Take a look at an exclusive clip form the third season of The Boondocks
Take a look at an exclusive clip form the third season of The Boondocks
(AllHipHop News) Alabama rapper Yelawolf will drop six brand new tracks later this month as part of a new collection hitting stores titled Trunk Muzik 0 – 60. Trunk Muzik 0-60, which is being released via Ghet-O-Vision/DGC/Interscope, is a follow-up to Yelawolf’s Trunk Muzik mixtape and features the new single “I Just Wanna Party” featuring Gucci Mane. According to Yelawolf, The latest tracks offers fans a preview of what can be expected on his upcoming debut.”The demand for new music has been crazy,” Yelawolf commented. “That’s why putting out Trunk Muzik 0 60 made sense to me; to give my fans something to hold them over until my official album next year.”Rappers like Bun B., Raekwon, Rock City and others are featured on the latest offering from Yelawolf, born Michael Wayne Atha. A variety of genres of music have influenced Yelawolf’s debut album, which will hit stores sometimes in 2011.”I can go any direction arena rap or even the bluegrass hip-hop sh*t,” Yelawolf stated. “I would never sign myself down to any style,” Yelawolf says. “I’m always gonna have the darker edgy music; it is always in my pocket because it comes so naturally to me. You’ll never stop getting records like “Pop the Trunk” or “Good to Go” the Crunk South stuff. It will always be a part of what I do in some way. But I plan on evolving. You have to. I’m out to make long-lasting records.”The track-listing for Yelawolf’s Trunk Muzik 0-60 is listed below: “Get The F*** Up!””Daddy’s Lambo””That’s What We On Now””I Just Wanna Party” ft. Gucci Mane”Billy Crystal” ft. Rock City”Pop The Trunk””Box Chevy” ft Rittz The Rapper”Good To Go” ft. Bun B”Marijuana””Love Is Not Enough””I Wish” ft. Raekwon”Trunk Muzik”
DISCLAIMER:All
content within this section is pure rumor and generally have no factual
info outside of what the streets have whispered in our ear. Read on.WHO: illseedWHAT: Rumors, Funnies, Fails and more!WHERE: illseed.com, twitter.com.illseedHOW: Send your rumors, sightings and ill pics to illseed at [email protected].WIZ WE LOVE YOU, YOU STONER, YOU!! They keep us talking, but if we stop talking about them then they should worry!
(AllHipHop News) Rap star 50 Cent has been hit with a lawsuit claiming he stole the idea for his movie and album Before I Self Destruct was stolen from a book titled The Preachers Son-But The Streets Turned Me Into A Gangster.The lawsuit, which was filed in United States District Court of New Jersey by the book’s author Shadrach Winstead. Winstead claims he owns the copyright to the book The Preacher’s Son-But The Streets Turned Me Into A Gangster, which was released in 2008. According to Winstead, 50 Cent stole the concepts for his November 2009 album and accompanying movie Before I Self Destruct, from Winstead’s book. “The defendant infringed the copyright by publishing and selling an audio visual work (a movie released in DVD format), coupled with an audio recording (recordings),” Winstead’s complaint reads. “In many cases, the content and word choice used by Defendants in their work is identical to that used in Plaintiffs book.”Winstead’s lawsuit seeks an undisclosed amount in damages. The author also seeks all profits and interests gained from both formats of Before I Self Destruct.
DISCLAIMER:All
content within this section is pure rumor and generally have no factual
info outside of what the streets have whispered in our ear. Read on.WHO: illseedWHAT: Rumors, Funnies, Fails and more!WHERE: illseed.com, twitter.com.illseedHOW: Send your rumors, sightings and ill pics to illseed at [email protected].
SO THIS IS HOW YOU CATCH A RAPPER IN 2010?
Wiz Khalifa must be on the Lil Wayne Guide To Success program or something. No shots. But, it seems apparent that he wanted to get arrested.
DRAKE TO EXECUTIVE PRODUCE THE AALIYAH STORY????
I didnt google this or anything so it may already be old news. I decided to hit you up with it anyway. Michael Condon, the director of “Dreamgirls” is working hard on “Aaliyah: the Movie” and guess who is coming along for the ride? Drake. It seems that Drake is seriously pushing to be the Executive Producer of the project. He wants to make it happen and the producers are rumored to be with it. Also, remember Keshia Chante? She is the beauty that was rumored to be the girl Chris Brown was cheating on as he was with Rihanna? Well she is still set to play Ms. Haughton and Drizzy on the soundtrack. Sounds like a crazy combo, especially since Keshia Chante is a singer too. I wonder if Drake will act in the movie, because there is talk about that too. Two Canadians heading up the Aaliyah movie! Theyre taking over!!!
MINI ME BATTLES 50 CENT IN MONEY!
Ahhhhh, lil Vern Troyer needs to get on the mic and bust a rap. Dude got paper taller than he is.
SIGNS THE WORLD IS COMING TO AN END
Peep this mess from the Associated Press.
DAYTONA BEACH, Fla.A Florida woman and her boyfriend have been charged with trying to sell her infant grandson for $30,000.
Florida Department of Law Enforcement agents arrested 45-year-old Patty Bigbee and 42-year-old Lawrence Works on Friday in Daytona Beach after they met with an agent posing as a buyer. Both were charged with illegal sale or surrender of a child, and Bigbee was also charged with communication fraud.
FDLE agent Wayne Ivey said an investigation began last month after an informant told authorities the woman was trying to sell the baby. Authorities say the woman originally wanted $75,000 but was talked down to $30,000.
The child’s mother is currently incarcerated on unrelated charges.
The infant has been turned over to child welfare officials.
Authorities said they didn’t know if Bigbee or Works had an attorney.
MIKEY TS RUMORS!
Ahhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhhh . You know the deal! I generally dont know who Mikey T is talking about and hes got bad grammar. Other than that, dude is the man in these evil streets.
Whats Good it’s the kid Mikey T The Movie Star
Back 2 hit u w/ the hottest news on the net …
Lil Kim comin hard , she looking for a 4th quarter release , it doesn’t
matter if she drops after Nicki as long as she gets out between now
and Valentines Day , The Queen Bee is working hard at getting
that release weather the label working the project is E1 or a major
you can look for accessories as well maybe a Kim Barbie 2 take a jab
& jack the prices .
Raz B is looking 4 a new label
deal after recently being dropped .
also he is looking for counseling .
Freddy P spoke exclusively on
The Boss Ricky Ross , detailing what
the scene in Miami was like an siting himself
as one of the first call out Ross comparisons 2 B.I.G.
Diddy Got a release Date 4 Last Train 2 Paris
and Still Red Cafe may be looking at spring of 2011
to drop his official album.
Def Jam Compilation Album
New Nas & Shyne Record on the Way , it looks like
Def Jam may capitalize on having so star artists signed
to there label , Cashing in w/ a collaboration album , to feature
the likes of Rick Ross , Ludacris , Fab
Also Rick Ross imprint of Maybach Music
could be heading to Interscope along w/ Diddy’s Bad Boy
Ross is courting a big deal over there , looking for that major
label distro deal that 50 Cent F**ked up .
But Ross is going to justify his Def Jam deal .
Holla at ya boy @MTMovieStar we grinding hard
got so many exclusives on the way 4 the hip hop world 2 see .
BACK TO ILLSEED!
KEEP IT PUSHING FOR OSCAR GRANT!
Shout out to Jubilee Shine! He sent me the following link on Oscar Grant
http://www.change.org/petitions/view/eric_holder_prosecute_mehserle_in_federal_court
It is very encouraging to see that SOME people still care and are pushing for justice. As you can see, a lot of people care more about the Cowboys coach getting fired than a cop firing on an unarmed man. This link makes it simple for you to support Justice For Oscar Grant. Go to the site and type in your name and push send. A letter goes to U.S. Attorney General Eric Holder so we can bring up fed charges on the cop that murdered Oscar Grant.
ANTOINE DODSON WONT GO AWAY!
I cant be mad at the dude. Hes feeding the fam. As much as I want him to go away, I cant hate.
Click here to see what I said about it on Twitter. LOL!
OSCAR GRANT, WE LOVE YOU!! OAKLAND STAND UP! EVERYBODY STAND UP!They keep us talking, but if we stop talking about them then they should worry!
Lil Wayne just finished a bid of 9 months in jail.T.I. just started a new bid of 11 months after serving.
Mike Vick served 23 months in jail.
The police officer that murdered Oscar Grant in cold blood was sentenced to 2 years in jail.
I’m back, b***hes. That’s right, I said B***HES.
Want to know why I said it? Because that’s what we are.
I’ll include myself in there as well, because WE continue to get bucked down, beat down..basically exterminated all over the globe. And, I mean, Black people.
The death of Oscar Grant is continued proof that NOBODY cares or places a value on the Black life. WE, as people of color don’t even value our own lives. How do I know?
Well, for one, a too many of us don’t even know a brother was shot and killed unarmed on New Years day. This hasn’t been widely publicized, but it has been news. And, it has been pushed heavy in the community at large, websites and other independent media.
The second is that the powers that ARE keep doing this.
Johannes Mehserle is a half a cop piece-of-S**T and he doesn’t value our lives. Sure, he expressed regret, but everybody does that when they screw up royally. Dude pulled the trigger in such haste to use force that he didn’t know it was his taser, AND THAT’S THE BEST CASE SCENARIO. The worst is that he simply blew Oscar Grant’s 22-year-old body away. don’t value your life. On the other side, with the judge, the same remains true. Last week, a judge sentenced Mehserle to two years in jail, shredding the possibility for justice in the twisted, turbulent case of Oscar Grant.
But wait, it gets worse. According to Davey D, the judge said something like Oscar caused his own death. REALLY? Did he willfully put a bullet in his own back and cause it to bounce off the concrete at the BART Train station, essentially shooting him again? These judges know they won’t get checked. These cops know the system is protecting them too the fullest. There is no sense that there are real consequences to these unjust, immoral and plain old INHUMAN actions. But Mike Vick served about the same amount of time that ex-officer Mehserle will go on to serve. So you know, the value of the African American male is about the same as a couple dogs.
And then there are the rappers.
Man, F### YOU N***AS.
Nobody has anything to say.
What once was the CNN of the HOOD is now the equivalent to a bad reality show on FOX. You dudes are so busy shuckin’ and jivin’ for your money or sponsorships, you can’t even say a good word about these brothers. Oscar Grant, Sean Bell, Danroy Henry, Abner Louima, Amadou Dialo, Anthony Baez…need I say more? These cops are PIGS and they know they can be as sloppy as they want and somebody in a higher place is going to clean up the mess.
I look at T.I., Lil Wayne, Gucci Mane and even the older ones with a real voice like Jay-Z. Sure, Jay can get down with Obama, but what about getting down to raise some awareness about Sean Bell. And, I understand, Jay did some things with Sean Bell. Commendable. But we have to continue to apply pressure.
The leaders.
Where are they? Where is the movement? Where is the proactive actions that can prevent this from happening on all levels? Jesse and Al are getting old and their tactics are even older. Funny, a few years ago, Nas said it was time to get those dudes out of the way and let people like him lead. Where is Nas since he wants to names. And where is The Game aka “Mr. F**k Jesse Jackson Because It Ain’t About Race Now.” Yeah, I remember that one, Game.
This here was just to get all the rage out that I feel. I am not the leader of the movement against the extermination of Black people.
I am just a soldier.
A soldier with no leader.
A soldier with no army to join.
To put this in perspective, even Bill O’Reilly was wrong when he predicted that the officer would eventually face heavy criminal charges. FML.
(AllHipHop News) Details continue to emerge in the arrest of Wiz Khalifa on purported drug charges.
The rapper, whose real name is Cameron Thomaz, was released from the Pitt County Detention center earlier this morning, after he was apprehended in the middle of a concert at East Carolina University .
Greenville, North Carolina police have officially charged Wiz Khalifa with three different counts, including two felony drug charges. The Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania-based rapper was arrested shortly after a performance as part of the national “Waken Baken 2010 Tour” at (ECU) last night (November 8th). According to reports, a large stash of marijuana was found on the bus, although the amount confiscated is not known at press time. Wiz Khalifa has officially been charged with possession of drug paraphernalia (misdemeanor), maintaining a dwelling/place for the sale of a controlled substance (felony) and drug trafficking (felony).The rapper, who has since been released from jail on a reported $300,000 bond, took to his Twitter page with his first public statement. “waken baken wrist still achin. thnx for tha love and support,” Wiz Khalifa tweeted.
A Facebook group of 1,200 people have already started a Free Wiz campaign.Wiz Khalifa was brought to East Carolina University in Greenville, North Carolina after students lobbied for him.
Below is the video. Click here to read the previous story on Khalifas arrest.
DISCLAIMER:All
content within this section is pure rumor and generally have no factual
info outside of what the streets have whispered in our ear. Read on.WHO: illseedWHAT: Rumors, Funnies, Fails and more!WHERE: illseed.com, twitter.com.illseedHOW: Send your rumors, sightings and ill pics to illseed at [email protected].
30 POUNDS OF WEED??????????????
Say it isnt so Mr. Wiz Khalifa! The lil homey I helped introduce to the world got arrested last night in North Carolina! Click here to read the story.
Here is what 30 pounds of weed looks like.
I heard Wiz is out too.
KANYE WEST IS TRYING TO LEAK1!!
Wheeeewww! I dont think even Kanye West can stop this one from coming down, but they are trying! There is a leaked version of Kanyes album out there. But, theres a catch. First of all, whoever is in charge of stoping leaks is doing a great job. All the links are dead and thats a good thing. Secondly, I am told that there are leaks that are incomplete. And Thirdly, I am hearing that the leaks are actually WRONG. So, why not just buy the album?
HAMMER ISN’T TALKING!
I’m not saying any more about this, but MC Hammer definitely isn’t talking about where the beef with he and Jay-Z started. Read about it below.
AllHipHop.com: There are rumors, but nobody knows where this started. MC Hammer : What I’ma say is that people think that this is a throwaway line from Jay. But Jay and I both know that it wasn’t. Because it didn’t start on record. How about that? Jay and I both know that it didn’t start on this record and what he said is a result of something that was happening behind the scenes and he put it on wax.
Click here for the rest of the interview.
KAT STACKS IS OUTTA HERE, BUT HER MOMMA SAYS “NO!!!”
Kat Stacks is another day closer to deportation. Here is what VIBE.com is reporting.
According to The Nashville Criminal Justice Center, Kat Stacks, who was arrested Friday Nov 5 under an immigration hold, has a 90% chance of being deported to Venezuela this week.
The young mother born Andrea Herrera-Cardena was detained in Nashville, Tennessee just three days after celebrating her 21st birthday. She’s currently being held without bail at the Nashville Correctional Development Center For Females. “She didn’t get arrested for a state charge, so she must’ve missed an immigration court date in the past. Once that happens they start looking for you and once they got you… it’s a wrap,” says Miss Pugh a police assistant at Nashville’s CJC.
Pugh also stated that most of the time illegal aliens are deported within seven days of detainment. However, if the woman who made a name for herself by sexing and terrorizing rappers seeks council, there may be a chance she stays on US soil.
On the ignorant side of life, her mom said it ain’t true and that Kat will be w###### sooner than you haters think.
ILLSEED’S QUICKIES
Rumor has it OJ Simpson is suicidal due to the fact that his last appeal was denied.
Last night, Lil Wayne laid down his first post-jail verse. He also shaved for the third time.
SIGNS THE WORLD IS COMING TO AN END
In Iran, you can lose your life if you do the wrong kind of Hip-Hop. The police in Tehran have declared war on the kids that make rap music of the “subversive and inappropriate” type. Apparently, the sort of rap that gets people riled up is not appreciated. These kids are being arrested, even on the university level, for doing Hip-Hop or “Western-percieved” musical musings. This includes videos too, I’m reading. They are saying that these students and kids are making videos and mixtapes in abandoned buildings and distributing them to people, raising a ruckus. They even get arrested for using the wrong kind of slang.
EPIC WIN OF THE DAY! This was TOO FUNNY…lol
NICKI LOOKING GOOD!
Tell me Nicki Minaj doesn’t look like a hood AKA. LOL
Click here for a full photo shoot of super hot pics of NICK!
OSCAR GRANT, WE LOVE YOU!! OAKLAND STAND UP! EVERYBODY STAND UP!They keep us talking, but if we stop talking about them then they should worry!
Nicki Minaj is about the be the hottest thing in Hip-Hop for reasons outside of music after people get a glimpse of her new photo shoot for Black Men magazine. See them below and scoop the magazine, because it is one stands.
(AllHipHop News) Rapper Wiz Khalifa was arrested in the middle of his concert during a tour date in North Carolina.
The concert took place at East Carolina University.
Details are scant at press time, but early reports suggest the arrest is related to Khalifas penchant for smoking marijuana. Early reports suggest that after he was apprehended from stage, his tour buss was raided by authorities.
The popular Pittsburgh rapper has boasted about smoking about $10,000 in weed.
At press time, no official reason for the arrest was available.
(AllHipHop News) Pittsburgh, PA rapper Wiz Khalifa was arrested in Greenville, North Carolina for unknown reasons, it’s being reported. While details are sketchy, early reports state that Wiz Khalifa was at a show at East Carolina University when police reportedly stopped his show 45 minutes into his set. He was arrested later, as he attempted to board his tour bus.
Sources suggest the arrest is related to Khalifas penchant for smoking marijuana.
The popular Pittsburgh rapper, known for his hit single “Black and Yellow,” has boasted about smoking about $10,000 in weed per month.The 22-year-old rapper was in town to perform at Wright Auditorium, as part of the national “Waken Baken Tour 2010.”The 60-date-tour kicked off September 16th and ends in Boston on November 21st. Tonight, rapper Big Krit was tapped to open for Wiz Khalifa.Wiz’ last tweet came around 4:30 PM EST when he sent the message: “Smoke outs greenville, nc tonight. fall thru wit ur finest plant life.”Earlier, his told his 482,000 followers that he enjoyed waking up and “smoking” on his tour bus each morning. In October, Wiz Khalifa launched his own line of rolling papers.
At press time, no reason for the arrest was available.
Continued from MC Hammer: Jay-Z, The Devil, Christianity and Being So Appalled (Part 1)In Part II of this exclusive conversation with MC Hammer, the legendary entertainer reveals whether or not he truly feels Jay-Z is an agent of the Devil, the real reason he “addressed” Jay-Z on the musical front and how this whole beef started. AllHipHop.com: So let me ask you this, now we had a brief convo on this when it all started. Now I didn’t think you were gonna go at Jay in this manner. What made you at Jay from this stand point? I mean honestly I thought you were going to do a short documentary or something like that, of that nature. What made you actually do a song and a video?
MC Hammer : I had no doubt in my mind, that if I did it from my perspective. If I used my creativity and use what I am known for and use all those elements and still address issues. That it would receive the attention that I wanted to receive. I thought it would have been the best approach and I had I just done the documentary it would have meant nothing and it would have been; ‘Oh we have heard all this before’.
It is real strange that I what I did, they way I did it and the medium that I chose is so powerful that if you say your position is; ‘I don’t like this song it is the worse song ever, it really speaks more to someone not expecting me to be saying the things that I am saying and have the elements that I have. Everything from the Jay Z look-alike to the hook of ‘Run, you better run run’. To the direct verses that are simplistic in nature, but are very revealing in what would be quote on quote ‘a punch lines’. If you’ve noticed on my twitter feed, you’ve never seen quote on quote ‘Hammers not lyrical’. But all of my lines from the song are being quoted. From “He stole my swag, to let’s put the prints all over the bag” to “The Devil say can you give me a sign? Throw the Roc up that’s one of mine.” If you go from verse to verse you see that my verses are being quoted.
But I am not trying to be “Mr Lyrical.” I am trying to be effective and that has been the same style I use from day one as an artist. Remember these are the same people who said from “Let’s Get It Started” was wack, but 50 million people said “Where can I buy this?” But 50 million people said “This style and this Hammer guy, where can I buy it and where can I see this?” So I am not offended by the naysayers I just need a few more of them so I can know that I got something that is really gonna be hot.
AllHipHop.com: Right, I feel you. That was one of my points on Twitter last night before it started getting crazy. “You know Hammer sold…”. And they were like “you can’t talk about sales.” I was like “You can talk about sales, because that does speak to someones impact, no matter what you feel or say.”
MC Hammer : All the arguments they make are around sales. Then they’ll make another indirect argument that is still around sales. “Well they doing stadiums!” He’s doing stadiums with another act. I did stadiums by myself. No guests. There will be no guests tonight. Its Hammer time. Six nights and fifty thousand people a night! So the point is, when people are passionate about their position, logic goes out the door.
AllHipHop.com: I have hard time believing that Jay Z worships the Devil. In the video it seems like Jay Z is being pursued the Devil. Do you feel like he is in cahoots with the Devil – do you really feel like he is in cahoots with a Satanic force or something like that?
MC Hammer : My position is another line from the song. I said that ‘I don’t really have to go in on a fella, but that dude romance the Devil’. Notice I didn’t say that he worships the Devil, I said that he romance the devil and I mean that. I don’t even think he is an official Devil worshipper. I think he thinks it is a great thing to do for the way he positions his brand.
But there is a danger in that and the danger is that in anyway of romancing the Devil is to perceive by the occult themselves is that they a part of the click. That’s number one, number two in his Anti-Christian positions and his continuous bashing of Christianity mixed with a romancing of the Devil, equates to a strong flirtation with darkness. That’s what it is.
AllHipHop.com: Overall, Hip-Hop has dabbled in this for quite some time. Everybody from Eazy-E to Big L to Big Pun to Biggie Smalls. There’s a whole genre of music called Horrorcore that definitely dabbles in this too. Your thoughts overall on this topic, do you have any feelings overall with Hip Hop? Is that other stuff just entertainment and this has now hit a different level?
MC Hammer : I wasn’t in it like that, so I can’t speak on it. But this issue we are dealing right now, is 2010 blatant in your face and again because of the fact that I am a Christian, these things to the verse, he throw [Usher’s] “Hotty Totty… got her speaking in tongues, she like ooh daddy by by you so hung.” Again a shot and please include this Chuck, because this is consistent, another shot at Christianity. Even on that song when he talks about having sex with a woman and got her speaking in tongues. Consistent with the Christian bashing.
If people look at my response to Jay and they say, why is Hammer coming heavy? It’s real easy, it’s not even that hard to see. If Hammer is coming this hard behind his lines something isnt right. You right about that. Think about what you saying. Why is Hammer coming this hard off his line you heard a thousand times? You right about it but I heard his other lines a thousand times.
Since I am hearing that other line combined with your influence and who you are. Then you address me, good then let me address you on all this.
AllHipHop.com: There are rumors, but nobody knows where this started.
MC Hammer : What I’ma say is that people think that this is a throwaway line from Jay. But Jay and I both know that it wasn’t. Because it didn’t start on record. How about that? Jay and I both know that it didn’t start on this record and what he said is a result of something that was happening behind the scenes and he put it on wax.
MC Hammer Addresses Jay-Z, T-Pain and The Death of Autotune
Rapper Noreaga just released a new track titled “5 Deadly N#####” featuring Imam T.H.U.G. Ft. Peedi Crakk, Vado, Reek Da Villian and Fred The Godson.The track is reportedly from N.O.R.E.’s upcoming album S.U.P.E.R.T.H.U.G., which will be the Queens, New York native’s sixth solo album. N.O.R.E. is currently on a nationwide tour promoting the upcoming release, which is his first collection of material since a 2009’s album of unauthorized material. While N.O.R.E. revealed very little details on his upcoming album, the rapper performed material and discussed his influence on the rap game during a recent performance at The Lex Lounge in Dover, Delaware. Check out N.O.R.E.’s latest track “5 Deadly N#####” here and watch the video below:
Push pause before watching for colored girls . People either love or hate filmmaker Tyler Perrythat much is clear to me. Weeks before I decided to see Perrys For Colored Girls on opening night I could hear the extreme reactions to the fact he was adapting, producing, and directing a film version of Ntozake Shanges classic 1970s choreopoem/play For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When The Rainbow Is Enuf. I think Tyler is the worst filmmaker ever, one pal of mine said, an amazing actress and writer, who is completely traumatized that Perry was even permitted to touch Shanges writing. And then there have been all the pre-film blogs written and passed around which have, in the main, been attempts to prepare viewers, particularly Black women movie goers, for the worst. Indeed, one blog I sampled encouraged women to read Shanges words first, to go as a group, almost as if bracing themselves for a natural disaster. Another blog demolished Perry as a proprietor of modern-day minstrel shows in real-time Black face. This womans blog was so detailed in her point-by-point critiques of Tylers pictures, that it set off what appears to be at least 100 responses, most supporting her views, with a few not, and a handful saying she was an extremist, and, better yet, a hater. And this last blog and its comments are from a year ago when it was first announced Perry was tackling Shanges piece. (A not-so-humorous side note: From the hardcore reactions to one Tyler Perry, you would think his films have done as much damage to Black America as, say, racism, HIV/AIDS, failing public schools, rampant unemployment, crime, drug dealing and drug abuse, gentrification, the prison-industrial complex, police brutality, Republican right-wingers and the Fox News Channel, ghetto dictatorships and lazy leadership in the form of certain very identifiable Black politicians and Black preachers, corner liquor stores, fast food restaurants, and every other challenge you could name .) Since then it hasnt helped that the trailer for the adaptation doesnt do the actual film any poetic justice. You see Janet Jackson far too much (it is clear Mr. Perry has an acute fascination with Ms. Jackson in spite of her well-meaning but limited acting abilities), and you see a plethora of quick-cut imagery in the film, but unless youve closely read the Shange book yourself, or have seen the words interpreted on the stage through the years, you come away from the trailer not really clear what the film narrative is. As a result I was really torn about watching For Colored Girls. First off, I have seen some of Perrys Madea films and, yes, they have made me cringe. How could they not when I know very well the history of Black images in America, how destructive so many of these images have been to our collective spirits, psyches, and bodies, be they mammy, big momma, tragic mulatto, gangsta, thug, pimp, prostitute, thief, hustler, or bumbling, stumbling coon or buffoon. If there was a true and intentional balance to what we colored folks are given to digest on television, in movies, in music videos, in video games, and now on the internet, then there would hardly be a whisper about Tyler Perrys films. And if he had stayed in the urban Black theater sceneour theatrical version of the famous chitin circuit for Black performersthen no one, save poor or working-class and or church-going Black folks, would probably even know who Perry is today. But it is precisely because those poor or working-class and or church-going Black folks flock to venues like the Beacon Theater in New York City, every time one of these plays is announced on local urban radio stations, that Tyler Perry is famous and fabulously wealthy. The plays are simplistic, but with enough Black around-the-way humor and morality lessons that serve as a necessary escape from the grind of our daily Black lives. Who would not want that? And is it little surprise that Perrys career first skyrocketed during the Bush II years, and continues to be an entertainment outlet for the souls of many Black folks during The Great Recession? No, he is not a great writer, not a great director, not a great actor. Not yet, and I have no clue if he will ever be any of those things. But Tyler Perry is an astute entrepreneur, a marketing genius, someone who has filled a huge void for working-class Black America, for church-going Black America, with film after film. Up until For Colored Girls, Perry has not pretended to be an artist, or a super-talented director in the vein of Julie Dash, Martin Scorsese, or Kasi Lemmons. No, what Perry has done is exactly what pioneering African American filmmaker Oscar Micheaux did from 1919 to 1948: give Black people themselves on screen on a regular basis, something that, as evidenced by Perrys huge box-office receipts with each film (including approximately $20 million this past opening weekend for For Colored Girls), we desperately crave. Indeed just as Oscar Micheaux steadily fed the Black masses with his 44 films and 7 novels (including one national bestseller) over those 29 years, Perry too has been relentless with his productivity and his work ethic, churning out, it feels, a film a year, if not two. This is on top of his plays, his television shows, and the running of his new state-of-the-art film and television studio in Georgia. But please be clear that Tyler Perry is not the first African American to own his own film and tv compound. No, that distinction belongs to Tim Reid and Daphne Maxwell Reid and what they built and opened in Virginia in the late 1990s. But Perry has taken the best of the hustle and flow of Micheaux, the bravado of Blaxploitation wonder-man Melvin Van Peebles, the make-Black-films-by-any-means-necessary mantra of Spike Lee, and the business savvy of the Reids, remixed the ingredients, and given us Tyler Perry, the baddest Black film mogul this side of the 21st century. And that begets a taste of power that makes Perry the Booker T. Washington of Black filmmakers. In other words, like how Booker T. was hotly debated in his day for his dealings with Black folks and issues of race, so too is Tyler P. hotly debated in his day for his dealings with Black folks and, yeah, issues of race (images). But what one cannot deny about either is that in an America where it has always been extremely hard for Black folks to own and sustain institutions, both built institutions that stand as unbelievable achievements of the human spirit, and in spite of entrenched American racism and White privilege in the realms of education (Booker T.) and Hollywood (Tyler P.). One could even go so far as to say that outside of Oprah Winfrey, Perry is easily the most powerful Black entertainer in our nation, and one of the most influential regardless of race. For Tyler Perry has taken the business of Black filmmaking to another level. A level that Micheaux, Van Peebles, and not even Spike Lee could have ever achieved. Because Tyler Perry is not only the master of his own ship, the owner of his vision and his brand, but he is now positioned to tackle Hollywood racism head on without ever uttering a single word about it. For sure, Perry says he does not discriminate against anyone, and that is clear from his diverse team of production folks. But it is also abundantly clear he has added brick after brick to the Spike Lee foundation of hiring Black people in every position possible, to nurture and train them for long careers in film and television production. The kind of opportunities they would not get elsewhere. I mean, when I look at the credits to, say, Francis Ford Coppolas epics, The Godfather I and II, it is not lost on me the numerous Italian surnames. Coppola was clearly looking out for his people. So why cant Perry do the same for his? But with the box office success, the full-fledged studio, the role as the most powerful Black person in Hollywood, and an uncanny ability to get every kind of Black actress or actor you can think of into his films (no matter the quality of the films), I imagine the question began to gnaw at Tyler as the refrain scrutinizing his filmmaking skills, or lack thereof, have grown louder and louder: Where do I, Tyler Perry, go from here? Here, I believe, means Tyler knows, there in the underbelly of his Southern soul, that he cannot continue to make, solely, Madea films, preachy PG movies with one-dimensional characters and a gumbo pot full of plotlines. That he had to leave his comfort zone, had to create 34th Street Films so that he can begin to make more meaningful films, better developed and multi-faceted films, films written and directed by others, and perhaps others with extensive film training, who can bring to life the kind of Black tales seldom told, and seldom seen in the history of American cinema Push play: for colored girls unfolds . Living in New York City for the past 20 years as both a writer and activist means I have seen and heard versions of Shanges choreopoem many many times. I even once lived with and dated an actress who, like many Black actresses, frequently used a monologue from For Colored Girls in one audition or another. What I learned from my then-girlfriend, and from my Black female actress friends through the years, is that there is an enormous scarcity of monologues written specifically for Black women, that what Shange wrote really is as timeless as Shakespeare. And as poetic and lofty, too. That when you enter the world of Ntozake Shanges For Colored Girls you are, in essence, entering high and sacred ground. Which brings me back to my decision to see the film on opening night. The evening before I had visited my mother in my hometown of Jersey City, and there we were, in the same kitchen she has been in for 30-plus years. As I ate the fish my moms prepared for me, she sat, all 67 years of her, slightly slumped, in a plastic-covered chair by the stove. My mother looked both at peace, and well, very tired. Tired from years of being a Black woman in America. Tired from years of working in cotton fields, factories, and in the homes of the wealthy and the elderly. Tired of being tired, these several years later, from talking about how my father had wronged her. To the point, now, that she herself had aged with hints of sorrow in her heart and twinges of bitterness at the corners of her mouth. She, a colored girl, who had survived the hostile abandonment of my father, and all the would-be suitors who came to move in, not to love her. She, a colored girl, who had survived acute poverty, minimal life skills, and an 8th grade education to raise me, a Black boy, to be something other than yet another wretched statistic. Who will sing the coarse songs of women like my mother? Who will tell their tales if not us? And then to the other extreme of why I was in Jersey City Thursday night: Judge Shirley Tolentino, the first Black woman judge Id ever met, had died, and I went to St. Aloysius Church on Westside Avenue to pay my respects at her wake. And what a wake it was. The church was loaded with all kinds of people, mostly Black, there to say good-bye to a Black woman many considered one of Jerseys most powerful judges. I met her when I was a teen and driving my mother mad. I dont even recall what the particular indiscretion was with the law, but there I was in front of Judge Tolentino, utterly stunned a Black woman, this Black woman, was about to decide my fate. For whatever reason, she gave me a break, I never went to a juvenile detention center, never landed in jail, so I had to see her one last time, even in that coffin box, just to say Thank you. I had thought of Judge Tolentino often through the years, long before I knew of Harriet Tubman or Sojourner Truth, or Ida B. Wells or Mary McLeod Bethune, or Shirley Chisholm or Angela Davis, or the ladies in Shanges For Colored Girls , or Michelle Obama, even. For Judge Tolentino, like my mother, represents a kind of power that Black women have always possessed, from the golden earth of Africa to the concrete jungles of Americas inner cities, a power that said you may try to destroy us by all available means but like that Maya Angelou poem, still we rise And somewhere in Tyler Perrys life, ostensibly, he has been affected, aided, raised, prepared, by Black women like the ones I know. All us Black boys know them. No, I have not always liked the way Perry has depicted Black women in his films, but I also cannot ignore how many Black actresses he has employed, quite a few of them so remarkably gifted by their God yet so completely shunned or forgotten by Hollywood. Nor can I disregard that in his newly minted studio are soundstages named after Black female acting giants like Ruby Dee and Cicely Tyson. Somewhere in Perry croons an undying love for Black women Yes, these things were on my mind as I made my way to the Brooklyn Academy of Music to see Perrys film. I purposely sat in the back row so that I could watch any who entered. And here they came, slowly but surely, Black women like my mother, and Black women like Judge Tolentino. Younger Black women and older Black women. Straight Black women and lesbian or bisexual Black women. Black women with perms and weaves, and Black women with dreadlocks or baldheads. There were a few of us Black males present, and a few White sisters and brothers. I could feel some Black female eyes on me as I sat alone, wondering what had brought me to this film, maybe. I think if I had suffered through what countless Black women have suffered through in their lives, including my mother, I would question, too. For what is it to live in a nation where you have been victimized not only because of your race, but also because of your sex? Where you have not only had to contend with sheer madness ranging from slave masters to corporate bosses with a reckless disregard for your being, but also from husbands, boyfriends, lovers, fathers, grandfathers, uncles, sons, and grandsons whose own internalized racism and oppression have destroyed them and, in effect, destroyed you. This is the heaviness of experience and history that these Black women march with into one Tyler Perry movie after another. They simply want to see fragments of themselves on screen, be it Madea or Shanges For Colored Girls. And most of these women are not like my actress friends, not like my cultural critics friends, not like my academic or scholarly friends, and not like my bohemian friends: well versed in all things Black, cultural, artistic, political, or literary. They are more like my mother, a woman who does not read books, save bits and pieces of the bible, and who has never really been told (nor mustered the strength to tell herself) that she is beautiful, that she is powerful, that she is visible. Which is why since the 1970s when I was a child, as far back as I can remember, my mother mostly goes to the movies when it is Black people up on the screen. My moms is especially fond of Whoopie Goldberg and I suspect it is because Whoopie, like my mother, is a dark-complexioned Black woman who has been told, more times than not, that she is ugly, and you and I both know that Whoopie, and my mother, are quite beautiful. Therefore in seeing Whoopie shine on that screen my mother is seeing herself shine, is seeing her beautiful brown skin shine in a way it never shined in those cotton fields, in those factories, in the homes of those wealthy or elderly folks, and certainly never shined in the eyes of my long-gone father. Women like my mother, younger and older, simply need to know that their lives are valid, that their lives do matter. Love him or hate him, that is the space Tyler Perry has created for many a Black person, a space my mother asked me to share with her when she requested Can you take me to see that movie about them colored girls? Yes, ma, I will So there is this film, and as For Colored Girls began, I washed away the negative reviews Id read, the questions on why him to do this, and simply watched the movie. I would say about 15 minutes into it I realized I was watching something very different than other Perry flicks, that he had grown as a filmmaker, that he was not butchering Shanges words as so many had suggested he would, or had. Instead what we were getting was a 21st century reading of For Colored Girls, very much required, in reality, given that Shanges piece was created in the 1970s. And no different, undoubtedly, than Ethan Hawke taking Shakespeares Hamlet and setting it at the Denmark Corporation in his early 2000s film version, while retaining the old language. If Hawke could keep the old language and update the setting, why cant Perry? Moreover, it was clear to me, as the drama unfolded, that many in the theater, including the Black woman sitting right next to me, had never read the Shange book, nor had ever seen a staged production. Tyler Perrys flick was it, was their introduction. And in this world of fast-paced videos, Twitter, and every manner of cell phone with video components, Perry has taken the best of what Shange has willed to us, combined it with a stellar ensemble that features Phylicia Rashad, Whoopie Goldberg, Anika Noni Rose, Kimberly Elise, Thandie Newton, and Loretta Devine, and created something that is, well, very special and quite magical, in spite of the hurt and pain peppered throughout this film. The film had to be given a bona fide backdrop in Harlem, the men had to be given some voices here and there, and the womens names could not merely be Lady in Red, Lady in Brown, and so on. We need to know them as Crystal and Yasmine and Jo. Need to know their names because those names are the real names of real Black women who live in Harlem, Brooklyn, Oakland, Los Angeles, Chicago, Detroit, Atlanta, D.C., St. Louis, Houston, wherever Black women be. But Perry had to cast his bucket somewhere, so Harlem became the metaphor for anywhere America, specifically one walk-up apartment building where most of the characters dwell. Think of how Gloria Naylor put her main female characters on one block in her majestic novel The Women of Brewster Place. Or how a Brooklyn neighborhood exploded off the screen in Spikes Do The Right Thing. With For Colored Girls I was awestruck by the color palettes used for the film, the exquisiteness of these Black womens many skin hues, the imaginative method in which Perry stitched Shanges original words in with freshly written lines to make the narrative go. And go they do, for they are brilliant, hardworking, dedicated, steadfast, loving, divine, and, often, very very lonely in their own skins. You feel it with Phylicia Rashads character, the manager of the building, whose sole purpose at this moment seems to be as ears and eyes of what is happening with her neighbors. But it is in helping them through their pain that gives her life a pulse. You feel it in Whoopie Goldbergs character, so terrified of the universe that she has turned her apartment into a shrine of boxes filled with God only knows what, her life reduced to prays, pray oils, and an overwhelming belief that anyone who does not believe in her God and her religion is destined for hell, including her two daughters. You feel it in the innocence of Anika Noni Roses character, wide-eyed and recently out of a relationship, and so horrifically duped by a handsome man into a rape scene and subsequent monologue that was so jarring it felt like the entire theater had instantly become a mountainous chorus of tears, wails, and gasps for air. And you feel it in Kimberly Elise, so broken by mental abuse and domestic violence that she is just one step from a complete nervous breakdown. And then her husband does it, he murders her two children in broad daylight, dropping themand the sanity and heart of Elises character from their apartment window, their blood smeared on the asphalt below like the jagged journey of Black women and girls in America. I never thought Id see the day when I enjoyed a Tyler Perry film, said one female friend, and I concurred with her. But I am not sure if enjoy is the right word. For Colored Girls is a conversation, a mirror, something, obviously, that one culturally and socially ignorant film critic after another just did not get as they blasted the film in their reviews. One repeated critique is that the movie deals too much in pathologies. Are you going to tell me that Coppolas Godfather I and II, widely hailed as two of the best movies of all time, are not riddled with multiple social pathologies? Likewise with Citizen Kane, or Forrest Gump, even? So to these over-the-top haters of Perrys For Colored Girls, What film, exactly, were you watching that that is the sum of what you viewed? How does one come away from that film and not agree that Kimberly Elise should be nominated for a Best Actress Oscar, and Thandie Newton (with Anika Noni Rose and Whoopie Goldberg not far behind) for a Best Supporting Actress Oscar? How does one not acknowledge the terrific score, the captivating cinematography, or the set design, even? And how does one gripe that the back-alley abortion scene is not credible in these times if one has never been to, never lived in, nor ever spent significant time in an American ghetto and, as a consequence, is not fully aware of the physical and psychological lengths us poor Black folks have historically had to go to, even in the age of Obama and in an allegedly post-racial America, to duck and dodge the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune? Additionally, I do know if a Tom Hanks, a man who was on a mediocre television sitcom and made mediocre film after mediocre film in the 1980s, could reinvent himself as a leading man and Oscar winner in the 1990s, then why cant Tyler Perry be given the space to evolve, to grow, to be something other than what first made his fame and fortune? Or if a Marvin Gaye could go from crooning catchy but clichéd Motown pop ballads to making a masterpiece model for social protest music with Whats Going On? then why cant we believe, in our hearts, that Perry made a strong, compelling, and emotionally-riveting movie with For Colored Girls? Yes, there are flaws in the film. Here are the glaring ones for me: Janet Jackson, who I have always loved in general, just should not be in the film nor should she have been given top billing. Janet simply does not have the range and depth she displayed as a child actor on Good Times. Next, the director did not push Kerry Washington hard enough, I feel, to display the kind of emotional dexterity needed for her character as she witnessed the breaking down of lives about her, and her inability to have a baby. And it was so pathetically predictable that Janets husband in the film would turn out to be a brother on the down-low. Weve got to stop fanning the flames of fear and homophobia to Black people like that, once and for all. The issue with HIV/AIDS in Black America is sexual dishonesty and sexual irresponsibility across the board, not whether someone is straight or gay. Everyone has to be more honest and everyone has to be more careful. That scene is one moment of a few in the film where I felt we were getting the old Tyler Perry, the Perry as Madea film where the script got stiff and, well, lethargic and unimaginative. And, no, for the record, I as a Black man had no problem whatsoever with the depiction of Black males in the film. For Colored Girls is not a male-bashing film. It is a story about women and if you, a man, happen to be uncomfortable with what you see and hear, then maybe it is because elements of who you be are in some of those characters. I absolutely thought about my own relationships with Black women through the years as I digested For Colored Girls, thought of women I have dated, women I have treated correctly and as my equals, and of women Ive treated poorly or disrespectfully. So if you are an honest man, one serious about your own growth and evolution, then you come to For Colored Girls, or any story about women and girls, with emotional courage and integrity, not disdain, finger-pointing, and haterism. Unfortunately, this same wave of negative male responses occurred when Shanges For Colored Girls opened on Broadway in the 1970s, and with The Color Purple, the film, in the mid1980s. So it is to be expected given the patriarchy, sexism, and misogyny that runs rampant on our planet, still. Men will refuse to see the film and say it is unfair to them just because. But what is missing is that we males do need to listen to the stories of women, do need to empathize with their highs and their lows, do need to understand how much more we can learn about ourselves, if we simply develop the intellectual muscle to listen to the blues songs of women, including the women who are our mothers, grandmothers, sisters, aunts, nieces, cousins, lovers, bosses, employees, wives, friends But, alas, in an American society as drenched in sexism as it is in racism, that is a huge leap for many of us. Male privilege is a tough thing to shake, above all when weve been conditioned our entire lives to believe we are the superior sex, to believe that the only way to view the world is through our eyes. As if the womens eyes dont matter at all. The stories told in For Colored Girls are very factual, happen to women in Black, White, Latina, and Native American communities every single day; happen to women who are Christian, Jewish, Muslim, and other faiths, or no faiths whatsoever; and those stories, in particular the ones of rape and domestic violence, are the reasons why it was stated in a New York Times Magazine article in 2009 that global violence against women is the human rights issue of the 21st century. What that means, matter of fact, for my community, the Black community, is that weve got some long-held and far-rooted traumas that weve got to deal with immediately. That was evident from the excessive laughter during scenes that were clearly not funny. Also evident by all the Black folks complaining about the audience chatter that took place during their viewing of the film. Or complaints of cell phones that went off. Mad annoying and each gripe valid, yes, but worthy of long Facebook posts and blistering denigration of each other that reeks of Black self-hatred and, in some cases, blatant classism by some of my more, uh, uppity and uptight Black sisters and brothers? No. But as long as we continue to suffer from what scholars and activists in Black America refer to as post-traumatic slave syndrome, passed from generation to generation, like a baton in a relay race, where your pain becomes your childs pain, and so on and so forth, then we will continue to be divided, inwardly and outwardly. Was that not clear from the scarred and shredded relationship between the characters depicted by Whoopie Goldberg and Thandie Newton? At the end of the day, people who are hurting simply want love, but often fail to recognize the first love must be of self. In sexing all those men in the film, Newtons character was essentially ducking and dodging the inner her, and ducking and dodging the past she needed to confront, finally. That is why that coming together of community at the end of For Colored Girls is so critical, and so necessary. For none of us can go it alone. Yes, Black males have issues too and, and yes, we deserve films that present as whole human beings, as well, but that is not the point of For Colored Girls, nor should it be; and, no, Black women are not abandoning us simply because of one film, but Perrys For Colored Girls does suggest that if we are to be healthy, and whole, then it means weve got to make conscious decisions to come together in a way where I am not hurting you and you are not hurting me. And to love our powerful and beautiful selves before it is too late That is the challenge for Mr. Tyler Perry, as For Colored Girls continues to make money and continues to be both debated and disparaged. That is, can Tyler Perryor will Tyler Perrystrive and struggle to transform the one-man economy his films have manifested, and use his voice, and his power, to push the envelope to make films, Black films, that not only show the vast complexities of the Black experience in America, and on this planet, but to also be spaces, simply by virtue of the genius of the work he produces and endorses for others, that can be healing circles for as many of us as possible? Will Perry, the next time a womans story is presented to him, step aside and support a dynamic Black female director like Nzingha Stewart, Julie Dash, Ayoka Chenzira, or Kasi Lemmons? Will he, as a man, use his male privilege to make sure, in fact, that For Colored Girls the movie is not the last time, for decades and decades, we see such rich and layered depictions of Black women in theaters? Tall orders, yes, but I dont think Perry has been given this grand opportunity just for the sake of making dollars. As Perry admitted himself in one interview, he tried to avoid doing For Colored Girls, both on Broadway and on film, but it kept coming back to him. Now it is done, it is out, and it is what he does from this moment forward that will determine his place in cinematic history and whether Tyler Perrys body of work will ultimately be a legacy for the ages. Kevin Powell, New York City-based activist and public speaker, is the author or editor of 10 books, including the essay collection Open Letters to America and the poetry book No Sleep Till Brooklyn. Kevins writings have appeared in Esquire, Newsweek, Ebony, Essence, Rolling Stone, Vibe,huffingtonpost.com, and elsewhere through the years. Email him at [email protected]
This
young contender has been giving all upcoming emcees a run for their
ends. Maryland rapper Phil Adé has the internet waves constantly shaking
in anticipation for some new tunes. The reason why isnt hard to
understand. With Wale opening the doors for DMV artists, the spotlight
is on the nations capital more than ever now. But its not any
hand-me-down raps coming out of this keeper. Crisp lyricism and delux
production, its no wonder why Raheem DeVaughn signed him to his
independent DC-based label 368 Music Group. The rising star has already
had the pleasure of accomplishing major moves. With his face gaining
regular rotation on MTV Jams and show appearances all across the US,
theres no warning signs clear enough to understand for the youngster.
AllHipHop
had a chance to rap with the kid and talk randomness, on top of some
vital information onne may want to know. In his first time Breeding
Ground interview, Phil shares his insight on his growing success, being
next up in the DMV and other random goodies such as taking long walks on
beaches during sunset. Muisc/Videos
Phil Ade – Toast 2 Life featuring Kevin Ross from 368 Music Group on Vimeo.
AllHipHop.com: Its obvious that you came into the game with Raheem DeVaughn, but did you really expect to blow up so quickly?
Phil Adé:
Actually I really didnt know what to expect. When I first really got
serious about doing music, it is kind of when I met Raheem and my
manager Tennyson and Dre [Andre Dre The Mayor Hopson] and all of them.
So I really wasnt even sure what to expect as my first time pursuing
music seriously.
AllHipHop.com: Can you recall when you first fell in love with Hip-Hop? Whether it was a song, or an age, can you remember?
Phil Adé:
Actually, nah. Its kind of like something that I just kind of grew up
with. When I was younger I did what my brother did. I was kind of like a
follower of my brother. So if he was listening to Tupac and B.I.G. like
he was, thats what I would listen to too. Its kind of always been
like that. Pac and Big were like the first people I listened to, and Nas
and Tribe. Those artists were kind of the first artists that I really
listened to a lot because my brother did.
AllHipHop.com: You list Biggie, Nas, Jay, etc. as influences. But is there anybody that may shock some of your fans?
Phil Adé:
Lets see. I know off the top, AZ. I listen to a lot of AZ. Really, the
stuff he did with Nas. I dont know if you heard the song Lifes a
B####. Thats one of my favorite songs from him and Nas. S###, AZ, Jeru
the Damaja, um…I say thats about it.
AllHipHop.com: So now you have your current project out, The Letterman out. The Letterman follows Starting On JV. Would you say that youve moved up the varsity with the second project? How do you feel in the game right now?
Phil Adé:
Yeah, definitely. Ill say Ive moved along. My music has gotten better
and gotten to the point where I think you can reach more people to
actually be a successful artist full-time because of the experiences
Ive had. Ive had more experiences being with Raheem and going on tour
with him. I guess you can say Ive just seen a lot more life and a lot
more situations. So I have a lot more to talk about, and I believe
thats taking my music to the next level.Phil Ade “The Letter” from Okayplayer on Vimeo.
AllHipHop.com: Some would say youre the next best thing to come out of the DMV after Wale. Do you feel any kind of pressure at all?
Phil Adé:
I dont really think its any pressure really. Wales a great artist
and he has his name. And Im a pretty dope artist myself, if I may toot
my own horn, and I have my own name. I believe everybody has a part to
play and Im just playing my part. I dont think theres really any
pressure there.
AllHipHop.com: So you find it rather easy?
Phil Adé: Yeah, I mean, I dont really feel any pressure. Im just doing me.
AllHipHop.com:
Speaking of Wale again, you both have African descent. And I recently
interviewed Chiddy from Chiddy Bang who also has Nigerian blood in him.
How do you feel about more and more African artist being on the rise in
Hip-Hop? Of course we have Wale, Nipsey Hussle, Nneka.
Phil Adé:
I think there have always been African artists. I would say Africa is
one of the originators of music with a beat behind it. Drums and stuff
like that you know, is really deep-rooted in the African culture. It
doesnt surprise me. You know artists like Sade, shes an African artist
and shes been out since the 80s. But um, I think its great though. I
dont really know if its a coincidence or what it is, but I think its
dope. I think its dope that its a lot of Nigerian artists coming up
also.
AllHipHop.com:
Now this is totally random. But one of my favorite tracks from you is
Always There. And I was just wondering like, do you have a shorty or
anything like that that could always be there?
Phil Adé: Yeah, I got a shorty. Phil Ade “Always There” from Okayplayer on Vimeo.
AllHipHop.com: So when youre not with your shorty or your 368 crew, what can we find you doing? What do you do in your spare time?
Phil Adé: Ill say drawing.
AllHipHop.com: Drawing? You actually draw?
Phil Adé:
When I was in college I was actually studying graphic design. And
drawing was one of my first passions. I used to sketch cartoons when I
was little. And my brother used to collect basketball cards, so I used
to sometimes take the basketball cards out, go in the corner and draw
the little picture on them. I draw and play ball.
AllHipHop.com: So the basketball theme is really real, you actually do that?
Phil Adé: Mmm Hmm.AllHipHop.com: Recently you were in North Carolina working with 9th Wonder. I figured that youre working on a new project. How is it working with 9th? And tell us about this new project that youre working on.
Phil Adé: 9th
was dope. I got to see him actually make beats. He made a joint for me
really in like 15 minutes. It was dope, like, I hadnt heard something
that dope in a while. It was great to see him work. I was honored to
actually be in the studio with him. And I got a joint coming with him
soon, a few songs. And as far as the mixtape, its an idea that I came
up with from the last couple days. Me, Dre, and DJ Money, were gonna do
a little project. I went to Australia on September 18 and Im going to
be on the Sneaker Pimps Tour, so Im actually going to be gone til
November. I just thought itll be dope to put something together to give
to all my fans and supporters, just to hold them til I get back.
Phil Ade “Hollywood” from Okayplayer on Vimeo.
AllHipHop.com: Now, what is this Winners Circle Im hearing about?
Phil Adé:
Basically what its 368. Im no longer the only artist on there
anymore. Theres a new artist from Florida named Dee Boy. Theres
another artist named Phuture, and another one named Stello, that just
got involved with 368. And basically what were doing is, weve come
together and made a group of all of us, and called it The Winners
Circle. And what we have coming up is a mixtape called 368 FTW Vol. 1.
Im not quite sure on the date. But its coming soon. We actually have
some stuff up. We have a song called Til the Lights Come On. It has
Raheem on the hook, its me, Dee Boy, and Stello, and DJ Money also.
AllHipHop.com:
So in the midst of these projects and trips to Australia, etc., whats
next for you? Do you have any goals that you want to tackle? What would
you say is next in your plans and goals?
Phil Adé:
I wanna do an album. Thats really what I want to do now. I dont know,
its just something that I havent tackled yet. I think thats
basically whats next. So hopefully when the right situation rises, I
cant say when Im planning on doing it, but hopefully the right
situation arises that I can do an official album.
AllHipHop.com:
Who would you want to grab for that, as far as producers and
collaborations? If you could just do it off the top of your head, who
would you know for sure you wanted on that project?
Phil Adé: 9th
Wonder, Swizz Beats, No I.D., Kanye. Thats one of my favorite artists.
Off the top, thats about it. Of course Sunny, the dude I been working
with since day one.
AllHipHop.com: Last words for Hip-Hop?
Phil Adé:
Dont be afraid to take risks, as Raheem calls it, jumping off the
cliff creatively. You know, mainstream Hip-Hop is always changing. I
think thats because people arent afraid to take risks. Thats another
thing with being a successful artist. I believe every successful artist
has something different to offer. So be you.
Visit Phil Ade on twitter: Twitter.com/PhilAde301
Jay-Z has been added to the Miami Book Fair’s International lineup, when he will take part in a discussion with revered educator, Dr. Cornel West. Jay-Z and Cornel West will conduct the chat live from the New York Public Library, although the session will be telecast live to the fair. The pair will discuss Jay-Z’s new book Decoded, which is the Hip-Hop mogul’s first book about his life and his explanation of his most popular lyrics. Jay-Z’s conversation with Dr. Cornel West will take place at 7:00 PM on November 15th, in the auditorium of Miami Dade College’s Wolfson Campus. The event is free, on a first-come, first-serve basis. There will also be a limited number of signed copies of Decoded that will be given away during the chat session. Black Eyed Peas frontman will.I.am is assembling a group of celebrities who will lend their support to President Barack Obama via a massive Twitter campaign. On November 13th, will.I.am is leading a global call to action to build an “indestructible Twitter army for the 2012 election” with the “i.am W/U MR. PRES!” campaign. Celebrities like Don Cheadle, El Debarge, Pras, Vivica A. Fox, Sinbad, Greg Grunberg, Anthony Hamilton, Hill Harper, Sally Richardson, Sugar Shane Mosley and others are all confirmed to take part in the campaign, which is also being organized with Jimmy Jean-Louis, Bill Duke and Mikal Kamil. On November 13th, the celebs will shoot a video tweet message at the Record Plant in Hollywood, California, which is being shot by GBK Productions and 3Kingdoms Entertainment. The video tweet is slated to be blasted out on Thanksgiving day in the United States, which is November 25th. will.I.Am also lent his support to President Obama during the 2008 election with the hit track, “Yes We Can!” The Urban League Of Hudson County will host the 2010 Girls 2 Women Empowerment Conference this weekend, for young women between the ages of 13-17 years-old. The conference, which will take place on Saturday, November 13, will provide a supportive environment for dialogue addressing a wide range of topics. Celebrity speakers like WBLS Radio/TV Personality Egypt, CNN Commentator Michaela Angela Davis, Fox Business News producer Alvina Alston and other women will address the young girls about subjects like self esteem, sexting/cyber bullying, gang violence prevention, improving and managing personal relationships, images in the media, peer pressure and the importance of goals and education. A variety of workshops will also focus on parents, to improve communication and stress the need for positive role models in the young ladies’ lives. The 2010 Girls 2 Women Empowerment Conference will take place at the Culinary Conference Center @ Hudson County Community College located at 161 Newkirk Street in Jersey City, New Jersey The Urban League Of Hudson County is proud to present a conference addressing the concerns of our young women. We understand the power and motivation that comes from shared experiences. The GIRLS 2 WOMEN Empowerment Conference will serve as a way to educate and ensure that our youth have access to valuable community resources, said Elnora Watson, CEO & President of The Urban League Of Hudson County.
(AllHipHop News) R&B singer/musicA mogul Akon has announced the launch of a new foundation to help serve under privileged children in Africa.According to Akon, the Konfidence Foundation was established to create a better future for the children of Africa. “It all strung from concept of creating a better future for the kids in Africa,” Akon told AllHipHop.com. “I started realizing as I was growing up and as I was coming up in this business, I allowed myself to be educated, period. And I think that was the moment where I became more of an entrepreneur; I understood what the essence of business was.”Akon has experienced major success over the course of 2010 with the runaway success of Lady Gaga, who is signed to his record label Konlive. Other acts on Akon’s label include T-Pain, Kardinal Offishall, Ya Boy, Red Cafe, Rock City, French Montana and others. Akon, who was born in Senegal, applied the knowledge and education he received from mentors and successful executives like Michael Jackson, Quincy Jones, Jimmy Iovine and Steve Rifkind, to his own label. And the new foundation is his way of reinvesting his money into the African continent. The mogul recently opened an elementary school in his Senegal, using the proceeds he earned from touring. “You start to realize education really is the key,” Akon told AllHipHop.com. “You just got to allow yourself to absorb the information and properly use it. With that thought in mind, when we created the Konfidence Foundation, it was more so to find a platform to educate all these children so that they can have a better future with whats left to develop in Africa. We built my first elementary school in Senegal, which is an incredible accomplishment because I did it with my own money, my tour money and did it myself.”According to Akon, his next project will be to create and establish a new University in Senegal for students, in addition to future plans to build hospitals in the country. “We feel like education doesnt mean anything if you arent healthy,” Akon told AllHipHop.com. “Between health and education those are the two key things to rebuild any country. We want to start with the kids because they have a lot more growing up to do and a lot more to give in order to create a future for ourselves.”
(AllHipHop News) Hip-Hop innovator Ralph Uncle Ralph McDaniels is scheduled to be honored this November for his contributions to the Hip-Hop genre. McDaniels is the creator of Video Music Box, which was the first televised music video show to focus entirely on Hip-Hop music.A Tribute to Ralph McDaniels will take place on Saturday, November 13, 2010 at 1pm in the Langston Hughes Community Library and Cultural Center of the Queens Library. The event is free to all but seating is limited. The celebration will include McDaniels being interviewed by Mark DJ Wiz Eastmond (DJ/producer of Hip-Hop group Kid N Play), a video presentation of McDaniels accomplishments, testimonials and guest appearances by those who have been impacted by the pioneer.Video Music Box was created over 25 years ago. Since then McDaniels has expanded his contributions to the Hip-Hop industry. He is currently an on air radio personality at New Yorks Hot 97, the creator of video website OnFumes.com, president of Uncle Ralph Productions, and the host/producer of television show The Bridge.
“Looking For Trouble”
“Let Me Remind Ya”