Mr. Wavy may wash ashore sooner than expected. XXLMag.com spoke with incarcerated rapper Max B’s manager, Joli O’Shay, earlier today (Mar. 19) and she says the Harlemite was recently granted an appeal in his murder case.
According to O’Shay, Max is now sitting tight as he awaits an actual appeal date. Once that comes in the MC known as Biggavelli, has a new lawyer to fight for his innocence. “He’s gonna try hopefully to go back to trial, or get it a mistrial or get it time served, whatever we can do,” she said.
As previously reported, Max was sentenced to 75 years in prison on September 3, 2009 for orchestrating a 2006 robbery that left a man slain in a Fort Lee, New Jersey hotel.
The former Jim Jones protégé was convicted of felony murder, aggravated manslaughter, kidnapping, armed robbery and conspiracy.
O’Shay, who speaks to Max daily, says he’s in good spirits about the appeal.
At some point, Curtis James Jackson III will probably want to bid farewell to the gangsta-rapper charmingly known as 50 Cent. The controversial performer – famous for being shot nine times, entertaining disagreements, dodging lawsuits (his most recent involves allegedly posting a sex tape online), and wearing bullet-proof vests like thermals over those intimidating, tattooed biceps – employed the persona well when he debuted in 1999 with the single "How To Rob". He went on to sell 12 million records with his first album, Get Rich or Die Tryin' and, from a brand perspective, it had enough mileage to warrant a movie inspired by his life, his own G-Unit record label, a couple of video games which indulged kids in gangster-like fantasies and a series of "hip-hop noir" novels.
But in 2010, 50 the businessman looks to have established more credibility with other ventures which include clothing, properties and a lucrative share in Coca-Cola's Vitaminwater, not to mention last year's New York Times bestseller The 50th Law, where he collaborated with business strategist Robert Greene. It all begs the question of how relevant songs about wiping out his foes and animalistic sex are nowadays, when carefree pop music reigns in the hearts and minds of the mainstream who don't get the thug life, or want to spend an hour of their life mulling it over either.
Of course, his loyal fans will always get it, but they were the same people ready to lick the rapper's wounds when he lost out to Kanye West in a battle of album releases in 2008.
Then there's the fact that Jackson now prefers to approach his interviews like his own publicist, who'll happily talk numbers and strategies all day, with the right amount of philosophising to convince his most dubious critics that he's actually a pretty nice guy. And that he is; the 34-year-old has the sexy side of confidence down to a fine art. What he says is often prefaced by a smile, and his responses are so measured it often exposes less about himself, and more the factors that will help him sell something, anything.
But a private matter beyond his control was when his son's mother and ex-girlfriend, Shaniqua Tompkins attempted to sue him for $50m, and, after the case was dismissed, battled him over his $2.4m home she was living in before it was destroyed in a fire in 2008.
He chooses to reveal little about what goes on behind his closed doors. "Um... I don't really have much of a personal life to offer," he says, with a shrug. "I've kept what little of my life that is personal to myself. I'm very private and it's not a part of the show. I think some people really lose themselves to the entertainment business and they become consumed so much with entertaining people that they offer everything that they actually have, even down to inside their house, as far as reality television is concerned. But there's got to be a place where you stop and you actually live away from it."
On this Monday afternoon in Berlin, he's particularly keen to talk about his latest album, new business projects, and his global tour, which comes to the UK this month.
"I'm excited to be going on tour right now," he says. Cue smile. "A lot of music that I hear coming from new artists, I mean, some of it's good and some of it I'll completely pass on. And I think a lot of people out there feel the same way, and it's just a shift in the actual climate of the music business itself." He adds that it's important for him to go on the road and connect with his core fanbase. "I think at this point, most artists would dream of having the ability to travel from the United States to different territories and actually be wanted, and have people already knowing their material," he says. "When you see artists going out and wanting to touch their fans and being involved in different territories, it allows them to create longevity. That's what that's about. I remember looking at Eminem's plaque for The Marshall Mathers LP, and it had 35 countries on it where the record went gold or platinum, and I looked at that and thought, 'I want one of those'."
His last album, Before I Self Destruct, was set to be released in February 2008, but was pushed back so many times that, by the time it came out, in November 2009, it'd been leaked and made less of an impact than expected.
"I was extremely happy with the response to it," he counters. "For the most part, I heard it was my best record since Get Rich or Die Tryin', and that was huge accomplishment for myself. I've been in huge competition with myself since. Of course, it didn't sell a fraction of what Get Rich or Die Tryin' sold, that record went on to scan 12 million records, but we're just in a different climate and time. It was interesting numbers for the first week for me, but I still feel good about the project because of the response publicly that I got from people."
Didn't he feel the content might have been, well, a little redundant by its release? "Well, you know, creatively, I went in to try and write what was a prequel to Get Rich," he says. "Songs like 'Stretch' actually explain why I wrote 'P.I.M.P', and I explain where that concept came from and why I wrote that record and how I was actually exposed to that lifestyle."
He's good. Too good. But how does he explain the purpose of an album like Before I Self Destruct? Judging from the content alone, he seemed pretty fed up. "Well, I don't think anyone is completely mad everyday," he laughs. "The photograph is angry. I look at Ice Cube's career and what he did from NWA all the way to Are We There Yet? Those movies he made are a huge difference from the things he chose to do artistically but people still love and appreciate him for what he did originally."
So he considers it to be art. And, similarly to Ice Cube, 50 has shown his desire to cash in on movies ever since landing his first character role in 2007's Home of the Brave, alongside Samuel L Jackson, who was initially reluctant to co-star with him in 50's debut Get Rich or Die Tryin'. Since then, 50 has appeared in four movies including Righteous Kill with Robert De Niro, and Dead Man Running. He has also launched his own film company, Cheetah Vision Films, with producer Randall Emmett. The lacklustre Before I Self Destruct was a straight-to-DVD tie-in with his album, but he'll also be appearing in the film Twelve later this year, and has lined up a number of film projects he'll be writing and producing himself.
"For me, it's an opportunity," he says. "I wrote the screenplays. Before I Self Destruct – that was the first one I wrote and directed." Did he plan to release it on the big screen? "Well, I put it in the album packages because... it wasn't like..." He pauses.
"I hate to say it's not my best, but it was done on a budget and that makes it not as... extravagant as some of the things you'll see from me in the future. But since then I've created two other projects: Gun with myself, Val Kilmer – I wrote that screenplay – I wrote and produced a film called Love Me, Love Me Not, and I shot the actual screenplay before I got out here. So I'm looking forward to a lot of different things."
Born in Queens, New York, to a drug-dealing mum who died when he was eight, the New Yorker opted to make his entry into the rap game with references to his rags-to-riches story.
He was raised by his grandmother with nine other children, started dealing crack when he was 12 and owned his own gun by 15. He told Newsweek in 2005: "I didn't want to ask her for a pair of Air Jordans when I knew she couldn't afford them, so I began working to get my stuff and not stress her out. So I started hustling to buy things. I'd tell her whatever I had new was my friend's stuff across the street. That's how I became two people – one was the hard-core drug-dealer in the day and the other was my grandmother's baby by night.''
He spent a number of years in and out of jail before considering a rap career and turning to the late DJ Jam Master Jay, who gave him his first break on his short-lived label. His early records caught the attention of production duo Trackmasters, who signed the rapper to their subsidiary label under Columbia Records, and started work on his debut Power of the Dollar, which included the single "How to Rob", and another for Destiny's Child. But, just a few months before the album's release, Jackson was shot at nine times while sitting in a car outside his grandmother's house, and was subsequently dropped from Columbia.
Two years later, he formed the rap collective G-Unit and made a name on the mixtape circuit. One of his early fans was Eminem, who worked with producer Dr Dre to sign him to his own Shady/Aftermath label and feature him on the soundtrack to Eminem's film 8 Mile. The 2002 single "Wanksta" – which hit out at 'fake gangstas' – was a smash, and set him up for the success of "In Da Club", which topped the charts in the US and went to No 3 in the UK a year later.
Subsequent albums The Massacre and Curtis performed well by virtue of having a great production and catchy hooks. But he's conscious that he'll need to up the ante if he still wants to be considered as one of the most notable rappers in hip-hop. He has never been considered a great lyricist, and brushes off his lack of accolades as "politics".
"There's moments where you're gonna have ups and down, periods when you're a lot hotter than you were, and periods where you rejuvenate that time frame, where you make music that impacts hard because music marks time," he reasons.
"I'm a part of a hip-hop culture where the majority of the audience has a very low attention span. It's like, what's hot right now? They're looking for that. They care less about your portfolio and your records from the last six years. They want a hit record right now and if you don't have one, then give us the guy that has one. That's how they feel. Obviously it keeps me working, it keeps me working on new material because the art-form is that way."
When will he retire from hip-hop, all considered? "I don't think I'll retire," he concludes. "I think you should look forward to me going behind the scenes more. I still have passion for music. And the music business itself has changed. If you can't figure out how to develop the brand extension and opportunities that allow you to build up the marketing dollar, I don't see how you can continue to be a superstar."
BET's Annual Spring Bling Event will take place April 10 in Riviera Beach Florida.
Events will include a concert featuring Soulja Boy, Juelz Santana, Yo Gotti, Lloyd Banks, Waka Flocka Flame, Trina and Plies,
Trey Songz and Nicki Minaj will also be in attendance according to Singersroom. The two will perform and host their own segments titled "Ready For Trey" and "I Am Nicki"
The festivities don't stop there, organizers will have some interactive events for fans starting with the 'Beach Towel Throwdown', followed by 'My King and Queen'. They will even have a dating game type event titled 'Who Got Game?'.
The event will air on BET Friday April 16 and Saturday April 17.
Top five dead or alive producer, Just Blaze talks to Grind Music Radio about his legendary career.
They speak about everything from how Blaze got his start, the first piece of equipment he bought (ASR10), when he realized he'd finally made it and his 1st check which was for a beat he did for Ma$e for $12,000.
Just gives his preference between working with samples & live beats and names his favorite producers from past and present.
WASHINGTON, D.C. – The United States Senate approved by unanimous consent a bill that would reduce the sentencing disparity between federal crack and powder cocaine offenses. The bill, S. 1789, was sponsored by Senator Richard Durbin (D-Ill.).
Julie Stewart, president and founder of Families Against Mandatory Minimums (FAMM), released the following statement upon the bill’s passage:
“Today’s approval marks the first time since the Nixon administration that the Senate has voted to repeal a mandatory minimum. The unanimous vote demonstrates the ability of Congress to work across party lines to achieve sentencing reform. We commend the good efforts of Senators Durbin, Leahy, Graham, Hatch, and Sessions, and their willingness to find common ground.
While we wish the Senate had voted to eliminate, rather than reduce the disparity, we believe there is too much as stake to let the perfect be the enemy of the good. People who will be sentenced under this law will return home to their families two or three years earlier – a benefit that simply cannot be quantified.”
The Senate proposal could affect nearly 3,000 cases annually, reducing sentences by an average of about 27 months. The bill would not, however, reduce sentences for those currently incarcerated for crack offenses.
Under the Senate approved bill, 28 grams of crack cocaine will trigger a five year prison sentence and 280 grams of crack will trigger a 10-year sentence. Significantly, the bill also would eliminate the mandatory minimum sentence for simple possession of crack. The legislation would also direct the U.S. Sentencing Commission to enhance penalties for aggravating factors like violence or bribery of a law enforcement officer. The impact of those provisions has not yet been calculated.
Families Against Mandatory Minimums is a national nonprofit, nonpartisan organization supporting fair and proportionate sentencing laws that allow judicial discretion while maintaining public safety. For more information on FAMM, visit www.famm.org or contact Monica Pratt Raffanel at (202) 621-5044 or email media@famm.org
Queens native Ty Fyffe has them all from The G-Unit to Michael Jackson.
"It was a life-changing experience," he said about visiting Michael Jackson at the King of Pop's home. At the time in the early '90s, Fife was under the tutelage of Teddy Riley and living in Virginia.
(AllHipHop News) Houston rapper Paul Wall has been elected president of the Texas chapter of the Recording Academy, the organization responsible for The Grammy Awards.
The Recording Academy is the organization responsible for organizing the annual Grammy Awards.
The rapper previously held the title of Governor alongside notable Houston executives and artists like Mathew Knowles, saxophonist Joe Posada, renowned bass player Chuck Rainey and others.
“I’ve been a Governor on the board of the Texas chapter for a long time. There’s a process on how you get nominated [for a Grammy] and it’s done by voting,” Paul Wall told AllHipHop.com. “A lot of people don’t know this and for me, I want to get our membership up in Texas.“
Paul Wall, born Paul Slayton, has been nominated for a Grammy, but has yet to win one of the coveted awards.
Even though he’s working on a new album titled, Heart of A Champion, Paul Wall said as President of the Texas Chapter of The Recording Academy, his chief aim was to boost the local membership.
“There’s so much credible music here in all genres and its so vast,” Paul Wall told AllHipHop.com. “Everything is bigger in Texas but our membership, we are like #6 on the list out of [the] 12 chapters. At the very least, there could be more nominations for artists from Texas."
Paul Wall recently helped to mend a deep division within the Houston hip-hop community, by reuniting with former member Chamillionaire, at the behest specifically of the late Pimp C. of UGK and Atlanta rapper Killer Mike.
Swizz Beatz relationship with Alicia Keys has become so public that a lot of people have forgotten that he is actually still married to singer Mashonda.
Both Swizzy and Mashonda have gone to the media in recent days to give their sides of what has become an ugly story
In an interview with Bossip Mashonda had this to say:
"Unfortunately, my divorce is not final, the paperwork hasn’t been signed by the judge, and so therefore, we are still legally married. Not that I’m proud of that, (this process has been hell on earth) but divorces take time.
Our marriage and our family was never respected, nor has been a concern to the parties involved. Both of them have been extremely determine to disregard the fact that I am a human being with feelings, a mother, and the woman whom was there when this man was sick, down, and without money or fame. Amazing how people forget!”
Swizz meanwhile recently spoke to DJ Enuff and accused his wife of engaging in "foolery" saying the two of them have been having problems for ten years. He says his wife was gassed up by "the wrong people" who convinced her she could get a reality show by airing out their dirty laundry.
He also accused her of trying to make him choose between her and his oldest son Prince Nasir whom he has from a previous relationship.
Mashonda's reponse to this?
“I recently saw a video of his, his words completely took me by surprise. It was an awful demonstration of lies and tales. All in the name of “saving face… I believe the two of them are meant for each other. Only a certain type of woman would sleep with a married man, and only a certain type of man would abandon his family for another woman. I guess they are “equals.” Those were his words on that video.
The past 12 years of my life with this man has been a complete learning experience and I’m proud to say that I am a better woman today, because of it…Fortunately, I’m able to walk away with a prize or two. My self esteem and my son. My focus is my son, coupled with figuring out a way to make this all make sense to him at the end of the day, so that he can be a great man.
I seriously hope people can learn a thing or two from all of this. Its a disease to family growth and human behavior.
”
Something tells me this saga is far from over. Hopefully they can both move on with their lives and find happiness. Although it seems like that will be harder for Mashonda to do than Swizz.
Check out Swizz's full interview with DJ Enuff below.
Once Lady Gaga and “Honey B” Beyoncé joined forces as a team of femme fatales in the video for their pop smash “Telephone,” it was only natural for their music industry peers, namely Chamillionaire, to form an opinion about the nine-and-a-half-minute visuals.
The Houston rapper was mesmerized by the cinematic piece upon initially viewing it. “I thought it was genius, from a directorial standpoint and an iconic standpoint,” he reveals to Rap-Up.com. “When I saw that video, I saw so many racy images.”
That daring display of imagery lead Chamillionaire to compare Gaga to another pop superstar who is no stranger to pushing the envelope. “Lady Gaga has always been big, but before her there was Madonna,” he states. “[The video] reminded me of Madonna. It also reminded me of the fact that [Lady Gaga] is so big that people are gonna be like, ‘Oh my goodness, I can’t believe you’re doing that. What the heck?’”
With many artists’ creativity being stifled by record labels’ decreasing budgets, the Grammy-winning artist applauded the platinum-haired singer’s ability to do as she pleased when it came to the clip’s concept. “The freedom to be able to do whatever you want is an incredible thing in the music industry,” he admits. “I appreciate that because nowadays man, most people want to do that but can’t.”
As for his favorite “Telephone” moments, the “Ridin’ Dirty” rhymer couldn’t pinpoint just one. “[There] was so much weird stuff that was really weird but really dope,” adds Cham. “There was a lot of originality in it—she had the glasses and they were smoking. It’s definitely something that you will go back and look at the video 20 times and pick up something different every time.”
Only a few years ago, I could shock people by divulging that I don't own a TV. Since Hulu and others let me get my show fix online, I now seem to be part of a growing minority who only have one kind of box at home.
But I still shock people. All I have to do is admit I'm not on Facebook. According to most people I talk to, at least, this is truly strange behavior.
So it's not surprising that so many people rely on social media, for both work and play, every day--a statistic highlighted in the latest Retrevo Gadgetology Report on social-media usage. What people are willing to interrupt for the sake of virtual connectivity, however, may give a few texting thumbs pause.
Among social-media users, almost half say they check Facebook and/or Twitter from bed at night and/or as soon as they wake up in the morning, with 16 percent of users saying these sites are, in fact, how they get their news for the day.
More than half of social-media users report needing to check Facebook at least once every day, and more than 10 percent say they have to log on every few hours. Of course, iPhone users are even more attached at the hip, with more frequent usage than any other group in the 1,000-person study.
Again, I'm not surprised that 40 percent of respondents don't mind being interrupted for a message. I'll fully admit to being one of those people. But it depends on the time and the place. One in three respondents will take a message during a meal, and one in 14 during sex (this number jumps to one in 10 for those under 25). This may say as much about the quality of food and foreplay as it does the person interrupting them.
These numbers are backed by others. Intel did a study on the Internet and sex a few years ago, and Retrevo found a few months ago that Twitter may be the new poist-coital cigarette. Lesser of two evils, I suppose.
The authors of the Retrevo Gadgetology Report write that they're not qualified to declare a social media crisis, but they do go so far as to question whether a growing number of social-media users are suffering from some sort of addiction to connectivity.
I'm only 30, but it's already easy to long for the good ol' days, back when we'd twirl telephone chords with our fingers during gab sessions on the phone--a phone we weren't allowed to pick up during dinner, that most sacred of connectivity sessions.
And I don't care what the kids say today--if Facebook is more interesting than sex, you just might be with the wrong person.
P Diddy plans to put the Cristal into Crystal Palace with a shock bid for the struggling London footie team.
The hip-hop mogul has decided he wants to be the next filthy rich foreign owner of an English club.
And Diddy, real name Sean Combs, is planning to splash some of his reported £360million on the Selhurst Park side who gave Sun columnist Ian Wright his big break in football.
The bankrupt club is in chaos, facing relegation from the Coca-Cola Championship after having ten points docked for going into administration.
Former owner Simon Jordan was no stranger to the jet-set - so at least the poor fans are used to flamboyant playboy owners with a taste for the high life.
Diddy's swoop for The Eagles would bring some much needed bling back to south east London.
Last night his UK spokesman confirmed the multi-millionaire is in the market for Palace. He also added that the New Yorker has his eye on another big club.
Bankrupt
A source said: "Diddy was in London meeting football fixers a couple of weeks ago. The finance is in place, he's just deciding who he thinks he'll make a bid for.
"Portsmouth were mentioned but he thought Palace were a better idea.
"He could cover their debt and bankroll a return to the Premier League. He liked the name as well"
If he bought my team Hibs, he could be P Hibby and park his yacht in the docks in Leith.
Drake said he wasn't upset when he heard that Sade — an artist he had wanted to collaborate with on his upcoming Thank Me Later debut — said she's not into guest-starring on anyone's project.
"I don't think they have contacted me," Sade, 51, told Canada's National Post last month. "I've never collaborated because I've always avoided working outside my safety zone — I can be exactly who I am and can fail or succeed within the moment. I feel safe working like I do. I wouldn't want to work in a situation where I am expected to deliver, because I think I wouldn't deliver."
Long before Kendra Wilkinson entered the spotlight and became known as a bubbly blond Playboy model, she experienced some troubled times as a teenager.
In the new "E! True Hollywood Story" about the reality star, Wilkinson admits dabbling in drugs and self-mutilating during her short 24 years of life.
She said she was "about 13" when she had her first experience with cocaine after her friends introduced her to "this white stuff."
"I started feeling pretty good," Wilkinson said. "That was the start of my drug days."
By the time she was 15, Wilkinson was abusing drugs and was at one point "feeling suicidal" and "cutting myself."
"I had so much pain that I just wanted to die," she revealed. "It wasn't that I was trying to die, it was that the pain took away from my pain inside."
After Wilkinson admitted swallowing a "half-dozen or so medications" while at school, her mother, Patti, checked her into a secured psychiatric facility for two weeks.
"It was crazy in that place," the reality star told "THS." "We didn't see daylight. We weren't allowed outside. It was basically a jail, but it was a hospital."
Despite her family members being "scared to death," Wilkinson said the hospitalization "did not change me at all."
"I think it made me worse because in my heart I didn't want to change," she said. "People were forcing me, and that's something that does not work with me."
Wilkinson credits an instance when she almost died from a cocaine overdose as the moment that made her realize she needed to get her life together.
"I was bleeding from every hole in my body and I really thought I was going to die that night," she said. "But you know what, I survived, and I swear it was a couple of days after that that I had an epiphany. I just stopped drugs, stopped smoking cigarettes, stopped everything, and went home."
Admitting that her "devil years" were "very selfish," Wilkinson's attempt to repair her damaged relationship with her family took time.
"My mom did not take me back with open arms," she said. "I basically had to get on my knees and beg. I looked in her eyes [and said] 'I swear on my life, I am done.'"
Kendra & Husband Hank Baskett
After getting involved in sports and working a part-time job, the reformed teen found her way working at the Playboy mansion, where she ultimately met future boyfriend Hugh Hefner.
Now married to NFL star Hank Baskett and caring for their 3-month-old son, Hank IV, Wilkinson told E! Online that she's just "enjoying time" with her new family.
The Daily Show With Jon Stewart welcomed Snoop Dogg to the show yesterday (March 17).
Snoop is always a funny interview. Jon asked about him if he remembered when white people used to be scared of him, lol, Also what keeps him motivated to keep performing and his voice being on GPS systems.
On Tuesday, we slid you the exclusive gem that Gucci Mane is putting out a mixtape album on April 13. While Gucci is in jail now for a probation violation, we have his main accomplice in all this, DJ Holiday, to let us in on the odds and ends.
"It's the warm-up before Writing's on the Wall 2," Holiday said of The BurrrPrint 2HD. "I talk to him every other day. His spirit is up. He's 1,000. He called me to get an update of what's going on in the city. My tapes is crazy. Waka is the hottest thing out here. Nicki is on fire. He was like, 'You think they miss our tapes?' I was like, 'Hell yeah.' He said, 'Let's do something. [But] you know I can't move like I want to.' I said, 'Let's knock it out on some over-the-phone sh--.'
"They gonna really f--- with the mixtape, because he's really rapping on the tape from the phone," Holiday continued. "We matched up a beat with Drumma Boy, and [Gucci] rapped on it. But he rapped a cappella over the phone, and we matched up the beat to it in the studio. It's f---ing bananas. I thought it was creative. You know how Shyne was locked up and you'd get a freestyle from the phone? I said, 'Let's take it another step.' We recorded him rapping on the phone in the mic ... and went from there. Then we matched it with the beat Drumma Boy made. It came out crazy, and it sounds good too."
"New Gucci Mane mixtape is going to be crazy!!!" Drumma Boy said. "Gucci kept tellin' me how much of an impact he wanted to make with this mixtape, and with him being incarcerated, we had to be very creative in how we got this done. One of my favorite records and most difficult records that I've ever produced was BurrrPrint 2 off the mixtape. He called me one day I was in the studio making beats, and he told me he had written some new verses and wanted me to hear them. So I stopped doing what I was doing to listen. After five seconds of listening, I was like, 'Stop. I'mma record you while you rap through the phone.' I recorded his verses but later realized that there was no consistent tempo. This means I had to chop up each word for word to punch into tempo, which took me about five to six hours. After I had lined up his verses, I then began to add music around the verses, structure the build, and then create a hook that matched the intensity of his verses. Overall, I spent a good two days producing that record, and it's a great feeling to see people's reactions after them finding out I produced the record of Gucci Mane through the phone."
The other records on BP2HD are unreleased records Gucci had in the stash.
"Anybody who knows Gucci, they know his work ethic in that studio is ridiculous," Holiday said. "I got 10 songs in one damn day. All brand-new records, bruh. Maybe one record you might know. Everything else is brand-new. One song is with Ludacris called 'Atlanta Is a Zoo.' It's a club banger. One song is crazy with Jim Jones. He's got another one with Rick Ross and Yo Gotti. Heavy features on there. It's a mixtape album. The label [Asylum] is going all out with it."
Shawty Redd and Fat Boi are among those who contributed tracks. Drumma Boy handled most of the production.
Gucci's camp is hoping BurrrPrint 2HD will tide fans over until Mr. LaFlare gets home. As soon as Gucci comes home from jail, he plans to record the sequel to his mixtape The Writing's on the Wall and later put out his album (The State vs. Radric Davis: The Appeal). DJ Holiday's next mixtape is Waka Flocka Flame's Flockaveli. Holiday's debut album will be released later this year and called either The Tape or We Working.
"What's up with these local MC's in L.A. who keep disrespecting me? They're just mad cause I don't f*ck with they wack-a**. They ain't on my level, why should I waste my time. I don't even remember ever meeting these clowns or even being in the same room with any of 'em. They can't make a name for themselves so they need help from the O/G's. I refuse the throw'em a life line. F*ck'em. It ain't my job to make nobody famous. And for the record, I ain't scared of no n*gga. Especially, no rappers....seriously people."
Jay Rock fired back at Ice Cube directly via his Twitter.
"WATTS UP WIT ICE CUBE TALKIN KRAZY ABOUT NEW WEST n***as.IF HE GOT A PROB WIT 1 OF US HE SHUD SAY R NAME N STOP BN SCARED 2 CALL A N***A OUT
ON SOME REAL STUFF I AINT NEVER HAD A PROBLEM WITH CUBE OR NONE OF THE OG n***as. BUT IF HE SAY NEW WEST IM APART OF THAT
TO ME HE TALKIN BOUT ALL OF US IF HE DIDNT SAY A NAME. THATS HOW THE WEST GOT FUCKED UP IN THE FIRST PLACE
YALL KNOW AINT NO N***A STAMPED ME. I DONT NEED NO N***A. ALL I NEED IS A MIC MY HOOD MY FANS AND THIS BIG A$$ GUN"
Ice Cube also directed a shot at former partner in rhyme Mack 10.
"Me and Mack 10 together again? I never say never, but he has to kiss the ring first."
Damn, Cube aint playing around, We all know what he can do in a lyrical battle. This could get really interesting so stay tuned.
Rihanna replaces labelmate Taio Cruz atop the Billboard Hot 100, set to be released today (Thursday, March 18), as her latest single "Rude Boy" jumps 4-1.
"Rude" is Rihanna's sixth Hot 100 No. 1 and fifth as a lead artist. Her most recent chart-topper had been as a featured vocalist on T.I.'s "Live Your Life" in 2008. Her other leaders are "SOS" (2006, three weeks), "Umbrella," featuring Jay-Z (2007, seven weeks), "Take A Bow" (2008, 1 week) and "Disturbia" (2008, two weeks)
Since debuting on the scene in June 2005 with the No. 2-peaking "Pon De Replay," Rihanna has posted more Hot 100 No. 1 than any other artist. Next in line is Justin Timberlake who's scored five chart-toppers during this span.
The Bronx meets Houston in the latest music video from French Montana.
French lays down a dope hook and verse and of course Bun-B kills it as always.
This joint is from French's upcoming mixtape 'Mac Wit Da Cheese 2'
Make sure you check out the end of the video to see some of the last video footage of G. Baby who lost his life to senseless violence recently. Watch as he kicks it in the studio with Roscoe Dash, Frenchie from So Icey Entertainment and Montana.