via @djvip510
(AllHipHop News) Nelson Mandela, the consummate South African freedom fighter, has died at the age of 95.
South African President Jacob Zuma made the announcement on Thursday.
Mandela pushed South African from the dregs of apartheid in to democracy that was inclusive of all races. His struggles have been well documented as he endured almost three decades of imprisonment by the White majority. Somehow, he was able to simultaneously prevent a South African Civil War and evolve into an international symbol of peace.
He would go on to become South Africa’s first Black president.
“The time for the healing of the wounds has come,” he said in his acceptance speech in 1994. “The moment to bridge the chasms that divide us has come. We have, at last, achieved our political emancipation.”
Mandela has amassed innumerable awards and he won the Nobel Peace Prize in 1993, one of his many accolades. AllHipHop will continue to commemorate the life and times of Nelson Mandela.
The Hip-Hop community was no exception to the mourning felt for the icon and many used social media to express their feelings.
REST IN POWER TO THE GREAT NELSON MANDELA!
— allhiphopcom (@allhiphopcom) December 5, 2013
RIP to a true warrior?????????????????????????????????? MANDELA THE KING?? http://t.co/Dej89A8cIt
— SWIZZ BEATZ (@THEREALSWIZZZ) December 5, 2013
RIP 2 ONE OF OUR LAST TRULY GREAT KINGS AND GOD OF OUR UNIVERSE, THE LATE GREAT NELSON MANDELA!!! I WILL 4EVER LOVE U GREAT MAN & GREAT MIND
— Busta Rhymes (@BustaRhymes) December 5, 2013
Thank you Nelson Mandela. All the best on your transition.
— Nasir Jones (@Nas) December 5, 2013
A true fighter in every sense of the word… MANDELA!
— QTip (@QtipTheAbstract) December 5, 2013
The mission to FREE Mandela was woven into the blueprint of PublicEnemy using RAP & Hip Hop to recognize THIS MAN RIP pic.twitter.com/HEcYZVpPtr
— Chuck D (@MrChuckD) December 5, 2013
Nelson Mandela. What a difference one person can make. #RestEternally
— LL COOL J (@llcoolj) December 5, 2013
#NelsonMandela you made your people proud!! We'll always love you for it!
— Rihanna (@rihanna) December 5, 2013
What a heroic, beautiful life Mandela lived. Rest in peace.
— John Legend (@johnlegend) December 5, 2013
R.I.P Nelson Mandela sad thing is that alot of ya'll myself included wont fully understand his importance until the movie comes out
— TROY AVE NYC (@TroyAve) December 5, 2013
Madiba. Not just your own nation, but the WORLD mourns your passing. Let us celebrate a life of sacrifices & strengths that changed us all.
— LIFE WITH JEANNIE (@JeanGreasy) December 5, 2013
We cut our teeth as 80s student activists demanding the UofR divest of companies doing business in S Africa. Mandela: an early inspiration.
— Bakari Kitwana (@therealbakari) December 5, 2013
Nelson Mandela. Farewell soldier! pic.twitter.com/5wHCBPlcMd
— Willie D (@WillieDLIVE) December 5, 2013
Mandela was a warrior and an inspiration #RIP
— Black Thought (@blackthought) December 5, 2013
Rest peacefully Mr. Mandela. Your strength & determination will forever inspire.
— Wendy Williams (@WendyWilliams) December 5, 2013
So very saddened to hear of Nelson Mandela's passing. His struggle will never be forgotten.
— ⭐Jill Scott⭐ (@missjillscott) December 5, 2013
A good head and a good heart are always a formidable combination.
Nelson Mandela
— Charlamagne Tha God (@cthagod) December 5, 2013
RIP NELSON MANDELA DIED AT 95 BUT I WISH HE COULD'VE MADE IT 122 AND GOT THOSE 27 YEARS BACK TAKEN… http://t.co/txEkHYSuwV
— Crooked I (@CrookedIntriago) December 5, 2013
Mandela stood for justice and truth!! Today the world lost a beautiful soul, fighter and true KING!! #RIPMandela http://t.co/Y6hCvwk49u
— Diddy (@iamdiddy) December 5, 2013
Nelson Mandela was the embodiment of discipline, courage, love and forgiveness. "There is no future without forgiveness"-@NelsonMandela
— Mike Tyson (@MikeTyson) December 5, 2013
Ice-T Nelson Mandela rap. > Prepared to die "RIP MANDELA " http://t.co/ngTPdsuqRP via @youtube
— ICE T (@FINALLEVEL) December 5, 2013
MANDELA!!!!! May God Bless that angel!!! Thank You for all that you have done for MANKIND!!!! REST IN… http://t.co/FLNdyBsGST
— D-dot (@DDotAngelettie) December 5, 2013
RIP Nelson Mandela not many Sacrifice & Struggle for the Freedom of others, You are Appreciated, & Your life will be Celebrated!!
— Treach (@triggertreach) December 5, 2013
RIP Nelson Mandela the world will never forget your importance and impacted to mankind. RIP
— Shane Mosley (@SugarShaneM) December 5, 2013
R.I.P Nelson Mandela…I'm in Cape Town right now..u can feel his absence in the air..
— Robert Glasper (@robertglasper) December 5, 2013
ON MY RECENT TRIP TO SOUTH AFRICA I HAD THE PLEASURE OF LEARNING ALOT OF STUFF I DIDNT KNO ABOUT MANDELA AS WELL… http://t.co/y7q1ZYHmR3
— LIL JON (@LilJon) December 5, 2013
Rip Nelson Mandela gone but never forgotten.
— Tony Yayo (@TonyYayo) December 5, 2013
(AllHipHop News) After hinting that a collaboration was coming, Justin Bieber officially announced on Twitter today that the next song in his #MusicMondays series will be a cut featuring Chance The Rapper. The contender for Hip Hop’s rookie of the year will join Biebz on a new tune called “Confident.”
[ALSO READ: Justin Bieber & Chance The Rapper Hint At Upcoming Collaborations]
Are you ready? My new single #Confident featuring @chancetherapper Sunday at Midnight http://t.co/TlR8W93Z0Z
— Justin Bieber (@justinbieber) December 5, 2013
@justinbieber it almost feels like a holiday.
— Chance The Rapper (@chancetherapper) December 5, 2013
Chance has worked with several high-profile artists this year. He has appeared on songs with Lil Wayne (“You Love”), Joey Bada$$ (“Wendy n Becky”), and Childish Gambino (“The Worst Guys”). His own Acid Rap mixtape is be heralded as one of the year’s best project by music critics.
[ALSO CHECK OUT: Childish Gambino Ft. Chance The Rapper “The Worst Guys”]
(AllHipHop News) Young Money recording artist Drake is giving back to a local Philadelphia high school by promising to build a brand new recording studio for students aspiring to becoming performers. The “Started From The Bottom” rapper surprised kids at Strawberry Mansion High School with the announcement during a taping of an ABC News special.
[ALSO READ: Drake Announces He’s Teaming With The Jordan Brand (VIDEO/PICS)]
“In the next few months I’m building a recording studio inside your school,” Drake told the students. “This about you. This about your principal. This about your future. I love you. I care about you. I want to see you succeed.”
Strawberry Mansion was featured on a World News with Diane Sawyer special report in May. The “Hidden America” segment covered the school’s principal Linda Cliatt-Wayman, faculty, and students in a what was dubbed “one of the most dangerous high schools in America.” Sawyer returned to SMHS to do an update on the school’s progress and brought Drake along to speak with the students.
[ALSO READ:Meek Mill Gives Back To Philly With “A Dreamchaser’s Thanksgiving”]
Watch footage of Drake speaking with students from Strawberry Mansion below.
(AllHipHop Features) In part 2 of AllHipHop.com’s interview with Skyzoo the Brooklyn emcee shares his thoughts on one of the topics that has consumed New York City Hip Hop over the past month – Trinidad James’ “South Runs New York” rant. While Sky points out that the Atlanta-based rapper was “disrespectful” for making those statements in NYC, he also contends some of the blame for a speech like that to even happen falls on the city itself.
Besides the dust up over Trinidad, Skyzoo also discusses his views on New York’s rising generation of rap stars, why the somewhat common practice of “ghostwriting” stays hidden in Hip Hop, and what his beloved New York Knicks can do to turn the franchise around. And be sure to go back and check out part 1 of AHH’s Q&A where Sky gives details about his latest project with Antman Wonder An Ode To Reasonable Doubt.
Being from Brooklyn, what’s your opinion on Trinidad James’ recent comments about the south running New York?
I think a lot of people may have taken it out of context. First of all, the fact that someone would come up here and speak like that in New York just shows where we are as New Yorkers sadly. I don’t think you can go to any other city or region and do that. And that’s not to start a Hip Hop war, but if you go to certain cities and regions they’re not having that, but it seems like in New York we’re okay with that. We allow that for some reason.
Why do you think that is?
Identity crisis. I look at other regions who weren’t running Hip Hop before, but now they run it. Look at the South or the West Coast or the Midwest, whether they were winning as far as the popular consensus in Hip Hop or not, they never lost who they were. When L.A. was winning they were L.A. When they were quiet they were still L.A. The South started running it, and they were still the South. When we were running it we were New York. When we stopped running it we became whoever was running it. That’s the problem. That’s the identity crisis right there. So you’re raising up a generation that doesn’t know how to be New Yorkers.
There are a lot of reasons for that. You can look at the media. You can look at the radio. You can look at TV. We became that to survive. We said, “oh they don’t want this. We got to survive so we gonna sound like Atlanta or Houston or L.A.” Whereas with these other regions they said we may not be winning in the grand scheme of things, but we’re winning where we’re from. We’ll survive until it’s our time. That’s why they were able to still have an identity. L.A. never sounded like the South. Down South never sounded like New York. New York is the only city where cats can say there was a time where heads sounded like they were from over here or down there. We’re the only ones who copped out and did that.
It’s not everybody. You have a lot of artists that stood tall and made New York music. Myself, Torae and Stimuli, Fred The Godson, Mysonne, Maino, obviously The Lox, Troy Ave, French Montana. They’re a lot of artists who stood tall and made New York music regardless.
Going back to Trinidad, obviously it was crazy for him to say that here, but when he’s talking about rap he’s right. It was disrespectful, but he’s right. If you listen to the radio in New York, it’s everything but New York. Now there is a little spurt where we’re gonna play some New York records cause he said that, but that will die in a month. It’s like when the Trayvon Martin case happened. Everybody was so militant for about a week after George Zimmerman was found not guilty. A week later everybody was back to being ratchet. It’s the same thing.
How do you feel about the younger generation of New York rappers?
I think it’s dope as long as heads are being authentic to themselves. It’s just about making the music that you can be proud of. No matter where you’re from. No matter what you listen to… I’m from New York born and raised, die-hard New Yorker, but at the same time I’m a fan of music from the south.
I think T.I.’s Trap Music was a classic. I love Scarface. He’s one of my top emcees ever. Storytelling is immaculate. He taught me how to tell stories. The same way Raekwon, Jay, Nas, and B.I.G. taught me. Andre 3000 is in my top 5 emcees ever. I grow up on Snoop the same way kids in Compton grew up on Snoop. It’s about keeping your identity of who you are while still showing love to everybody else.
But the new artists are dope. Anybody who’s making music that just reflects who they are, at the end of the day you can’t really ask for much more.
I have to ask. What’s going on with your Knicks?
Everything and nothing at the same time. I’m one of those guys that rides out regardless. I was a fan when they were trying to sell Chris Duhon jerseys. It’s rough times. The roster’s not put together right. Sometimes I feel like I’m a G.M., but who am I? I’m just a rapper/songwriter. I don’t run no team. [laughs] We gotta change that point guard situation. We gotta get another big body in there. A whole lot of pieces need to be put together.
I do feel like in a couple of years, if we don’t make any stupid moves between now and then, we could be something, because the cap will be wide open. Right now we’re dying off this Amar’e [Stoudemire] situation. We’re dying off these contracts we have on us.
Amar’e comes off the table, you offer LaMarcus Aldridge a nice deal, you put a couple of pieces together to get a [Rajon] Rondo in a year, now you’re dealing with something. You can’t do those things if you have Amar’e’s contract for this year and next year. It’s tough, and lord knows I talk so bad about The Nets. I hate that team.
Do you still follow the Hip Hop battle scene?
Somewhat. I do enjoy and respect it. I am a fan of it. I don’t watch every week when it’s a battle going on, but I feel like I know enough about who they are and what they’re doing. I know a good amount of them personally. Cortez is my man. Loaded Lux is my man. I know DNA, Charlie Clips. I’ve known Serius [Jones] for a while. I know [Math] Hoffa real well. I know a good amount of them just from coming up in the New York scene. Before the battle thing really popped we all knew each other just from the scene.
Your Twitter bio says “ghostwriter.” Have you written for any well-known rappers?
Yeah, I’ve helped people out, rap and R&B. That’s something I want to continue to do more. I just love to write stories and create music, so whether it’s me in front of the camera or me behind it, as long as the story I’ve created is being told I’m with that. That’s something I want to do well on into my career.
You mentioned you write for R&B artists too. I know lyricism is the core of Hip Hop, but people in the industry know that a lot of rappers work with others when it comes to writing. When you’re in the studio you bounce ideas of each other. Why are rappers so afraid to admit that they had a co-writer? R&B artists will say they didn’t write the entire song, but in Hip Hop you can’t say that you didn’t write every single syllable.
In R&B, job one is to be a great singer. Whether you can write or you can dance, all that stuff is additional. As long as you can sing you’re straight. No you can’t write, but it’s all good because if somebody writes that record for you and you can blow that through the roof with your harmonies or a certain cadence, that’s the job. With a rapper, we don’t sing. We don’t dance. It’s literally just about rapping. It’s like we’re having a three-point shooting contest and you can’t shoot. It becomes, “wait a minute. Why are you even here?” That’s why it’s so taboo and hidden under the table in Hip Hop.
Follow Skyzoo on Twitter @Skyzoo and Instagram @SkyzooTheWriter.
Stream/download Skyzoo and Antman Wonder’s An Ode To Reasonable Doubt below.
Jazze Pha may have a bigger issue that I originally suspected.
The transgendered individual seen in that pic…is running with the notion that is actually IS the Atlanta producer in that picture with him/her. So, the craziness continues. This time, the person allegedly in the picture with him antagonizes Jazze on the internet.
Peep what’s posted on Rhymes with Snitch:
Hip-Hop Rumors: Jazze Pha Deals With His Own Gay Rumors!

I don’t know, but I remember how Chingy got played a few years ago in a similar fashion. I’m thinking somebody’s just looking to get attention at the expense or expose of Jazze Pha. But, ain’t nothing like a transgendered scorned.
Oh yeah, an a lot of you comment dudes are chumps, probably in the closet ya damn self. You’ve exposed yourselves with your stupidity.
“They keep us talking, but if we stop talking about them then they should worry!” -illseed.
Illseed, Out.
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(AllHipHop News) The social media war between Chief Keef and Soulja Boy has a new chapter. Over half a year since their differences became public, Chief Keef took to his personal Twitter account to release Soulja Boy’s phone number.
Describing him as “Houlja H*e A*ss”, Keef tweeted what he alleges is Soulja Boy’s actual phone number to his 810,000+ followers:
Call Houlja Hoe Ass (240) 447-6760
— AlmightySo (@ChiefKeef) December 4, 2013
While this may seem out of line, it is actually consistent with the way Soulja Boy and Keef’s beef has transpired. In late April of 2013, Soulja Boy sent a series of threatening Facebook posts to Keef:

Soulja Boy later claimed his account was hacked, but not before Chief Keef responded in kind:

There is no word on what prompted Keef to revisit their beef by leaking Soulja Boy’s alleged phone number. Check out the pair’s collaboration, “Foreign Cars” below:
Tyree grabs a huge feature from Future, who barely takes a breath in his rapid-fire warbled out verse on the new remix to “F*ck Wit A Boss”. The singer dropped off the tagged version back in October, but has now offered the jam in its full CDQ glory. Turn Up!
via @djvip510
I doubt this is going to stop weed smokers from getting it in but researchers at the University of New Haven have found that mold, invisible to the naked eye, insect parts, salmonella and E. Coli could possible be in marijuana. These are just a few of the contaminants found.
Researchers are working fast to figure out a quality control solution, especially since weed is now legal in Colorado and Washington.
Via Huffington Post:
Although the Department of Justice announced that it will allow Colorado and Washington’s new recreational pot laws proceed, marijuana remains illegal under federal law and that means that government agencies like the Food and Drug Administration won’t oversee the testing and policing of the products.
So it’s up to the states to come up with a testing and certification process.
“It’s important for us to do it because it’s public safety and there’s no U.S. FDA oversight here,” said Randy Simmons, the Washington State Liquor Control Board project manager in charge of implementing Initiative 502 which legalized marijuana for recreational use, to NBC News. “Things that would be FDA rules don’t exist.”
Many states, including Washington and Colorado, already require quality control testing of marijuana.
“Through Colorado’s robust regulatory regime, marijuana businesses will soon be required to test their marijuana for potency and harmful contaminants such as mold, mildew, pesticides, and microbials,” Michael Elliott of the Medical Marijuana Industry Group told The Huffington Post. “These new testing regimes will help protect consumer safety, and ensure that marijuana being sold through the regulated businesses is far safer than marijuana being sold through the black market.”
The 136-page rule book for the retail marijuana industry in Colorado has detailed instructions regarding quality control and contaminant tests including testing for molds, mildew, herbicides, pesticides, fungicides and general filth along with labeling that states the results of those tests and if they were performed.
Labels will also detail the potency of a marijuana product and the compounds that are contained therein.
“By regulating marijuana and requiring that it conform to reasonable standards we can ensure it does not present any undue harm to consumers,” Mason Tvert, communications director for Marijuana Policy Project and key backer of Colorado’s marijuana legalizing Amendment 64, said to HuffPost. “It makes little sense to force marijuana into the underground market where we are virtually guaranteeing it will not be tested.”
Moldy marijuana is nothing new. Back in 2009, marijuana industry blog Spark Report wrote that finding mold on marijuana is actually quite common. “Anyone who has smoked marijuana more than a couple times has most likely inhaled mold spores from marijuana,” the blog states. “That may sound alarming, however its important to remember that you are likely to inhale the same or similar mold spores while taking a walk in the park. The most common type of mold, Aspergillus, occurs naturally in almost everything in nature.”
Moldy marijuana can cause respiratory or other flu-like symptoms in some people. Another concern is that several of the chemicals applied to pot plants are intended only for lawns and other non-edibles but Medical cannabis samples collected in Los Angeles have been found to contain pesticide residues at levels 1600 times the legal digestible amount.
Since weed is primarily inhaled rather than eaten, the toxins it carries get into the lungs and blood stream much faster.
(AllHipHop News) Kanye West is planning on giving more with less. During his interview at Art Basel in Miami, Kanye explained the reasoning behind planning to make an 8-track album, how he tricked the world to think he was a rapper and more.
As part of Surface Magazine’s Design Dialogues talk series, Kanye explained that his hightened ambitions to be apart of the high-end design world as his reasoning for making both Yeezus and his upcoming new album relatively short:
It’s just reducing down the amount of information that you need. People say a design is the point where you can’t take anything else away. [Yeezus] was very, very designed. I took a departure from radio and popular music in order to get this seat here. If I hadn’t made Yeezus, I wouldn’t be sitting here with this cool font at Basel right here.
Kanye has said on numerous occasions that Rick Rubin’s involvement in the making of Yeezus was instrumental due to his skills of reduction. In an interview with The Daily Beast, Rubin explained how and why he reduced Yeezus:
Initially, he thought there were going to be 16 songs on the album. But that first day, before he even asked me to work on it, I said, ‘Maybe you should make it more concise. Maybe this is two albums. Maybe this is just the first half,’ to which Kanye excitedly said, ‘That’s what I came here today to hear! It could be 10 songs!’
The next single from Yeezus is set to be “Blood on the Leaves”.
Kris Jenner created quite the stir when pictures surfaced of she and former Bachelor contestant Ben Flajnik out and about. Of course, people assumed that the pair was dating but apparently that isn’t the case (allegedly). Flajnik spoke to PEOPLE about the situation and said they are nothing more than friends.
“She’s a beautiful, smart woman. Kris is a very, very dear friend of mine. We are not dating, we’re just working on a couple of projects together, so that’s why we’ve been seen a lot as of late,” he said.
In this day and age, people blow everything out of proportion so maybe he’s telling the truth. It’s just so easy to believe given Kris Jenner’s high potential for cougar status.