Azealia Banks Claims She Is The Female Kanye West

(AllHipHop News) Azealia Banks and Kanye West definitely have two things in common. They are both performers, and they both are not afraid to hold their tongue. According to Banks their connection goes even deeper than that. In a recent interview with Elle magazine, the Harlem native shares her belief that she and Kanye best represent experimental art in Hip Hop.

[ALSO CHECK OUT: Lola Monroe Ft. Azealia Banks “Dark Red Lipstick”]

“Kanye and I are like the same person but boy and girl. We’re pulling from the same cloud, the same inspiration,” said Banks. “We’re the two premier avant gardists in Hip Hop music. It’s just me and him. I think our consciousnesses are swirling around each other in some weird kind of way.”

Banks first made waves with her single “212” in 2011. She has since released the EP 1991 and mixtape Fantasea. Her debut studio album Broke with Expensive Taste was originally scheduled for release in 2012. It is now set to drop at the beginning of 2014.

[ALSO READ: Hip-Hop Rumors: Did Azealia Banks Pop Up A  NYC Burlesque Show?]

TDE’S Isaiah Rashad Says Debut Mixtape “Cilvia” Dropping Soon

(AllHipHop News) Top Dawg Entertainment’s newest emcee is ready share his musical contributions with the world. Isaiah Rashad announced that his debut mixtape Cilvia will be available in December.

[ALSO CHECK OUT: Myspace’s ONETWOWATCH: Isaiah Rashad]

Expectations for the Tennessee rapper’s project will be high seeing that he is following fellow TDE artists Kendrick Lamar, Schoolboy Q, Jay Rock, and Ab-Soul, all of which have released well-received projects over the last few years.

Speaking of the rest of the roster, fans should expect new works from Schoolboy, Ab, and fellow newcomer SZA by the end of the year as well. TDE’s president Terrence “Punch” Henderson revealed last month that the label is looking to drop projects from all three in the coming weeks.

[ALSO READ: TDE President Says Schoolboy Q, Ab-Soul & SZA Projects May Drop This Year]

 Watch video of Isaiah Rashad announcing Cilvia below.

Chief Keef Says He Has Grown Up (VIDEO)

(AllHipHop News) It has been a trying few months for 18-year-old rapper Chief Keef. After an arrest for speeding in May the Chicago native was recently ordered to perform community service at a horse center, and he will soon be admitted to a rehab for drug use. While the headlines kept coming, Keef was mostly silent on the matters publicly, until now.

[ALSO READ: Chief Keef Ordered To Clean & Feed Horses As Community Service]

TMZ caught up with the “I Don’t Like” performer to ask him about his rehab stint, community service assignment, and if he has changed. According to Keef, he is a new, more mature person now.

“I growed up,” Keef tells the pap before correcting his grammar.

This is not the first time Keef has proclaimed that he altered his life choices. In February his manager relayed at message from Keef that he had a “wake-up” call while serving time in juvenile detention.

[ALSO READ: Chief Keef’s Manager Defends Troubled Rapper, Says He’s Had A “Wake-up Call”]

 Watch the TMZ video below.

Daily Word: Are you willing to make the Sacrifice?

Happy Veterans Day my soldiers and survivors! Welcome to the day we give thanks to those who selflessly fight for the freedoms that we enjoy daily! Today’s Daily Word is dedicated to sacrifice! Just as a soldier is willing to give up everything for something they believe in, should be the way we are willing to give up good to get to great! Many of us live so routine within our comfort zones that even if what we are doing is not what makes us happy we are unwilling to make the sacrifice in order to live in bliss! What we need to realize is that a life lived in fear is not a life lived at all! Stop being afraid of what might or might not happen! You must always match your actions with your desires! Stop saying you want something but then not be willing to sacrifice what it takes to actually attain it! You are in total control of your life and your happiness! Be courageous and live the life that you deserve!! Be willing to make the sacrifice!

-Ash’Cash

“There is no easy shortcut to anywhere worth going. You must be willing to make sacrifices. It’s a process!”
-Suman Rai

“The ones that have the courage to make the sacrifice, are the DREAM builders of tomorrow.”
-Ritu Ghatourey

“Your success is determined by what you are willing to sacrifice for it.”
-Unknown

“Don’t be afraid of letting go. You may lose something good, but you might gain something even better.”
-Unknown

“A wise man once said you can have anything in life, if you sacrifice everything else for it. What he meant is, nothing comes without a price. So before you go into battle you better decide how much you’re willing to lose.”
-Bernajoy Vaal

“A beautiful life does not just happen, it is built daily by prayer, humility, sacrifice and hard work.”
-Unknown

“Success comes hard, but its worth all the sacrifices.”
-Aruho Marwin

“If it’s meant for you, you won’t have to beg for it…you will never have to sacrifice your dignity for your destiny.”
-Ritu Ghatourey

TO HEAR THE AUDIO VERSION OF THE DAILY WORD **CLICK HERE

Ash’Cash is a Business Consultant, Motivational Speaker, Financial Expert and the author of Mind Right, Money Right: 10 Laws of Financial Freedom. For more information, please visit his website, www.IamAshCash.com

The Wake Up Show Unplugged Drops Two More Dope Artists [VIDEO]

As we’ve previously reported, King Tech, Sway and DJ Revolution have been dropping phenomenal videos of emerging artists over the last few weeks and this week is no exception! The World Famous Wake Up Show recently created a Hip Hop experience like none other. They took Grammy Award Winning musicians who had never played together before and paired them with emerging Hip Hop artists. The result was a day of Hip Hop genius.  They are finally rolling out the videos from that amazing day and AllHipHop.com has got the exclusives! 

Okay so first up this week is an artist that we’ve been writing about forever both for work that he’s done within his group the Brown Bag AllStars and for his solo joints as well. As one of the most sought after up and coming producers in New York City at the moment, this kid is shaking the underground scene by the shoulders and awaking the masses to his abilities in a major way. Audible Doctor is versatile as you will see in the video and his rhyme scheme and flow are the cross-roads where verbal adeptness and cleverness meet. His punishment for every word spit is corporal as he kills each verse with no remorse. And just to show you how much he wanted to be a part of King Tech and Sway’s Unplugged project…the guy spit his verse while dealing with the an awful case of the flu! Take a look below!

 

 

Next up is Chris Young who took the room by surprise when he stepped up to the mic. Don’t let his smile fool you into thinking there isn’t poison about to be spit from his lips! This kid is unassuming but when he grabs a microphone it’s curtains on the kindness as he is about to murder every lyric in the song. His abilities to spit his truth and to share his story are nothing short of genuine gifts. He’s able to take it to a place of no return! Check him out!

 

 

Well there you go! Two very different and very dope performances! Through the coming weeks there will be even more of them so stay tuned!

Check out www.wakeupshow.com  for new updates on both the “Wake Up Show Unplugged” project and to keep up with Tech, Sway and Rev about what’s going on with their show on Sirius XM/ Shade 45! You can also follow them on Twitter at @wakeupshow. Don’t forget to tune in Monday nights, Shade 45 on Sirius XM at 8 PM ET/ 5 PM PT!

Jay Z’s “Made In America” Doc Headed To Theaters

(AllHipHop News) Jay Z’s documentary Made In America will soon be shown in theaters nationwide. Phase 4 Films acquired the North American rights to the film and plan for its theatrical run to begin in 2014.

The Ron Howard directed movie gives a behind-the-scenes view of the inaugural edition of Jay’s Made In America Festival held in Philadelphia. The film featured artists at the event like Tyler, The Creator, Run-D.M.C., Janelle Monae, and Rita Ora sharing their thoughts about the festival. Clips of performances were also cut throughout the movie.

Made In America debuted in the Mavericks section at the 2013 Toronto International Film Festival and it premiered on television on Showtime in October.

[ALSO READ: Jay Z’s Made In America Festival Documentary To Premiere At Toronto Film Festival]

Watch the trailer for the film below.

Jhené Aiko Feat. Kendrick Lamar – “Stay Ready”

(AllHipHop) Jhené Aiko taps long time collaborator Kendrick Lamar for the cut “Stay Ready” off her debut EP. Aiko’s Sail Out is scheduled for release tomorrow (11/12).

[ALSO READ: Jhené Aiko Announces Release Date For Debut “Sail Out” EP]

via

DJ Infamous – Double Cup feat. Jeezy, Ludacris, Juicy J, The Game & Yung Berg

Young Jeezy, Ludacris, Juicy J, The Game and Yung Berg get recruited by DJ Infamous for this lean anthem called “Double Cup.” Features production from KE On The Track.

RZA Says Raekwon Holding Up Wu-Tang Album, Raekwon Finds That Funny

(AllHipHop News) Wu-Tang Clan was founded on a brotherhood of men who developed a real life fraternity that translated into some of the most cohesive group albums ever. 20 years after their seminal debut album Enter The 36 Chambers, founding members of the group can not agree on why a new Wu Tang Clan album has not manifested yet.

In a recent interview with ESPN’s Grantland posted on Friday (November 8th), RZA explained that while a few members have put in time working on the album, the hold up on the new Wu Tang Clan album attests to fragmented efforts:

You know, I give Cappadonna credit, he’s been really on it. U-God has been present. Masta Killa be representing. Inspectah Deck has been somewhat present. Ghost has been, you know, 20 percent present. And Raekwon hasn’t shown up at all. When you look at somebody like Masta Killa and U-God, they seem to have that original hunger to complete the legacy. I respect that everybody [is] busy with they own lives. I started with a plan that I thought would work. Now maybe my plan not working.

Raekwon responded to these claims the following day (November 9th) by taking to his personal Twitter account to laugh it off and insinuate that RZA is lying:

These turn of events may be disheartening to fans but should not be shocking given RZA and Raekwon’s recent comments about each other in the news. When Raekwon and Ghostface failed to appear at a few Rock The Bells dates with their Wu Tang brethren, RZA informed HipHopDX in September that this was happening because the pair were “bullsh*tting”:

There’s no reason for them not to be here. But the beautiful thing is, ‘Okay, you’re not here, but guess what: we’re bringing the technology of [Ol’ Dirty Bastard] on your a*s.

Raekwon shed more light on what he believes is holding up a new Wu Tang Clan album on MTV’s RapFix back in February alluding to unsatisfactory business arrangements as being a central cause of the album’s delay:

I just want everything to be right, the business. When we made a lot of our great music, it was because we were in harmony. You cannot put guys together if there is no harmony, and on top of it, we’re doing business. As a man with children, I have to always look at that. It’s bigger than sometimes just the thought of it, the fact of it, it just gotta make sense.

[ALSO CHECK OUT: Ticket Giveaway: ODB Dirty: Platinum Edition Screening Event #BDayODBContes]

The entire Wu Tang Clan is expected to be in attendance at the screening of the Ol Dirty Bastard documentary Dirty: Platinum Edition at Brooklyn Historic Academy of Music on November 15th.

Drake Previews “Worst Behaviour” In New Orleans

(AllHipHop News) One of the dopest song on Drake’s latest album is “Worst Behaviour” and the Canadian has decided to make a video for it, which he previewed in New Orleans.

The video has been shared on various social networks, eventually making its way to Youtube.

In the video, Drake is seen in the gritty streets of New Orleans spitting grimy lyrics with cameo appearances by his father Dennis Graham, Turk, Juicy J, and Project Pat.

Check out the preview below.

DMX’s Bankruptcy Filing Thrown Out Of Court Over Inconsistencies; Wife Says Rapper Spent $40 Million

(AllHipHop News) Legal issues continue to dog rapper DMX, whose bankruptcy filing was just thrown out of court.

The rapper has been prohibited from filing for bankruptcy for another 18 months, meaning he is exposed to almost $1.8 million worth of debt owed to creditors.

According to the presiding judge, DMX has failed to provide accurate information about his financial status.

The judge cited the rapper for providing inconsistent documents and untrustworthy information regarding his financial affairs.

DMX’s wife Tashera Simmons was recently interviewed on The Breakfast Club on New York’s Power 105.1 to promote her new book “Finding Tashera,” which details her relationship with DMX.

During the interview, Tashera revealed that DMX had earned and spent over $40 million during the course of his career.

At one point, the rapper was shelling out over $100,000 a month in miscellaneous expenses, including credit cards.

“He used to spend recklessly. When I told him I didn’t want to be with him anymore because of all of the stuff that was going on, he said ‘well I’m gonna see how you’re going to live without any money’ and I thought he was playing. I called the accountant and said ‘the mortgage hasn’t been paid’ and she said ‘you got to take that up with your husband.’ Only because I had a stash that I put away is the only reason I refuse to kiss his butt to take care of me.”

DMX’s representatives said they are working with the rapper to book more shows, as well as resolve his issues with his passport, so he can take advantage of an international tour.

Check out the interview below (finances are discussed at 22:20):

Hip-Hop Rumors: Gucci Mane Ain’t Gonna Like Who Rick Ross Is With!

Oh snap! Looks like Rick Ross took a little page out of 50 Cent’ black book on “get back.” Why? Because, most recently, and I mean a few minutes ago, was seen with Keyshia Ka’oir, Gucci Mane’s hot ex-girlfriend. I never knew how Gucci got her in the first place. But, when Gucci went nuts, he talked trash about a lot of people – including his own damn girl. That didn’t go over well and Gucci was extremely apologetic after he sobered up. “Keyshia Dior Kaoir I’m sorry. Please forgive me,” he pleaded on Twitter. But Keyshia Ka’oir got her own and she’s a boss in her own right if you know her story.

Well, she’s linked up with Rick Ross and, they look pretty cozy. There may not being anything crazy going on, but the affiliation alone is tragic for Gucci’s soul.

Damn.

She posted this one:

“They keep us talking, but if we stop talking about them then they should worry!” -illseed.

Illseed, Out.

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Email illseed rumors: ki*********@***il.com

Kanye’s Confederate Flag: I Sorta, Kinda Understand.

As someone who walks around rockin’ a fitted-cap with the letters C.O.O.N.—I sorta, kinda understand Kanye’s Confederate flag. I think its peachy-keen how black folk have snatched the ratchetness & wretchedness from the jaws of oppression and flip-da-script on such derogatory words as the N-word (and made a soul food faire of shitlins pig intestines.) Kanye West has a lot of people peeved over his Confederate flag—and rightly so!

Every evil, vile and despicable thing can be said about the Confederate flag. Most of us know what it stood for and stands for. Indeed, Kanye West knows its history, although he hasn’t really expounded on the origins other than to say, “You know, the Confederate flag represented slavery in a way—that’s my abstract take on what I know about it… So I took the Confederate flag and made it my flag! It’s my flag! Now what are you going to do?”

“In a way?” One would think that Kanye would really get down to the nitty-gritty and not talk in “abstraction” about a symbol so hurtful—you know, put some intellectual mustard on his Confederate flag sammach! As we have it, Kanye has found a new toy and wants us to know that it’s his! But Kanye is not the first rapper to don the Confederate flag. He is doing no new thing, save selling it for profit. Rappers Pastor Troy, David Banner and Outkast once waved the Confederate flag, but theirs was more in protest of the southern way of life. Kanye’s appears self-serving. Kanye is marketing and selling the Confederate flag.

But now, let’s kick da ballistics! The Confederate flag and Betsy Ross’s stars & stripes American flag were birthed at the same time and represented identical ideologies in their founding. Say what? Say word! Both flags held sway over an African people for 89 years! (1776-1865) Under both flags slavery persisted! Like the Confederate states in the Antebellum South under President Jefferson Davis, the North promulgated “That Peculiar Institution” (slavery) as well. It was only when the North became more industrial that the slave question began to be of importance. Unlike the agrarian South, which needed slaves to yield crops and work farmland, the North outgrew its use of the slave in vast numbers.

Don’t get it twisted! My point? Northerners were no less racist.

Both flags did us wrong, yet we haven’t taken the stars & stripes to task as we have done with the Confederate flag. We are taught to “pledge allegiance to the flag of the United States of America,” but what we are not told is that that same Republic gave no f#### about us either! Abraham Lincoln aka “The Great Emancipator” was no friend of the Colored race. I know they taught you that he “freed the slaves,” but that just wasn’t the case. Lincoln was no humanitarian as we were lead to believe when we were children. Black freedom came second only to saving the Union. In an August 1862 letter to his good friend Horace Greeley Lincoln wrote:

“If there be those who would not save the Union, unless they could at the same time save slavery, I do not agree with them. If there be those who would not save the Union unless they could at the same time destroy slavery, I do not agree with them. My paramount object in this struggle is to save the Union, and is not either to save or to destroy slavery. If I could save the Union without freeing any slave I would do it, and if I could save it by freeing all the slaves I would do it; and if I could save it by freeing some and leaving others alone I would also do that. What I do about slavery and the colored race, I do because I believe it helps to save the Union; and what I forbear, I forbear because I do not believe it would help to save the Union.”

I bet your high school history teacher didn’t let you read this! The hell? (Lincoln “freeing” the slaves to save the Union is akin to the ancient Jewish priests forbidding homosexuality to save Israelite religion. Think on it!)

Taking things a step further and proving that The North and their stars & stripes were just as fraudulent as the Confederate, in 1863 Lincoln signed the “Emancipation Proclamation”—the document that supposedly ended slavery, but oh contraire! Lincoln’s document only freed the slaves that were under Southern Confederate rule—south of the Mason-Dixon Line. That document did not (I repeat!) did not free the slaves under Union control! And since President Jefferson (Yes! America had two sitting presidents at the same time!) in the Souf was god, the Emancipation Proclamation was no more than a piece of toilet paper parchment used for wiping one’s ass! It held no weight in the South, thus, later on after the Union won the Civil War Lincoln passed the 13th Amendment, the document which finally ended physical slavery.

But now, get this! Did you know that there were black slaves that fought on the side of the South? Did you know that, like Kanye West’s Confederate flag-wearin’ ass, there were blacks who saw no other way to exist other than helping the Confederate keep a foot on their necks and a boot in their a####? Somewhere between 65,000 to 100,000 blacks fought on the side of the Confederate army where some 13,000 black combatants “saw the elephant” (actually fought).

Can you imagine fighting on the battlefield of freedom only to run up on a fellow slave who’s down with the oppressor? Perhaps that’s a n#### that needs to die (in my humble opinion).

Kanye West is not an original type—not back then or today! Black folk have been intimately entangled in the Confederate flag from the beginning. The question that we want to understand is what is Kanye’s motivation? Is this for show? Is he trying to stimulate a national debate on race? Why are you really wearing the Confederate flag? Are you really trying to put this symbol into the gumbo pot of n#####, coon, and chitlins?

I understand where Kanye might be coming from! How ever deplorable, white folk don’t own any word! Yes! You meant harm when you used it–you meant harm when you waved it, but I’m claiming the word and the symbol and taking the power from it! Give me that s###!

Like my word C.O.O.N., which is an acronym for “Consciously Optimistic, Overtly Nihilistic.” It is the philosophy of questioning, deconstructing & ridding one’s self of antiquated, archaic and outdated thinking–and not merely a word for shock value. Nothing is definitive, concrete or finite! Everything is subjective & debatable!

If nothing more, Kanye West is reppin’ for those 100,000 Southern slaves who were down for the Confederate, but I would hope that Kanye is a teacher, because, I sorta, kinda understand his intentions.

Khalil Amani is a blogger for AllHipHop. He also writes for DJ Kay Slay’s Originators Magazine & Straight Stuntin Magazine. Amani also writes for Hoodgrown, Maybach and Sext Magazines. He is the author of six books, including the ground-breaking book, “Hip-Hop Homophobes…” iuniverse.com 07). Amani is gay hip-hop’s self-proclaimed straight advocate. Visit The Coonerific One at http://www.khalilamani.ning.com Follow on Facebook/Twitter @khalilamani. Youtube @ yahweh 12 Kh*********@***oo.com

A Tale Of Two Classics: Enter The Wu-Tang And A Tribe Called Quest’s “Midnight Marauders”

On this day, 20 years ago, two classic albums were released that represent the vast diversity of Hip-Hop. Wu-Tang Clan dropped Enter the Wu-Tang: 36 Chambers on November 9, 1993 and A Tribe Called Quest released their third, and most successful album, Midnight Marauders on the same day. At the time, Wu Tang was kicking in the doors of opportunity, taking the music industry by storm with an unprecedented 9-man crew.

Exclusive Interview: RZA Talks, Rock The Bells, ODB Hologram And 20 Years Of Wu Tang!

On the other side, A Tribe Called Quest crystallized their genius and commercial viability with their third opus. Lead by the hit single “Award Tour,” the album would go on to achieve platinum success and fill the Hip-Hop Nation with positive vibes. Wu Tang repped the streets of Staten Island, an unlikely place to expand Hip-Hop, and brought forth a rawness unseen previously in Hip-Hop. Gritty, unmastered beats, a wild, fearsome crew and a marital arts theme all made Wu Tang special. A Tribe Called Quest’s Midnight Marauders would symbolize something else for them: their last great album.

AllHipHop.com 15 Year Anniversary Concert Recap With Raekwon, Prodigy & Ghostface Killah!

Pay homage to both albums by listening to them in their entirety below.

Midnight Marauders:

Enter the Wu-Tang: 36 Chambers:

 

Flo Rida – “How I Feel”

Flo Rida drops his new single for “How I Feel”. Look for him this Thursday on the Jay Leno show with fellow POE Boy artist, J Rand .STREAM it here : https://soundcloud.com/atlanticrecords/flo-rida-how-i-feel

Download on iTunes: smarturl.it/howifeelitunes

Dr. Boyce & Yvette: 8 Reasons Don Lemon Needs to Be Fired from CNN

________________
The views and opinions expressed herein are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views of AllHipHop.com. This editorial originally appeared on www.yourblackworld.net.
_________________

Here’s the deal: We have a serious problem with Don Lemon. Not that he was ever all that likeable in the past, but to us, he was just fine as another talking head on TV. But when he somehow decided to provide impromptu black social commentary, we became saddened and disgusted by the way he used his platform to spread half-truths about the black community. Don might be more equipped to criticize the gay or journalistic communities, but going after black people has become a fashion statement.

So, let’s be clear – Don Lemon needs to be fired from CNN. There have been a long line of black faces removed from the network in recent months, including Soledad O’Brien, Tony Harris, Roland Martin and TJ Holmes, yet the only black face that is regularly featured on the network is the guy who enjoys chopping off the heads of black people with a smile on his face. Sorry, but we just won’t stand for it. Don’s defense of the Stop & Frisk program, which has violated the civil rights of thousands of New Yorkers, was the straw that broke the Lemon’s back.

Here are 8 reasons that CNN needs to turn Lemon into lemonade and pour his sorry behind out into the street:

1) Because he just might be a racist: People think that you can’t be a racist when you’re black. But if you work for white people and use your blackness as a tool to oppress and attack people who look like you, you are akin to the Uncle Tom in Django Unchained who hated black people more than white people do. So, Don Lemon could likely be a mild mannered version of Samuel L. Jackson’s character.

2) Because he is being used as a token: If a white guy were to say the same things that Lemon has been saying, he would never be considered to be an objective journalist. But for some reason, people think that when Lemon opens his mouth, he is allowed to sport his “negro license” as a Get-out-of-jail-free card for any ignorant thing he might say. No white guy on CNN would ever dare to say the things that Lemon says on a weekly basis.

3) Because he has lost all credibility as an objective journalist: Whatever happened to the days when a journalist reported objective news? Lemon’s diatribes make him sound more like a less intelligent version of Rush Limbaugh than a CNN anchor. Maybe he should spend his time bashing gays the way he goes after blacks. Oh, that’s right…you can’t criticize gay people on CNN, at least not the way they go after blacks.

4) Because his analysis is simple-minded: Don Lemon analyzes race in ways that would make a third-grader blush. He rarely says anything truly insightful, it just comes off as a repetition of what people are saying on Fox News. Is that what CNN wants? A Fox News parrot?

5) Because he’s (ignorant) naïve enough to think that Stop and Frisk is a good policy: Don doesn’t back up his support for the ineffective program with actual data, just the meanderings of a confused black man. Stop and Frisk has been proven in one study after another to NOT be a deterrent to crime and only serves to increase the amount of terrorism that citizens must endure at the hands of the NYPD. But, for some reason, Don Lemon thinks the program is a good one.

6) Because he’s turned CNN into the Circus News Network: Sure, Lemon has gotten people talking, but at what expense? Anderson Cooper, another CNN brand from the gay community, has been consistent, fair, intelligent and reliable. Don Lemon has been consistently auditioning for a role on Def Comedy Jam. If we’re going to criticize the buffoonery that might appear in a Tyler Perry film, then we should also speak up about the educated buffoonery that sometimes occurs when talking heads yap about things they don’t understand.

7) Because he’s a hypocrite: Right after Don expressed his passionate support for the NYPD’s Stop and Frisk program, it was revealed that Don himself sued after being the victim of racial profiling. So, while Don is asking the black community to sit back and take it, he feels that respectable negroes like himself should not be followed around like a common “n***er.”

8) Because he is spending less time elevating CNN’s brand than his own: Does Don Lemon work for CNN or for himself? Are the network’s executives comfortable with Don ranting and raving on the air, infuriating millions of black people? Maybe Don should just stick with being a CNN anchor and stop trying to become an angry white man.

Dr. Boyce Watkins and Yvette Carnell are Senior Editors for the Your Black World Network. For more information, go to www.yourblackworld.net.

Hip-Hop Rumors: Looks Who Is Dissing Jay Z Now!

Jon Stewart is pretty much acclaimed as one of the dudes that gets it poppin in politics for the younger generation. He’s dope and he’s a critical thinker, for sure. He’s also great at challenging conventional thinking. He’s decadently against the Republican Party and Fox News, but every so often takes time to chastise Obama. Well, Jay Z has not been in his sights since I’ve been a watcher. But that’s all changed. Seems like Jon and The Daily Show took exception to the way Jay handled the Barney’s situation. They said: “White people have been watching their musical icons sell out to corporations for decades. It’s the American dream and we’re finally achieving it. You go Jay Z Penny!”

So disrespectful!



Jay Z is catching it from all over.

Is this warranted?

EXCLUSIVE: Prince Paul Discusses The State Of Hip Hop, Riff Raff, & His Own Cultural Impact

(AllHipHop Features) In part two of AllHipHop.com’s exclusive interview with Prince Paul, the legendary producer/DJ talks about how taking on the duty of hosting Scion A/V’s “The All Purpose Show” has given him a firsthand view of contemporary Hip Hop. Paul opens up about his take on the current state of the culture, how it has changed since breaking into the industry producing for Stetsasonic and De La Soul, which new school artists are on his radar, and whether he actually recognizes the role he has played in the evolution of rap music.

[ALSO READ: EXCLUSIVE: Prince Paul Discusses His “All Purpose Show,” Art vs Business & Refusing To Sell Out]

What’s your opinion of the state of Hip Hop right now? You get to speak to a lot of the young artists through your show. Where do you see culture heading?

The cool thing about doing the Scion A/V show is that I do get a chance to talk to these new artists and honestly, a lot of them I’d probably never to listen to in life, but the show gives me the opportunity to research them. I listen to their music, read their bios, and it gives me a new respect. [Contemporary Hip Hop is] just different. It’s not necessarily stagnant. It’s definitely not better, but I can’t say it’s worse either. People’s hustles are different. Music is for free. We use to make music with the intention to sell it. There like “I’m just going to give this away.” The mind state is different, and it’s quantity over quality.

Where we use to take like a year to make an album and it had to be perfect, now it’s if I don’t get this out next month they’re going to forget about me. The grind is different. I don’t know at what year I got lost, but I think it all switched around once the labels kind of went under and everybody started downloading. The concept and creativity of music changed. I think it’s unfortunate that everybody can make music now whether qualified or not just based on technology. I can get my laptop, an interface, and a microphone, make the music inside the computer and flood the web with crap because there’s really no filter. There’s nobody to say, “This is garbage.” There’s so much stuff out there sometimes it’s hard to get to the good stuff. That’s part of the good thing of doing the show is that it gives me an opportunity to filter through some of that.

I’ve interviewed people like A$AP Rocky. To actually sit down and talk to him [I realized] that he’s actually a cool guy. And even Danny Brown. They’re not as unknowledgeable about music as I thought [laughs]. As an older person in the industry you automatically assume those things just by what you hear and see. I try not to be that dude, at least I try and understand. So it’s a different game. Is it better? No, but I don’t think it’s really any worse. It’s just riding a straight line right now. I hope it gets better.


What new artists do impressed you? Who have you heard that you feel really stands out?

At one point when Earl Sweatshirt first came I thought, “Oh my God. He’s incredible.” I thought he was pretty dope. The new stuff I haven’t heard so I can’t say about present day. I’ve only seen one video. I like Tyler [The Creator] too. A lot of the songs he makes are very hit or miss, but he does his own thing and he has his own sound. I can appreciate that. I’m not mad at the whole A$AP Mob at all. Joey Bada$$ and his crew Pro Era. Killer Mike, though he’s been out for a minute. Stalley I thought was impressive.

There’s a bunch of kids that really make music for the sake of making it and enjoying it and advancing the art. I have a problem when people try and extract from the music and not try and give something to the music. Try to elevate it, make it better, or give it a different perspective we haven’t heard before. If you’re going to have fun with, have fun with it, but don’t go, “I’m going to destroy this. I’m going to make my money and I’m out. My father owns a paint store. I’m good regardless.” Those things bother me.

I noticed that you interviewed Riff Raff recently. He gets a lot a flack because people feel like he’s mocking the culture or trying to take advantage of the culture. From your conversation with him what did you take from what he’s trying to do with his rap career?

[laughs] I knew you was going to head into the Riff Raff thing because he’s what you feel is example of what I just said. Before he got on I was like, “this dude.” I’m looking at his hair, looking at his videos, listening to his rhymes, and I’m thinking he’s a cornball. That’s my first impression, but after I interviewed him… I’m not going to say I’m a Riff Raff fan. The other guys on the show with me are Riff Raff fans. I’m not necessarily a fan, but I see where he’s coming from. He’s a clown. He’s an exaggerated Hip Hop person.

If you were to draw someone on a piece of paper like kids use to be back in the day with the Adidas and the chain and the Kangol, he’s that dude. He’s exaggerated. His thing is I’m not trying to get nothing. I’m not trying be nothing. I’m just having fun. You can’t be mad at him. If you wanna go “he’s taking advantage of the culture” be mad at the people who follow him and support him. The people make him at the end of the day. You gotta understand the people who like him aren’t real Hip Hop heads anyway. They’re usually quirky kids who live in Middle America. I can’t relate to that. Nor can my true Hip Hop heads, but he has his own audience. Those people who support him will probably never support Rakim or certain people. There just happens to be there’s a bunch of kids that like him.


Do you ever sit back and reflect on your impact on the culture?

I don’t know my impact on the culture until I read it somewhere. I don’t sit and go, “Do you know who I am or what I’ve done?” It’s not until I’ve read it somewhere like years back it was “you’re the first one to do skits” or recently 3 Feet High and Rising was put into the Library of Congress along with “Take Me Out To The Ball Game” and all these classics. I don’t acknowledge these things until I read it or people tell me, and even then I don’t sit and reflect on it.

The one thing I do reflect on as far as what I’ve done is the ability to take care of my family. It’s a pride thing. I hate the “poor black kid story,” but I’m the first person to own my own house. I’m the first person to finish college in my family. I took care of my mom until she passed away. She was able to retire. I bought my brother a car. I helped my sister buy a house. My kids are going through school. It’s things like that. I was able to do all this off of something that I love, and I kind of got ridiculed for it growing up.

You have to remember in the ‘80’s Hip Hop was looked at as a fad. Even my brother told me to quit. He was like, “Mr. Magic, they took him off the air. Hip Hop is dying.” Being teased as a kid, I went through a lot of adversity. At the end of the day I was able to become something that I never thought I’d become. I went way beyond my wildest dreams. So the accolades are great, but if I have the time to sit down and reflect that means I’m not doing anything. When I get to the point where I can really reflect, that means Paul has really retired and there’s no work on the plate.

Prince Paul’s “The All Purpose Show” is available at scionav.com and on YouTube.

Follow Prince Paul on Twitter @DJPrincePaul