Cee Lo Inks New Management Deal To Prepare For ‘The Lady Killer’

(AllHipHop News) Cee Lo Green has inked a new management deal to prepare for the release of his highly anticipated upcoming album The Lady Killer, which has already spawned the #1 hit single “F**k You.” The Atlanta rapper has inked a deal with New York City-based Family Tree/Primary Wave Talent Management that will see veteran manager Michael “Blue” Williams take charge of Cee Lo’s career. Williams has handled the careers of a variety of stars, including Outkast, Monica, Macy Gray, Donnell Jones and others. “Finally a firm with foresight! Fearless and focused, fighting on the front lines for the fundamentals of franchise. In short – I like these guys!” Cee Lo said. The announcement comes as Cee Lo adjusts to the massive success of “F**k You,” which has garnered over 13 million plays on YouTube in less then a month, forcing Cee Lo’s label, Atlantic Records, to move up the release date of the album several months, to November 9th. “Cee Lo Green is an incredibly talented artist, and I couldn’t be more proud to represent him,” says Williams. “Cee Lo and I have known each other for over 15 years and over that time I’ve seen him grow monumentally as a performer. From the first time I saw him perform through today, I’m still utterly amazed each and every time I see him or listen to his music, and I’m so ecstatic to help bring his talent to the world.”In addition to Cee Lo, Family Tree/Primary Wave Talent Management handles the careers of Big Sean (G.O.O.D. Music), Cody Simpson, the Trio Lords and Lady. The Lady Killer is due in stores November 9th.

The Journalist MC, The Novelist MC, And The Artist-Leader

“And no I ain’t get shot up a whole bunch of times

Or make up s*** in a whole bunch of lines

And I ain’t animated like say a Busta Rhymes

But the real s*** you get when you bust down my lines…”

Jay-Z on “What More Can I Say?”

If you ever wanted to know the root of the creative tension (not the personal drama or the competitive energy) between Jay-Z and Nas last decade, it boils down to the fact that they are two rappers from two different schools. One – Jay-Z is the classic journalist (or columnist), able to describe his environment and state of mind in first or third person with vivid commentary. The other – Nas, was the epitome of a novelist, skilled at dramatizing reality in fictional descriptions and powerful symbolism and imagery. This does not mean that either artist could not do what the other did. Obviously they could, did, and still do. But each of them received the support of a loyal following because they became the perfect representative of a school of MC’ing that will always live in Hip-Hop.

As references, Jay-Z is at his journalistic best on “Izzo” (H.O.V.A.)and Nas, the supreme author of the reality based novel on “One Love.”

Both describe reality and tell the truth, with wit, but just in different ways.

The artist to me who did both the best was Tupac. It was not that he was the best lyricist in either school. He’s not a better novelist than Scarface or Slick Rick for instance and he’s not a better journalist than Chuck D.

And he never combined both schools in one song like Kool G. Rap did for example on ‘Streets Of New York’ (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TdvKAnIlB2Y) or how KRS-One did for most of his career (by the way KRS-One is very unique in that he started out as a novelist on ‘Criminal Minded’ and within two years was arguably rap’s leading journalist and activist-leader).

But what ‘Pac had more than anyone else was the ability to convey empathy (way beyond sympathy) and give you the impression that he would act on what he was rapping about – sincerely dedicated to the cause he gave attention to – even to the point of death.

Tupac had leadership qualities and left you with the impression that his image as an artist was second to his profile as an authentic person and leader. It seemed to come natural to him. In comparison to so many artists today, there was nothing contrived in Tupac’s artistry, however over-the-top he may have been in his calculated obsession with Puffy and Biggie.

As I introduce my advisory service for artists (http://www.cedricmuhammad.com/cedric-muhammad-unveils-hip-hoppreneur-%E2%84%A2-advisory-service-for-international-artists/ ) and look for the right mixture of talent, ‘story,’ consciousness and charisma, I continue to come back to these schools of thought – novelist and journalist – and the gold standard of the rare individual who as artist-leader has the ability to 1) accurately describe reality 2) dramatize the most powerful elements of reality (love and hate) and 3) seek to serve as a catalyst, even lead a movement, to change reality for the better.

Not since he passed away have we had an artist who came so close to balancing all three.

“ There that voice go again, ‘Mac, practice for greatness.

Get paid for them immaculate statements

Keep thinking of those hot lines, like a psychic’

I can’t explain it – there’s no pain when I write it, there’s nothing like it.

…I spit words that skip through air

Let these words of a true thug hit your ear

And change colors like blue blood when it hit the air.”

Beanie Sigel on “Nothing Like It”

So I thought of artists who stand out in either of these two schools of thought and who in some way have the potential to go to the third level in a major way. Or perhaps more importantly, these artists, if they do not reach that level themselves, represent qualities on that path for today’s younger artists to study and learn from.

Here are five that came to mind:

Rick Ross. He either stumbled upon it or knew it all along when he made ‘B.M.F.’ but in that one anthem Rick Ross came as close to giving us broad appeal non-preachy but start-a-riot ‘movement music ‘ as anything we have heard in some time. While some in the more overtly political school of thought in Hip-Hop viewed references to the Black Mafia Family as a ‘political’ force with skepticism, they could not deny the electricity and implication of the Larry Hoover shout-out in the chorus. The reaction alone bore witness that rap’s current L.B.M. (Lyrical Big Man) of the moment was on the money to depict the streets as political and that Rick Ross as novelist is a force to be respected. With his ‘boom’-heavy Nike commercials in heavy rotation, Ross gives the impression that he’s back to being more interested in lifestyle than moving us from coke rap to movement music. But never underestimate the man who sometimes stops showing us his belly long enough to appear in a suit and describe his ‘Farrakhan aura.’

Jay Electronica. For that one song -‘Exhibit C,’ – may Allah (God) forgive all of his sins. Jay Electronica, with the cinematic help of Just Blaze, gave us a track every journalist and novelist would kill for. Yes, in retrospect, we were premature to anoint him as the heir to Nas’ throne – a position Jay Elect Hannukah never said he wanted. And there is no denying that the inability to strike when it was hot and build a marketing campaign around that song and ride the ‘We Need Something Realer’ movement into millions of homes (as well as millions of dollars) may go down as one of the great ‘what if’ moments in rap history. But Jay Electronica cannot be defined by one song and his uncanny ability to ‘write novels’ with journalistic qualities means he is only another great concept, or better yet theme album away from going places few lyricists have – in the hearts and minds of the people.

Jasiri X. The reigning Journalist-In-Chief of Hip Hop (http://www.jasirix.com/). It’s not even close. No one delivers more timely, topical, and relevant commentary on current events than the franchise MC of the New Canadian record label Wandering Worx Music (Jasiri just signed with them). With a close working relationship with the legendary Paradise Gray of X-Clan, Jasiri’s channeling of Golden Era energy (1987-1992) is unmistakable, but his efforts to remain relevant to the youth – particularly through his masterful use of video and Internet technology make him a specialist without peer at the moment. In addition Jasiri’s activist-leader credentials on the ground are intact and thoroughly documented in the Pittsburgh-area. It will be interesting to see whether Wandering Worx has the formula to position Jasiri in creative ways on the national and international stages that await him.

“For the Gods that lost Their Earth

The World’s A Song You’ll Get It Back; You Just Lost Your Verse

It’s P verse the demons; that’s why I’m fiending for weed – cause I don’t want to forfeit first

…And I never practice Voodo, but it’s like Black Magic – how I spit this fluid to ni***s”

Styles P. on “Black Magic”

Styles P. No one writes introspective songs any better than one third of The Lox. His novelist abilities are not a metaphor. He really has published his very own novel – ‘Invincible’ – one of the most progressive marketing steps I’ve seen a Hip-Hop artist make in years. And then there is the at times Tupac-like honesty and reckless energy. I was so moved by the similarities that I wrote two tributes to the work of Styles P. at BlackElectorate.com several years ago. One for the courageous step he took – which few applauded him for – in making “I’m Black” (http://www.blackelectorate.com/articles.asp?ID=1309 ) and the other after the release of ‘A Gangster And A Gentleman,’ (http://www.blackelectorate.com/articles.asp?ID=668) which I insist is one of the best albums of last decade. In that second article I explain how Styles P. represents the duality that Tupac personified better than artist I had seen out back then. It is hard to imagine Styles P. as an artist-leader in the activist sense but his African roots (where his Mother is from) are an explosive wildcard waiting to be played right – for commercial success and more movement music.

40 Glocc. Make no mistake about it – this man is an intellectual. Like many affiliated artists whose real talent and ‘consciousness’ is drowned out by street organization imagery and the fascination and confusion that many in the world of rap have with the lifestyle and culture – the Crip rapper has another dimension as an artist-leader that has not been brought out through his musical career. All you have to do is listen to his riveting interviews where he expresses his political consciousness (which everyone assumes he doesn’t have because he is in a ‘gang’) and you can see there is a non-music industry goldmine awaiting 40 Glocc. He just has to use music to drive his brand, rather than squeezing his dynamic leadership profile into the limiting strait jacket of a music career. His love for and credibility in the streets could be an asset in terms of bigger business awaiting him, but it may be a liability when confined to the politically correct world of ‘gossip’ and ‘beef’ dominated rap marketing. With more positioning of him as an informed street intellectual, a right theme album, concept songs, and journalistic subject matter capable of building a local community and international support base (not ‘fans’) 40 Glocc could do what I believe he is built to do best – lead a movement.

****

If I had to choose between the two – novelist or journalist – while I believe people are always looking to escape and have art indirectly dramatize reality, I believe the journalistic school would resonate more in these hard times, which will get worse before they get better.

But the artist who has novelist skills would probably be more valuable from the perspective of the entertainment industry and particularly in terms of the kind of non-music industry creative work – acting, scripts, scores and books – that go beyond the direct sale of recorded music. This is what makes the Styles P. rapper-turned-novelist move so potentially powerful, from a business perspective.

But in a Great Recession with two wars, people don’t just want to hear their plight accurately depicted and dramatized – they want to know that the person talking about it wants to change things. So, like ‘Pac , the rapper with the greatest value will be the one capable of representing both schools , while seeking to change the reality that he describes. That is why he was so special – and valuable in life and death. He could rap, write, act, and speak – articulating, dramatizing and popularizing any reality or cause.

In 2010 I believe the artist with skills as novelist and journalist, and with marketability as both performer and leader is even more valuable than he (or she) was back in 1996.

Whether such artist-leaders leaders are made, or born, is the subject for another day…

Cedric Muhammad is a business consultant, political strategist, and monetary economist. He’s a former GM of Wu-Tang Management and currently a Member of the African Union’s First Congress of African Economists. Cedric’s the Founder of the economic information service Africa PreBrief (http://africaprebrief.com/) and author of ‘The Entrepreneurial Secret’ (http://theEsecret.com/) . His Facebook Fan page is: http://www.facebook.com/pages/Cedric-Muhammad/57826974560?ref=ts and he can be contacted via e-mail at: cedric(at)cmcap.com.

Akon: Is Pop The Final Frontier For Hip-Hop?

Recently, Erykah Badu blasted the urban community for its newfound affinity for music of a more electronic variety. If the movement continues, some may find that the origins of the trend begin with Akon. The Senegalese singer/Hip-Hop artist noticed the talents of one Lady Gaga and signed her to his KonLive imprint, a subsidiary of Interscope Records. Aside from being able to retire, the music industry has seen the GaGa affect come to Hip-Hop and R&B, to the chagrin of folks like Badu.

AllHipHop asked Akon…is pop music is the final frontier to Hip-Hop?

Akon: I doubt it… absolutely not. One thing about Hip-Hop is that it is like a virus. It’ll eat up anything that get in front of it and take it over. Hip-Hop, it’ll begin to stand alone, a movement by itself. It was just a hardcore drum beat bass line and that’s all you saw. Then, it started to slowly travel into the funk era, and it took over that whole funk era, and that’s when the West Coast came and brought that whole vibe to it so it just slowly came in effect at that part of it. Then as you started to realize that the West Coast was being effected by hip hop and started bring the whole funk feel to it, back on the east coast it was completely now starting to be slowly accepted by the Jamaicans, and before you know it the traditional reggae one drop started becoming dancehall, and Jamaicans was really rappin’. It influenced that because dancehall didn’t come about until Hip-Hop. So it ejected itself into that. Then as all that was combined, then it started to become more musical.

Then slowly before you know it, you had hip hop ejected itself into R&B. Then R&B started flourishing because now you couldn’t hear a R&B song without a hip hop artist on it. So now time is starting to go, then before you know it is like whoa, you couldn’t even understand the difference between hip hop and R&B. Now when you look at it you gotta say Hip-Hop and R&B; you can’t even say Hip-Hop and you can’t say R&B because it is the same thing. That is how effective Hip-Hop is. Now is it starting to go into electro dance, ‘cause now when I get on a record, even my artist ‘til this day call me a hip hop artist; they don’t know the difference. You ask a White guy or a little White kid “Who’s your favorite hip hop star?” they’ll say Akon. I’m like; I never kicked a verse in my life. But, it’s the way it actually walked in. Now we are going into the dance era and we are going to take that over eventually too. So once this world’s over, I promise you, it’ll find something else. We even infected a little bit of the rock. When you stop and look at these clashes, you got a lot of these rock bands that’s actually rapping over these hardcore heavy metal tracks. As long as there is music playing, Hip-Hop is going to find it’s way into it. So I don’t think it’s going no where or going anywhere no time soon. It’s literally a virus, it’ll effect that you put in front of it.

Tiny Pleads Not Guilty To Drug Charge In Los Angeles

(AllHipHop News) T.I.’s wife Tameka “Tiny” Cottle pleaded not guilty to a misdemeanor drug possession charge, after she was caught with ecstasy and arrested along with her husband T.I., in Los Angeles on September 1st.Both T.I. and Tiny were arrested on the Sunset Strip, after the rapper made an illegal U-turn. When police stopped the rapper’s Maybach, they allegedly smelled the odor of burnt marijuana and searched the vehicle’s occupants.Officers found ecstasy on both T.I. and his wife, Tiny. They were charged and released on $10,000 bail on September 2nd. Cottle entered into the not guilty plea yesterday (November 1st), the same day that T.I. surrendered to authorities to serve an 11-month prison sentence for violating the terms of his probation with the drug charge and other infractions. Last week, Los Angeles prosecutors dropped the same charge against T.I., because he has already punished with his 11 months in prison, which he is serving in an Arkansas prison. In October of 2007, police charged Cottle with possession of ecstasy, which was found during a raid of her house, as police searched for a cache of guns relating to T.I.’s arrest for attempting to buy machine guns prior to the BET Awards. Tiny’s next court appearance is for a pre-trial hearing, which is slated for January 6th in Beverly Hills Superior Court.

Hip-Hop Rumors: 50 Cent “Rolls” Out With Chelsea! Drake Gives Away A Lambo! R.Kelly & Tupac?

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.comtwitter.com.illseedHOW: Send your rumors, sightings and ill pics to illseed at [email protected].HAMMER’S GETTING PAID!?

Ohhhhh! I see all the talk about Hammer and I understand where it is coming from. But, weren’t half of you turncoats saying just last week that Jay-Z was in this club and had all these Masonic symbols in his videos! Ohhh…but now that Hammer said it, everybody is now on Jay’s side. Oh, well anyway. I don’t know any details, but I heard HAmmer got paid pretty nicely for those placements that were in the video. Hey, I can’t be bad at him for getting that money.

BATTLE OF THE CHEETAH CAKES

Who won?

DRAKE GIVES AWAY A LAMBO?

Cats can say what they want, but Drake is one loyal hombre. Before he was “discovered” by Lil Wayne, he was discovered by J. Prince’s son, who goes by Young CEO. Well, J. Prince, Jr. has always quietly taken credit for it and Drake remembered his homey when he gave him a nice lil Lamborghini on October 29.

R. KELLY SAID BEST OF BOTH WORLDS WAS REALLY FOR TUPAC!?

I don’t know where this quote came from, but it sure is revealing. I’m not an R. Kelly fan, but a duet album with Pac would have been better than that fiasco with Jay-Z. Here is the quote.

“Well ‘I Wish’ was basically about Tupac at first,” Kelly said. “I met Tupac in L.A.- the [Hotel Nikko], and he was rolling by in his drop-top whatever hot car. I seen him, and I yelled out, “‘Pac! ‘Pac!” He was driving by, rolling by himself. I’m like, ‘This n*gga got a lot of balls to be rolling by hisself!” So we kicked it for a minute, I said “Dude, we need to do an album.” See, The Best Of Both Worlds was for me and Pac at first. “I Wish” was gonna be the first song we were gonna do.”

50 CENT AND CHELSEA ROLL OUT AGAIN

Rolls Royce, eh?

50 & CHELSEA, WE LOVE YOU!They keep us talking, but if we stop talking about them then they should worry!

Hip-Hop Rumors: Fake Rick Ross Tricks Howard U! Kid Cudi Drunk In Street! Kim Kardashian: Singer?

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.comtwitter.com.illseedHOW: Send your rumors, sightings and ill pics to illseed at [email protected].

KIM KARDASHIAN, THE SINGER

Kim Kardashian is reportedly about to take her “career” as a socialite into a new direction as a singer. You can thank The Dream for this one, because that is who she is rumored to be working with.

Thanks, Dream.

FAKE RICK ROSS FOOLS HOWARD STUDENTS!

Over the weekend, Rick Ross performed at Howard and dude was well received. But there was a fake Rick Ross running around the campus.

I heard Lincoln University blew the whole budget to get Rick Ross at the school. A student rapper was the opening act, because Ross took all the cake.

KID CUDI SICK ON THAT BROWN WATER

Kid Cudi was out and about and very, very drunk.

Maybe its best that he does just go over to the Rock side of music. This is how they acted in the 80s.

Shout out, Necole.

YOUNG DIRTY BASTARD

Hip-Hop moves 360-degrees and that couldn’t not be more apparent with the emergence of Young Dirty Bastard, the son of Ol’ Dirty Bastard. After performing with the Wu over the summer, the young rapper is ready to come forth on his own, representing for his late father. Preview for Food Stamp Celebrity: The Young Dirty Documentary

Whats Good Everybody welcome to Mikey T The Movie Star’s

portion , Happy Monday MotherFu**ers …R U Getting $$$$$$$

Holla at me [email protected]

Saigon got his Ass Whipped 4

the lil stunt he pulled on Prodigy , not gon

lie Saigon is a big dude but

you don’t mess w/ the Infamous Mobb.

Artist signed to Cash Money

Young Money are giving up the rites

to all there master recordings . Think about it

theres alot of artist’s signed to the labels .

Miami Goes Crazy 4 Rick Ross , his music

his club appearences , hell the East Coast

goes just as crazy , i’m jus reporting the truth

being that i’ve lived in both areas , Ross got

both Coasts on Smash , rite now .

Speaking of Rick Ross , Freddy P

was one of the first from Miami to speak

on radio about an emerging artist from Miami

who resembled Biggie in both size + flow .

Freddy P + Rick Ross recorded music together when

Ross was running around the hip hop scene as “Teflon Don”

Nicki Minaj just had a show in Trini , should have

some of that footage 4 u 2 , both Nicki & Bang Em Smurf

are From Trinidad originally .

Heres Some Exclusive Performance Footage of

of Onyx performing in boston , some of there most

Raw Tracks .

My Grind Don’t Stop @MTMovieStar

make u a superstar

S/O Jazzy thats my Guy we bout to do somethin major 4 Harlem .

THE DREAM, WE LOVE YOU!They keep us talking, but if we stop talking about them then they should worry!

T.I. Back In Prison

(AllHipHop News) T.I. officially started his 11-month bid in an Arkansas prison.

The rapper entered in the facility this afternoon, according to sources.

T.I., real name Clifford Harris, was forced back to jail after he was found in violation of his probation in September. He was then arrested in Los Angeles with the drug ecstasy on his person.

A spokesperson told TMZ that the rapper will go through a normal entry process, including a prison photo, bunk assignment an will have a “community shower situation.”

T.I. has roughly 300 hours of phone time per month.

Soulja Boy Talks Business and Marketing With Wall Street Journal

(AllHipHop News) Soulja Boy recently sat down with the Wall Street Journal to discus his business practices on the net, and among other things, his new album The DeAndre Way, set to debut November 30th.Soulja took the time to tell everyone exactly how he came up and progressed from A high school student to a hip-hop mogul.                                                 “My whole story is around 2005 I started rapping and recorded my first mixtape.  Around 2006 I discovered the Internet and started using SoundClick to upload my music to get around the U.S. and I started using Myspace and Youtube and that’s when my name really started to grow,” Soulja Boy told the Wall Street Journal. “After I reached my first million hits on Myspace, I had put up my OG Miami Mike’s email address and after that we had a bout 20-30 requests to perform,” Soulja Boy said reminiscing of his past.While building his name on Soundclick, the rapper was generating ad revenue of 50 cents per download and averaging about 19,000 downloads per day.          “Well I built my name on SoundClick first,” Soulja continued. “Basically that’s the like the Billboard Charts for underground artists. Once I reached the top 10 on there my plays just started to increase, after every week, after every month. Then after I found MySpace, I linked my MySpace page directly from my Soundclick page.”New marketing for Soulja Boy’s upcoming project entails using the services of a company by the name of SayNow.“I took it a step further with this company called SayNow, and that’s basically a phone number that lets you talk to all your fans like how Twitter is,”  Soulja Boy told the Wall Street Journal.  “SayNow is like, if a fans calls my line number and they want to subscribe to you, so that means they hear any message that you leave them. If I call and leave a message it goes directly to all 4.9 million people at one time.”Always finding new ways to market his projects, Soulja  Boy now has over 20 websites working directly under him or for him.“I just thought, like I should build as many websites as possible,” Soulja Boy said. “When I was unsigned and on the grind trying to come up, I would make a lot of websites and just try and get my names out there.  Now that I am in the position I am in now, I just like to take all of my creative ideas and put them on a website to give fans something to do.”In related news, Soulja spoke about the use of camera phones or video to bring him down in anyway or to slander his name, although he did not mentioned Katt Stacks, who released footage of the rapper allegedly using cocaine, a charge he vehemently denied and blamed on slick editing.“When you are successful person, I feel like people are always going to have different opinions towards you,” Soulja Boy said. “There might be people that have nothing but positive love for your and good intentions, or you might have people that just have nothing but negative energy towards you and that want to knock you down.”

MullyMan: Repping the DMV In The Fast Lane

Hailing from Baltimore, Maryland is an ambitious emcee by the name of Mullyman. Striving to be a hope for those settling on broken dreams alongside the mean streets of violence and poverty, this DMV rhymer is a true success story. Gaining worldwide recognition through his viral music videos played on MTV, in addition to getting his music air play on popular show The Wire,  he has surpassed struggle and proven that adversity is nothing but another obstacle to be overcome. He’s not yet where he wishes to be, but Mullyman has already created valuable landmarks of his success. Sharing the stage with the legendary KRS-ONE, and being one of such an exiguous amount of independent artists to attain this status of credibility, are a few of the many great things to come from this talented rapper. Music/Video:MullyMan – “Get Ya Life”DJ Gemini Ft. D.M.V. Dream Team [Mullyman, DC Don Juan, Bossman, Gerreddi, Skarr Akbar, Whitefolkz, Smash, and Kingpen Slim] – “Welcome To The D.M.V.”AllHipHop.com: How did you get your music on a series like The WireMullyman: Actually through a guy who approached me about doing a mixtape, his name is Don Juan, and I got on that mixtape which landed in David Simon’s desk. From there it took his interest to work with Baltimore artists on the wire show. At first, they had never had any artists on The Wire but after that mixtape they got us on there and then following that they got The Wire soundtrack, and that’s how I got on there. I had two songs on the soundtrack and had four songs featured on the actual show, season 4 and 5 and that’s what really set up me being on the soundtrack twice.AllHipHop.com: Seeing you have your hometown established, what is your plan to have the rest of the world know your name?Mullyman: Right now MTV is showing a lot of love. My first video on their was the “I Go Harder” joint with Jay-Z on the hook and they were playing that video crazy. As far as presently, this coming week I’ll be up to my fifth video. This video is not my solo song but it’s a solo song called “The DMV Dream Team,” produced by Unbelievable and it features me, three other artists from Baltimore and four artists from D.C. As far as the world, a lot of artists have a hard time figuring out how to get on MTV and it’s the quickest way to me, even quicker than radio as far as the world seeing you because every time that video is played it’s seen all around the world. I’m really playing off of that to keep the world in tune with what I got going on. MullyMan – She Hurtin em from tabi Bonney on Vimeo.AllHipHop.com: How did you get up with Tabi to actually direct one of your videos?Mullyman: Well Tabi is from D.C. and at the time me living in Baltimore, it’s only 30 minutes apart and I had seen he had success with a few of his videos , so we reached out to him to do my first one in hopes that some of the magic he had going on with some of his own videos would work for me as well and it did. Since then, I developed my own rapport with MTV so now whenever I send them something they respond to it. That also made Music Choice On Demand show the same love as well. AllHipHop.com: Going back to the grassroots…what are you earliest memories of loving Hip-Hop?Mullyman: Ah man. I’m a real fan of Hip-Hop, so I’m fans of Big, Jay, Pac and I’m also fans of KRS-ONE, Rakim, Big Daddy Kane. I’m just a fan of Hip-Hop since the beginning, I study it. Hip-Hop as a whole, you name it, I love it and appreciate it. AllHipHop.com: You’re from Baltimore, how would you say that the music culture in that area is embedded in your own music?Mullyman: I think each area has a distinctive slang and mood of things. I incorporate Baltimore slang in there. We have B-More club music, we have a rhythm called the B-More two step which is also featured on there. We’re just a city that’s known for going hard so I incorporate that energy as well into the music, as well as talking about my experiences growing up there. Every place you go to has their signature on what makes them uniquely different. I definitely epitomize the dude from the hood that’s from Baltimore…but not in a negative way. In an optimistic way, coming from the hood and emerging and making something better of a bad situation. AllHipHop.com: How are you able to do that and still stand out among other artists from your area?Mullyman: I’m just a firm believe that the truth is stronger than a lie. A lot of rappers rather bend to be whatever they think people perceive they should be. I believe if you give people the truth in a way that they can receive it and it’s good, they will. If you look at the people that really have longevity it’s people that really are artists; the Lauryn Hill’s the Kanye West’s to the Drake’s, these people give you something that wasn’t supposed to work. Usually that’s true, because we’re in an industry where truth isn’t what people are trying to sell for the most part. The artists that bring truth are the ones who win the award and last. AllHipHop.com: What is your focus point right now? What are you working on and working towards?Mullyman: Right now I have that CD out which is “Harder Than Baltimore,” it’s got 19 tracks on it and it’s produced by DJ Booman and Unbelievable. It features Lady D, Nik Stylz and Sean Paul. My focus is really getting that out to the people and letting everyone know how great the music is. Just gaining more Mullymaniacs. The ultimate goal for this Cd, and I’ve been out here in Atlanta for three weeks now and I just had a great meeting today, is getting it nationally distributed to the world. AllHipHop.com: In your opinion, how crucial do you feel freestyling is in the measure of a rap artists credibility?Mullyman: Ah man, I think it’s very crucial. I believe if you’re going to call yourself something, you should be able to do it within balance. You should be able to write, you should be able to freestyle, you should be able to make great hooks. You put me on the spot, I’ll give it to you and I’ve done it time and time again. I’ve even been fortunate enough to get a chance to freestyle with KRS-ONE live on stage, and killed it. I believe that adds an extra element to what you can do as an artist if you’re able to improvise. Sometimes things get thrown your way and the energy of the room is going a certain way, you can make magic happen.AllHipHop.com: What was it like for you to share the stage with KRS-ONE and be able to go at it?Mullyman: That was humbling, it was unbelievable! It was crazy. It was when Blender Magazine came down here to interview me and after the interview we needed something to do. We were going to a specific show and it got cancelled because my homeboy got arrested so instead we made the choice to go to this particular event. Once we were in there he was on stage, doing his thing and he asked the question before he left the stage, How many emcee’s do we have in the building?; before he could get the word out I had jumped on stage, I already knew where he was going with it. I’m standing beside KRS-ONE, I kid you not, I always walk around with a couple CD’s in my pocket just in case I see somebody, not expecting this to happen that night. While up there, I hand him my CD first. He takes the CD, he has me sign it for him, then he lets me do my thing. The crowd goes crazy, Blender Magazine goes crazy. It was a humbling experience, it was just crazy. Who thinks they’re going to be on stage just rocking the crowd with KRS-ONE? That just doesn’t happen in your day! I’ll never forget that moment, I cherish that moment and it’s one of many of a independent artist just doing his thing. AllHipHop.com: You’ve mentioned before overcoming a lot of adversity, growing up what was one trial that stuck with and would you say defined you as a person and artist? Mullyman: I know the world is familiar with The Wire. It’s based off of true stories twisted up. It’s like the atmosphere where I grew up, a lot of drug activity, poverty, violence, my pops didn’t live with me growing up, and the majority of those people don’t have success stories. Every day I wake up and do what I do, all the stories of the people that had something in them and for whatever reason it didn’t go right, so that it’s not in vain, it’s like I’m fighting for everything that went wrong. To make a right out of everything that went wrong. That’s how I feel every day I wake up. For every homie I lost that died, for every homie that’s locked up, for every kid that feels like he doesn’t have a chance, I want to be that hope for the hood. That’s my drive. At the end of the day, good does prevail and I want to be a walking testimony of that. Prioritizing is essential to anyone in the music industry, no matter what field you’re in; be it artist, journalist, whatever. For you, what are some of the things that YOU make a priority. I’ll say truth first. I fundamentally believe that truth is stronger than a lie, I believe that love is stronger than hate so I would say truth and love. Those are the energies that I operate out of. Those are my priorities. Love is going to consume all at the end of the day, so that is my priority to stay truthful and loving. AllHipHop.com: What’s your next move and what can your fans be looking out for from you?Mullyman: It’s funny because there’s a saying, Tell God your plans and watch him laugh. I could sit here and tell you I’m going to be at the award shows, I’m going to be doing concerts, but I think that if the sky’s the limit, I’m definitely going to ignore the sky but as far as me putting a limit of anything I can do, I can’t even limit that. I want to be the greatest emcee that ever lived, that’s what people should expect from me.Visit Mullyman atTwitter.com/MullymanMyspace.com/Mullyman Youtube.com/majorleagueunlimitedBooking: [email protected]