Hip-Hop artists like Fat Joe, Memphis Bleek, and Jay-Z.

AHHA: What is the biggest difference between Hector Bambino and Hector “El Father”?

Hector: The Hector of right now, Hector “El Father;” this is who I really am. This is all me. Before, Hector Bambino was part of a group, a partnership, and with that comes sacrifices. You don’t always get the opportunity to reach your full creative outlet [working in a group]. But now, I am able to give creatively everything I have to offer.

AHHA: Knowing his current position in the music industry, has Jay-Z offered you any advice on this next stage in your career?

Hector: I’m kind of taking the approach like I went back to school. I’m taking it really slowly, learning new things in different steps. I’m not just talking about music, but the whole business aspect in itself. It’s such an honor to have him [Jay-Z] guiding me, and helping me take my career to the next level.

AHHA: Do you feel that there is any competition between you and other reggaetón artists?

Hector: There’s always competition. That competition is what makes me wake up earlier to be that much more ahead of the game.

AHHA: If you weren’t here, where would you be?

Hector: Baseball. Definitely, playing baseball.

Hillary Clinton: On Internet Neutrality

Dear Mr. Creekmur:

Thank you for writing to share with me your concerns regarding internet neutrality. As you may know, I support net neutrality. The open architecture of the Internet has been the critical element that has made it the most revolutionary communications medium since the advent of the television.

Each day on the Internet, views are discussed and debated in an open forum without fear of censorship or reprisal. The Internet as we know it does not discriminate among its users. It does not decide who can enter its marketplace and it does not pick which views can be heard and which ones silenced. It is the embodiment of the fundamental democratic principles upon which our nation has thrived for hundreds of years.

I have always, and will continue to, strongly and unequivocally support these principles. As I have worked throughout my Senate career to make broadband access readily available throughout New York State and our nation, I believe that maintaining an open Internet coupled with more broadband access is necessary if we are to meet the promise and the potential of the Internet to disseminate ideas and information, enhance learning, education and business opportunities for all Americans and improve and uplift our citizenry.

We must embrace an open and non-discriminatory framework for the Internet of the 21st century. Therefore, it is my intention to be an original cosponsor of the net neutrality legislation proposed by Senators Dorgan and Snowe to ensure that open, unimpaired and unencumbered Internet access for both its users and content providers is preserved as Congress debates the overhaul of our nation’s telecommunications laws.

Thank you again for writing about this issue that is important to me and to so many of my constituents. Please be assured that I will fight any efforts that would fundamentally alter the inherently democratic structure of the Internet. Updates on this and many other important issues being discussed before the United States Senate, can be found on my website http://clinton.senate.gov.

Sincerely yours,

Hillary Rodham Clinton

For more on the issues surrounding net neutrality, read an editorial by Davey D and contact your local Senator.

Chuck "Jigsaw" Creekmur is the co-founder of AllHipHop.com.

G.A.G.E.: Measure of a Man

T

wenty-three and with a flow scratched out of sandpaper rawness, Chaz “G.A.G.E.” Scott is Aftermath’s newest and youngest signee. And while his sometimes-nickname — “Shottie” — implies the kind of double-barreled sawed-off that left Cuba Gooding Jr. screaming “Ricky!” in an alley, G.A.G.E.’s rap handle has little to do with guns. Born, raised and left to fend for himself in Northwest Philly, the name “G.A.G.E.” has come to say a lot about the life of the man behind it. It’s become a measuring stick that has seen the hungry rapper through extreme peaks and valleys, moments that shift from saying goodbye to three of the most important people he’s known — his mother, father and grandmother — to joining arguably the most successful and influential Hip-Hop record label in the world.

Between sessions for his debut, My Life, G.A.G.E. spoke of his turbulent come-up, from growing up on Germantown Avenue, and watching family members die, to holding his own in the studio with Dr. Dre and DMX.

AllHipHop.com.com: Tell me about the name G.A.G.E. What does it stand for?

G.A.G.E.: I’m from Philly, a neighborhood called Germantown. G.A.G.E. stands for “Germantown Avenue Gotta Eat.” That’s the avenue where I did what I had to; that’s where my father was killed. A lot of s**t went down on that avenue.

AllHipHop.com.com: When was your father killed?

G.A.G.E.: It’s been about five years now.

AllHipHop.com: Tell me about your experiences growing up in Philly.

G.A.G.E.: Growing up in Germantown, it was actually fun. My pops was the neighborhood weed man, so I was spoiled. All the kids played [together]. Getting a little older, you start seeing the hardships of the neighborhood: the addicts, the violence. But you don’t really see that as a child, you just out there having fun.

AllHipHop.com: How did you get into Hip-Hop? What were some things you were hearing as you were growing up?

G.A.G.E.: My sister Azerene, she was rappin’; she’s a little older than me. My mom had passed when I was about nine years old. After she died, all I had was my sister. I looked up to her; she was rappin’, doin’ her thing. I wanted to be like big sis. So I started writing, but it was just poetry and screenplays for school. One day, I put one of those poems to a beat.

AllHipHop.com: What kind of things were you writing about?

G.A.G.E.: Probably the girl with the big butt in class [laughs]. [With] screenplays, I was writing horror stories. I like horror movies.

AllHipHop.com: What’s your favorite horror movie?

G.A.G.E.: A Nightmare on Elm Street.

AllHipHop.com: The first one, or the next seven or eight in the series?

G.A.G.E.: Every one. I’m a Freddy fan ‘til I die [laughs].

AllHipHop.com: So you were writing a lot of horror stories?

G.A.G.E.: Yeah, and I was actually into art, too; drawing. My father was in art school, but he had to drop out. So I was always around art and music.

AllHipHop.com: You said your mom died when you were younger.

G.A.G.E.: She died in front of my face. She OD’ed on promethyzene [syrup] and Xanax pills. I was about nine years old. My mom was remarried and she was living in Maryland. I was out there for the summer, spending time with her. A few family members came into town, so they got a hotel room, and I guess the partyin’ got outta control. When I woke up, it was just me and my mom in the room. I watched her take her last breath.

AllHipHop.com: Are you living in Philly now?

G.A.G.E.: I’m in Atlanta right now, working. I go back and forth, because my sister moved out here about ten years ago. I was living with my father and my grandmother. Right after my father was killed, it was just me and my grandmother. Then she got a call and found out she had cancer. I was just 17 years old, on my own. I couldn’t do it — I starved for weeks, I didn’t have no heat, I had to sleep in clothes, I didn’t have food for long periods of time. My sister came back to Philly and said, “You gotta get outta this hell.” She took me down to Atlanta and I never really moved back since.

AllHipHop.com: Getting back to Philly, there’s a real diverse history of Hip-Hop there, people like Schoolly D, Steady B, Will Smith, The Roots, Beans, Eve, Freeway. Where do you fit into that picture?

G.A.G.E.: I’m just trying to tell my story, my life. I have an uncle on death row up there in Pennsylvania; they caught him on America’s Most Wanted. The Birdsongs, that’s my mother’s last name. They’re known up there. If you go into the old Philadelphia Inquirer newspapers, my family’s [name] had a lot in there, drug history, y’know, selling drugs up there. I have one uncle on death row and two uncles have life [sentences].

I just want to tell my whole story. I don’t think nobody has really made it and put Philadelphia [on the map] like how New York is or how the West Coast is. Eve made it big; Will Smith made it big, but Will kinda ventured off into the movies. But you don’t really hear too much about Philly. “Oh, Beans, Beans, Beans”; yeah, but ain’t nobody really sold millions and millions of copies. I look up to Beans a lot in Philly, actually, as a rapper.

AllHipHop.com: Being on Aftermath, do you think you’ll be too closely associated with the other artists on the label and not be able to represent Philly?

G.A.G.E.: Oh no. Dre loves Philly rappers, for one thing. Kurupt, Eve, Bilal, Floetry; he really likes the whole Philly thing.

AllHipHop.com: Tell me about the Aftermath deal and how that came about.

G.A.G.E.: My manager, Y.O., is a good friend of Mel-Man, who was a producer on Chronic 2001 and a couple Eminem albums. So they kept in touch, and Mel-Man said he had the connect with Dre. So we were going out there messin’ with Mel-Man, tryin’ to get in. But I wasn’t really ready for the game — this was about three years ago. I was ready, but I wasn’t Aftermath-ready. I coulda came out on another label, but Aftermath is a big thing. So we just kept workin’; went to L.A., met with Mel-Man; but we never got to Dre. But bein’ with Mel-Man, we started linking back up with an associate of Dre’s from Compton named Jay Bible. We kept in touch with him, and when Mel-Man and Dre went their separate ways, we were still sending packages to Jay. We sent him about 250 songs. He was a little nervous, because you only got one shot with Dre. It’s not no “work some more and come back with a better product;” you got one chance to blow. We were about to stop sending him songs. We was like, “We sent you all this,” and [Jay] would tell us, “Oh, Dre said change this, change this.” But we knew [the songs] never got to him. Finally we sent him a six-song package and he took it to Dre.

A lot of labels was tryin’ to holla at me, but when Aftermath heard [the songs], they called the next day and said, “Your flight leaves at this time and your hotel is in Beverly Hills.” They laid out the red carpet. And when I met Dre he was like, “We don’t really need to talk. I’m feelin’ your stuff; you feelin’ the Aftermath stuff. Let the lawyers ping-pong back and forth until we both happy with the situation.”

AllHipHop.com: Dre’s picked some of the most successful rappers — some of the greatest rappers — ever. When Dr. Dre says, “I want this guy,” and he’s talking to you, what’s going through your mind?

G.A.G.E.: I didn’t really get excited at first. It’s like you’re watching the T.V. and you got a lottery ticket in your hand and they read off your numbers. You don’t really believe it at first. The night before we met with Dre, we met with Mike Lynn [former A&R at Aftermath], and he’s like, “Dre’s feelin’ your music, [but] he wants to know if you got star quality; if you ready for the game; if you got the look.” He’s like, “Dre’s gonna stare you down; he’s gonna be hard on you.” So the whole night before, I’m just preparing: writin’ songs, goin’ over my verses, thinkin’ what I could rap for him. When I met him, he ain’t say nothin’ but, “Yo, I’m feelin’ your s**t, let’s make it happen.”

AllHipHop.com: What’s it like for you, being the youngest and newest, on a label that’s affiliated with some of the biggest names in Hip-Hop?

G.A.G.E.: It’s a lot of pressure, but I’ve been under a lot worse. I’ve had birthdays where I was pickin’ out caskets [for my grandmother], where it was just me and the funeral director.

AllHipHop.com: Dre’s got a reputation for being a real perfectionist. From what I’ve heard, he’ll just flat-out tell you, “I don’t like that,” or “You gotta do that again.”

G.A.G.E.: Oh yeah. I hear that all the time. Busta Rhymes called me. He was like, “[Dre’s] gonna turn down a lot of your songs, he’s gonna say a lot of it ain’t it. It’s gonna be a lot of songs that everybody around you think is excellent. But trust me, it’ll work out for the better.”

AllHipHop.com: Was Dre hard on you when you did your session with him?

G.A.G.E.: Nah, he’s harder on you when you bring him the music. It isn’t really what you say on the beat, it’s the beat [itself]. Dre is a beat perfectionist. That’s what people don’t understand. He wants the beat to be right. I’m gonna let a little secret out, though: Dre has a CD shredder next to his desk. So it’s not just, “I don’t like the song”; your s**t’s goin’ in the shredder.

AllHipHop.com: You got Andre 3000 and DMX on the “Crack, Murder & Missed Meals” mixtape. How did you pin those guys down?

G.A.G.E.: DMX is my manager’s cousin. I got that drop before I had my deal. I met with X one day ‘cause my manager was like, “X wants to hear you rap.” And when X came down, he was like, “Don’t mess up, don’t be nervous,” like really tryin’ to diss me or whatever. So I went at him, and he came back with a verse. We went back and forth for about 15 minutes, just rappin’. After that, he was like, “F**k it. You ridin’ with me today.” He took me to the mall, got me some clothes. We rolled out to a couple parties, went back to the hotel and went to sleep. The next morning, my manager flipped out the tape recorder and said, “We need that drop, cousin.”

With Andre 3000, we went into the studio, and he was working in the room next to mine. My room had a better sound. He needed some girls from my room to sing a part on his song, and he needed our room for a half-hour just so he could do this one part. So we agreed to let him hold our studio room for a half-hour if he blessed us with a drop.

We didn’t get a lot of people to do drops. I got Twista on there doing a drop. I have D.O.C. on there —

AllHipHop.com: How did you get him on there? He’s been M.I.A. for awhile.

G.A.G.E.: Who, the doc [D.O.C.]? That’s my man. He still hangs with Dre on a daily basis. When I’m in L.A., Dre’s got so much on his plate that he don’t have time to just work with me. So I go to my own studio sessions that Aftermath books. I was in there one day working by myself, ‘cause, y’know, I don’t really know anybody in L.A. And D.O.C. actually came over and was like, “I just wanted to come check on you.” So that’s when me and him got tight.

AllHipHop.com: You mentioned Busta calling you, too. Have the artists on the label welcomed you?

G.AG.E.: Oh yeah. I haven’t met 50 or Eminem yet. But Game welcomed me in; that’s my big homie. Busta lent a helping hand. Dre is the kindest, though. He’s from another planet or something. You never see him with no jewelry on, no flashy rims; nothing. And he got more money than the people with all that stuff.

AllHipHop.com: I want to talk about the new album. Tell me about some of the experiences you’re drawing from when you write songs.

G.A.G.E.: It’s called My Life. [It’s about] the death of my mother, the death of my father, the incarceration of my uncles — my life; me bein’ on the block, gettin’ shot at, shootin’, doin’ whatever I had to do to survive. I’m talkin’ about the hunger I went through, havin’ nothin’ and building it into an empire.

AllHipHop.com: The Game came out last year with The Documentary; 50 came out the year before with his story; Eminem tells his story. How are you going to differentiate what you’re doing from these other releases on your label, not to mention other rappers telling their stories?

G.A.G.E.: I’m not saying the artists on my label, but a lot of artists fabricate their life. You can tell when someone is genuine and actually went through an experience. No one has lived my life, so I gotta be different. No one can tell my life like I can.

Troy “Smack” Mitchell: Lights, Camera, Action

B

ack in 2002, Troy “Smack” Mitchell probably never thought that his DVD magazine would become a phenomenon in Hip-Hop culture. But some element of belief kept him tapping rappers on the shoulders, and begging them for a voyeuristic look at the lives of the lyricist.

Everything about the S.M.A.C.K. DVDs captures that “fly on the wall” authenticity. The camera does not lie, as the editor determines what’s best for the DVD, the rapper, and the culture at large. Perhaps that’s why more than 750,000 copies later, along with recognition in countries all over the world, Mitchell is ready to take this phenomenon to new heights.

Recently, Mitchell joined with Koch Records for distribution of the newest edition. The latest series, S.M.A.C.K The Album: Volume 1, features a full length video for every cut on the corresponding CD. Years after begging for cosigns, Young Jeezy, Fat Joe, Bun B, B.G., Juvenile and others obliged to contribute. Smack looks at his brand, its humble roots, and the infinite possibility as the video medium met rappers in their element.

AllHipHop.com: When you first came up with the S.M.A.C.K. concept, and when you made your very first DVD, did you automatically try to get distribution? Or did you go directly to the streets?

Smack: I did 11 titles, and didn’t approach one major company. I wanted to put in my work first, and build my foundation before I sat down at any table. It gives you stronger negotiations when you have your own fan base and there’s a buzz out there about what you do. That’s what I was focused on. I wanted to take my time and build my brand, so I just went straight to the streets. By doin’ that, I was very successful. I got my DVDs in different territories around the world: places like Japan, London, France, South Africa. These are territories that a lot of people who love Hip-Hop don’t even know exist. I was fortunate to focus on those different territories and get my brand out there.

AllHipHop.com: How did this distribution deal with Koch Records come to play?

Smack: Actually, I was at my man, Cam’ron’s house, and we were doing something for the regular street title: S.M.A.C.K DVD. He had a marketing meeting that day when I was there, regarding one of his projects that he had with them at the time. He introduced me to some of the execs that were there, and they were already familiar with my brand, and they were in tune with my whole movement. So we sat, talked, and it came up that they wanted to do a joint venture with me. That’s basically how everything played out.

AllHipHop.com: For many other companies that put out DVD magazines, even though it is competition, you are all working towards the same common goal. Have you though of collaborating with a company that you feel you can produce something major with?

Smack: I’m just trying to perfect my craft you know, and create my identity in the game. I felt that I did [that] for the last 11 titles that I’ve put out on the streets. I look at all street DVDs that come out, and I haven’t really seen one company that I would want to jump the band with as yet. I was thinking about collaborating with up-and-comers [in the DVD production industry], but honestly, I ain’t really seen any creativity out there yet. Everybody’s trying to run with the same format. When I did it back in 2002, I had to come up with my own formula and format for the DVD. I had to put out three DVDs before I really developed my format that would form my audience. I had to put all the secrets of video in a certain way, so my audience could enjoy it. Like, you would be sitting watching a S.M.A.C.K. DVD for an hour and a half and you don’t even realize it, you know what I’m saying?

AllHipHop.com: When it comes to putting S.M.A.C.K together, is it spontaneous… Or do you actually plan out which artists’ you want featured for each volume?

Smack: At this point yeah, I plan it out, but it depends on what’s going on at the time. It could be a promotion for a real big product that they have coming out. So this will [help] increase awareness for their project. That’s how I build my roster for up-and-coming DVDs. They can get a chance to showcase their talent and solidify a situation that they might be tryin’ to get involved with. I [might] throw in some artists’ that you haven’t seen in a while, but their still doin’ their thing.

At the beginning, it was more spontaneous, and more renegade. I had to run up on the scene and prove myself to all of the artists’. ‘Cause you know, when you are running around with a camera, and nobody really knows who you are, they’re kinda nervous. At the end of the day, it’s real! There are a lot of things that go on behind the scenes that’s real in the Hip-Hop game. So when I first came through, they were definitely weary, and I had to prove myself, ’cause nobody knew who Smack was. [I had to] show them that I could do something that could benefit them. Once they saw what I was doing with other artists’, they started respecting that like, “Yo, there’s Smack, he give us good business, and good looks so we can link up wit ’em.”

AllHipHop.com: Technically, you can call yourself a Video Journalist, and as journalists’ we are always at risk of something. Can you recall one particular day things just went completely wrong?

Smack: That’s everyday! [laughs] Lights, goin’ to a shoot without a tape in the camera. I’ve been to shoots where I get the footage, come back to the studio and as it turns out, while I was shootin’ the camera was dropping frames! So, the footage is there, but it’s all choppy and not usable. Even with this latest project, my camera for some reason was dropping’ frames. You know the X-ray machines at the airport where you put your bags through, I don’t know if that messes up the tape… I just don’t know! I have lost so much footage on this last project that it’s crazy! But that’s what happens when you do production. Anything that could go wrong will go wrong. But I’m experienced, and I know how to get around certain things and when I come across situations, but ah man!

AllHipHop.com: Based on what you’re saying, it’s little things here and there, but what about one situation like getting chased by dogs, or getting caught trying to jump a fence…

Smack: Stuff like that too! I fought Security Guards for being on the stage at the National Coliseum, while 50 Cent was performing. They didn’t want promoters to film, but this is my life. They tried to confiscate my tape, but you know that wasn’t goin’ down. I’m with them at the shows, but I’m doin’ what I do. And I take my work serious too! Once I’m filming, this is money, especially when you got an artist like 50 Cent or whoever, performing in a major arena. We got kicked out of the arena, but I still got my footage and I still got my tapes! But that’s just part of the game.

AllHipHop.com: Not even with the rappers. Have you ever been placed in a threatening situation because you have some footage that someone wants just because they know you have it? Even though you know and they know that you edit the production.

Smack: I’m a real dude at the end of the day, and the streets is real. And like I said, I’m not gonna put a rapper in a situation that can jeopardize their freedom. I respect them. Everything I do is outta pocket, and I have lost money not putting out projects that I wanted to do. But me being a real dude, I won’t put it out. My audience will come to me and be like “Yo, what’s up with that DVD you promoted, when are you gonna put it out?” But I’m not gonna do anything that will not make anyone look good.

AllHipHop.com: Considering that you do music videos for your dvd, are doing big budget music videos the next step?

Smack: That’s definitely my next step, and movies too. That’s the path that I’m gonna take.

AllHipHop.com: Will you be opening other ventures outside of film production?

Smack: Yeah [my team is] trying to expand the brand, “Streets, Music, Arts, Culture, Knowledge.” We’re tryin’ to have S.M.A.C.K clothes, DVDs, drinks. Once we get situated in the game, sky is the limit. But we’re just gonna do what makes sense at the time.

AllHipHop.com: S.M.A.C.K. has turned into a Hip-Hop phenomenon for what it is. But now that it’s at its highest peak, have you graduated? Will there be a last S.M.A.C.K. series?

Smack: It’s hard to say ’cause the streets need me, you know what I mean. I’m all over America man, and my fans really appreciate my work. Once I come out with my DVD, they’re hype for a week! From the first week that I drop a series, they be waitin’ for the next one. And they don’t really know that it takes a long time to put these productions together. When dealing with rappers, that’s like a whole different time zone, so it’s hard. But my audience loves it, and they just want more. So, the streets need me and I’m focused, but at the same time, I’m tryin’ to broaden my horizons. I’m just not tryin’ to do DVDs my whole life, I want to take it to new levels. That’s why I did this project with Koch, because it will give me more exposure on a national scale and open other opportunities for me.