Hip-Hop Rumors: Will Kanye Catch A Felony For Alleged Assault?

50 Cent talked a lot about self destructing, but maybe that title goes to Kanye West. He totally spazzed on a photog earlier – ALLEGEDLY. But, the thing is, that’s what they want you to do! Like Trayvon, they wanted us to wild out and riot so the police could STAND THEIR GROUND. Anyway, Kanye West is on the edge. He’s reportedly the suspect of a felonious robbery!

RELATED: Kanye West Allegedly Assaults Papz

PEEP THE CONSPIRACY FROM TMZ!

Kanye West has been named a felony suspect in the LAX attack Friday afternoon … TMZ has learned.

Law enforcement sources tell TMZ … police suspect Kanye committed an attempted robbery when he assaulted a photog at the airport and tried to jack his camera.

The case has now been transferred to the Robbery Homicide Unit and cops are currently putting a file together.

Our sources say the case will be referred to the L.A. County D.A. for possible prosecution.

The victim was taken to the hospital after the attack. His condition is unknown.

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

 

Illseed, Out.

GET INTERACTIVE WITH ALLHIPHOP.COM!

Follow us on Twitter! Like us on Facebook!

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

UPDATE: Is the Detroit Bankruptcy Unconstitutional?

Judge Rosemarie Aquilina of Ingham County, Michigan has ruled that the Chapter 9 bankruptcy filing by the City of Detroit on yesterday (July 18) was unconstitutional.

“I have some very serious concerns because there was this rush to bankruptcy court that didn’t have to occur and shouldn’t have occurred,” said the judge in her ruling. The ruling is in response to three separate lawsuits filed by city pension funds which provide benefits to retired city employees. “Plaintiffs shouldn’t have been blindsided,” and “this process shouldn’t have  been ignored,” Aquilina said.

However, The Detroit Free Press is still reporting that a U.S. Bankruptcy Court Judge Steven Rhodes, who is a native of Detroit, has been assigned to oversee the historic bankruptcy case. The first words in the story: “It’s official.”

Meanwhile, Michigan Governor has stated that the Detroit bankruptcy filing is “not about a bailout.”

The historic bankruptcy filing has been a trending topic on Twitter since the historic filing yesterday.

SEE ALSO: CITY OF DETROIT FILES FOR BANKRUPTCY

Kanye West Allegedly Assaults Papz

(AllHipHop News) Kanye West has allegedly assaulted members of the paparazzi at LAX airport.

According to a report by TMZ, the rapper attacked one of five paparazzi that surrounded him at the Los Angeles airport.

Oddly, Kanye even had a bodyguard to protect him, but the paps may have need the protection services according to the report.

The rapper requested that the photographers not ask questions, but apparently one did, prompting the alleged attack. “Kanye attacked, attempting several punches, and the man fell down. Paramedics and police are currently on scene,” the TMZ report said.

Kanye has told the paparazzi not to speak to him any more.

Reps for the rapper have not commented on the matter yet.

REVIEW: Ace Hood's Trials & Tribulations (Deluxe Version)

I’ll always wonder what affect the exploding watch debacle had on the new Ace Hood album, Trials & Tribulations. Just as his street banger, “Bugatti” was taking him over the top, that damn watch lost its bezel on BET in front of millions. Did it affect the perception of Ace Hood, who has toiled through so many obstacles to get to this point?

The album starts off strong with “Trials and Tribulations” and “Another Statistic,” which pays homage to Trayvon Martin. Refreshing to hear the “pain, the hunger, the hustle shall never go unnoticed” in his mind. “Before The Rollie,” which features Meek Mill, bangs despite the irony of the current events.

Ace Hood has always been able to leverage his relationships on his album, seemingly based on his relationship with DJ Khaled. So, we see Chris Brown, Lil Wayne, Anthony Hamilton, Rick Ross, Future, the legendary Betty Wright, but most of the album is Ace Hood holding court on Trials & Tribulations. He does a good hope and his hunger is evident on just about ever song. You can hear his concerns on songs like “Hope” and “Pray For Me.” He cares and he goes hard on every song.

If there are issues on Trials and Tribulations, its in the repetitive content, but its easy to overcome, particularly once fans curate the songs their way on iTunes. There are incessant bars about God, the struggle, the haters, the money and the pursuit of prosperity. Sonically, he’s got great beats with The Renegades, Cardiak, Sonny Digital, Ben Billions, Schife, StreetRunner, and Lee On The Beats. This is his fourth album so he’s no rookie anymore and it shows. Hopefully, the BET debacle doesn’t have the social media world too hard on the emerging talent known as Ace Hood as his wings begin to spread.

AHH’s Ratings:

Lyricism –9/10
Production –9/10
Album Cohesiveness –8/10
Replay value –8/10
Overall –8.5/10

  1. Testimony

  2. Trials & Tribulations

  3. Another Statistic

  4. Before the Rollie (Feat Meek Mill)

  5. We Outchea (Feat Lil Wayne)

  6. We Them N****s

  7. The Come Up (Feat Anthony Hamilton)

  8. Rider

  9. Hope

  10. Pray For Me

  11. Bugatti (Feat Future & Rick Ross)

  12. How I’m Raised

  13. My Bible

  14. Mama (Feat Betty Wright)

  15. Bugatti (Feat Wiz Khalifa, T.I., Meek Mill, French Montana, 2 Chainz, Future, DJ Khaled & Birdman)

  16. F**k da World

  17. Have Mercy

Underground Effects Artist Of The Week: Joey Bada$$

[twitter-follow screen_name=’AllHipHopcom’] [twitter-follow screen_name=’SkyyhookRadio’] 

After Joey Bada$$ breaths life into the mic with his lyrics, the stage is left in flames. This artist has been on the rise for a while now but it feels like he just stepped into the ring yesterday. With Joey’s recent quest to study and learn from some of the greats within the Hip Hop realm, he has only gotten better in the booth.

He’s becoming one of the artists to beat, and the issue with that is, most of  his colleagues are out here getting arrested and making headlines for stupid nonsense that has nothing to do with their music. However, young Bada$$ is making music and turning out quality tracks  hand over fist. Thus making his headlines about his craft! So while his fellow artists are too busy not checking out their young competition properly, Joey is not only making new fans, he’s taking fans away.

He is mos def a problem!

Check out the latest joint from Joey Badda$$ below!

And here’s another!

Be sure to keep up with Joey Bad A$$ on Twitter: @joeyBADASS_

Tune in to Shade 45 every Monday at 8 PM ET/5 PM PT for “The Wake Up Show” with Sway, King Tech and DJ Revolution on Serius/XM to check out Skyyhook’s “Underground Effects” artist picks from this week!

EXCLUSIVE: The Last Poets' Abiodun Oyewole Responds To Dahveed Nelson Calling Jay Z A "Coon"

(AllHipHop News) Earlier this week Dahveed Nelson, one of the co-founders of The Last Poets, gave an interview with Fox Sports columnist Jason Whitlock. In the exchange Nelson accused mogul/rapper Jay Z of “putting on blackface and cooning” as well as placing the blame for Trayvon Martin’s death on Hip Hop for reinforcing negative stereotypes of African-Americans.

[ALSO READ: Dahveed Nelson Of The Last Poets Says Hip Hop Is Now “The Devil”; Calls Jay-Z A “Coon”]

Fellow founding member of The Last Poets Abiodun Oyewole read those comments and reached out to AllHipHop.com with a statement clarifying that Nelson’s opinions about Jay Z and Hip Hop should not be attributed to The Last Poets as a collective. Oyewole also wanted to express that he disagrees with Nelson’s viewpoints and calls his comments divisive.

Read Abiodun Oyewole’s full statement below.

Here’s my response to Jason Whitlock’s interview with Dahveed calling Jay-Z a coon.

It is unnecessary to refer to Jay-Z or any other Hip Hop artist as a “coon”. Hip Hop was created on the foundation of The Last Poets. The Last Poets are a group of African-American men who use poetry to address issues concerning Black people. We considered ourselves to be the final word in bringing about unity within the race. We often speak about the white man “divides and conquers”. He does nothing of the sort. He conquers the divided. He has been doing this for centuries.

Dahveed Nelson, an original member and co-founder of the group, made remarks during an interview that were very divisive and not helpful to the cause of Black Unity. The Last Poets are the fathers of all the Jay-Zs in the world. We must take our role as father seriously and not “throw the children out with the bath water.” Jay-Z and Beyoncé have made quite a few positive contributions to the Black community. This should not be ignored.

Because I am one of The Last Poets I am concerned about the social and political circumstances my people are dealing with. This does not mean that other wordsmiths have to echo my sentiments. On the other hand, I would love to hear more positive messages, educational and historical information as well as stories about our victories in a world where we were designed to self-destruct.

In the advent of the Trayvon Martin verdict, and all the Trayvons that we know and don’t know about, it is important that we come together and stop throwing stones at each other. The only answer to the countless injustices we are faced with daily is to be even stronger and more deliberate in our love for each other. We need to share good thoughts, be encouraging, be supportive and criticize each other constructively.

When we work together we can do anything and we have proven that already. We have great power backed up by our ancestors, but we need to unify in order to receive the benefits of our great power. We must show a unified force so strong until no one white or other would even imagine assaulting us, insulting us, or killing us.

I think most of us know that racism is very much alive in America. Because there is a Black president many of us thought that things would change. The fact is racism has become even more rampant. Racism is a disease just like cancer and no cure has been found for either. The elders need to reach out to the youth and pass the torch honorably. We should help them find their way and make their mark. There are some elements and styles of Hip Hop that I too find distasteful, but it is a genre that should not be demonized. And if that be the case then we created this devil.

I hope and pray that the future will afford us time to have healthy dialogue that will turn into significant actions using all of our wonderful art forms for the purpose of liberation and Black Unity. The elder wordsmiths must talk to and listen to the younger wordsmiths. Name calling is unnecessary and unacceptable.

– Abiodun of The Last Poets

Former Bad Boy Loon Goes Down For 14 Years

(AllHipHop News) Loon, the former rapper under Diddy’s Bad Boy, has been sentenced to 14 years in jail for drug related infractions.

The rapper, who is now an Orthodox Muslim, claims it was a set up.

Now known as Amir Muhadith, Loon was arrested and charged in 2011. He explained his side of things in an online audio recording made from a prison cell.

Here is part of the audio transcribed:

“I want to explain to you, in detail, the charge that I was charged with and the federal indictment from the Eastern District of North Carolina as well as the conspiracy charge which I was charged with, conspiring to possess with intent to distribute one or more kilo of heroin. … In 2008 — some individuals had crossed my path who were interested, at one point, in the music industry. At one point, these individuals called me in relation to something totally different than the lifestyle I was living. But the fact I answered placed me under the umbrella of conspiracy and therefore, once these individuals were apprehended by the United States government, they chose to implement in the situation and tried to implement in the leadership role. … But because of the way the United States government works, they used the information of the informant and put together an elaborate story to make it look like I had a leadership role.”

The full audio is below:

Loon maintains that others basically snitched on him and got him involved in something he had nothing to do with.

President Obama on Trayvon Martin: "He Could Have Been Me" (VIDEO + TRANSCRIPT)

(AllHipHop News) In a move that is as shocking as it is emblematic, President Barack Obama addresses race in America in the wake of George Zimmerman’s acquittal in a recent speech.

“There are very few African-American men in this country who haven’t had the experience of being followed when they were shopping in a department store. That includes me”

While President Obama states that Florida’s Stand Your Ground law was not apart of George Zimmerman’s defense he does believe alterations to it is pertinent in order to ease “racial disparity” in the law:

If we’re sending a message in our societies that someone who is armed potentially has the right to use those firearms even if there is a way for them to exit from the situation, is that really going to be contributing to the peace and order? For those who resist that idea, I’d just ask people to consider if Trayvon Martin was of age and armed, could he have stood his ground on that sidewalk? Do we actually think he would’ve been justified in shooting Mr. Zimmerman because he followed him in a car?

Invoking the theme of “it takes a village to raise a child”, President Obama called for athletes, celebrities, businessmen and others of influence to set positive images for young African American males.

The full transcript of President Obama’s speech can be viewed here.

Watch President Barack Obama discuss Trayvon Martin, legislative acts to help race relations in America and more below:

The Lincoln Park Music Festival '13: The New New Jersey Renaissance

“Diverse and talented more so than any other state because we’re in between two big cities of Philly and

New York so we been the little guy that has to stand up for themselves.”-Glen Thorton of Slaag Records

(AllHipHop News) New Jersey is at times an afterthought when discussing the east coast’s influence on the landscape of music. This neglect is even internally perpetuated in the city with residents feeling as if South Jersey was forgotten during New Jersey’s modern improvement.

But that all is changing and has been for the past eight years.

The 8th annual Lincoln Park Music Festival is product of a conscious desire to showcase acts from or heavily affiliated with New Jersey, creating a microcosm of the diversity of the culture in New Jersey. Newark Idol, hosted by Buttafly Soul will showcase homegrown talent in dance, rap, singing and spoken word to be graded by celebrity judges.

“Jazz In Lincoln Park”, hosted by Amiri Baraka will feature and 8-piece band including a musical tribute to Newark native and jazz great Wayne Shorter. Veteran saxophonist Alfred Patterson hopes “Jazz In Lincoln Park” can reinvigorate the enthusiasm for jazz in New Jersey as he remembers decades ago:

There used to be jazz clubs in downtown Newark just about every block. Teddy Powell on Broad Street. Key Club. Howard St Bar. In the 60’s, as a musician, sessioning, you could go out every night and session. There was jazz going on in five different clubs every night. Now at any one time jazz is going on in about two clubs. Besides that it’s really died down.

New Jersey’s proliferation of  house music will be showcased on the festival’s 2nd day (July 27th) and  Slaag Records Recording Artist Eddie Nicholas, world renowned DJ Punch, Tiger Wilson among a wide variety of others.

The festival reaches its climax with a collection of Hip Hop artists performing that would make J. Dilla and the Notorious B.I.G. cry a tear of joy from heaven. The list includes Redman, Black Thought, , Lords of the Underground, The Hit Squad (Das EFX, K-Solo, EPMD, Redman), Artifacts, Sugar Hill Gang, Kwame (minus the polka-dots?), Rah Digga, Mr. Cheeks of the Lost Boys and of course surprise guests.

Do It All from Lords of the Underground spoke with AllHipHop recently about New Jersey’s immense influence on Hip Hop and on the highest selling rap artist of all time, Eminem:

I’ve been around Treach and Redman since young. Not to be racial but to have this white boy from Detroit who lived in Newark NJ and slept on the outside of his house with Young Zee and Pacewon, I’m not surprised [he was influenced by Treach]. When you are around around those type of people you get influenced.

The festival represents more than just three days of amazing music. The Lincoln Park Music Festival has transformed into an emblem of progress for the once desolate area.

The festival changed the brand and image of the community. Because of the change developers have built more houses. We have made a name for  Lincoln Park. This is going to be the new Red Hook and Tribeca. The gentrification inclusive of us.- Anthony Smith

For more information on The Lincoln Park Music Festival visit the website http://lpccd.org.

EXCLUSIVE: Uncle Ralph McDaniels Talks Pusha T, Reviews Jay-Z's New Album + More (VIDEO)

(AllHipHop News)  Ralph McDaniels lives, breathes and creates Hip Hop and has done so for over 30 years. As the founder of the legendary and ahead of its time music video platform Video Music Box (aka The Box), Ralph became such an integral part in the beginning of so many Hip Hop acts that he is universally referred to as Uncle Ralph.

His contributions to the artform do not stop at being the first music video platform for Hip Hop artist, but him and Brooklyn Bodega’s Brooklyn Hip Hop Festival has been a constant showcase of homegrown New York talent along with a conflation of stars from the new and older generations of Hip Hop.

Uncle Ralph spoke EXCLUSIVELY with AllHipHop at the ninth annual Brooklyn Hip Hop Festival about the performances, his history with Pusha T, the importance of Hip Hop festivals and even reviews Jay-Z’s Magna Carta Holy Grail.

Check out Uncle Ralph at VideoMusicBox.tv

Watch the AllHipHop Interview with Uncle Ralph McDaniels below:

Video shot by Frsk Purple of LiveMoneyCulture

Master P Ft. Rome "I Need An Armored Truck"

Master P reveals his classy artwork for the new mixtape Famous Again. Master P has a habit of reaching a younger audience and fan base by his viral, internet campaign as the multi-platinum artist reintroduces his self to this generation. After the highly successful Al Capone mixtape, P has now made a new street banger “I Need An Armored Truck” featuring his son Rome which is the lead off single to his new mixtape Famous Again which drops August 6th of 2013.