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Styles P: Fear of a Black Poet

It’s a few days before the Millions More March and Styles P is getting him mind and his mic ready to attend. Without a doubt, Styles P is one of the most well respected rappers on the streets, and the charts. His flow and his personal flavor have made him a stand out not only in The Lox, but pretty much everywhere he walks.

As he readies his next release Time is Money, he candidly talks to AllHipHop.com about how “I’m Black” got ignored by mainstream radio, how we need to do more than just march, and how young folks need to get their minds right in 2005.

AllHipHop.com: What is your favorite song on Time is Money?

Styles P: All of them. It switches day to day, because they are all great.

AllHipHop.com: What’s your favorite one today?

Styles P: “This Is How We Live- it’s produced by Havoc. It’s about how we live in the ghetto. It’s about the s**t that happens.

AllHipHop.com: Like what?

Styles P: Smokin’ drinkin’, all kinda, shootin’ tryna make money. That’s what the song’s about.

AllHipHop.com: When you did “I’m Black,” it did not get the response on radio that many felt it deserved. How did that make you feel as an artist about the industry of radio and what it means for Rap artists who speak about positivity?

Styles P: I think they always put a negative spin on Hip-Hop. Then when an artist such as myself reaches out with an song like that, they shoot that s**t under the door. I think a lot of politics are involved. The song was dropped near Black History Month, and they still didn’t play the s**t right. But I’m cool with that. Because at least people recognized what I was doing.

AllHipHop.com: Does it make you want to speak about politics and social issues in your music less?

Styles P: It definitely makes you not wanna make a song like that your single. It changes your outlook on how you should try to distribute it out. You don’t wanna give a song like that to the main machine. It’s always a fight man.

AllHipHop.com: In the early 90’s Death Row Records rose up, and conscious Rap started to take a back seat. People used to say at the time “Oh conscious music does not have a good hook. It does not have good beats” and things like that. I always believed that was a lie created by the Rap industry executives.

Styles P: Definitely so. The industry is about money. The industry is not about the fans. It’s not about the people. I think people confuse industry with Hip-Hop. The industry is the hand that has the same seven songs you hear going everyday, on every radio station. That’s what the program directors want. That’s what the party people want. People who wanna party just wanna hear the party s**t. The street people just wanna hear raw lyrics. I don’t think there’s enough of that goin’ on.

AllHipHop.com: Are you going to the Millions More March?

Styles P: Oh yeah! I’ll be there!

AllHipHop.com: What are your thoughts about the significance of that day, the Nation of Islam and things of that nature?

Styles P: I think it has to be more than a day. I think everybody needs to recognize what we are dealing with in this day and age. We have to make ourselves stronger.

AllHipHop.com: Did you attend the last Million Man March?

Styles P: Nope.

AllHipHop.com: What did you do on that day?

Styles P: I don’t even know, to tell you the truth.

AllHipHop.com: So, what made you decide to participate in this one?

Styles P: To be honest with you, I’m not one who usually marches for the day. I play my part, and say what I could say when I could say it. But I feel like things have to happen a lot more often. I used to be like “Why go march and the next day that s**t is over with?” But now as I get older and more mature, I see. So playing my part will be better than staying at home and not saying nothin’. I’m my own Black Revolutionary party.

AllHipHop.com: Who are the three people that had the biggest influence on you, in terms of bringing positive things into your life?

Styles P: The three most influential people would be God, my mother and my wife. She influenced me to stay out of jail and think with a better mind. But on another note, that’s a long list. I could say Malcolm X. I never met him, but he really influenced me. Malcolm, Nelson Mandela and everybody on the streets who makes it happen who are nameless. Them kinda people.

AllHipHop.com: What three films or books motivated you the most?

Styles P: Malcolm X again. Manchild in the Promised Land by Claude Brown and Mis-education of the Negro, by Carter G. Woodson. For me, I thought that Black people were set up since the 1900’s. But when you read that book, you learn that we were set up since the 1800’s! How we are living in 2005 was set up way back in the 1800’s. That book made me know how real s**t is, ya know?

AllHipHop.com: A lot of times drama that happens in Hip-Hop bleeds over into the streets. Often this ends with tragic consequences and repercussions. What are your ideas on how various gangs and street organizations can empower themselves through the Millions More March as well as beyond the day itself?

Styles P: I think the problem is that the same s**t happens everywhere. A lot of people do care and do things to make the youth stronger. But if you look, none of the youth want to work for minimum wage. If you work for minimum wage, you’ll barely get by. A lot of us come from broken homes, which makes it so much harder. So, a lot of the youth feel that they have to do, whatever they have to do. It’s a f**ked up situation for the youth.

AllHipHop.com: I actually speak to incarcerated youth from time to time. What would you tell a young brother right now who is tryin’ to get his life right?

Styles P: I would not suggest anything but for the kid to find himself. Because he could have his eye on something nobody even knows about. Sometimes people are looking for an answer, but my answer may not be the answer for you. It may not match your will or your drive. Sometimes a person has to look deep within themselves and say “What do I want to do? What’s in my means realistically?” People have to follow their hearts.

Adisa Banjoko is the controversial author of the upcoming book “Lyrical Swords Vol. 2: Westside Rebellion” For more info visit: www.lyricalswords.com today!

Method Man Gets Down With Howard University For Homecoming

On the eve of their

homecoming, Howard University announced that Method Man has been selected to serve

as the official Homecoming Ambassador and Grand Marshal of the 2005 Homecoming

Parade.

Under the theme “Reminiscence: Build…Treasure…Relive,”

Method Man will lead one of the largest Parades on the East Coast, which also

serves as a pre-cursor to the Homecoming Football Game.

"Its a great honor to me as I’m sure it was for those who

have participated in the festivities over the years," Method Man told AllHipHop.com.

"Howard University is Black History."

The University selected the Wu-Tang member based on his contributions

to the music industry and his commitment to community development.

Howard’s Homecoming activities will culminate with the

Bison playing the rival Aggies of North Carolina A&T on October 22 at 1

p.m.

The momentous event will be highlighted by the Annual Family

Reunion Yard fest, which is a two-day celebration where Howard students, alumni,

friends, and celebrity guests gather on the main quadrangle to network and celebrate

in the Howard tradition.

Known to for bringing out the entertainment and music industry’s

A-list celebrities, Howard alumni Sean “Diddy” Combs is primed and

scheduled to host several parties during the course of the celebrated weekend.

The Homecoming weekend kicks off with Howard’s famed Fashion

Show, which, features an evening of fashion, elegance, and style, as Howard

student models exhibit clothing from the industry’s top designers.

A Greek step shows is slated for Saturday and there are also

scheduled alumni events and over the weekend.

For more information

and a complete listing of events, visit http://www.howarduhomecoming.com.

Field Mob: ‘We Aint Comedians’

Field Mob’s Smoke says people have mistaken their country mannerisms for comedy – an erroneous assumption.

“We ain’t no f***in’ comedians. They like to put us in that comedian [category], because we country [and] it’s taken a major toll on our career,” the Albany, Georgia native told AllHipHop.com. “Like we were proud to be country [and] people know this in the back of their heads like they know Chris [Ludacris is] that n***a in the back of their heads.”

Nevertheless, Smoke said the group’s style, which debuted commercially in 2000, has been hijacked by some of their peers, who were not specifically named.

“I know I got kids [imitators] out there,” he said laughing. “We started that country s**t in ’99 before n***s came out with their country grammar albums. We were screaming country before it was cool. They see us and it’s so massive, but they don’t want to see it.”

Although the group released a pair of acclaimed albums, 613: From Ashy to Classy (2000) and From Tha Roota To Tha Toota (2002), the crossover success somehow eluded them.

Smoke said the group intends to change that with their upcoming set, Light Poles and Pine Trees.

Smoke said location has also hindered their success as the Atlanta musical explosion somehow escaped him and partner Shawn Jay.

“If you look at Ray Charles, Ray Charles is from Albany, Georgia – they ain’t even put it on TV. Why? Because Albany ain’t as metropolitan as Atlanta, New York or L.A.

“He’s not from a very popular place,” he continued. “So they do it the same way in this rap s**t. ‘Oh, they ain’t from…[Atlanta].’”

Both of their previous albums came out under MCA Records, but Smoke would only state that the situation was a “terrible deal.”

Under Disturbing Tha Peace/Geffen Records, Smoke said they would even market themselves slightly differently to accentuate their personas.

“Yeah, dark-skinned n***as are in. Them light-skinned n***as tried to come back, but I’m going to promote my black ass,” he said. “Other than rapping, we got banging personalities.”

More seriously, Smoke explained that the group has high stakes with the expected November 29 release of Light Poles and Pine Trees.

“We trying to reestablish ourselves with our fans. We not trying to disappoint them,” he expounded. “We gotta come with a great album and the album is great. For the new people, we trying to make a great first impression.”

The group has already released their single, “Friday Night,” and their third album features a high-powered supporting cast that includes Ciara, Bun B, Bobby Valentino, Jazze Pha, Bone Crusher and others.

Change

Artist: Self ScientificTitle: ChangeRating: 3 1/2 StarsReviewed by: Conan Milne

Self Scientific captured the attention of the underground hip hop conscious with their seminal debut Self Science. Since then, there have been some big transitions for the talented duo of Chace Infinite and DJ Khalil. The group has seen their profile rise through affiliation with Xzibit and his Strong Arm Steady clique, and via the formation of Angeles Records with Cypress Hill’s DJ Muggs. It’s fitting then, that the collective would label their well anticipated sophomore set Change. This title is also relevant to the group’s music, which has gone through a reinvention of sorts.

It’s undeniable that Chace and Khalil have expanded their sound with this effort. On “King Kong” Chace trades verses with, of all people, Bun B. Over Khalil’s stuttering guitars and wailing sirens, Chace spews venom at the rapping clones he deems 50 Cent wannabes “with a flow reminiscent of Jigga’s”, while Bun B’s appearance alone shows that Self Scientific aren’t afraid to embrace the mainstream. Surprisingly though, or maybe not, the UGK member sounds right at home over Khalil’s intense instrumental, delivering a suitably aggressive chorus.

While “King Kong” proves that the pair can deliver quality, “accessible” rap (well, relatively speaking anyway) ‘’2 Step’’ is a club orientated jam that sounds glaringly out of place. Chace’s flow sounds comfortable enough, but lyrically he’s on cruise control. After instructing his female accomplice to take leave with him, the MC follows up with “just kidding – unless you was willing. I’m not kidding”. The group’s desire to experiment with their sound is understandable, but it really sounds like both Chace and Khalil dumbed themselves down here.

“Weight Of The World”, meanwhile, is vintage Scientific and is to Change what “The Covenant” was to their first offering. It’s epic. Chace sounds somber on the cut, frustrated by the many problems of modern life and rapping that things don’t seem right, before adding, “How many things in life is?” His downbeat rhymes are the perfect partner to Khalil’s haunting strings and scratches.

Rest assured that the intelligent commentary of “The Self Science” is still there (check out Chace’s barbed rhymes on domestic violence on the brutally honest single ‘’Live N Breathe’’) while Khalil has added more variation to his already impressive production. Despite differences with their first record and filler in places, the duo has successfully convinced this skeptic that change can be a good thing.

NBA Bans ‘Hip-Hop Dress’, Players, Coaches React

With the blessing

of the NBA Players Association, the NBA has set forth a "minimum" dress

code that will be implemented starting with the 2005-2006 season.

Players will also now be required to wear a sport coat on the

bench when they are not in uniform.

In addition, players will no longer be able to wear sleeveless

shirts, shorts, T-shirts, chains, pendants, or medallions worn over the player’s

clothes.

Sunglasses while indoors, and headphones (other than on the

team bus or plane, or in the team locker room) have also been banned.

The dress code is a decisive shift away from the hip-hop culture

that has become a fabric of the NBA during the past years.

While some players wear suits or sport coats to all team functions,

a growing number often dress in casual sportswear.

NBA Commissioner David Stern said he was certain that the new

dress code would be complied with.

The new dress code has sparked a fierce debate, with many players

and coaches weighing in on the subject.

"I

think it should have been done behind closed doors and not made so public,"

Indiana Pacers’ Ron Artest told AllHipHop.com. "Our business should not

be for the world to know about."

"The players have been dressing in prison garb the last

five or six years,” Lakers Head Coach Phil Jackson told the San Gabriel

Valley Tribune earlier this week. “All the stuff that goes on, it’s like

gangster, thuggery stuff. It’s time.”

Pacers swingman Stephen Jackson told the Indianapolis Star the dress code was

implemented out of racial bias.

“Almost 100 percent of the guys in the league who are

young and black wear big chains. So I definitely don’t agree with that at all,"

Jackson said referring to the ban on excessive jewelry.

To protest the leagues ban on chains worn over clothing, Jackson

wore every long, diamond-studded chain in his collection Tuesday night.

Boston Celtics star Paul Pierce agreed with Jackson’s

assessment, but said the he would stick to the new dress code.

"When I saw the part about chains, hip hop and throwback

jerseys, I think that’s part of our culture," Pierce told the Associated

Press. “I love my job. I love playing basketball more than I love getting

fined and getting suspended."

Despite strong opposition, players will be expected to wear business casual

attire whenever they participate in team or league activities, including arriving

at games, leaving games, conducting interviews and making promotional or other

appearances.

The dress code

however makes no provisions or requirements for hair, tattoos, earrings or piercing.

Young Buck, 50 Cent Make Substantial Donations For Education

Young Buck and 50

Cent recently announced two new grants that will be distributed by 50 Cent’s

G-Unity Foundation.

Young Buck will donate $25,000 to the Nashville Alliance for

Public Education to support Advance Via Individual Determination (AVID), a nationwide

program aimed at helping aspiring college students.

"The Nashville Alliance for Public Education is proud to

accept this gift from The G-Unity Foundation to benefit a program which brings

out the best in students and helps close the achievement gap for low income

and disadvantaged youth," said Kay Simmons, Co-Executive Director of the

Nashville Alliance for Public Education. “This gift represents a statement

from G-Unit and Young Buck of the importance of education."

The G-Unity Foundation also donated a $100,000 grant to support

the relief efforts surrounding Hurricane Katrina.

50’s donation is going to Teach for America’s Houston

chapter. The national organization is comprised of recent college graduates

that commit to teaching for two years in urban and rural schools.

Teach For America recently organized a charter school for students

that were victims of Hurricane Katrina’s devastation.

“We are extremely grateful for the substantial gift from

The G-Unity Foundation, Inc.," said Ann Best, Teach For America-Houston

Executive Director. "This gift affords us the opportunity to do what we

are compelled to do, respond in crisis. Our displaced New Orleans corps members

are thrilled to have the opportunity to teach students who have evacuated from

New Orleans.”

The G-Unity foundation

donated grants to the Jam Master Jay Foundation for Music, The Boys Choir of

Harlem Academy, Queensborough Community College, and the Compton Unified School

District.

Ne-Yo: Unplugged

Singer/songwriter Ne-Yo is entering the entertainment industry strongly – slowly perfecting each angle of the game. Although he is only 22, Ne-Yo is not a newcomer to the scene. Growing up in a musical household in Las Vegas, his talents were engrained in him from birth, and he began honing his crafts in his teens. He co-wrote Mario’s#### single “Let Me Love You” in 2004 alongside producer Scott Storch and songwriter Kam Houf, and his heartfelt words have been on countless songs for the likes of Mary J. Blige, Musiq, and B2K.

After a few years of creating for others, the time has come for Ne-Yo to focus on his own project, In My Own Words. His first single and video for “Stay” featuring fellow Def Jam artist Peedi Peedi, aka Peedi Crakk, is creating a huge buzz.

AllHipHop.com Alternatives had a chance to speak with Ne-Yo before he sets out on a month-long tour with John Legend. In an exclusive interview, Ne-Yo discusses his transition from a song writer into an artist, and his new home at Island Def Jam Records.

AllHipHop.com Alternatives: Being that you’re from Las Vegas, what challenges have you faced as an R&B artist coming from there?

Ne-Yo: I live in California now, but I grew up in Las Vegas. I’ve been trying to do music like forever. You’ll find that there’s a lot of talent in Vegas, Vegas is actually an untapped source—there’s a whole bunch of talented people out there, but there’s really no outlet to get into the business in any way. The furthest you can go as far as R&B is singing in some lounge in some casino somewhere. It was just a matter of me getting out of Vegas as soon as I could, to move to California to really get stuff popping.

AHHA: Being that Vegas is an entertainment-oriented city, and although it is limited music-wise, did you use your surroundings while you were there to help you start your career? What show did you star in?

Ne-Yo: Yea, when I was in the 11th grade I was an extra in one of the big Vegas shows over at the MGM. That helped me get comfortable with the stage and performing in front of a bunch of people, because if one of the main actors in a specific part was out then I had to fill in. And there was a point in time when I was up on stage like every night for a month. It was EFX at the MGM Grand Hotel. I’m not sure if it’s still running there, but at the time David Cassidy was headlining the show.

AHHA: Did the local Las Vegas stations help your career? Did you get ample radio play?

Ne-Yo: I am now. [laughs] Well, once they found out that I was from there then, yeah, it was all love. The opened the front gates for me.

AHHA: When did you begin to seriously pursue your musical career? Was it when you were still in school or afterward?

Ne-Yo: Yeah, it was when I was still in school. I was in a group with three cats that I went to high school with. We were in a singing group called ENVY. We did local talent shows all around Vegas and everything, but then again there weren’t any outlets to do the music thing. So when I moved out to California, we all moved out there together hoping to try and lock down some kind of record deal.

AHHA: What happened with ENVY?

Ne-Yo: To make a long story short, after we moved we went through creative differences and wind up splitting up. We’re still close, two of the guys from the group are writers signed to my production company. We basically just grew apart; I mean they were trying to go in a direction that I wasn’t try to go in. So I had to move on and met with a production company, Real Time Entertainment, where I got my first record deal with Columbia Records.

AHHA: Did your album ever drop on Columbia?

Ne-Yo: Nah, when we went over there we shopped a finished album, but this was during that period in time when they couldn’t keep their urban division together. They just sat on my project and weren’t doing anything with me. So the production company that I was with asked them to release me, and of course they didn’t want to do that. So it was a long drawn out thing with lawyers and stuff, and then they finally decided that they would let me go but they kept the album.

AHHA: How was it transitioning from a songwriter into an artist?

Ne-Yo: I mean I’m still transitioning. Well it’s definitely something that takes some time getting used to. Especially coming from being in the background, as a songwriter; it’s like to be a songwriter you don’t have to worry about the things you have to worry about as an artist. As a songwriter you don’t have to worry about how you look everyday or saying the right things in interviews. It’s just get up, get something to eat and go in the studio and stay there until you make a hit. But this whole artist thing, it’s like I gotta make sure that my body is right, I gotta make sure that I look like a million dollars every time I walk out of the house just because I’m an artist. And there’s a reputation and an image to uphold with that, and that’s taking some getting used to ‘cause I’m very much just a t-shirt and jeans and go… and I can’t do that now. So that’s definitely taking some time to get used to, but I’m getting that hang of it.

AHHA: What would you say makes you any different from other songwriters?

Ne-Yo: I don’t really know. And I’ve been asked that question a bunch of times, but I never have an answer for it just because I don’t really try to be different from other songwriters. I feel that there’s room for good music regardless of who writes it, be it me, R. Kelly or whoever—a hot song is a hot song. If I feel I can write a hot song just like any other writer, then I feel I have as much of a right to be here as they do. So I don’t really try to separate myself from other writers, I just do what I do and hope that it’s hot.

AHHA: How did you link up with Def Jam?

Ne-Yo: The whole Def Jam situation, my whole deal was an accident. A little while after I got released from Columbia, I was in a depression and I was like, ‘To hell with this whole artist thing, I’m just going to be a writer—forget it’. The people that I was working with, one of the writer cats named Sauce, remember that group Somethin’ For The People? Anyway, one of the producers from that group – his name is Sauce – he’s a good friend of mine. We was in New York trying to shop songs to other artists, other labels and what not, and he remembered that a friend of his, Tina Davis who was an A&R over here at Def Jam at that time, they grew up together in the Bay in California.

So she asked him what he had been up to, and he was like, ‘Well you know just working, I got this kid Ne-Yo, he’s an incredible writer, and singer, etc.’ She popped a CD in, and stopped it in the middle and asked ‘Can you perform?’ I was like, ‘Ahhhh, yeah.’ She said, ‘Ok, perform.’ I said, ‘Right here, right now here in your office?’ She said, ‘Yeah.’ So I did a little impromptu performance for her right there in her office, and to make a long story short she was impressed so much that she put me in front of LA Reid that day, and we got the deal that day. That was not even a year ago. I haven’t been at Def Jam for a year yet.

AHHA: How is it working closely with Jay-Z?

Ne-Yo: It’s cool, like Jay, as far as my project, he didn’t really have a whole lot of input. You know he would listen to songs and tell me either this song is hot because of this, or that song isn’t hot because of that. He was basically just throwing his little critiques on it here and there. He basically let me do me – I mean being that he is who he is, and he has the swagger that he has, you know he knows what’s hot and what’s not. But for the most part he just let me do what I do, and I got the utmost respect for him and LA Reid for that, because… going back to the whole Columbia situation, I was just so hungry and happy to have a deal that I basically let them turn me into whatever they wanted me to be. Which is probably the reason why the deal didn’t go anywhere, because it wasn’t me—it was them trying to create the next Usher or the next whoever; where as over here at Def Jam, they’re trying to create the first Ne-Yo.

AHHA: With the new structure of the Roc-A-Fella/Def Jam Label, how do you feel your album is going to fit in?

Ne-Yo: On the R&B side, Def Jam is doing big things. They got Bobby Valentino, came out strong. Teairra Mari is doing her thing on the Roc-A-Fella side, Rhianna’s doing her thing, Mariah Carey came out and just murdered the game doing her thing. I mean it’s all good music. Like I said before, I feel that there’s always room for good music. I feel that my album is quality R&B music, and I feel that the world is going to agree with me when it comes out.

AHHA: Can you talk to me a little bit about your album?

Ne-Yo: The album is entitled In My Own Words. I called it that because I wrote every song on the record. I touched on earlier that I have my own production company called Compound Entertainment, and we did a good half of the record as far as the production side. On the other half of the record we used a lot of up and coming producers, a guy named Shay Taylor, who’s this new kid out of Philly; this guy Nefew, who actually did the first single for me. He did a bunch of stuff for 50 [Cent]’s album, on the low, you know how that goes. And the main reason why I used a lot of up-and-coming producers and my own in-house producers is mainly because I wanted to create a project that people are going to go and get because they dug it, not so much because Scott Storch produced it or Timbaland produced it or Dr. Dre produced it. I wanted to stay away from and avoid the whole name game thing, and have people go get it because they actually heard the music and they liked it.

It’s slated for a release sometime in December. I’m not sure exactly of the date because they keep changing it, but they’re trying to figure it out. The first single off the album in entitled “Stay.” It’s me featuring Peedi Peedi, who’s a rising star over on the Roc-A-Fella side. That was Jay’s call to put him on their. You know the song was already done, and then Jay heard it and was like, ‘You know what? This song would be perfect if it had this.’ So he threw Peedi on there and it was like the perfect marriage, and it worked out perfect.

AHHA: Do you have any other features on the album?

Ne-Yo: There are no other features on the album other than Peedi. The main reason for that is, again, because I want people to go and get the album because they dig the music, they dig me. I want people it because they dig Ne-Yo.

AHHA: What’s the significance behind your name?

Ne-Yo: The name Ne-Yo came from another producer friend of mine, his name is Big D Evans. He did “Brenda’s Got a Baby” [for Tupac], “Kiss You Back” [Digital Underground]. He’s a good friend of mine and we work a lot, and one day he said to me, ‘Man it’s like you see music the way Neo sees the Matrix,’ and from that day forward he just started calling me Ne-Yo and it just stuck. To this day I don’t really know exactly what he meant by that, [laughs] but it is what it is—I’m Ne-Yo now.

AHHA: Who would you like to work with as far as cameos and production on the next project? Do you do any production?

Ne-Yo: Me and Scott [Storch]… you know I wrote “Let Me Love You” for Mario, me and Scott did that, and we had meant to do some stuff for me but with his schedule and my schedule we just haven’t gotten around to do it, so I really want to get in and do some stuff with him for me. I was talking to [Dr.] Dre about doing some stuff, I really want to do some stuff with him. And as far as artists, I’ve had the pleasure with so many great people that it would be an honor and a pleasure for any of them to bless me with anything. I’ve worked with Mary J. Blige, Faith Evan, Christina Milian. I’m about to go in with Beyonce, I’m doing some stuff for Tyrese right now. If any of these people would be willing to do any cameos on my next joint, that would be an honor.

I’m heading the production company right now, you know I got producers under me and they’re showing me how to push buttons and stuff. So in the very near future you’ll have Ne-Yo joints written and produced by Ne-Yo, but for now I let them handle that part of it.

Jha Jha: Afro Puffs

It’s been a bit of time now since Jha Jha joined the fold of Dipset as their official first lady, yet, we still haven’t heard a great deal for her. That is all soon to change. She recently contributed “So Gangsta”, which is featured on More Than Music, the solo debut album from Dipset’s Duke Da God, and now she’s plotting her strike on the industry with her solo debut! Tentatively titled Bright Lights & Big Cities, Jha Jha is set to let her own personality to show. AllHipHop.com recently sat down to talk with Jha Jha, and not only did we get a chance to see how big she’s going to hit with her new album, but we also got a personal look into her life. Despite her surroundings throughout her childhood and adolescence, she still dreamed big, and managed to escape the many things that destroys the dreams of so many others. Now that she has made it, she’s pimping the industry in so many ways it’s rediculous. So you think you’re Dip-worthy? Read this.

AllHipHop.com: Growing up in Miami, did you always want to go to New York?

Jha Jha: I been rapping since I was eight years old, and Miami is not really a city where you can just break a new artist. I was with an independent label coming up, and I tried and tried until I was like 16 or 17. I graduated from high school and went to college. I was a third-year junior, and I’m like a year ahead of all my classmates.

AllHipHop.com: That’s impressive…

Jha Jha: Yeah, I’m not a stupid individual. My thing also, and I don’t want to get too far off the subject, but I’m intelligent, and I encourage kids to go to school and do all of that. I’m not one that’s like “Yeah, I was a stripper or drug dealer.” And there’s nothing wrong with it. If those are the cards that you were dealt, then that’s your thing. But my thing I that I grew up in the hood too! I didn’t grow up in no first class neighborhood. The crack head lived right next to me. The drug deals were right down the street from me. I could have took that route, but I chose to do better. The strip club was right down the street for me, and if I wanted to be a stripper, I could have been a stripper. I just chose not to go that route, so I encourage them to go to school, and become intelligent. If you want to rap, then rap, but you don’t have to be dumb.

AllHipHop.com: It’s good to show kids that you can be a product of a particular environment, but you don’t have to become a victim of the environment.

Jha Jha: Oh yeah, because I’m not no ‘goodie goodie two shoes’ or nothing. I’ll take you to where I grew up at. I had to sleep with my mother until I was like 16. I was never into fast money, because I feel like if it comes too fast, then it’s not going to last that long. So, I worked it out, and I encourage kids to do that. I know exactly what’s going on with my contract. When my attorney tells me something, we’re going through it together. I know what mechanical rates is, and I know about royalties. I know that when I sign that contract, I know exactly what I’m going to get. Some artists sign, and they don’t have a clue what’s going on.

AllHipHop.com: That is so great that you are paying attention to those things now, because just like you said, so many artist get into this business, and they don’t know these things. Then they wonder why they don’t get the money they thought was coming.

Jha Jha: Right, and they’re blaming it all on their management, but I feel like you can’t blame nobody for your mistakes but you. You heard the Toni Braxton story, and you heard the TLC story, so don’t come talking about they stole your money because you didn’t take the time to learn it, or because it wasn’t as important to you. I read a lot, and I watch how people like Diddy, they don’t compromise. So I don’t compromise. If I want it, I want it. So I tell kids if you want to rap, then rap, but know what you are getting into. You may actually be cut out to be behind the scenes. People behind the scenes make more money anyway. That’ why I produce, and that’s why I write for other artists. I want to be an all around entertainer.

AllHipHop.com: How did you get into producing?

Jha Jha: Basically, I have these two wonderful producers. One of them is Lance, and he is my right arm. I met him in Miami when I was with the independent label. The other, I met in New York. Basically, I just picked up from what they were doing, and I figured hey, I can do this. Let me go get me an MP3 player. Shoe me how you do this. That’s how I got into it. You make a lot of money off of that, and people don’t know, but you do.

AllHipHop.com: How did you end up getting down with Dipset?

Jha Jha: It was a coinky-d###! I’m from Miami, so being with Dipset was the farthest thing from my mind, even though I have known and heard of them. It was just by luck that I ran into their manager Joe. What happened, was I had finished school, and I made this three-week trip to New York. I figured, something is going to happen within this time. I ain’t know nobody in New York at all. I already had an album done. I just knew I was going to make it, and couldn’t nobody tell me nothing. My friends basically was like yea right, you better come go shopping with us and go to the beach. I was just like, “I’m going to New York.” I went on the internet. I didn’t know where any record labels were at, let alone how I would get inside if I found them. So I went on the net and pulled up the addresses to the major labels. So I went down there, and I went to Universal and Def Jam. It was raining so bad, and I was just standing so I would get wet. This dude named Big Joe came down like, “What you do”. I guess because I had this afro and my look was just distinct. My family had old me to look out for the pimps. So I thought he was trying to pimp me.

AllHipHop.com: Wow.

Jha Jha: Then he told me he managed Cam’ron and the Diplomats, and he was with Roc-A-Fella Records. I told him I was an entertainer and showed him by bio and demo, and he invited me upstairs. He was going to play my album in his office, but it didn’t work that way because it was during the time of Juelz Santana’s album listening party, so Joe was running around for that. I lucked out because we had to go down and listen to it in his truck. As he got into it, Juelz pulled up with Jim Jones, and once they heard it, they were bouncing up and down saying “That’s the s**t”. So from there, I was invited to the listening party, and I got to hang out with them. Joe was just like, if I wanted to do this, I would need to move up there to New York. It was a lot to think about because I had just got a new apartment, and I didn’t think my parents would go for it. In the end, I took the opportunity and moved to New York. It still didn’t happen all that quick, because Cam is like the head honcho, and they are really hard on women. I can understand why, just because of the things that some women do. So they had to test me out. I just let them see that I carry my business like a lady, and I didn’t have sex with nobody.

AllHipHop.com: Really?

Jha Jha: Nobody has ever tried me like that, but I just let it be known that I am not up for all of that. I was just around them, writing for like a year. I used to be real timid though, just sitting in the corner writing. Every song I would do though came out hot around them. It made them respect my grind. I wasn’t depending on nobody. I went and got my own attorney. At first my name was Styles, and then I changed it because there was already Styles P. I came up with Jha Jha. I paid for my own studio time, because I ain’t want them to think I was leaching or nothing. I had made this song called “Get from ‘Round Me”, which was featured on Diplomatic Immunity 2. When Cam and them heard it, the first thing Cam said was “That’s going on the album”. From that point on, I was inducted as the first female of Dipset….

AllHipHop.com: Have you started picking songs for your album yet?

Jha Jha: That’s the thing. I got so many songs to choose from, and I will not stop writing. I just can’t stop. Everyday, I write a song. What we’ll probably do is gather all the hottest songs, and then pick from there for the first album. I want like twenty-something songs on there. As many as I can fit on a disc. I’m from Miami, so I feel like I just got a whole lot of juices mixed up in my style. There’s a lot that I want to vocalize. I got a lot of stuff to talk about. It’s not just one style. I want people to know the things that I went through.

AllHipHop.com: Did you work with anyone else besides Diddy & Paul Wall?

Jha Jha: There’s a lot of people I want to work with, but I can’t disclose it right now. Of course Dipset will be all over it. I got a little R&B in me too. You know, I like to give what people call “more cluck for the buck”. I like to dance. When we were doing the video, they had to stop me. I can’t help it though.

AllHipHop.com: You have your own style…

Jha Jha: I have a Diplomatic attitude, but I have my own style. You don’t want everybody to sound the same in the group. Everybody is not going to have the same character.

AllHipHop.com: What else is going on with you?

Jha Jha: I’m in talks right now with a couple of companies for my own reality show. I’m still writing for other artists, and basically, I’m just getting ready for this album. We just did the video, and we’re about to go on tour with Jimmy for his album. It’s going down.

AllHipHop.com: Do you spend a lot of time online?

Jha Jha: When I’m free at home, I always online, talking with fans and whatnot…

AllHipHop.com: Do you have any final comment for your online fans checking this out?

Jha Jha: I just say look out for me! I’m coming. Bright Lights & Big Cities in the building. Gotta get that More Than Music too which is in stores now.

The Source Defends ‘G-Unot’ Issue, 50’s Manager Chris Lighty Speaks

The recently released

November issue of The Source features a sensational cover story on 50 Cent and

G-Unit with the headline "G-Unot! Is Corporate Rap’s Top Unit Fading Fast?"

Although insiders have speculated that the article is fueled

by a feud with Interscope Records, 50 Cent & his G-Unit crew, The Source’s

Editor-In-Chief Dasun Allah said the notion is untrue.

"We are functioning as what a journalistic structure and

organization is supposed to do," Allah told AllHipHop.com. "We are

supposed to be the watchdogs of the industries in our culture that exploit and

live from our culture–as has been the traditional role of the press."

Allah said the issue is simply a look at the state of Hip-Hop,

with G-Unit as the center point.

"It was an analysis; the G-Unit thing was an analysis,"

Allah told AllHipHop.com.

The Source questions 50’s image, the rapper’s approach

to business and the cultural ramifications of his multi-platinum success.

Additionally, the issue takes on New York radio station Hot

97 and the issue of payola, an illegal practice of airing records for gifts

or other considerations.

New York’s attorney General Elliot Spitzer recently targeted the

music industry as a whole due to payola practices and is in the process of settling

with major record labels that have been found guilty of the practice.

Last week at New York’s Power 105.1, program director Michael

Saunders was terminated for allegedly accepting gifts from Sony/BMG. The latest

issue of The Source alleges that Funkmaster Flex has taken money from labels

to play records on Hot 97.

Funk Master Flex chastised The Source on his Hot 97 radio show

on Monday and Tuesday, deeming the magazine a "sinking ship," which

prompted angry calls from co-owner Ray “Benzino” Scott to rival

station Power 105.1

Violator CEO Chris Lighty told AllHipHop.com that he was disappointed

in the cover story and the portrayal of 50 Cent and other artists he manages.

"I deeply regret the turn The Source magazine has made

in the last few years and the recent cover with 50 Cent is a testament to the

lack of respect for journalism," Lighty told AllHipHop.com. "[It’s]

just a blatant attack against my client and friend that does nothing to further

Hip-Hop. I supported The Source for many years until this dismal turn for the

worst took place and journalism was replaced for favoritism. The G-Unit brand

and Hip-Hop can’t stand for such attacks and I hope they hear the criticism

and take heed before it is truly too late."

In addition to 50 Cent, Violator handles the careers of Busta Rhymes, Missy

Elliott, Mobb Deep, Capone-N-Noreaga, Nore and others.

Countering, Allah adamantly denied Lighty’s assertions, stating the issue

transcends 50 Cent and G-Unit.

"Who else is doing what we did as far as Hurricane Katrina

was concerned? Who covered Minister Farrakhan the way we did? Who asked those

questions? Who put it into perspective and made it so we can grasp and digest

the message and ask the questions that are on people’s minds?" The Source

editor queried.

The current issue

of The Source is on stands now.

UN Backs South African Hip-Hop Summit, Guru Headlining Concert

The United Nations

will host the first ever Global Hip-Hop Summit in South Africa tomorrow (Oct.

20) in an effort to achieve their Millennium Development Goals.

The UN’s Millennium Development Goals include the upliftment

of millions of youth around the world using Hip-Hop music.

The summit will take place in various areas of The Newtown Precinct

and will gather Hip-Hop artists, activists and members of society to debate

and discuss matters relevant to the Hip-Hop community.

American rapper Guru of Gangstarr fame will headline a concert

associated with the event on Friday (Oct. 20) in Newtown Park, supported by

artists from Kenya, Senegal, South Africa, the U.S., Bangladesh and Cameroon.

“This is an exciting moment in the South African music

industry – indeed in the hip-hop industry worldwide,” said event coordinator

Sipho Sithole of Native Rhythms Productions. “We’ve literally gathered

an impressive array of the genre’s most relevant voices who have taken

ownership of the discussion on youth issues. The next two days are going to

be fascinating, challenging and a real educational journey!”

A mini-film festival will also take place during the two day

Global Hip-Hop Summit, will feature such names as Beatmaker, Yfm’s Lee

Khasumba, Tbo Touch of Metro FM, DJ Awadi, K’naan, Tumi & the Volume,

Zuluboy and Sudanese rapper and child soldier-rights activist Emmanuel Jal.

The UN developed eight Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) that

include halting the spread of HIV/AIDS, extreme poverty, providing universal

primary education and others, by 2015.

Mister Cartoon, T-Mobile Created Limited Edition Sidekick II

T-Mobile has partnered

with tattoo artist Mister Cartoon and Juicy Couture to create a limited edition

version of the T-Mobile Sidekick II.

Cartoon’s Sidekick II is a black ink-colored unit that

features custom tattoo artwork around the 2.6 inch screen.

"I am a gadget freak and my Sidekick II rolls everywhere

with me," Cartoon said. "I was happy to partner with T-Mobile to customize

a Sidekick II to reflect my style and give young art collectors the opportunity

to carry a piece of my work around with them."

Juicy Couture’s T-Mobile Sidekick II comes in “Juicy”

crystal pink and boasts the company’s icons around the trim of the screen.

The new designs

will be available Oct. 24 online and in five markets in the United States including

New York, Los Angeles, Chicago, San Francisco and Miami.

Renegade Foxxx: Tough Love

Renegade Foxxx is a whole other breed of artist, and he certainly shows it in an interview. In a conversation with AllHipHop.com concerning his Still Hustlin’ album, Renegade shares thoughts on every corner of the industry – and makes some bold commentary. But if you thought it was a gimmick, the Alabama turned New Jersey rapper even admits to his craziness at one point – for better or worse.

Regardless of whether Renegade Foxxx is crazy, he says things few will. From hood politics, to Rap bodybuilding, to Puffy and Oprah, and his friendship with DJ Red Alert, Renegade Foxxx is a unique spirit, an old soul, and a character for the ages. If you haven’t heard Still Hustlin’ yet, you’re likely to gravitate to it after checking this…

AllHipHop.com: I’m rather shocked to learn you’re actually a Jersey dude. Everybody seems to think you’re Southern…

Renegade Foxxx: Well basically, my moms who passed away and s**t, we was down in Alabama – grindin’, having fun. Then, I was young, a peanut-head, I got up in Jersey. Wherever you lay your head is your home, man. All hoods are the same – everybody wants to get out all of ‘em. It’s just a good situation. I just wanna shut this industry down – this industry is bulls**t.

AllHipHop.com: Why do you say that?

Renegade Foxxx: I did records with a lot of people – I see how people be vibin’. I didn’t wanna do records with nobody from New York, I wanted to do records with people from the South. The South shows love, man – real businessman. I can’t deal with egos.

AllHipHop.com: Do you feel that you have a lot of opposition from the people in New York?

Renegade Foxxx: Nah. Everybody cool. I pimp my car, drive. You see me in the party, I’m laughin’. The majority of the times, it’s just me and [DJ] Red Alert. That’s my dude, right there.

AllHipHop.com: That’s interesting. When people think of somebody like Red Alert, we often presume the pioneers to be not-so-accepting of a Southern sound. So many of those guys thought that Southern artists went soft on lyrics and too keyboard on beats…

Renegade Foxxx: Yeah, yeah. What it is, I give great respect to that man. A lot of these bulls**t ass DJ’s, they say they do – and they wanna be with him at the conventions, takin’ pictures and s**t – half of you motherf**kers don’t know Red Alert, or Kool Herc, or Kay Slay. Cats need to understand. Red’s been in this game for years. I’mma listen to him. I’mma listen to him before somebody else because you can only learn from an elder – older brothers who been there and done that. A lot of these cats with these crews today, they ain’t like that. That’s why you got all these gunshot n***as…

AllHipHop.com: You’ve got a skit that talks about that on Still Hustlin’

Renegade Foxxx: Straight up dog, if you’ve got some beef with me – bark it. I won’t fight your boy, let’s fight each other. Just fight. Go in the schoolyard, go in the alley-way. Bust my s**t – I got money, I can go to the dentist. But when you start puttin’ up glocks and stuff, that’s ignorant. Ain’t nothin’ you can say bad enough for me to shoot you. You ain’t hurt my mama, you ain’t hurt my kids – I ain’t gotta kill you.

AllHipHop.com: Violence is running rampant in Hip-Hop right now…

Renegade Foxxx: Yeah man, it’s f**king retarded. The littlest rappers in the world talkin’ ‘bout killin’ somethin’! What the f**k? These kids ain’t lived. They don’t even know what it’s like to do time – do a county bid. They swear they been on death row.

AllHipHop.com: At the same time though, you’ve got a song called “Royal Rumble”, where you say you’re iller than the Son of Sam, and tell the story of a 16 year-old kid really doing it. That’s violent in of itself…

Renegade Foxxx: Yeah, exactly – I was ruthless on that track. I was feelin’ the beat by my man, Alvin Johnson down in ATL. Before me and Bonecrusher got together to do it, I was actually feedin’ off his vibe. He’s a beast, so I’mma be a beast with him.

AllHipHop.com: Why’d you later add Pitbull and do a whole other version?

Renegade Foxxx: Because, my man Fireman from North Carolina flipped the beat – like wow. Plus, I’m cool with my Latin community. I think Hispanics are just like Blacks. I don’t look at Pitbull as Spanish or anything – I look at him as a Black man. He really shined on the record. To me, it’s his best 16 bars ever spit. I’m glad Lil’ Jon got him. I remember when Lil’ Jon wasn’t really rockin’ – we was all in Miami at Puffy’s party. Jon was up and coming. Now he’s getting his shine. First thing people do is say he don’t rap. S**t, if you don’t rap and you gettin’ paid – you genius!

AllHipHop.com: Speaking of gettin’ paid, what does Still Hustlin’ Records get its name from?

Renegade Foxxx: People think Still Hustlin’ [Records] is about the street. See, what y’all doing at AllHipHop – y’all hustlin’. What any DJ is doing, what any trick is doing – to get that money. Everybody’s tryin’ to get paid. A judge can be a hustler. A doctor is a hustler. Oprah hustles her life and she’s the richest chick in the world – she’s my favorite, I love her.

AllHipHop.com: She’s proved that fame is not ephemeral…

Renegade Foxxx: We all get 15 minutes. There was a time when Puffy was the king of radio, now look at him – don’t nobody wanna hear Puffy’s s**t – especially me. He still on his hustle with parties and Sean John. He on his hustle. He don’t really care ‘bout music no more. Boy N’ Da Hood is a good group. Will they get the attention they deserve? Hell no. ‘Cause the CEO ain’t hungry no more. If you asked me if I’d merge Still Hustlin’ Records with Bad Boy? Hell no. ‘Cause I’m hungry, I’m biting like a pitbull and he out there pettin’ poodles.

AllHipHop.com: From a dude in prison with a dream to running a label now with an album out, are you satisfied?

Renegade Foxxx: Nah, I ain’t even started yet. The day I get up on that stage and see my mama, I know I started. Other than that, she still up in Heaven, waiting… I know I’m a lil’ bit crazy.

AllHipHop.com: Sometimes that’s the only way to be…

Renegade Foxxx: Nah, I’m really crazy. I thought I’d just tell ya. I’m crazy enough to know the difference between success from failure. I want the best of both worlds. When I make this money, I’mma put this money back in the hood. These cats be driving ‘round in their 300,000 dollar cars and they’ll drive past the hood and won’t put a net in the basketball court. But the first words that come out these cats mouth is, “For my hood!” What the f**k you doing for the streets? Half of ‘em don’t even talk to they family no more. When the neighborhood bully was whoopin’ that ass, all you had was your family. Motherf**kers don’t know. That’s why I watch this industry. I got my favorite artists – my favorite is Tupac. That cat had tons of wisdom. I respect that cat. That’s the Black Elvis.

AllHipHop.com: You’ve got “Royal Rumble” but you’ve also got “Wonderful World” – the complete opposite. Tupac was very contradictory too…

Renegade Foxxx: Exactly. You’re right, dog. There was a message in everything he said. I had the blessing of meeting his moms one time at the studio. It was like, “Damn, girl.” Anybody who can say on record, “You were a crack fiend, mama,” got my respect. When I was young, my family did drugs. I tried to hide that fact. That’s some f**ked up s**t. Kids never forget. That’s why, when I do this music s**t, anybody that rides with me is gonna watch a winner – I don’t bulls**t. I’m here to make you laugh, but I’m here to make you think that this motherf**ker is actually crazy enough to do it.

AllHipHop.com: We got Freddie Foxxx – another bald headed, tough guy, that’s been around for over 15 years. Were there any issues with your name?

Renegade Foxxx: You know what? I was gonna do a record with Freddie Foxxx. I really wanted to. It was gonna be me, Freddie Foxxx, and I was gonna call out for Foxy Brown. As time goes on, you start workin’ your deal – bit drifts away. I got a lot of respect for that brother – tons. I call myself, Renegade. Foxxx just came from my cousin who I was a big fan of, as a kid. Everybody’s confusing Renegade Foxxx with Freddie Foxxx – I’m just Renegade. Pay homage to that brother, he been there and broke bread. I’m a newjack.

AllHipHop.com: How’d you get Renegade?

Renegade Foxxx: I got Renegade just from being a bastard. I say exactly how I feel for some reason. I think a renegade is a person that just do – living on the edge. That’s me.

AllHipHop.com: Still Hustlin’ has been out a minute. What’s happening with it?

Renegade Foxxx: It released May 17th. I wanted a new deal. This my money, this my time – it’s a good record. I got a record that’s coming out next month that’s gonna knock the s**t outta everybody. It’s sick. I’m a shut down the Grammy’s – it’s a wrap. Dog, I just started! I ain’t got not no talent, I got a gift.

AllHipHop.com: The Grammy’s?

Renegade Foxxx: I did The Source Awards red carpet – I took the pictures, I did all that – and I left. I didn’t watch the show. I said, “I ain’t gonna stay in the seats if I’m not nominated.” I’m not gonna be a fan. I’m gonna take it over. When I take it over, you gonna say, “I talked to this motherf**ker when he said he was.” We gonna shut the Grammy’s down! I’mma let White America know.

AllHipHop.com: At one point on the record, you tease Missy Elliot…

Renegade Foxxx: Missy Elliot to me, is one of the most talented women in the industry, that fire is just burning out. I love her! I know her, I goofed about her in the skit, but I goof about people that I actually respect. I liked her better when she was thick. Don’t break the format.

AllHipHop.com: 50 Cent told us that he’s putting M.O.P. in the gym…

Renegade Foxxx: 50’s big on his body-building stuff. To me, he’s still light. He’s gotta bump them arms up, bump that chest up. I’m 240, I’m solid. You could put me on the Giants right now, and I’ll bust ass. LL [Cool J] did the liposuction. Damn, he did a lot of lipo. [laughs] I been locked up all these years, I can’t get that. I know he did work. [laughs] You got a lot of s**t out there that can enhance. I don’t believe in that s**t.

AllHipHop.com: I know you got E-40 on the album, his boy Celly-Cel is pretty cut too…

Renegade Foxxx: Yeah, yeah. Yo, E-40 is crazy. I don’t know what the f**k he’s saying! There’s a word he said on my record – to this day, I don’t know what a “bozzle” is. Dog, if you figure out what a bozzle is, call me. I don’t think he know. Bozzle? Damn, I gotta change up my lyrics. All the stuff you hear, Snoop’s [“dizzle” language], that brother did that – pay homage. I ain’t the first rapper to come out, and I ain’t the last – so I ain’t gonna say I’m the greatest. The greatest to me is them two brothers that died. Everybody else, they okay. KRS-One? He aiight. Rakim? They aiight. There’s no such thing as a great rapper no more. Freestyling? That’s bulls**t. Come on man.

AllHipHop.com: I will say that Jay-Z released a few verses this summer. He’s leaving the listener hungry at a time when rappers pump out too much material…

Renegade Foxxx: Exactly. That’s why Eminem outsold everybody. He ain’t gonna last. There’s nothing he can talk about. I was waiting for him to say that word, “n*gger.” I was begging for it. When they gave him the Greatest Lyricst Award – it p##### me off. I’mma be honest. I think Nas is nasty with his. Jadakiss is good. There’s a lot of brothers out there. He was just such a star. That’s f**ked up. I’m not taking Hip-Hop as a race war, but he’s a White boy. Respect – he must’ve had it harder than any brother out there. So? That’s the way I like to think. “F**k that!”

AHH Stray News: Sticky Fingaz Arrested, Lone Catalysts, Prince Harry, Young Jeezy

Sticky Fingaz surrendered this morning (Oct. 18) after allegedly leaving a gun in his hotel room yesterday.

Local reports said that Sticky, born Kirk Jones, left a loaded 9mm in the Flatotel

in Mid-town Manhattan. Housekeeping reportedly found the gun and called police.

Sticky Fingaz surrendered to authorities this morning. The rapper is in New York

shooting the movie "Karma Confessions & Holy" which is directed

by Robert de Niro’s daughter Dreena.

Underground Hip-Hop group The Lone Catalysts are preparing to

release their sophomore effort, Good Music. The album is the follow-up

to the group’s 2001 debut album, Hip-Hop. The album

features guest appearances from Masta Ace, El Da Sensai, Grap Luva and others.

The album hits stores November 15.

The UK”s

Mirror is reporting that Prince Harry stunned guests at an exclusive party,

when he started listening to hardcore rap by Tupac Shakur and Ice Cube. The

21-year-old heir to the royal throne was allegedly drinking and smoking, while

listening to Skakur’s “Ghetto Gospel” and Ice Cube’s

“Cave B**ch.” The prince and his brother William were attending

a birthday party for 27-year-old rugby star, Mike Tindall.

Young Jeezy’s debut album Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101

has been certified platinum by the RIAA after 11 weeks on the shelves.

The rapper recently earned his first #1 R&B hit with “Soul Survivor,”

a duet with R&B singer Akon. The songbumped Def Jam label mate Kanye West’s

“Gold Digger” down to the #2 slot on the charts. Mariah Carey’s

“Shake It Off” gives The Island Def Jam Music Group three hits in

the top 5 this week.

Eve Tapped To Host Fashion Expo

Multi-platinum recording

artist/actress Eve has been tapped to host the 2005 Philadelphia Fashion Expo

at the Pennsylvania Convention Center.

Eve, born Eve Jeffers, will be on hand to host the event and

to cheer on new and young designers.

"Coming home and hosting this worthwhile event is a great

honor to me," Eve said of the event via a press release.

The Fashion Expo is billed as a one of kind experience that

includes fashion and business seminars and panel discussions, three top industry

fashion shows and one artistic hair show with over 40 models and creative designers,

live concerts, and an all day vending mall.

Known for her style and fashion forward savvy, Eve has recently

partnered with urban lifestyle fashion pioneer Marc Ecko to re-launch her branded

clothing line, Fetish.

Under the aegis of Marc Ecko Enterprises, the new collection

of women’s sportswear, headwear, footwear and luggage will debut fall 2005.

Eve is among a list of other special guest hosts, featured designers

and entertainers to be a part of the event.

Among the confirmed special guests are Philadelphia raido personalities

Ukie Washington, DC Todd, Monie Love and Poochman.

Featured designers include Meezan Art Couture, Chic Bella, Earl

Bannister, Garfield Michael, Get Money Girl, Brooks Brothers and GD Originals.

Along with a day full of activities and in conjunction with

City of Philadelphia, there will be a clothing & food drive for victims

of Hurricane Katrina with part of the proceeds to benefit the Gulf Coast State’s

hurricanes & the Children’s Aid Society.

The Philly Fashion Expo will be held at the Pennsylvania Convention

Center on October 30th.

For more information

on the event, tickets and special guest host’s visit: www.phillyfashionexpo.com.

The Black Rob Report

Artist: Black RobTitle: The Black Rob ReportRating: 4 StarsReviewed by: James Johnson

Who doesn’t remember the joint, “Whoa”? It was only one of the biggest hits of 1999. Black Rob immediately solidified himself as a hood celebrity with the songs and it carried his debut, Life Story to platinum status. With Bad Boy records suffering a significant down period following the death of the Notorious B.I.G., Bacardi Rob helped reinvigorate a faltering Bad Boy Records’ place in Hip-Hop history.

Following Life Story, Black Rob took a hiatus of sorts, due to certain things going on in his life. Of course, as the news would tell it, he had his share of issues with the law, but he also suffered a kidney disorder which surely threatened his existence. Now that he’s regained his health and strength, after five years away he’s returned with The Black Rob Report (Bad Boy).

The album immediately jumps off to a great start with “Watch Your Movements”, featuring Hip-Hop’s new King of the Hook, Akon. On this track, he reflects on the changes in his life, the things he used to do in the past coming up, and how he’s now evolved. Rob takes it straight to the club on the Scram Jones produced “Ready”, and “Y’all Know Who Killed Him” will become an instant classic, as it features timeless vocals from the Notorious B.I.G. Labelmate Ness drops in on the hood anthem “Fire In The Hole”. Other guests include Cheri Dennis, Rhea, and Minister Louis Farrakhan on “You Know What”. Other standouts include “Smile In Ya Face”, “Help Me Out”, and “Team”, which pairs Rob again with Ness, along with Making the Band 2 alumni Chopper and Babs.

Compared to Life Story, BR gets a lot more gritty with this LP, and he works hard to prove that he belongs here in the game. He’s looking to show the game what it’s been missing since he’s been absent, and judging by his work, it’s been a great deal. The Black Rob Report is sure to be a popular hood dispatch among Hip-Hop fans.

Cypress Hill’s Sen Dog & Mellow Man Ace Form Reyes Brothers

Cypress Hill’s Sen Dog and

Mellow Man Ace have partnered to form a new group, The Reyes Brothers.

The result of the

union is a new album titled Ghetto Therapy on their own Latin Thug

Records imprint.

Ghetto Therapy

will feature tracks with Warren G, Bishop Lamont and production from the likes

of DJ Muggs, Fredwreck, B-Real and others.

According to Mellow

Man Ace, the album was a long-time coming and marks the first time he has recorded

an album with Sen Dog, his real-life brother.

"We planned

it for four years, talked about it for three more and now its here," Mellow

Man Ace said. "I told ya’ll get on board, we saved you a seat and we’re

serving filet and shrimp."

Latin Thug Records

is a new label fronted by Sen Dog (CEO) and Mellow Man (Vice President of A&R),

along with Fred Sherman (President) and Marvin Sheleby (Vice President of Operations).

According to Sen,

not only is he excited to work with his brother, but he’s also pleased about

being able to release quality music on his newly-formed label.

"Since we

were a break dance crew with B-Real in high school, it’s always been a dream

of mine to work with my brother," Sen Dog said. "To have it happen

on Latin Thug Records, my own label, make it even sweeter. I’ve always wanted

to create a situation that was artist-friendly but also had its hustle on."

Mellow Man Ace started off

in a rap group called DVX (Devastating Vocal Xcellence) that also featured Cypress

Hill’s DJ Muggs, B-Real and Sen Dog.

Shortly afterwards,

the rapper was signed by Delicious Vinyl and later Capitol and struck big with

the #1 hit "Mentírosa,” which featured “Spanglish,”

a form of English/Spanish rapping that Ace takes credit for creating.

Latin Thug Records

will also release albums from rapper O. Brown, Mexican rock group Asesino and

solo efforts from Mellow Man Ace and Sen Dog.

"Latin Thug

Records is about creating hits and bringing those hits to the heads in Los Angeles,

across the USA and around this whole world," Sen Dog said.

The Reyes Brothers

Ghetto Therapy hits the streets in Jan. 2006.

Rapper Trick Daddy Hosting Halloween Party For Victims Of Hurricanes

Trick Daddy will give

back to the Miami community this Halloween, as the superstar rapper is hosting

the Trick Luv Da Kids Spooktacular Halloween Fundraiser later this month.

The event is part of a broader partnership the rapper’s

non-profit struck with Single Parent Initiative and the Boys & Girls Clubs

in Mississippi and New Orleans to provide support for families displaced by

Hurricanes Katrina and Rita.

Trick Daddy’s non-profit, Trick Luv Da Kids Inc. is sponsoring

the event. The organization also recently teamed with The Florida Entertainment

Summit, a new music industry conference.

As a non-profit partner, The Florida Entertainment Summit will

assist the rapper in raising funds to support initiatives created by the Trick’s

Luv Da Kids, Inc.

The Florida Entertainment Summit is a one day conference that

focuses on empowering independent businesspeople in the entertainment industry.

The summit will debut in South Florida on Oct. 29 at the University

of Miami Conference Center in Downtown Miami.

A portion of each registration fee will be donated to the Trick

Luv Da Kids event.

Trick Luv Da Kids Spooktackular Halloween Fundraiser takes place

Oct. 29 at Solo, located at 10890 Collins Ave., Sunny Isles Beach.

Donations of $100

include food and drinks all night, while general admission is $25. Trick’s

organization will also provide prizes for Best Dressed Male Costume, Best Dressed

Female Custom and Best Dressed Couple Custom.

Lost Boyz: Pounds Up

It has been ten years since the Lost Boyz stormed on the scene with Legal Drug Money. With Mr. Cheeks and Freaky Tah leading the way, the LB Fam carved their own niche with their creative party jams and energetic street anthems. Utilizing the formula that Naughty By Nature made popular, the Lost Boyz’ run during the mid 90’s was impressive to say the least. They were a staple in the rich Jamaica, Queens Rap tradition we see today. With nine singles/remixes off Legal Drug Money getting rotation in form or another, the Lost Boyz made their impact on the Hip-Hop game. Love, Peace, & Nappiness followed, and continue to grant the Jamericans airplay on feel-good street music.

However, since the tragic passing of Freaky Tah, the LB Fam has never been the same. While Cheeks went on to have solo success, the Hip-Hop public has seemingly forgotten about what the Lost Boyz have accomplished. Now with their ten-year anniversary album, Lost Boyz Forever, Mr. Cheeks and Pretty Lou are here to tell you that the crew is far from dead. With the duo intent on preserving the Lost Boyz legacy, and how making music still keeps them high.

AllHipHop.com: Take us back to when you were recording Legal Drug Money. What was your guys mindset going into the album?

Mr. Cheeks: We went into the album trying to vent our frustrations and problems. At the time we were making records, we were having wars in the streets and all of that, so it was a crazy time. We didn’t think we were going to be able to make music or be around long enough to do anything. But at that time, we were smoking mad weed and just trying to figure out how we were going to hit the world with our music. Legal Drug Money was a great album. We were in the studio having fun together and we didn’t think it would ever stop. We were making those party joints, feeding off the Naughty By Nature type of vibe.

AllHipHop.com: You mentioned Naughty By Nature. Historically, they are credited with the biggest entourage, but it seemed like LB Fam was right there…

Pretty Lou: I can’t say the city – I’ll say Queens – especially South Jamaica. We repped. We was like the biggest thing in the hood. We couldn’t even get a record deal up here, ‘cause our reputation proceeded us. We had a reputation for being these hard-headed knuckleheads. We started in like ’92 – didn’t get signed till ’95 – album came out [same year]. We moved to Virginia. We moved with some people from the Bronx or whateva. They were plugged in with Puffy and them. [“Butt-naked”] Tim Dawg was like at the time, right-hand-man at Uptown. That’s what pulled us in. The rest is history. It took a change of scenery for us to get on.

AllHipHop.com: VH1 or MTV said that rappers basically need to pay off members of the entourage…

Pretty Lou: We didn’t do it that way. We a family. At first, we was real local. It grew. I’d be the last one coming in the club, ‘cause I gotta get everybody else in.

AllHipHop.com: In the 90’s, it seemed you could have a street song and still get recognition. But now if you come out with a street joint, unless you have that big label and machine behind you, you are definitely not getting heard.

Mr. Cheeks: Oh, no doubt about it. Its like 50 is the only street n***a getting airplay. He makes good music and all of that, but there are other n***as out there making good music that deserve to be heard. They are just putting stuff out to sell. I remember those good days when n***as was putting out that good Rap music.

AllHipHop.com: Tell me about your perception of G-Unit, being that you’re from the same ‘hood. I know Bang ‘Em Smurf expressed feelings that they aren’t paying respect…

Pretty Lou: We known half them G-Unit cats all our lives. Half of them G-Unit cats crossed out they Lost Boyz tattoos. I’m not saying the major rappers. But the cats they got runnin’ ‘round in they crew.

AllHipHop.com: Why is that?

Pretty Lou: People go through different movements. LB Fam is a movement. We not some group some A&R put together, we known each other all our lives.

AllHipHop.com: One song everybody remembers from that album is “Beasts From The East” and Canibus’ verse. So tell us the story of how you hooked up with him?

Mr. Cheeks: We hooked up in Atlanta and used to come around with Tiz and Charles Suit. Freaky Tah really put that n***a on and getting him to rap and all that. From there, he started putting his pen to the paper and started working. So that’s how we hooked up with Cani – him driving around in his mom’s little Toyota Tercel, which you couldn’t smoke in.

AllHipHop.com: On LL’s “Back Where I Belong” off his G.O.A.T. album, he said that Bis was from Canada and he piggybacked you guys for a ticket out to Jersey? What did you think about that?

Mr. Cheeks: I ain’t know about that, I never heard that track. That was there little thing they had. That is what it was. He went after LL.

AllHipHop.com: I was just asking to see if ‘Bis was really from Canada and you guys helped him get to Jersey.

Mr. Cheeks: Oh na. [Laughter] I ain’t never heard that s###, word up. I didn’t know he said that s**t.

AllHipHop.com: Cheeks, did you ever feel like, “I’m doing all the rapping, I should get paid more?” A lot of people firmly believed that because you did the bulk of the rapping, that you were the group, so to speak.

Mr. Cheeks: Na, I just felt that everybody gets their fair share. I never thought about it like that, I just wanted everybody to eat. When we sat down with my man Tim Dawg, he said, “Do you want this 60/40 contract? Because there is going to be problems, and cats aren’t going to want the 40.” And that s**t sort of was, because n***as came into the game eyes wide open and ready to do things. It was never about the money to us, we just wanted to make it. When the money came, the money came, but it was never our main concern.

AllHipHop.com: With the release of Forever, this year, was your goal to keep the memory of Tah alive?

Mr. Cheeks: Yeah, we have to continue on for his family and our family. We had to bring out that Lost Boyz Forever album and try to take it back to what it used to be. But it will never be the same as when my n***a was backing me up with that hard ass voice he had. But just like how Biggie and 2pac are still living, that is how we are going to do for Tah and keep his memory alive. We have to let everybody know that LB is still here and Tah is still doing it with us. That’s where I’m at with it.

AllHipHop.com: I don’t really want to get into the tragic passing of Freakie Tah and stir up bad memories, but after he passed, did you think that the Lost Boyz were done and they could never be the same again? What were your thoughts on the group’s future?

Mr. Cheeks: Man, when my man died it was crazy, because we didn’t know what to do at the time. We didn’t know who bodied our man and there was a bunch of s**t swirling through our heads. And we knew it was never going to be the same when Tah passed, because me and him were the LB. Without that n***a, the music will never be the same. Without his voice the music isn’t the same. His voice is crazy and the fans definitely recognized that. He had his fans and I had my fans. But I know Tah touched a lot of people with his music and he definitely touched me while we were in the studio together. It’s hard when you are not rocking with your n***a anymore. I knew the Lost Boyz would still be around, but it was never going to be the same.

AllHipHop.com: What did you think of Super Head mentioning you in her new book?

Mr. Cheeks: Who?

AllHipHop.com: That girl Super Head, she mentioned you in her new book.

Mr. Cheeks: Oh word?

AllHipHop.com: Did you know about that?

Mr. Cheeks: Na. [Laughter] You know what she said about me?

AllHipHop.com: Big no h###, but she said you’re something to the effect of well-endowed…

Mr. Cheeks: What the hell is that about? That is crazy. These chicks are crazy these days. I heard about the book, but I didn’t know I was in it. But that is what they are doing nowadays. But I ain’t read that book, that’s another situation. Now I got to hear that from somebody, so now it’s going down. [Laughter]

AllHipHop.com: It’s rumored that you’re actually on the run, sorta…

Pretty Lou: Kinda, sorta. I don’t talk about it too much. It’ll be resolved soon. Somebody did somethin’ that had nothin’ to do with me. I was living in Virginia at the time. I was coming home late one night – I watched the cops kick in the door. They was like, “Do you stay here?” I said, “Yeah, I’m stuck down here putting together this album.” This was around the time Cheeks had “Lights Camera Action,” that was the number one song in the country. They was trying to walk me to jail. I’m not going to jail – not for somethin’ I didn’t do. It should be resolved soon.

AllHipHop.com: When you decided to focus on your solo career for awhile, did you feel like you had to step up and keep the group afloat so you could put out another album like Forever in the future?

Mr. Cheeks: Yeah, plus, people were always coming up to me asking for a solo album. So I felt it was time and it helped keep my name out there. That is the path I had to go at the time. But now we are trying to make it bigger. We should have capitalize on everything long before, but now we are here to do what we have to do to bring it back. We are bringing that new fire and it’s a whole new thing. Destroy and rebuild.

AllHipHop.com: Is there anything your fans can do to hold you down?

Mr. Cheeks: Cop that new album Lost Boyz Forever, its in stores now. Shout out to everybody who supported the Lost Boyz over the years.

Pretty Lou: Just pray for me, man. I’m doing everything I can to fight this. ‘Cause I’m not, what they thinkin’ I am. I’m waiting for certain people to come to my defense. I’m not a drug dealer. Let me fans know that, I know that!

AllHipHop.com: The name of the classic album and the label is Legal Drug Money. That says it right there…

Pretty Lou: Music is a drug. Music is in every culture. Drugs can change your state of mind. That’s what music does. It can get you up and dancing, down and crying. That’s what we are. We sell legal drugs – music. There’s no drug money fundin’ this.

Domination: What’s Beef?

Even with the tinted windows rolled up on his all-black ride, people are waiving at his car on Jamaica Avenue in Queens. Domination is really in the hood. There is a stack of posters in his the backseat to promote the release of the recently released God Giveth, God Taketh Away. With Bang ‘Em Smurf locked up till 2008, Domination has a lot on his shoulders to prove he can do on the mic, what many say he’s done in the streets.

Up until this point, most people know Bang ‘Em Smurf and Domination on the strength of their issues with 50 Cent. AllHipHop.com let the quieter of the two, Domination speak on some issues to promote the album. Is it more important to trash 50 or push the Gangsta Flip envelope? Domination airs out.

AllHipHop.com: Who are you influenced by musically?

Domination: Man, to tell you the truth I’m not really influenced by a lot of dudes. That’s how I keep myself different from everybody else. All-time, who am I influenced by? My cousin Freaky Tah, [fallen member of The Lost Boyz] I don’t know if you know that he was my cousin. I’m influenced by him because he represents the same struggle that I came out of. With him, I got to witness that first hand.

AllHipHop.com: Do you feel any added pressure to blow because your Freaky Tah’s younger-cousin?

Domination: Nah, I don’t feel any pressure because of that. I feel added pressure because of the negativity they put on us because of the G-Unit situation.

AllHipHop.com: Smurf told us that he told us that he felt blackballed…

Domination: [Cutting in] Oh no, we don’t feel blackballed, we’ve been blackballed! We’ve spoken to DJs, reporters and websites who have told us that 50 directly told them not to put us on.

AllHipHop.com: 50 told The Next Level magazine recently that he spent money to keep Bang’em out of jail.

Domination: [Laughing] 50 never spent money to keep Bang’ Em out of jail. He didn’t give Bang’em his money man. Bang’ Em had $325,000 with 50 while he was in jail and he didn’t bail him out of jail. 50 didn’t give him the money and then he goes on the mixtape talking about the $325,000 he took from Bang’ Em. In actuality he never saw that money. You know what I’m saying, nobody ever seen that money.

AllHipHop.com: When did you really decide to do “What’s Beef?” and front page this?

Domination: Smurf had just come out of jail. We wasn’t thinking about 50 Cent, we weren’t going to do no diss songs toward him. We were just going to forget him if he wasn’t going to mess with us. And we heard a DJ Whoo Kid mixtape and 50 was on the beginning of a pack song saying “Hey Smurf don’t think I don’t hear you out there talking about me, brush your teeth before you talk about me, wash under your arms you smell like Queensbridge. Tell them n***as about the $325,000 I took back from you. When I come back off tour and I catch you I’m going to rip the skin off your ass, n***a.” So, he just came at us back. We couldn’t let that slide, we was from the hood and we was his gunnas, so for him to come at us like that we got to go at his head. So, “What’s Beef” was true facts, we put down real talk about him, so that’s why other s**t occurred, but that’s neither here or there.

AllHipHop.com – The beef between G-Unit and Murder Inc. really divided Jamaica, Queens a little bit, didn’t it?

Dominatio: That whole time, even when I was with G-Unit, and we was beefin’ with Murder Inc., my friend was Black Child best friend. He told me I should stay out of it, but at the time I told him “F**k it! I’m riding for my team!” I’m swinging hard for my team and it turned out not to be the wisest decision. And since then I’ve spoken to Black Child, and it’s not a problem there.

AllHipHop.com: A lot of cat’s on DJ Mello’s “We Don’t Talk to Police” mixtape made reference that they think 50 is a “snitch” or informer. What do you have to say about that?

Domination: Yeah, he’s a dry snitch, he sure is. At first I didn’t want to believe it, but he’s a dry snitch if you listen to his songs and what not. The things that he says are not a code of the streets to say the things that he says. Like he says “50, Who shot ya?, is it ‘Preme, Freeze or Tah Tah.” He’s putting a lot of business out in front.

AllHipHop.com: Beefing with 50 Cent seemed to have introduced you to Yukmouth and C-Bo to do “He Ain’t A Thug”…

Domination: Yukmouth and C-Bo actually got up with us. They did they background work and research and came looking for us. We just got a call one day and it was like “What’s up, this is C-Bo from the West Coast, we want to fly you out.” At first we were skeptical, we didn’t know if it was a set-up or what. But then we though if God wanted us to go that way; that’s the way we’re going to go. Without any more hesitation we went out to the West Coast and met C-Bo, Yukmouth had told him about us.

AllHipHop.com.com: And you recorded the joint for their album?

Domination:com Yeah, we got on they album, but they didn’t get a chance to be on ours because they wasn’t on this side at the time and what not. [I do have] Kurupt, my artist Young Dice, and D.V. Alias Khrist. .

AllHipHop.com – Being that Bang’ Em doesn’t rap at all, how does your group work out creatively?

Domination – Me and Smurf, it’s 50/50 regardless. He has a great creative sense, sometimes he’ll give me something to rhyme about. He also had a lot of the connects and we just build together. We never took it as “Yo, I’m the rapper and he’s the boss.” We took it as that we’re both bosses and we’re coming in this game together and we’re trying to stay together.

AllHipHop.com: In terms of your own career, you have to feel like you benefited from the attention given to the beef between 50 and you and Bang’ Em.

Domination: Oh, hell yeah! That boy got eight million fans. S**t, all I need is five-hundred thousand and I’ll go five times platinum on Koch Records you know what I’m saying. Hell yeah that benefited us, I ain’t going to front on that. But that is not my intentions because if you listen to my rap, I have skills. If you listen to my album everything is not about 50.

AllHipHop.com: Tell me about the process of recording the album. Because you said you’ve only been doing songs for a few year now.

Domination : Making the albums was beautiful for me, because while I’ve [only] been doing songs in these two years I’ve learned a lot. I learned how to format a song-song, how to make the song perfect. How to make it work and speak about something, instead of saying, “I’m going to kill you,” 5,000 times or say it in 6 million different ways. I chose not to, I chose to make music that battered women could listen to and be inspired by, music that your homies could listen to and say “Yeah! That’s how I want my n***a to feel about me. That’s my dude.”

AllHipHop.com: How much input has Bang’em had on the project even though he’s been locked away?

Domination: Oh, Smurf is still the boss man. He still has major input; I go see him every weekend, he’s up in “Sing-Sing” correctional facility in Ossining, NY. It’s about two-hours away at the most. He’s going, he ain’t worried about nothing right now, just coming home. He’s good in the yard, give him his package, money in the commissary and he’s good.

Court Documents Reveal The Inc.’s Hardships, Plot To Kill Irv Gotti, More

In recently released documents provided to AllHipHop.com, Christopher Lorenzo’s attorney, Gerald Shargel, recently wrote to Judge Edward Korman to officially raise objections to prison tapes being used by the federal government in the federal money laundering and racketeering trial of rap label The Inc.

The five-page filing documents Shargel’s requests to suppress conversations between the Gotti brothers (Irv and Chris Lorenzo) and Kenneth “Supreme” McGriff that were recorded by The Federal Bureau of Prisons.

The filing also detailed the financial hardships of The Inc. (formerly Murder Inc.), an alleged plot to kill Irv Gotti, and the status of Queens, New York drug baron Lorenzo “Fat Cat” Nichols.

Ethan Brown, a journalist for Rolling Stone, New York Magazine, Wired, the Village Voice, Radar, Vibe, and others, recently penned “Queens Reigns Supreme: Fat Cat, 50 Cent and the Rise of the Hip-Hop Hustler.”

Slated for a November 22 release, the book is a detailed look into the origins of Queens, New York’s most notorious and profitable drug gangs, and their ties to the Hip-Hop music industry.

“These transcripts show that Irv is clearly hurting financially because of the years’ long investigation into The Inc.,” Brown told AllHipHop.com. “The expiration of The Inc.’s contract with Def Jam earlier this year has only worsened the situation.”

Shargel’s motion seeks to have phone conversations ruled inadmissible because he believes that they’re “plainly irrelevant” and “hearsay.”

The motion further states that his client’s right to due process was violated when the government gained a strategic advantage by gathering evidence against the Lorenzo, by wire-tapping McGriff’s prison phone calls.

“They were successful in separating Irv’s trial from Supreme’s,” Brown noted. “Supreme is charged with various narcotics charges and murder.

Irv is not charged with any of that. He doesn’t have to sit in the courtroom with Supreme, and that is why the lawyers are saying these conversations are irrelevant.”

Some of the characters that are resurfacing have been mentioned in songs by Nas, 50 Cent, Ja Rule and others. Fans can reference Nas’ “Memory Lane (Sitting in the Park)” or 50 Cent’s “Ghetto Quran” for more details.

Coincidentally, 50 Cent’s upcoming movie “Get Rich or Die Tryin’ features a character named “Majestic,” said to be loosely based on Kenneth “Supreme” McGriff.

A review of transcripts documents reveals:

A conversation recorded on March 4, 2005, in which Chris Lorenzo was “expressing worry about his brother’s safety and the risk of harm posed by a ‘crazy fan’ of 50 Cent.”

According to the phone records, Chris was so worried about Irv’s safety that ‘he consulted his music attorney and others to stop 50 Cent’s ‘incendiary s**t.’

A conversation recorded on March 29, 2005, between Irv Gotti and Supreme in which the two discuss the financial hardships of The Inc. label for the first time. Wire-tap records disclose Irv explaining to McGriff that he was paying for everybody’s lawyer and that he was “F*cked up right now.”

Irv goes on to state, “Remember the sh*t with me though Preme, I’m paying everyone’s lawyer, Cynthia, Gutta, everybody. It’s all on my back so I gotta get the f*cking sh*t because (the lawyers) talking about bailing and that I got to get that money.”

An April 29, 2005 conversation where Supreme asks an associate of Irv Gotti’s about ‘Fat Boy,’ which authorities suspect is code for “Fat Cat,” or Lorenzo ‘Fat Cat” Nichols.

In February of 1988, Nichols was sentenced to a 25-to-life state narcotics and weapons violations. He was then hit with federal charges in August of 1988 on federal narcotics charges. He was slated to be released in 2026 for previous federal drug charges.

Incarcerated since 1985, authorities accused Nichols of running “The Nichols Organization” from behind bars from 1985-1988, when the organization was dismantled by federal agents.

Police suspect the Nichols organization provided drugs to the Supreme Team in their heyday when the drug gang controlled the Baisley Park Houses in Queens, New York.

“An army of federal agents stormed this territory in Southeast Queens and shut down the organization,” Brown told AllHipHop.com. “This was spurned by the murder of NYPD rookie cop, Edward Byrne, who were murdered by members of the Bebo’s, a gang run by Howard “Pappy” Mason.”

Mason is serving a life sentence and was convicted of being Nichol’s lieutenant in the Nichols Organization. Brown compared Mason to Fat Cat in terms of his status in the organization.

“He had a crew of kids with dreadlocks, and they killed a white cop, who was in uniform and in a marked car,” Brown said. “He was guarding the home of a witness. 50 talks about it in his book [“From Pieces to Weight”] as a pivotal moment in his neighborhood because all of the drug organizations were targeted from that point.”

Nichols was indicted earlier this year for allegedly running an auto theft ring from prison with notorious Detroit, Michigan coke kingpin Richard “White Boy Rick” Wershe.

Prison recordings also show that Irv and Supreme were allegedly surprised by how big their case had become.

Irv told McGriff their case was “So high-profile, like, it’s not even believable.”

“Being friends with Supreme isn’t a crime,” Brown stated. “The feds are alleging that money is being laundered through these companies, but no one knows what evidence there is.”

The federal money laundering and racketeering trial money for the Lorenzo’s is set to begin on Oct. 24.