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Audition

Artist: P.O.STitle: AuditionRating: 3 1/2 StarsReviewed by: Paine

In 1991, Public Enemy and Anthrax made history iby remixing “Bring tha Noise”. The effort fused two cultures, Metal and hip-hop, that long stood side-by-side, but never on the same block of cement. Fifteen years later, Minnesota’s P.O.S combines the cultures for an anger-driven, lyrically clever Audition (Rhymesayers) for the legions of Twin Cities fans looking for another self-made indie star. The Doomtree stand-out’s album may speak louder to rhythm savvy Punk fans than Hip-Hoppers, but it’s a guilty pleasure for all.

“P.O.S. is Ruining My Life” is a stellar confessional. P.O.S, like Joe Budden, admits that he struggles to maintain a relationship with his father, moments before generalizing women of waiting on the next best thing in life. Though he’s ranty and self-absorbed, P.O.S uses universal issues, and offers a delivery that mixes the timing and style of Punk, but with the avant-garde egoism of hip-hop. Holdsteady singer Craig Finn drops in on “Safety on Speed” which begins as a diatribe on the film, “Predator”, before evolving to a song about disappointment in general. Things like this are hard to take seriously, which is what separates P.O.S’s songs from the usual “woe-is-me” rapper

Musically, this is the first project besides MM…Food?, that Rhymesayers has made without relying on Atmosphere beat-maker Ant to wax some Soul. Instead, choppy guitar and break collages by Lazerbreak and Sims, mixed with DJ Turbo Nemesis’ cuts create new dimensions. Though Little Brother fans may cover their ears, lovers of Cage and Anti-Pop Consortium should be delightfully pleased.

The People Vs.

Artist: Trick TrickTitle: The People Vs.Rating: 3 StarsReviewed by: Henry Adaso

As Cassidy or Snoop Dogg would probably tell you, being accused of murder can make you a very rich man. Having received a clean slate on an alleged murder charge that landed him a seven month stint behind bars in 2004, it was only natural that the 33-year old Christian Mathis (known to the world as Trick Trick) traded in his street life for music hustle. By capitalizing off his first major deal and achieving what had eluded him at Click Boom Records nearly 14 years ago, Rock-city’s own Tricky has crafted a manifesto that chronicles his jagged past. Like the album art, however, The People Vs (Motown) is far from being a well-balanced album.

The aforementioned murder charge is the subject of Trick’s musing on “M-1” (a slang that implies first degree murder), where he barks out “not guilty” with DMX steeze over a gritty drum shiver. You can almost hear the snares gasping for air as they strive to keep pace with Trick on the congratulatory “Get Bread”, and “My Name Is Trick Trick” – one of several thug braggadocio-themed tracks on The People Vs. The latter touches on his well-publicized fracas with Trick Daddy; “Trick Daddy broke my arm? C’mon you saw the tape/ain’t nobody breaking s### this way…/I don’t whoop na’n n#### for nothin’/U got stomped then you had to do somethin’ (b**yotch!)”.

Things are not all ugly on this album, as the Goon Squad chief discards his gruffness for the pulsating “Leave Your Past”. As expected, the joint reaffirms the power of moving on, but takes an unusual turn evolving into an elongated instrumentation for an additional minute or so. An affiliate of Trick’s for over a decade named Eminem (you may have heard of him) lends his superstar hands on the radio-active “Welcome to Detroit”, but plunders into mediocrity on the insipid “No More To Say” alongside Proof (of D-12). Not even Jazze Pha’s catchy ditty “Attitude Adjustment” is enough to offset the Lil’ Jon regurgitations on “Let’s Scrap” and “Head Bussa”, both poorly-sequenced as track-closers.

Trick fails by allowing trite gangsterisms to outweigh substance, but successfully concocts an album that gives the world a peak into the mind of a relevant player in the Detroit Hip-Hop scene. Christian Mathis may have beaten his case against the state but the musical battle The People Vs. is a lopsided one with Trick Trick on the losing end.

Windmills of the Soul

Artist: Kero OneTitle: Windmills of the SoulRating: 3 1/2 StarsReviewed by: Brolin Winning

An emcee/producer/DJ based in the Bay, Kero One has been making hip-hop since the mid-nineties, but is just now releasing his debut full-length. After a pair of dope 12-inches, “Check The Rhyme” and “Keep It Alive!” plus a successful Japanese tour, he steps out with Windmills of my Soul (Plug Label), a mostly self-produced affair that bubbles over with jazzy breaks, mellow live instrumentation, and intelligent, slice-of-life lyricism.

“In all the Wrong Places” chronicles failed attempts at true romance, with acoustic guitar flourishes and some impressive Fender Rhodes work. “The Cycle Repeats” is an upbeat graffiti anthem, built on rugged snares and swirling flutes, injected with nice cuts from DJ Seoul Control. We also get treated to two outstanding instrumental selections that really showcase Kero’s ability behind the boards. The appropriately titled “It’s a New Day” is practically guaranteed to put a smile on your face with its shuffling drums, funked-out live sax, and Bob James-style keys, while “Ain’t That Somethin?” evokes thoughts of MF DOOM or Count Bass D thanks to the stellar synth loops and weird dialogue samples.

The 13 songs on here deal with real life concerns; showing love for good music, the ladies, family, and friends. There are no fake drug kingpin proclamations, no murderous threats, and no misguided attempts at Dirty South t#### bar music. If that’s your thing, this album probably won’t win you over. However, for heads looking for something slightly less formulaic, Kero One has got what you need. Windmills isn’t the kind of album that’s gonna incite a riot on the dancefloor, but it’s an undeniably nice, highly musical debut that will likely be embraced by b-boys and girls sick of the status quo.

Hit Producer Scott Storch Angry At Grammys

Scott Storch has

a bone to pick with the Grammy committee. The super-producer, who was named

Billboard’s number one Hot 100 and Hot R&B/Hip-Hop producer of 2005, feels

he was snubbed in the Producer of the Year category for the 48th annual Grammy

Awards.

The Producer of

the Year nominees for the Feb. 8 ceremony in Los Angeles are the Neptunes, Jimmy

Jam and Terry Lewis, Danger Mouse, Nigel Godrich, and Steve Lillywhite.

"I was extremely

disappointed to find I was not nominated, and even more so when I saw the list

of nominees," said Storch.

Last year, the

veteran producer opened the first 20 weeks of the year with back-to-back number

one hits—Mario’s "Let Me Love You" and 50 Cent’s "Candy

Shop," featuring Olivia. "Candy Shop" went on to become the number

one ringtone of 2005.

Storch ended the

year strong with Chris Brown’s "Run It!" which held the number one

spot on the singles chart for five weeks, as well as five songs on Billboard’s

Hot 100 Year End songs chart.

Overall, Storch

produced 13 hit singles that were released in 2005.

Although he said

he isn’t trying to disregard the nominees, Storch feels it’s hard to justify

some of the names when looking at the big picture.

Three of the candidates

(Danger Mouse, Godrich and Lillywhite) have one or two albums credited to their

names for the entire year, said Storch, adding that Jam and Lewis have worked

with many artists but have not had as many 2005 number ones as Storch.

Man Shot Dead At Busta Rhymes Video Shoot In Brooklyn

Police are seeking

suspects in an early morning shoot-out on the set of a Busta Rhymes video shoot

in Brooklyn, New York.

Israel Ramirez,

29, was shot once in the chest and was pronounced dead a short time later.

Rhymes, who was

in the studio at the time of the shooting, was not injured.

Rhymes was shooting

a full length remix video for his single "Touch It," on Green Street

in Greenpoint, known for it’s thriving artistic community.

Last week, Busta

Rhymes released three all-star remixes to "Touch It."

The video will

feature Missy Elliott, Mary J. Blige, DMX, Papoose, Rah Digga, Lloyd Banks,

Sean "Diddy" Combs, Winky Wright, Garry Sheffield, Raekwon and others.

Shortly before

the shooting marred the all-star video shoot, Rhymes was in good spirits.

"Touch It"

is taken from his highly anticipated Aftermath/Interscope debut The Big Bang,

which is slated for an April release date.

"I am blessed

to be in a position at this stage in my career that I could put out one record

and completely dominate the scene with the crème de la crème of

NY," Busta Rhymes said shortly before the shooting took place. "Mary,

Missy, Rah Digga, Banks, DMX and Papoose…its just the beginning.”

Police are viewing

surveillance footage from nearby buildings hoping to identify a suspect in the

murder.

Representatives

for Interscope declined to comment on the shooting.

Philadelphia Rapper Cool C Granted Temporary Stay Of Execution

Condemned rapper Christopher

"Cool C" Roney was granted a stay of execution by a Philadelphia, Pennsylvania

judge on Wednesday (Feb. 1).

The rapper was

scheduled to die on Mar. 9 for the 1996 murder of police officer Lauretha Vaird.

When Vaird, 43,

responded to a silent alarm at a PNC Bank branch in Philadelphia, she was shot

in the chest as she entered the bank, according to reports. She was not wearing

a bulletproof vest that day.

Cool C, 36, along

with rapper Warren "Steady B." McGlone and Mark Canty were convicted

of first-degree murder for their role in killing Vaird, a nine-year veteran

who was Philadelphia’s first female officer ever killed in the line of duty.

In Oct. 1996, McGlone

and Mark Canty were sentenced to life in prison, while Cool C was sentenced

to die by lethal injection.

Last month, Pennsylvania

Governor Ed Rendell signed the rapper’s execution warrant. But Judge Gary Glazer

has issued an order to put Cool C’s execution on hold until his post-conviction

litigation is resolved.

An early pioneer

in Hip-Hop, Cool C was a member of the Philadelphia-based rap collective The

Hilltop Hustlers in the late 1980s. He hit it big with "Juice Crew Dis"

and the 1989 hit single, "Glamorous Life."

Snoop, Luke Form Youth Football Leagues

Amoro Management Corp., a company specializing in large-scale real estate development projects in major U.S. cities, will sponsor rapper Snoop Dogg’s “Snoop Youth Football League” (SYFL) by creating an endowment fund to raise more than $1 million for the league.

The national program kicks off Saturday (Feb. 4) during Snooper Bowl II, which takes place at the Pontiac Silverdome in Detroit and features a live performance by Bow Wow. Amoro will present Snoop with a $10,000 seed check.

Snoop started the league in 2004 as a way to make football more affordable to underprivileged youth.

“It’s too easy for kids to join a gang,” said Snoop in a statement. “I want to make it even easier to play football. I have a passion for teaching youth life skills through football.”

Those who are unable to make a donation but have great credit can utilize Amoro’s Credit for Charity program to support the league without paying cash out of their own pocket, Taylor added.

Proceeds from the endowment fund will go towards funding football programs for youth and possibly college scholarships.

This year’s Snooper Bowl will feature Snoop’s Junior All-Stars against the Detroit PAL All-Stars. The winning team will receive the Snooper Bowl Trophy, created by Tiffany & Co., makers of the Vince Lombardi Super Bowl Trophy for the NFL.

Last year’s game was considered one of the most successful officially NFL-sanctioned events of Super Bowl week.

The NFL assists SYFL with youth initiatives such as the junior player development and Play Safe! programs.

“Our investors are used to double and triple digit returns on their investments,” said Amoro founder, Ephren Taylor. “Individuals who wish to support Snoop Dogg’s SYFL program can invest in the endowment fund, and the returns from their investment will continue to fund the SYFL for decades to come.”

Sponsors for the game include Spirit Airlines, Tiffany & Co., XM Satellite Radio and Natural Resources Media, which will videotape the event in HDTV, a first for any youth sports program.

In related news, Snoop’s one-time rival Luther “Luke” Campbell, who has mentored children for over 20 years through his Liberty City Warriors youth football league, announced his new venture, The National Youth Football League (NYFL).

The NYFL begins play this year and is affiliated with the Orange Bowl Youth Football League.

“I’m excited about this opportunity to develop the National Youth Football League and to be a part of the OBFYL,” said Campbell, a founder of the Liberty City program. “We have been meeting with teams throughout Dade and Broward during the off-season and all of us are looking forward to kicking off the National Youth Football League this season.”

Campbell said the majority of kids in his Liberty City program progressed in their academic performance last year.

“One of our kids this year was a failing student at the start and by the time we were playing in the Super Bowl he was an all ‘A’ student,” Campbell said. “With the academic progress reporting system that we have implemented, I’d like to think that we are not only helping develop great athletes but scholars as well.”

More information on the National Youth Football League is available at www.orangebowl.org.

Cartoon Network Announces Cast Of Andre Benjamin’s Untitled Cartoon Series

The Cartoon Network recently announced the cast of an upcoming animated series created and executive-produced by OutKast member Andre 3000.

Tionne “T-Boz” Watkins of TLC will join the cast of the untitled cartoon series, which is currently in production at Cartoon Network Studios in Burbank, Calif.

Veteran voice actors Crystal Scales (“The Adventures of Jimmy Neutron”) Jeff Glen Bennett (“Johnny Bravo,” “Camp Lazlo”), Tom Kenny (“Camp Lazlo,” “SpongeBob SquarePants”) and others will lend their voices as characters to the series.

Andre 3000’s voice will also be featured in the half-hour animated series, which focuses on a group of outcast children in Atlanta and their mysterious mentor.

Benjamin is executive-producing the project through his production company, Moxie Turtle. Veteran Tommy Lynch, creator of “Kids Incorporated,” “Romeo!” and other children’s television shows, is also executive-producing the series through his company, Tom Lynch Co.

Also on board as head writer is Patric M. Verrone, who has written for “Futurama,” “Pinky and the Brain” and “The Critic.”

Twelve half-hour episodes are being produced, along with a special one-hour premiere, which is slated to debut this fall.

Department of Justice To Decide Kenneth “Supreme” McGriff’s Fate

Defense attorneys

for Kenneth "Supreme" McGriff recently petitioned a federal judge

to require the Department of Justice to rule on a decision in McGriff’s pending

death penalty case.

McGriff’s attorneys,

Jean D. Barrett and David A. Ruhnke, have requested U.S. District Judge Edward

R. Korman to require that the Department rule on whether the convicted drug

kingpin’s murder trial will proceed as a capital or non-capital case by March

27.

In a legal correspondence

to Judge Korman, dated Jan. 27, Barrett and Ruhnke cited the attorney general’s

"death penalty protocols" as the basis for the request.

The Department

protocols require that the U.S. Attorney submit his or her death penalty recommendation,

no later than "67 days prior to the date on which the government is required

to file notice that it intends to seek the death penalty."

"There will,

however, not be answer on this issue for several weeks; Supreme’s case is at

the so-called ‘death desk’ at the Department of Justice in DC and they have

until March 27 to make a decision," author Ethan Brown told AllHipHop.com.

Brown wrote the

book, Queens

Reigns Supreme: Fat Cat, 50 Cent & the Rise of the Hip-Hop Hustler,

which details the criminal underworld of Queens, N.Y., McGriff’s ties to The

Inc., and the borough’s relationship with the Hip-Hop industry.

Judge Korman set

a peremptory trial date of April 3, which gives the DOJ a little more than two

months to rule on the case.

If a decision on

the death penalty is not made by the start of the trial, the case would proceed

as a non-capital case.

The charges against

McGriff are the result of a coordinated initiative by federal and local law

enforcement agencies, including the New York City Police Department, the IRS,

FBI, and ATF.

Five individuals

and two corporations are charged with an array of offenses, including racketeering,

drug trafficking, money laundering, and murder, including the slaying of Queens

rapper Eric "E Money Bags" Smith.

There’s Something About Remy: Based on a True Story

Artist: Remy MaTitle: There’s Something About Remy: Based on a True StoryRating: 3 1/2 StarsReviewed by: Jessica Dufresne

There are some harsh realities to being a female MC. Sometimes you can be very talented, but not attractive or sexy enough—so you get no love. On the other hand, you can have no skills but be pretty enough, and get a break. You can’t be too hard, because that’ll turn off the fellas, but yet if you’re too sexy, women will accuse you of setting us back and those same guys who’ll love you won’t actually be taking you seriously. Fortunately, Remy Ma knows how to straddle the many fine lines, and does it so well that she defies classification as “another female rapper”.

Rather than depending only on her sex appeal or just how tomboy-ish she is on There’s Something about Remy: Based On a True Story (Terror Squad/SRC/Universal), the BX lyricist realistically balances out the two, which leaves you no choice but to focus on what matters: skills. Using wit, dexterity and just the right amount of braggadocio and social awareness, Based on a True Story is a solid debut after holding fans’ patience hostage for six years.

The heat begins with a declaration by her mentor, the late great Big Pun that, “sometimes you gotta send a woman to do a man’s job,” which is quickly justified as Remy goes in on “She’s Gone”. Over a soulfully sinister Buckwild beat, she shows you she can go as hard as her male counterparts and when it’s over, you believe her when she says there’s no b*tch iller than her. More top-notch production by the likes of Cool & Dre, Agallah, and Scram Jones, among other, are the right foundation for Remy’s flow and spit-fire lyrics. Her versatility shines as well when she softens just a bit on tracks like “Feels So Good”, featuring Ne-Yo as her persistent love interest, “Thug Love,” a previously unreleased and Alchemist produced song with Big Pun and the poignant “What’s Going On.” On the latter, Remy ponders what to do about an unplanned pregnancy while Keyshia Cole wails emotionally on the hook. Also, the highlight of the album, “Guilt”, is where she displays her storytelling power when you’re taken through a first-person account of events leading up to a hit-an-run of a child. Her vulnerability also peeks through on the very personal “Still,” where she addresses three different people in her life about the pain they caused her.

The only things that drag down the project are ironically enough, the two lead singles, “Whateva”, produced by Swizz Beatz and “Conceited” by Scott Storch. But if you’re using those to judge her, you’re doing yourself a disservice because she’s so much more than party rapper.

Based on a True Story proves talent knows no sexual orientation, and finally Remy Ma has the album to back up what Pun (RIP) knew all along.

Queen Latifah Honors Women Activists

Queen Latifah, a brand spokesperson and creative advisor of the Curvation Project, helped pay tribute to five women who dedicated time and energy to local women’s programs.

In a taped message, Queen Latifah congratulated the five national finalists of the Curvation Project Confidence Awards, which sought to acknowledge women who have helped other women regain self-esteem.

The award recipients were: Yvonne Pointer of Cleveland; Mattie Palmore of Washington, D.C.; Lorraine Bowman of San Diego; Jillian Bullock of Philadelphia; and Kristin Bradfield of Phoenix.

“We received more than 350 nominations from around the country, filled with examples of how women are helping others to live more rewarding lives,” said Queen Latifah. “While the entries were all amazing and we would love to recognize everyone, these five stood out as being both extremely inspirational and deserving of national recognition.”

The five finalists will be flown to New York for an awards ceremony and will meet Queen Latifah as well as national leaders of top women’s organizations who were part of the selection process.

“I credit much of who I am today to the confidence I was given as a child and the inspiration of strong, independent women like my mother and grandmother, who showed me the power of believing in myself,” added Latifah. “So I’m particularly delighted to honor these finalists, who are motivating others in the same way, and look forward to meeting them in New York to share the news of who has won the national honor.”

The Confidence Awards are part of the Curvation Project’s Confidence Initiative, which includes the online community Curvation Nation.

More information is available at www.curvation.com.

Rewind The Rhyme: Ice Cube

There was a time when lyrics really mattered. I remember as a kid pressing “play” and “rewind” over and over again so I could memorize what I considered to be hottest verses in rap music. It was one thing to like an artist, but if you really wanted to be on top of your game, if you really wanted to show that you knew your stuff, if you truly respected the game, you had to know the rhymes that defined it, line for line! But those days are essentially gone. As most artists seek to produce records that will bring them money and the subsequent mainstream success, lyrics have taken a back seat to catchy hooks and hypnotic beats. It’s got a lot of folks sounding like De La Soul wondering, “Whatever happened to the emcee?”

The emcees themselves will answer the pressing question in my reoccurring feature called, “Rewind the Rhyme with Amanda Diva and (insert your favorite emcee’s name here).” The Hip-Hop-loving folks at AllHipHop.com will uncover how some of rap’s greatest lyricists created their most classic records/verses, how things have changed or remained the same in their creative process, and whether lyrics still matter.

Before the kiddie flicks and family fun movies, Ice Cube, through his scalding honesty and intensity, came to be regarded as one of rap’s most respected wordsmiths. A living legend, he is accredited with, among other things, solidifying the gangsta rap movement with classics like “N***a You Love to Hate” (1990’s Amerikkka’s Most Wanted) and the laid back “Today Was a Good Day” (1992’s The Predator). About to release his fifth solo album of new material, Laugh Now, Cry Later, I sat down with Cube at Mirror Image Studios in New York City to rewind the rhyme and talk about Cube’s writing process on some of his most renowned records, his new music, and if he’s still the n***a you love to hate!

Amanda Diva’s Rewind The Rhyme with Ice Cube.

AllHipHop.com: Do you still listen to Hip-Hop?

Ice Cube: Yeah.

AllHipHop.com: You still do?

Ice Cube: Yeah, what else I’ma listen to?

AllHipHop.com: Nah, you know a lot of folks be like, “I don’t even listen to Hip-Hop no more, yo. I’m straight old school, straight old school.”

Ice Cube: Nah, I listen to everything. I mean, I listen to old school, but I listen to new school, rap, R&B.

AllHipHop.com: So, on a scale of one to 10, where do you think lyrics rank on a scale of importance in Hip-Hop these days?

Ice Cube: [Listen] One-to-10 on importance? I mean, as far as the game go, lyrics are always gonna be some of the most important things. Just as important as your beats. But, nobody ain’t saying nothing important right now. You know what I mean? Nobody ain’t really saying nothing significant that’s gonna change somebody life. It’s a few MC’s out there that are trying to do it. Or that have been consistent with it. I mean you know, you can’t dismiss what The Roots are doing. You can’t dismiss what people like dead prez is doing and Common and Kanye and people like that. But for the most part the Hip-Hop nation just don’t want to hear [lyrics] now like that.

AllHipHop.com: Let’s start off with a record that did change a lot of people’s lives and lyrically I think this is the record you get most “props” for.

[“The N***a You Love to Hate”-Amerikkka’s Most Wanted]

Ice Cube: [Listen] DAMN! (Smiling) I remember doing this record! Greene Street Studios, SOHO right? Green Street Studios, with Chuck D, the Bomb Squad, Eric Sadler, Keith Shockley, Hank Shockley. You know this record to me represents the best of both worlds. You know coming straight from NWA with that West Coast gangsta flow, but over a Public Enemy conjured up-you know they used to be like mad scientist up in there with them beats flippin em-and it was like the perfect marriage at the right time. It was exactly what Hip-Hop needed and uh, you know the record Amerikkka’s Most Wanted is still my favorite record.

AllHipHop.com: Really?

Ice Cube: Yea, ’cause my memories of doing that record and what I had to go through to get it done makes it just kinda like close to my heart.

[“Today Was a Good Day”-The Predator]

AllHipHop.com: So let’s play this next record. I think this is probably your best known record. When folks think of Cube this is the record most point to that don’t really know your history.

Ice Cube: [Listen] At the time I did “It Was a Good Day,” people was trying to pigeonhole me saying, “All he can do is one type of record.” And you know, I’m a B-boy, I like all kinds of Hip-Hop. I’m not just, “Oh I like the gangsta stuff and that’s it.” So, “It Was a Good Day” was trying to show that, you know, whatever comes from me is not gonna be because people are saying I should do this kind of record, or I should just stick with what I’m doing. ‘Cause people was not really wanting me to do this record in my camp. They was saying, “You do hard records. Why you gonna do this?” And I was like, “That’s exactly why. Because it’s dope.”

AllHipHop.com: I think a lot of people miss the point of this record though. They miss the irony.

Ice Cube: Yeah

AllHipHop.com: The record is ironic in that it’s a good day cause n****s ain’t get shot? That’s crazy! But people don’t see it that way.

Ice Cube: Exactly. It is. It is. But when you really strip the song down, life is hard in the ghetto. All these land mines you try and duck and you’re happy that everything is going alright. Basically the song is saying, if you get through the day it’s a good day, without getting shot or going to jail or people you know getting shot or going to jail.

AllHipHop.com: On the new album do we have any joints that lead to a laid back Cube or is it a whole new Cube?

Ice Cube: It’s a lil’ dibble and dabble of both, of the old and the new. I got a song on there called “Growing Up.” It reminds me a lot of “It Was a Good Day.” It’s that old Minnie Ripperton sample, “Back Down Memory Lane.” It basically takes us through the history of Ice Cube from the time I met Dre all the way to XXX II (XXX: State of the Union). It’s one of those songs that felt a lot like “It Was a Good Day”.

AllHipHop.com: So we got this new album and the name of the album is?

Ice Cube: Laugh Now, Cry Later.

[“Chrome and Paint” Street Single off of New Album]

AllHipHop.com: And where did you get that title from?

Ice Cube: That’s a title that a lot of the people in the penitentiary use; tattoos people get. It kinda describes their life when they were on the street and them paying for it now. You know, laugh cry later is kinda the feel of my album. It’s got, you know, the club bangers, the political records-which is the cry later kinda feel. It kinda encompasses that. You know I didn’t want to do a whole political record and I didn’t want to do a whole record where I was just trying to get it jumped off. You know so, it’s a record that flows from kind of one tone to the next. Laugh Now, Cry Later really is the state of the world in a way. You know, you could say it’s the state of the world, the state of America, the state of urban America. Now everybody’s doing a lot of playing and nobody’s really thinking about when God gonna make us pay for all this at some point in time. That’s really what inspired me to make it that title.

AllHipHop.com: How do you know as a writer when a verse is done; when a record is finished?

Ice Cube: When the song is complete and I rap it acapella and I rap it with the beat that somebody gave me before we recorded and I go set it down, but I wanna go in there and rap it again because I wanna hear how it’s sounding. Cause I know that it’s fire, you know what I’m saying? (laughs) So, that’s how I know, to me, that a song is complete and a song is good, is that I wanna-I’m like anxious to get to the studio. I’m like busting at the seams to get there. That’s how I know, that this is it.

[“We Be Clubbin”]

AllHipHop.com: You’ve got classics. Hits! A bevy of them. Did you know that they were classics when you made them? Did you know that these were lyrical classics that people would be repeating these words? Don’t be modest!

Ice Cube: In some cases yeah and some cases no.

AllHipHop.com: Name one that you knew.

Ice Cube: “We Be Clubbin.”

AllHipHop.com: You knew it?

Ice Cube: I knew it! I knew, like “We Be Clubbin” that nobody was really rappin about being in the whole club experience. It was a song that kind of kicked off talking about how it feels to be kickin’ it in the club. So I knew that it was something that a lot of people was doing. You know, I did that song in ’96. So it was something that a lot of people was doing, but a lot of people wasn’t rapping about it. So I knew that would do it. I knew “F**k the Police” was gonna be. I knew “Today Was a Good Day” was gonna work.

AllHipHop.com: Yeah?

Ice Cube: Just cause of the sample. Using the Isley Brothers I felt like I was winning before I even started rappin so…

AllHipHop.com: Did you have any idea that “N***a You Love to Hate” would end up being one of them records that defines you?

Ice Cube: Yea it’s like a record that, like if “F**k the Police” marks NWA, “N***a You Love to Hate” kind of is like the stamp. If you want to explain to anybody what Ice Cube is about, you could probably play that record and get then and now.

AllHipHop.com: So are you still that n***a?

Ice Cube: Oh yea, fa sho, fa sho!

C-Rayz Walz: Mind of a Lunatic

Napolean Bonaparte once said, “There is only one step from the sublime to the ridiculous.” Almost 200 years later, C-Rayz Walz may be living evidence of such within Hip-Hop. The Uptown anthem-maker was ripping apart battles and releasing twelve-inches long before he garnered a major spotlight through MTV’s Made. Street-lore suggests that long before the C-Rayz choked the mic, he was choking vics on sidewalks. So if you think he’s weird for being different, don’t be so quick to judge.

AllHipHop.com traveled to C-Rayz’ Bronx residence to watch the MC do something his friends Raekwon and Ghostface would surely approve of – cook fish. But as Walz fries flounder, he drops severe science on the recent surge of fame and criticism, a poorly received album in Year of the Beast, as well as teaching at a highly-accredited university this year. C-Rayz shares on his bond with unlikely comrade, Juelz Santana. The MC also touches upon pornography while watching an Evil Angel release in another room. Within his reflections, C-Rayz makes some interesting, some hilarious, and some downright strange claims. Amidst it all though, his passion is quite clear. The one-time stick-up kid is back to show a legion of fans another route, and continuously bring the character back into Hip-Hop.

AllHipHop.com: What have you been up to since Year of the Beast came out?

C-Rayz Walz: I?m about to do a winter tour. A whole bunch of ski lodges. I want to let everyone know what?s coming. Wherever there?s snow, that?s where I?m going to be at. I?m letting motherf**kers know that I?ve been staying in the lab. For real, I?m changing my name to C-Rayz Lab this year. My next solo album is called Crazy. It?s got Flava Flav and KRS-One on it.

AllHipHop.com: Listening to your discography, we can hear your style continuously evolving into the lyricist you are today. What would you say is the motivation behind your changing attitude?

C-Rayz Walz: My music is a straight, direct reflection of who I am. It?s more enlightened, more comedic. It?s everything that I am and there ain?t no negativity to it. A lot of people can?t say that, you know what I?m sayin? Later on this year, you?ll see when I come up on a more commercial scene and start rubbin? elbows with known people, I won?t compromise my craft. My s**t is next level, but it?s still street on a personal level. I had to take it to the hood.

AllHipHop.com How can you become commercial by taking it to the hood? The hood doesn?t buy records…

C-Rayz Walz: The hood never buys records, but the hood becomes the records. The records become the hood. Meaning, these kids who buy 50 Cent records [become] hard, in Iowa! They?re hard in Little Rock! They?re banging hard out there and they ain?t been around nothing [that I?ve been]. So I gotta report what?s really going on. There ain?t been a $10,000 chain in my hood in years. You know how the game go. Too much hustlers, not enough customers – so now everybody?s selling drugs through music.

AllHipHop.com: So it seems things are bigger than Hip-Hop?

C-Rayz Walz: I?m supposed to teach a Hip-Hop course at Berkeley. I?m preparing for that s**t. The job is offered for the end of this year. Hopefully, I?ll develop my skills as a professor so I can be prepared for [it].

AllHipHop.com: What will you teach your students?

C-Rayz Walz: [How to be] conscious of your thoughts. As soon as you get that thought, it?s born and it?s up to you to harvest it or cancel it out. When I get negative thoughts, I?m always like, “Cancel, cancel, cancel.” For instance, I always think about grabbing my son by the ankles and slamming him on the concrete. Now, I think about people who do things like that. [They] probably had an ill thought. Once they had that thought, they began the process of making [it real]. That may be an extreme example, but the energy of doubting yourself may be just as strong as that. When you think about your own failures, it?s like, wow, your brain remembers that. Humans are definitely part elephant, man.

AllHipHop.com: How are things going with your label, Definitive Jux. It?s been said that you aren?t happy with your current situation with them.

C-Rayz Walz: I really appreciate them for everything that they?ve done. They?ve really made me rekindle my creative spirit that made [founder El-P] want to sign me. I?ve said thousands of things about him in past interviews, personal s**t doesn?t bother [me]. But Jux as a whole, is not as Definitive as it was when I came on board.

AllHipHop.com: What happened?

C-Rayz Walz: I?ve been on tour [by myself] for the last two years just to survive. If we were to tour as a whole label, we would be much bigger. I?m tired of going on tour and having people ask me, ?Yo, when is Jux going on tour? When we gonna see Aesop? When we gonna see El?? I?m tired of saying, ?I don?t know.? I planned on coming to them for marketing ideas but it?s kinda late for it now. My label ain?t helping me to do that.

AllHipHop.com: Let me first say that your fans are very passionate about your work and a lot of them have questions for you. Many of them want to know why, in their opinion, your latest album, Year of the Beast, is not on the same level as your earlier work. They say that there has been a definite change to your music–and it has been negative. How would you respond to that?

C-Rayz Walz: All right, imagine this: There would be a whole different view of my work if I called my album Nerd Rap. I don?t need a fan. If you relate to my music and you wanna buy it, that?s on you. I made [Year of the Beast] for me. [My discography] is a different aspect of truth?it?s a big book with gold embroidery around it.

AllHipHop.com: It?s been a while since it happened, but do you care to talk about the MTV Made episode?

C-Rayz Walz: Ayo, if my man Nile [the Minnesota teen he mentored known as “The Blizzard”] was here right now, and you had any inkling of rhyming in you?he would blaze you. You would wanna stop rhyming. That s**t was real, and there was nothing fake about it. People come up to me every day and tell me, ?That was the best Made I ever saw.” They really captured a lot of good elements.

AllHipHop.com: How would you respond to someone saying that the episode exploited the culture by exposing it to white suburbia?

C-Rayz Walz: [My philosophy is] ?be comfortable.? Whether we?re in the ?burbs or the hood all we have to do is have a conversation to make a connection. Hip-Hop runs the f**kin’ world. People still don?t realize that. My phone rings all the time [with suburban kids saying] ?C-Rayz, my friends is faking the funk. Can you spit a hot eight bars to let ?em know [that we?re connected?] “Eight bars for those that don?t think I?m horrid/ So you called the vampire/ He hit you back with garlic/Crossed your middle fingers for you/ Then left you in the back like LaToya while the Jack son?s upon you/ Clap son they royal/ Battle wasn?t royal/ Even Verizon said he?s online/ He?ll employ you/For futuristic flows you know what you know/For C-Rayz Walz 718 is the code, peace.” And then I hang up. That energy keeps me alive.

AllHipHop.com: Your skills at MC Battling are well known. Off the top of my head, I can say that you?ve defeated Supernatural on multiple occasions. But I want to discuss a time when you lost a battle to Immortal Technique. What do you think about him?

C-Rayz Walz: Immortal Technique is rich. He went platinum in Ecuador [Laughs]. I think I bust his ass that day, but I think it was the crowd?s [fault that I lost]. He is the only MC that can give it to me in a battle at this point. Technique is a motherf**ker on the mic, and I love him. He doesn?t give a f**k about humanity and he?s giving a positive message [at the same time]. He?s balanced it out.

AllHipHop.com: I want to talk about your run-in with another MC, Juelz Santana. I heard you and him got locked up together?

C-Rayz Walz: Locked up? Juelz? Me and him got sent to central bookings mad times together in Manhattan Tombs. Juelz left me and my man from 197st & St. Nick. He was released earlier, and instead of keepin’ it like a selfish cat, he spread love and left it with me and my man. We smoked it,

and gave the small clip to the cell-scavengers after we were high as hell. That s**t was crazy.

[ At this point in the interview, C-Rayz excused himself to go to the room where the p#### video was playing ?to make a phone call.? He exclaimed, ?I gotta beat off to this!? Immediately knowing he was detected, he flipped his words around and said ?I got a beat off of this?to freestyle to!?]

AllHipHop.com: You must get a lot of groupie love on the road, right?

C Rayz Walz: I got h**d from a p### star before?

AllHipHop.com: Who?

C-Rayz Walz: [Smiles] Wait for her album to drop.

AllHipHop.com: Oh, I know who you?re talking about?

C-Rayz Walz: Ayo! All y’all fake ass players, take a page out my book, man. Go to shortie?s house, play some music, take a shower, smoke a L and then bounce in like ten minutes. I can?t believe I?m sharing this with the world. [Then] pretend you?re on the phone with your man and be like ?Aight son, I ain?t forget about you?pick me up at 81st and 5th. One.? Don?t pay her any attention. That will drive your girl crazy. You?re playing love tag. The next time you see her, you?re ?it.? [Smiles] All of that was in my old life. I?m celibate this year, you know what I?m sayin’?

AllHipHop.com: But the year just started…

C-Rayz Walz: [Laughs] This year I?m a ?sell-a-bit? of records! I?m tired of this p***y s**t, for real.

Firewater

Artist: The AlkaholiksTitle: FirewaterRating: 3 1/2 StarsReviewed by: Bill “Low-Key” Heinzelman

Tha Alkaholiks surely live by the motto if its not broke, don’t fix it. For 13 years, the trio of Tash, J-Ro and E-Swift has provided rowdy liquor filled and weed scented party tales for all to love. With their fifth and final album Firewater (Koch/Waxploitation Records) Tha Liks stay true to this formula.

As is the case with any Alkaholiks album, you know what you are getting into before you even rip the packaging off. In typical fashion, the lead single “The Flute Song (LaLaLa)” finds the trio buying out the bar and kicking game to all the big booty woman. The aptly titled “Party Ya Ass Off” is another vintage party anthem that asks everyone to get their drink and smoke on. Tash also takes the time out to address all the rumors surround Tha Liks, stating, “I know you heard the rumors about Tha Alkies grand finale/How J-Ro shot Swift and Tash moved out of Cali/Half of that sh*t is true, half that sh*t is true lies/It will be a cold day in hell before the Likwit crew divides.”

While Firewater continues Tha Alkaholik tradition of good old fashion feel good music, the album does falter on a few occasions due to inconsistent production. “The Get Down” features a simplistic drum heavy beat by E-Swift, as well as a lackluster hook. The same can be said for “Chaos,” as Danger Mouse’s stripped down production fails to blend with Tha Liks energetic style.

Even though Firewater may not rival Tha Liks earlier work, the album is a fitting end to a legendary and overlooked career. While the album doesn’t break any new ground, Alkaholik fans would have it no other way. The trio has stayed true to who they are for over 10 years and you have to respect that. With Tha Liks run coming to an end, it will be interesting to see if Tash, J-Ro and E-Swift can hold it down on the solo tip from here on out.

Something New (Film)

Artist: Movie ReviewTitle: Something New (Film)Rating: 4 StarsReviewed by: Edwardo jackson

BIASES:30 year old black male; frustrated screenwriter who favors action,comedy, and glossy, big budget movies over indie flicks, kiddie flicks, and weepy Merchant Ivory fare

Despite a high powered job as a tax attorney and a new home in LA’s upscale black enclave of View Park, Kenya McQueen (Sanaa Lathan) has everything but a man. But she doesn’t want just any man, she wants her IBM, her Ideal Black Man. After a failed meet on a blind date, Kenya, whose whole life is a case study in a###-retentive repression, ends up catching feelings for her free-spirited landscape architect Brian Kelly (Simon Baker), a white guy. With her spoiled, Afrocentric mother (Alfre Woodard), callow, elitist brother Nelson (Donald Faison), and semi-approving but curious girlfriends (Taraji P. Henson, Wendy Raquel Robinson, and Golden Brooks) all weighing in, Kenya tries to reconcile what her life would be with who could be her Ideal Man versus the image, and the real life temptation of, her Ideal Black Man (in the form of a fellow taxlawyer (Blair Underwood)).

Although I am deliriously happy with the return to (luscious) form of Sanaa Lathan, Something New (Focus Features) marks the arrival of an equally talented director in Sanaa Hamri. Working from a Kriss Turner (TV’s “Everybody Hates Chris”) script that may be a little too on the nose at times, Hamri escorts us through this emotional and social minefield with visual artistry. Not only did she make me fall in love with Sanaa Lathan all over again, in all her Skippy-coated, butter brown glory, but also Hamri addresses the unspoken social taboo of interracial dating by playing up racial differences more with visual cues than cheesy dialogue. And for all you Los Angeles residents out there, Hamri covers all the local black haunts like Blackbucks, er, Magic Johnson’s Starbucks in Ladera Center, Magic’s TGIFriday’s, Leimert Park, etc. Reminding us that this is still a rookie feature director, Hamri isn’t immune to old romantic comedy movie tropes like “sexy” toenail painting (Bull Durham) and The Run (just about every rom-com ever made). Still, Hamri’s “Something New” is an impressive, hopeful debut of that Hollywood unicorn: the African female director.

The cast is thoroughly professional and, at the very least, committed to having a good time. Henson (Hustle & Flow) continues to enliven any role she’s in, large or small and Faison from TV’s “Scrubs” is slyly amusing as Kenya’s pro-black brother, dedicated to the bourgeois life and his endless parade of young, impressionable floozies. Green-eyed, blond-tressed Aussie charmer Simon Baker flashes a flawless American accent as the self-satisfied, dog-toting, naively appealing Brian. Through his unaffected confidence and guileless perseverance, Baker’s Brian is the perfect candidate to inject some variety into the garden of Kenya’s buttoned-down life.

In “Something New,” Sanaa is, as always, luminous, enchanting, and on point. At a time when some of our more venerable King Magazine pinups and Essence cover girls are going the way of “Disappearing Acts” (see the incredibly shrinking waistline of Union, Gabrielle), Sanaa’s still got more curves than a Thomas Guide. With acting chops to match, Sanaa plays Kenya believably, even understandably, as the beige-obsessed, dog-loathing, romantically ascetic individual she is. Once Baker’s Brian enters her sphere of influence, making her question all her pre-conceived, tightly held notions, Sanaa reliably plays the internal tensions with admirable aplomb. Their chemistry is fine, with a realistic, sweet pseudo-courtshipthat’s only semi-confrontational, but doesn’t ignore the proverbial Elephant int he Room (“That’s what being black is about,” a frustrated Kenya lectures Brian after he requests one night off from race talk, “youdon’t get a night off.”).

Will Sanaa Hamri’s visually lush “Something New” usher in a resurgence of buppie pics reminiscent of the late ’90s (“Two Can Play That Game,” “The Brothers,” etc.)? Only if they are as inspired as “The Best Man,” then let’s hope so.

Edwardo Jackson ([email protected]) is an author and LA-based screenwriter, visit his website at www.edwardojackson.com

Madame Tussauds Immortalizes Tupac Shakur In Wax

Madame Tussauds wax museum in Las Vegas, Nevada will immortalize rapper Tupac Shakur on Apr. 5 as part of its new “On Stage” attraction.

A wax figure capturing the famous image of a shirtless Shakur wearing a bandana and showing his tattoos joins superstars such as James Brown, Mick Jagger, Elton John, Prince and others as life-like wax statues.

Adrian Jones, general manager of Madame Tussauds Las Vegas, said the decision to immortalize Skakur came from public demand.

“We have received more requests from the public to immortalize Tupac than any other rap star,” Jones said. “It is fitting that he will be the central figure in our new ‘On Stage’ attraction, which will offer the public a new high-tech system for enjoying the music of all the stars in the attraction. We will have more information about the attraction at a later date.”

Shakur was fatally wounded in a drive-by shooting on Las Vegas’ famed “Strip” on Sept. 7, 1996. Shakur later died from his wounds. His slaying remains unsolved.

For “On Stage” attraction times, visit http://www.mtvegas.com.

Paul Wall And Wife Expecting First Child

Platinum-selling Houston rapper Paul Wall and his wife Crystal have revealed that they are expecting their first child in May.

“This year has been such a prosperous one already,” Paul Wall told AllHipHop.com. “It’s a boy. We are gonna name him William.”

Wall already owns a successful custom jewelry business with Houston’s jeweler “TV Johnny.” And as soon as baby Wall grows teeth, maybe he’ll inherit his father’s fashion sense.

“Yes, I already have his grill ready for him,” Paul Wall joked, referring to the custom gold and platinum fronts/caps popular among Southern rappers. Wall is currently featured on Nelly’s#### single “Grillz” with also featuring Ali & Gipp.

Wall and Crystal were married last October in a wedding ceremony in Houston.

DMX’s Wife Busted For Driving 106 mph

Driving issues

continue to plague DMX and his family, as the platinum-selling rapper’s wife

was charged on Sunday (Jan. 29) with driving 106 mph in North Castle, N.Y.

Police stopped

Tashera Simmons, 34, after they clocked her driving north in a 2000 Mercedes-Benz,

driving 106 mph in a 65 mph zone on Interstate 684–the same road DMX was arrested

doing 104 mph in Dec. 2004.

Ms. Simmons was

charged with speeding, driving an unregistered vehicle, and not using child

restraints, because four children in the car were not wearing seat belts, according

to police.

In Dec. 2004, DMX

was arrested for speeding on the same stretch of highway, a week after he pleaded

guilty to driving through an airport parking gate at John F. Kennedy Airport

in June 2004.

Last April, DMX

was driving on the Major Deegan Expressway in the Bronx, when he hit a car,

which in turn struck a police cruiser.

The rapper claimed

that he was rushing to an area hospital to visit his pregnant wife in the hospital.

A judge sentenced

him to 70 days in prison last November for violating the terms of his probation

in the JFK incident, after he was charged in the April 2005 driving incident.

Russell Simmons, HSAN Honored By Newark, NJ Mayor

Russell Simmons and the Hip-Hop Summit Action Network (HSAN) will be honored tomorrow (Feb. 2) by Newark Mayor Sharpe James and TRI, Inc. for

inspiring and uplifting young people across the country.

Chaired by Simmons, HSAN is a non-profit coalition of artists,entertainment industry executives, and community leaders who advocatepositive social change through hip-hop.

The group’s primary focus is the welfare of at-risk youth in the United States.

“It’s good to be acknowledged for the Hip-Hop Summit’s work helping young people but, you know, it’s all about the work and the work continues,” Simmons told AllHipHop.com.

The special presentation will be held in front of over 2000 students at Weequahic High School in Newark, N.J, in conjunction with Newark’s teen

empowerment program called Beyond The Cover Teen Magazine.

The program targets teens interested in publishing, computer graphics, journalism, marketing, and community service.

Now in its sixth year, Beyond The Cover is designed to engage and promote workplace readiness skills, and offers corporate and

entertainment sponsored scholarships and internships.

Juelz Santana Opening HipHopSodaShop On 125th Street

Juelz Santana has

become a financial partner in a new HipHopSodaShop opening on 125th Street in

Santana’s hometown of Harlem, New York.

The rapper is co-owner

of the new franchise, which is licensed by parent company H3Enterprises Inc.

(HTRE), a publicly traded company.

"We’re gonna

rip 125th up," Juelz said in a press release. "It’s great to be able

to enjoy all this in my own backyard with my own people. I’ve hung out with

my boy ‘A Butta’ here since we were little punks and now we’re gonna get a chance

to actually work together for the good of our own hood."

HTRE was founded

by Brian Peters, who was worked with various artists, including Outkast, Nas,

Snoop Dogg and others.

"Juelz is

a true Harlem treasure and we hope to utilize all of his talents to the full

benefit of our shareholders and our communities," said Peters, president

and founder of HTRE.

In November of

2005, HTRE announced it was leasing a large space less than a block from the

legendary Apollo Theater. Other locations are expected to open in Times Square

in Manhattan and Las Vegas’ famous "Strip."

"We’re building

a real home for the Hip Hop generation complete with all the things we love

to do," Juelz continued. "But it’s really about creating educational

opportunity and good jobs and that’s where Team H3 will prove to be unbeatable."

Last month, HTRE

announced a joint venture with Lou Pearlman, who has worked with some of the

most successful artists in the music business, including Justin Timberlake,

N Sync, The Backstreet Boys and others.

HTRE and Pearlman

will jointly develop HipHopSodaShops throughout Orlando and Tampa, Florida.

Pearlman invested an undisclosed amount into the venture and will bring his

entertainment, media, contacts and experience to the company.

"The man [Pearlman]

has proven over and over again that he has his hands firmly on the pulse of

the entertainment industry and always stays ahead of the curve," Peters

said. "We are truly honored that he has chosen to become an integral part

of our Company’s ongoing development."