1. Insulated 2. Days Off None 3. Table Meeting Ft. Ankhle John 4. Daily Operation Ft. Flee Lord x Ransom 5. Cold Shoulder 6. Champagne Intermission 7. Forcast Ft. BabyMaine x Ty Da Dale 8. Triece 9. Goat 10. Seeing Is Believing 11. Blurry Ft. WhoIsBravy x HOBX 12. Witch Hazel // Dollar and a Dream
Maverick Montana of Da Cloth will release a new project titled "Lord of the Boiling Water" next week. Today, he drops off an official music video for "Dollar Outta 15 Cent."
"I Am The Greatest" words spoken by the legendary Muhammed Ali. Those words would be what inspired Tyrone "Yung Cassius" Thorne. Yung Cassius became one of the most respected underground rappers from the gritty streets of Brooklyn, New York. Just as Muhammed Ali, Yung Cassius has the same drive, determination and passion to be the greatest. The same vision and hunger just in a different field.
Born in Guyana South America, he migrated to United States with his family at the tender age of 11, settling in the heavy Caribbean-populated community Flatbush section of Brooklyn New York. He faced the harsh reality of gangs, guns, drugs and murders in his neighborhood.
Growing up in Guyana which is located on the northeast coast of Latin America, along the Atlantic Ocean. Guyana border with Suriname to the east, border with Venezuela to the northwest, and border with Brazil to the south and southwest. Being the only English speaking country in South America, it's considered to be West Indian because of it's cultural similarities to the West Indies such as the foods, music and dialect. Yung Cassius had no hip-hop influence at that point of his life.
Yung Cassius rarely heard hip hop music being played in his home country Guyana, He grew up listening to Reggae artist such as Shabba Ranks, Bounty Killa, Super Cat, Ninja Man, Pinchers, Merciless etc. Even though raised on reggae music, he always wanted to record and perform music. After school Cassius would sit at home and listen to instrumentals day after day just trying to perfect his craft. He started rapping at the age of 18, at the age of 21 he decided to perfect his craft and start taking it seriously. What started out as just a hobby eventually turned into something of an addiction.
Determined to succeed with the aim of moving his family out the hood, Yung Cassius hit the streets hard with a barrage of underground bangers such as "OMBS," "Child Hood Idol," "TTYL," "I want it all" and "Signs". The rebirth of and era with a new twist, New York had its own unique sound and style. When you hear a project that Yung Cassius is on or have worked on you will hear what’s missing from New York artists.
The Punch Line King, Lloyd Banks, has released his 'Halloween Havoc 2' mixtape.
Production is provided by LJ Milan, araabMUZIK, Ty James, Tha Jerm, Automatik, Sean Anderson, AC Caldwell, Ryan Ryu Alexy, DK, Buda and Grandz and AlistFame.
1.Monument (Produced by Buda & Grandz & AlistFame) 2.Angel Dust (Prod by AraabMuzik) 3.Nowadays (Prod by LJ Milan) 4.Money Over Matter (Prod by Doe Pesci) 5.Sacrifice (Prod by Tha Jerm) 6.Take Your Pick (Prod by Ty James) 7.Live4Ever (Prod by Tha Jerm) 8.Dedicated (Prod by Automatikk) 9.Dollar Weight (Prod by Tha Jerm) 10.24 Drama (Prod by Tha Jerm) 11.Own Way (Prod by Sean Anderson) 12.All I Am (Prod by AC Caldwell) 13.Feed The Strip (prod by Ryan Ryu Alexy & DK)
Styles P a.k.a. Holiday Styles is back with two more fire freestyles to kick off the weekend. First he remixes J. Cole's"A Tale Of 2 Citiez" then goes in over Kendrick Lamar's"How Much a Dollar Cost."
It's officially the season of The Lox. All three members, Sheek Louch, Jadakiss and Styles P are cooking up crack freestyles and flooding the block with them.
Check out Jadakiss' new one entitled "Two Curse Words" over Cam'Ron's"The Roc (Just Fire)" instrumental.
If your looking for a home in entertainment, then you have come to the right place. If you are a entertainer, artist, performer, musician, movie star, event promoter, etc, then we welcome you. We search the globe looking for artist who like to put in work. We post, you share. Number are what we count on, and numbers bring more visual plays. We have our very own DJ's, Artist, Promotional Products, and Artist Review. Which ever name you see above that fits your need, then click its name and go.
Many people shall miss the great but small Marcus. Cleveland, Ms shall never again see one that is wide spread hated by many. There is not many that like him because of his moral values, but in the black community, he is feared because he represent progress.
On May 1st of 2013, the rap artist Gansta Marcus made the decision to depart Mississippi no matter what the consequences. Although he knows he maybe facing up to three years in prison, The Ohio rap artist is agreed that he is ready to make his appearance.
After being gone for five years, Gansta Marcus has developed many skills from "Building and apartment maintenance" to being a "Online Admin" for multiple websites. He is also a producer and artist who has yet to perform.
The rap artist +Gansta-Marcus.com releases another mix-tape titled "The Remix". This is his second mix-tape this month. If you have not heard the "4.2.82 Mix-Tape" then check it out now.
1.Intro 2.Intro 2 3. Shitten On Em 4. U My Nigga Tho 5.Lord Forgive Me 6. Clap 7. Addicted 8. Do It Big 9. E 10. Hustle Hard 11. New Rap King 12. Transition 13. TeAchthese 14. 100 15. We Love Bud 16. Help Me Get That Money 17. Dre Song 18. Gutta Shit 19. See No Evil 20. 50 Freestyle 21. What I Gotta Live 4
LiveSteez Reports
LiveSteez research shows that Black churches, in aggregate, have collected more than $420 billion in tithes and donations since 1980. With a Senate investigation into the finances of several mega churches underway, the “Prosperity Movement” has been the target of mounting criticism from inside and outside the Black Church. Specifically, the affluent ministries of The Reverend Creflo Dollar, Bishop Eddie Long and others have drawn the attention – and ire – of some clergy and laypeople alike.
Researcher Henry E. Felder’s study of Blacks’ donation habits demonstrated per capita spending of $508 per year in 2009 dollars. Another source, Tyler Media Services, estimated that Black Church revenue approached $17 billion in 2006.
One church, the Reverend Dollar’s World Changers, reported $69 million in 2006 income, according to the Atlanta Journal Constitution.
Mainstream politicians and Black community leaders are demanding a better accounting of the “return on investment” offered by churches to the communities that fund them. Meanwhile, legions of faithful churchgoers defend their pastors and accuse their detractors of applying a double standard that ignores the largesse of wealthy, white televangelists, while underplaying the economic development and social service functions provided by the Black Church.
“The church has gotten caught up in materialism and greed, a lifestyle. Many ministers today want to live like celebrities and they want to be treated like celebrities. In other words, instead of the church standing with the community, the church has become self-serving. It has strayed away from its mission” according to Dr.Love Henry Whelchel, professor of church history at The Interdenominational Theological Center in Atlanta.
Few people – not even the ongoing Congressional investigation by Senator Chuck Grassley accuse the mega church pastors of outright larceny, and congregants generally approve of their pastors’ luxurious lifestyles. However, in a blatant recent example, a father-son pastor team, 76-year-old Richard Cunningham of Moreno Valley and his son, 52-year-old Philip Cunningham of Laurinburg, N.C., pleaded guilty to felony grand theft and fraud charges. The younger Cunningham also pleaded guilty to forgery. Over five years, prosecutors say, the Cunninghams stole from Calvary Baptist Yorba Linda Church and School bank accounts and used the money to buy time shares in Hawaii and Palm Springs, golf club memberships and a Cadillac. Prosecutors say the men have paid $3.1 million in restitution to the church.
LiveSteez’s investigative series will take a forensic editorial approach to quantifying the return to Black America for the $350 billion in tax-favored donations it has given to the Black Church, examining the arguments on both sides of the pulpit. In this series we will seek answers and advisory to the following questions:
How often and how much do church leaders take advantage of the faith of poor black people?
We will investigate and indentify the churches they are showing a strong return on investment that goes beyond inspiration.
What does the black community have to show for the $350 billion in tax free dollars?
Expert analysis on what could potentially be done with such a huge amount of money and how it could improve the state of our communities.
Why do some church leaders refuse to participate in the Grassley congressional Investigation, which requested the financial records of several mega-churches.
Read more…