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Wednesday, October 31, 2012

Curren$y "#PriestAndretti" Mixtape Download & Stream


                      Curren$y "#PriestAndretti" Mixtape Download & Stream

UPDATE: Curren$y releases his new mixtape in honor of Halloween.
Curren$y has announced the release of his upcoming mixtape #PriestAndretti, dropping on October 31st.
In a video clip released in promotion of the tape, Spitta previews two cuts from the project. Further details surrounding the tape are unknown at the moment.
In addition to dropping #PriestAndretti, the Southern rapper is teaming back up with Wiz Khalifa for the sequel to How Fly. That mixtape, Live in Concert, was delayed from its original release date.
Watch the mixtape video announcement and check the cover art below.
spitta

Natina Reed, Blaque Singer, Remembered By Rapper Kurupt: 'This Is A Tremendous Loss To Our Family'

 

Natina Reed's death crushed fans of the 1990s girl group, Blaque, who learned that the singer had been killed in a car accident in Georgia on Friday night. Reed is being remembered by those closest to her, including her former fiance and father of her son, rapper Kurupt.
Kurupt, the Dogg Pound rapper formally known as Ricardo Emmanuel Brown, described the 32-year-old as "a great person."
"Myself and Tren, Natina's son, would like to thank everyone for their love and support during this tragic time," Kurupt said of the response to Reed's passing in a statement to MTV News. "This is a tremendous loss to our family. Natina was a great person and I wish everyone had the opportunity to meet her and know her as I did."
Reed and Kurupt were engaged in the early 2000s and have a 10-year-old son, Tren Brown, according to MTV News. Reed provided the hook for the rapper's solo single, "It's Over." The two never married.
Others close to the Blaque singer remembered her lovingly after her death.
Natina Reed Blaque Dead
Fellow Blaque members Brandi Williams and Shamari Fears-DeVoe issued a joint statement to E! News:
We are devastated by the loss of our group member, sister and friend Natina Reed. Because of the enormous support of Blaque fans and our love for each another, Blaque officially reunited this fall and we were in the process of working on a new album and a reality show. Natina continuously embodied the pioneering spirit of Blaque and her undeniable creativity touched the hearts of fans everywhere. Natina was a mother, sister, accomplished songwriter, artist and friend. We ask for your prayers at this time for Natina's family. She will forever be missed and her global influence eternally felt. We thank God for the experiences we shared.
Williams also took to Twitter to express her sorrow. "Last night the world was changed forever, life will never be the same....she was my sister," she tweeted. Actress Gabrielle Union, who appeared with Reed in 2000's "Bring It On," offered her condolences. "#RIP #Sad #BringItOn," she tweeted.
Reed died Friday, Oct. 26, after she was struck by a car near Lilburn, Ga., according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. Police received a call at about 10:30 p.m. on Friday from the driver of the vehicle, who was later "determined to not be at fault," the Detroit Free Press reports. Reed was pronounced dead at 10:59 p.m. at Gwinnett Medical Center.
Gwinnett County police spokesman Sgt. Rich Long said that the driver and a passenger appear to be the only witnesses. “It’s kind of a dark lit area,” Long said, according to the Atlanta Journal-Constitution. “There is not really anything in that area that’s open at that time of night, that would be any kind of a draw to a person up there." Police are hoping to determine why the singer was in the roadway.
Reed was a protege of TLC's Lisa "Left Eye" Lopes, who died in a car crash in La Ceiba, Honduras, in 2002. The Roots' drummer Questlove noted the parallel, tweeting, "man. in eerie Left Eye fashion....rip to Blaque's Natina Reed."
Reed would have turned 33 years old on Sunday.

Sunday, October 21, 2012

Rick Ross & Gucci Mane Demand "Respect" From Young Jeezy

Written by Cyrus Langhorne

                               
A week after Gucci Mane dropped his "Truth" diss record going at Young Jeezy, Maybach Music Group boss Rick Ross now hops along for the anti-Jizzle ride.
Gucci Mane and Rick Ross can agree on one thing: their dislike for Young Jeezy. The rappers take thinly-veiled shots at the Snowman on their newly released diss track "Respect Me." "Ain't no way in hell I'ma let you disrespect me," raps Gucci on the cut off Trap-A-Holics and DJ Cash Crook's mixtape Large On Da Streets 28. "Mad I'm fu**ing your wifey," Gucci alleges, while Rozay takes his own digs. "I push a button and them killers comin'/ Disrespect me, ni**as get nothin'." (Rap-Up)
Last week, Gucci made a slew of accusations and took jabs at Jeezy with his "Truth" track.
"I ain't playing wit ya, I ain't trying to dance wit ya/I ain't using hands, let them rubberbands get ya/It take money to go to war and we can go to war n*gga /I ain't no real rapper, I'm a f*cking grave digger /I'm a old school fool, don't make me show my age n*gga /Grab a Louisville and turn it to a batting cage n*gga /I did a song with Keyshia Cole and I know you still miss her /But Puff was f*cking her while you was falling in love wit her /Call you to do a song, wouldn't even smoke no bud wit ya /I was screaming so icy and was a neighborhood n*gga /This AR is my back up cause I don't need nan n*gga /Must didn't hear when Flocka said "Let them guns blam n*gga!" ("Truth")
This week, DJ Drama said Grand Hustle's T.I. could help mend the feud between Ross/Jeezy.
"Maybe they're not gonna be friends, maybe they're not gonna go out to dinner, but hopefully, we can probably get some music from it," Drama said in an interview. "I'm thinking now that it's a public situation, maybe that somebody can step in. Maybe Tip can do it. Nah, Tip can. Tip is, both of those guys are friends' of Tip. I'm not gonna say it's the first thing on his mind, but at the end of the day -- if it was something I could do, I would love to do that because I respect both of them. It doesn't seem like something that we can't get past." (This Is 50)
Earlier this month, Jeezy addressed his problems with Gucci in a radio interview.
"I mean, I feel like everybody know that boy retarded, nobody take him seriously. He got an ice cream cone on his face. That being said, I'm not going back. I'm going forward. And then it's crazy because they'll call you and want you on a song. And then when you

Drake Celebrates 26th Birthday In Washington DC


Drake's 26th Birthday at Park on Fourteenth 
 
Young Money Rapper Drake celebrated his 26th birthday in Washington, DC during Howard University’s homecoming weekend.
The rapper hit Park on Fourteenth, where he hosted and gave a performance of a medley of hit records.
Earlier in the day, Drake was spotted at Yardfest where other acts like 2 Chainz, Pusha-T, Sean “Diddy” Combs and others performed.
But Drake’s surprise appearance caused a bit of pandemonium that left several fans injured, due to the crowds.
Other artists that performed during the weekend included T.I. and weekend’s official closing act, Meek Mill.
Check out some flicks of Drake partying at Park on Fourteenth with Hennessy V.S for his 26th birthday.

Fast Life, Fast Fall: The Price Of Fame


broke-is-the-new-black


We live in a quick moving world. We watch others live the fast life, and we often desire the same. But as the saying goes, ‘easy come, easy go.’ While it’s not just society’s fault, and while we see people make millions and acquire the lifestyles that accompany it, each one of these elements, plus others, have fed into financial immaturity.
ESPN’s “30 For 30: Broke” recently touched on the astronomical percentage of athletes who end up with nothing. According to Sports Illustrated, 60% of former NBA players are broke within five years of retirement. For the NFL, two years after they walk off the field, 78% are under financial woes. But, athletes aren’t the only ones living outside of their comfort zones, or to impress those who won’t help once it’s all gone.
When is enough, enough? If you grew up with nothing, does that imply you will never learn how to keep anything? Music glorifies it, but there isn’t much good that comes from blowing money fast.
The strip club theme songs, flashy cars, lavish gifts, and once in a lifetime trips, are an almost hourly recurrence on the radio stations from ATL to L.A., and back. But the rented mansions and clothes the stylists will return once the shoot is done should actually show an up-and-coming entertainer that many of their realities are actually just the opposite. And while we aren’t what we listen to, we become engulfed in things the more we hear it. Even “YOLO” insinuates that living for now far outweighs planning for tomorrow.
Ignorance is bliss. Ignorance is also the life code of some of the biggest names out there. Chances are, the hot artist that millions love now will someday run cold – once the shows stop, singles fail to catch a buzz, and they don’t make the most of fame while they have it. Many miss the business side while chasing success; from starting other ventures to starting to learn money management, they don’t take heed to what they should. Then they are left with stacks of bills and still plenty of people with their hands out for the last bit of money they’re attempting to hold onto.
Some familiar names in music such as Toni Braxton, TLC, MC Hammer, and Young Buck, have all had face the ugly side of the music business known as bankruptcy. While they aren’t the only ones, the sad fact is they probably won’t be the last ones either. When you enter a world where everyone has all the most exclusive things, things become your focus. You work hard the same way they do, you put in hours in the studio, you start from the ground up, so now it’s time to stand up and show the world all you have. Actually it’s time to hold on tight to every penny, so you can count them after the spotlight dims.
At any income level, the only way to ensure that you’ll continue growing wealth is to spend less than you earn. That sounds simple enough – basic, if you will – but is one of the most complex principles in entertainment, from the looks of it. Fame isn’t easy for some, and the price tag can be heavy, to the point of breaking one star after another. Yet and still, several houses, way too many vehicles, and cute women who make even cuter babies, keep putting those on TV and stages in the same predicament. Much of nothing leaves nothing. Living a dream shouldn’t end in a nightmare. At some point, these celebrities should use some common sense – or borrow some. After all, that’s better than having to borrow money.
It’s always easier from the outside looking in, but when are those on the inside going to start looking at what fame could be doing to them? It’s never any of us until it hits home, or until that home is taken away.
Tawni Fears is a freelance writer and contributor to AllHipHop.com. Follow her on Twitter (@brwnsugaT).

Jay-Z, BeyoncĂ© Lose Bid To Trademark The Name “Blue Ivy”


Beyonce JayZ and Blue-Ivy   Rap star Jay-Z and his wife BeyoncĂ© have lost a bid to trademark the name of their new child, Blue Ivy.
The couple attempted to file a trademark for the name Blue Ivy shortly after their daughter was born in January of 2012.
Jay-Z and BeyoncĂ© reportedly had plans to start a children’s clothing line under the name Blue Ivy.
According to Boston’s Fox 25, Jay-Z and BeyoncĂ© lost an attempt to trademark the name to the Blue Ivy Events company, in Boston.
On Tuesday (October 16), a judge sided with Blue Ivy Events owner Veronica Alexandra in defending her trademark.
The Blue Ivy Events company can continue to do business without interference since The Carter’s lost the legal battle for the name.

Saturday, October 13, 2012

Marsha Ambrosius "F*$#K N Get It Over With"

Daz Dillinger "Once Again"

Wiz Khalifa "Runways"

Justin Bieber f. Nicki Minaj - Beauty And A Beat Justin Bieber f. Nicki Minaj Beauty And A Beat

Dr. Cornel West Encourages Jay-Z To Be Honest About His Stake In Brooklyn Nets


                   Dr. Cornel West Encourages Jay-Z To Be Honest About His Stake In Brooklyn Nets

Dr. Cornel West speaks on how Jay-Z should be completely honest about how much of the team he actually owns.
There's been some speculation that Jay-Z doesn't own as much of the Brooklyn Nets as he lets on, with some stating that he only holds a stake of one-fifteenth of one percent. Dr. Cornel West, who has been friends with Hov for some time, recently spoke on the
"Jay-Z came from the Marcy projects, but look at him now. He owns the whole - no, he owns one-fifteenth of one percent of the whole stadium. Let's get it right, now," he said. "They got a Russian gangster who owns 80 percent."
He said that Jay should be held accountable for how much he actually owns of the team and that he's only encouraging him to be honest "out of love."
"Now I love Jay-Z, I've spent much time with the brother. He's a lyrical genius. But we've got to tell him the truth," he said. "Tell the truth, Jay-Z. You tell the truth on Reasonable Doubt in 1996, that's what he started out with. He's telling the truth, we love you negro. But we gon' make sure you're accountable too. All of us in this together, and I'm saying it out of love."
Watch the video below (via JoyDailyTV).

KNOW WHEN TO SAY WHEN: Gunplay's Armed Robbery Caught On Tape, Rapper Could Face Life In Prison


                             Gunplay's Armed Robbery Caught On Tape, Rapper Could Face Life In Prison
Footage of Gunplay's armed robbery has been revealed.
Damning evidence has surfaced in the investigation of Gunplay's armed robbery and assault charges.
As previously reported, the rapper turned himself into Miami-Dade Police earlier this week.
Now, TMZ has footage of the alleged armed robbery:
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The video footage shows a man who appears to be Gunplay in a meeting with another man who is allegedly his accountant.
After discussing some matters, the man purported to be Gunplay pulls out a pistol, and eventually takes a gold chain from the accountant.
A third, unidentified man in the meeting, who appeared to have come with Gunplay, attempts to mediate the situation.
Gunplay also faces a second charge of aggravated assault with a firearm.
The rapper's attorney states that Gunplay could face life in prison if convicted on both counts.

50 CENT, TOMMY SUMMERS, AND THEIR FAILED ATTEMPT TO BREAK UP FLOYD MAYWEATHER AND AL HAYMON

                                    
Until now, the circumstances surrounding the discord between long-time friends Floyd Mayweather and 50 Cent have been unclear. When news about the formation of The Money Team [TMT] Promotions first broke back in July, we were led to believe that the company was created as a joint business venture between both men. As Mayweather was serving the remainder of his jail sentence, 50 Cent was moving quickly to sign fighters, like Yuriorkis Gamboa, Andre Dirrell, and Billy Dib. Presumably, he was acting on Mayweather's behalf, representing TMT Promotions as a partnership that would change the sport of boxing. However, FightHype.com has discovered that was not the case at all. What was once described as a "breath of fresh air" actually turned out to be an attempted coup by those once considered to be close to Mayweather.

Sources have informed us that 50 Cent and former Mayweather associate Tommy Summers, A.K.A. Tommy Smalls, tried to take advantage of Mayweather's incarceration in an attempt to oust long-time advisor Al Haymon in hopes of gaining control of Mayweather's career, both in and out of the ring. With the help of the influential Haymon, Mayweather has built a brand that has made him the highest-paid athlete in all sports. Their working relationship has allowed him to shatter pay-per-view records and generate revenue like no other fighter has ever seen before. One would think that Mayweather's achievements speak volumes about his working relationship with Haymon and their ability to succeed. Apparently, 50 Cent and Tommy Summers didn't see it that way. Ultimately, greed may have been the single solitary factor that caused long-time friends to go their separate ways.

FightHype.com was able to attain images of a letter (see below) that was sent by Tommy Summers to Floyd Mayweather during his incarceration. Shockingly, Summers embarks on a plan to try and convince Mayweather that he would be better off cutting ties with Al Haymon to instead partner with he and 50 Cent. According to Summers, if Mayweather did so, he could potentially make between $500 million and $1 billion dollars before he retires, raking in a whopping $100 million to $200 million per fight. Summers alleges that Haymon, Golden Boy Promotions, and HBO were all in cahoots, hiding money from Mayweather in a deal that was "cut under the table" with MGM Grand. It's unclear whether or not 50 Cent actually encouraged Summers to contact Mayweather with the alleged information, however, there's no denying that both men were working together to some degree, as evidenced by the mention of his name in the letter and the photo that was taken of Summers, 50 Cent and Manny Pacquiao at the September 17 press conference to announce Pacquiao vs. Marquez IV.

Although 50 Cent now claims his original vision of TMT Promotions was a joint partnership between himself, Floyd Mayweather and Manny Pacquiao, our source informs us that Mayweather never had any intention whatsoever of starting a new promotional company, which makes sense considering that he already owns Mayweather Promotions. Furthermore, Pacquiao continues to be under contract to Top Rank promotions, a company that Mayweather himself broke free of years ago with the intent of never doing business with its founder, Bob Arum, ever again. In fact, until Todd DuBoef takes over the reigns at Top Rank, the likelihood of Mayweather and Pacquiao doing any type of business, let alone starting a joint promotional venture, has proven to be unlikely.

Judging from the letter that was sent to Mayweather while he was incarcerated, postmarked July 24, 2012, which was exactly 4 days after it was revealed that TMT Promotions was formed, it would seem that the newly created promotional company was more of a joint venture between 50 Cent and Tommy Summers. Furthermore, given his instructions in the letter to "tear this up when you finish reading", it should be clear that, at the very least, Summers was definitely up to something. Apparently, as they spoke to fighters, they painted a picture that Mayweather was indeed on board, when in reality, he really wasn't. The notion that Mayweather was involved is one of the reasons why IBF featherweight champion Billy Dib was quick to sign with TMT Promotions, only to later find out that the facts were misrepresented to him. There was also an attempt to move former WBA featherweight champion Celestino Caballero to TMT Promotions, despite the fact that he was already signed with Mayweather Promotions.

Several sources have noted that Tommy Summers is notorious for making questionable back-alley deals on behalf of other fighters, like Mike Tyson and Zab Judah. It now appears that his latest decision to partner with 50 Cent may have cost him a close friend in the process. If the goal was to separate Floyd Mayweather from Al Haymon in hopes of reshaping the landscape of boxing, they should have known well in advance that whatever plan they concocted was not going to work based solely on how loyal Mayweather himself is to his team. Considering that 50 Cent has absolutely no experience whatsoever in boxing, one can only imagine why Tommy Summers decided to partner with a business man who's battling to keep his own sales up in the ultra-competitive rap industry. In fact, one can't help but wonder if 50 Cent's plan to align himself with Mayweather and venture into the business of boxing was simply an attempt to remain relevant, especially considering that he has a new album due to hit stores some time in mid-November, which just so happens to coincide with his original plan to promote the first event of TMT Promotions on November 17. After all, exactly what was 50 Cent going to bring to the table for Mayweather, who is already considered to be the biggest name in his own industry?


FOLLOW THE IMAGES FROM LEFT TO RIGHT TO READ THE LETTER BELOW



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Thursday, October 11, 2012

50 Cent Spotted Wearing Gunplay’s MMG Chain!



50 Cent and Gunplay
50 Cent is one bad mother – shut your mouth! In an attempt to bait Rick Ross into another lyrical battle, 50 has just been spotted flossing Gunplay’s MMG chain at a bowling alley. 50′s army of goons beat down Gunplay in the parking lot at the taping of the BET Hip-Hop Awards and apparently took the chain as a souvenir. Check out the video below of 50 with the MMG chain.
Do you think Rick Ross will bite? Anyone interested in another 50 Cent/Ross Beef Part II? It’s pretty safe to say that Rick Ross won that first round, right?
Source: KYSCD.com

How Hip-Hop Can Heal: A Message from Freeway Rick Ross on the Rick Ross, Young Jeezy BET Altercation



Freeway Rick Ross

“I’ve become a man of peace. My redemption keeps me strong.” -Stanley “Tookie” Williams founder of Crips
This weekend the news that came out of the BET award show about the altercation between the rapper using my name “Rick Ross” and “Young Jeezy” can only be described as disappointing. These are not fighters, they are entertainers, as much as they build their image on criminality – it is still an image. When art comes to imitate life it can become dangerous, because while these young men act out filling the shoes of their infamous heroes, they do so with out having walked in these shoes to prison cells or worse. As such the only winner that comes out of such a failure of celebration is the media that is able to characterize these actions as violent, perpetuating imagery of Hip Hop that has lasted far to long. In a moment of what is suppose to be a BET commemoration of achievement, these wealthy young men have created yet another stain on the American image of Hip Hop, black entertainment and young black men. Young men by the millions tune in to see role models, and receive this message of what to model themselves after for success. While this is not a deathblow to either’s career and through divine intervention no one was hurt, this does call us to come together and evaluate to avoid future incidents.
In the early 80′s as I rose to power one thing I saw was real money caused gang fighting between the Crips and Bloods to simmer down, in exchange for economic opportunity. The courts wanted to relate the drugs to the violence but that wasn’t the case. When we started selling drugs it was the first time you could see a Crip on a Blood’s block and they’re getting along because they’re trying to get money. When you are trying to get money you don’t want any violence. You don’t want violence making the police come around because that interrupts your cash flow. What seems to be happening in Hip Hop is the opposite; in some cases these artist produce violence because it is awarded with exposure, which validates their image of my life, and others like mine. The messages these young men are starting to emit through song, fashion and interviews is one of “get your weight up”, rather than let me help you up.
Rick Ross God Forgives I Don’t – So Sophisticated: “To get a verse from me, you gotta be initiated – To get a purse from me, she gotta be sophisticated – Purchase a whip from me and never miss a single payment -I’m from the city where the Muslims even Christians hate it – Even the black folk hate to see another ni**a made it – Tell all them p*ssies to chill, champagne refrigerated – Just bought a chopper ’cause the last one, got it confiscated – Counting a hundred mill so many times, I contemplated – You wanna be the hottest but that sh*t get complicated -I pull your card, I know you’re p*ssies by your conversation – Show you the safe, you’ll have to kill me for that combination… I’m the hottest and these other n*ggas cooling, ain’t it – I got a b*tch I’m f**ing that you see on BET -My lil’ Haiti shooters will have yo ass on TMZ.”
William Roberts pka “Rick Ross” you accomplished the goal you’re on TMZ, and BET for all the wrong reasons. Inside of these song’s lyrics is the kindling of a brushfire for violence, because the starting point is incorrect. It is a foundation built on low self esteem and selfish statements of I have what you can’t afford -from something as simple as a Passport and its stamps, to some European item that’s hard to pronounce and can even include a man’s mate in some of these songs. Hip-hop has the power to be so much more than that simple. At my height I did not make hundreds of millions to belittle those around me, this is what elitism has driven rap into becoming. A tool to marginalize the have-nots as rappers say what they invented, how they will protect it and how your less than for not being in the same class. The goal cannot be to have large sums of money to marginalize your fans with diamonds they don’t have, clothes they can’t afford or cars they have not seen.
The goal must be to use money to fund our faith centers, educational institutions and shelters for those in need. Black America today in mass is impoverished, some 10 million blacks live below the poverty line making less than $11,000 a year, and another large mass of blacks are classified as “near poor” by new census calculations. Likely making it around 2 in 3 blacks in America that are either poor or the newly classified “near poor”. Our goal in wealth must be to enjoy it, share it in charity, be the vision of our excluded great-grandparents and not allow it to destroy our purpose in achieving the American Dream of success for our community.
BET must also look to itself not only by saying that their failure was how they organized attendees. “Due to some misjudgment of select attendees, it is unfortunate that certain incidents took place. BET Networks does not condone any type of violence.” BET Network Statement. But in addition the network must look harder at its programming and the role it plays in creating an environment where social justice may not be a large enough part of programming goals for the network and the networks input on the artist it supports. A good step in the right direction by BET is the new piece they have airing in October by Marc Levin “Second Coming Election of Barack Obama”.
My partner Antonio Moore is a former prosecutor from years ago, and we speak often coming from entirely different sides of this thing called justice on what needs to occur, and undoubtedly it ends with maturation, responsibility and a call to social justice.
Look at the power of Jay-Z’s lyrics about my life story:
“Can’t you tell that I came from the dope game, Blame Reagan for makin’ me into a monster,…Blame Oliver North and Iran-contra/ I ran contraband that they sponsored.” Jay Z – Blue Magic
The power that can be wielded by our entertainers reaches so much further than those of the 60′s due to the globalization of their image. It is time to call on Hip Hop to be more and grow up and mature. As I attend the Emmys in New York this week for VH1 Planet Rock History of Crack and Hip Hop, I realize that Hip Hop can be a vehicle to explain how we survived a economic downturn. Even in my current battle with the rapper Rick Ross my end goal is not to destroy his career, but rather part of my goal for any resolution is to have him become part of the Freeway Literacy Foundation and teach positive messages to our youth across the nation. For that to happen Hip Hop must change its focus and its artist must become more oriented on the success of more than themselves (Ex:Dr. Dre Donates to Freeway Rick Ross Benefit Event by BET). Rap must heal itself by becoming a vanguard for social justice and causes that give purpose to idle resource.

My call today is for their to be peace and healing of longstanding wounds, for that to happen we must begin to be honest about why those wounds exist. Then truly come to the table to discuss how to help them heal for all of our sake.
Freeway Rick Ross
Coauthored Antonio Moore, Esq.
Follow Freeway Rick Ross on Twitter: www.twitter.com/FreewayRicky

Breakin’ 2 Chainz: Why Do Smart Rappers Make Dumb Raps?

by TRUTH Minista Paul Scott
2 Chainz
“Sophisticated ignorance/ write my curses in cursive” – “Otis”, Kanye West and Jay-Z
When the controversial rap superstar, “2 Shackles,” granted an interview to an investigative journalist at the New Jersey Times, he agreed that it would be no holds barred. When the reporter grilled him on everything from his recent baby mama drama to his beefs with rival rappers, he addressed each question without flinching. Even when she pulled out a copy of the mugshot from his most recent arrest, he just smiled and autographed it for her. But when she asked him about the allegations that he had an extremely high IQ and graduated from college magna cum laude, he stormed out of the office, knockin’ over chairs and mumblin’ something about “birthdays and big booty guhs…..”
If you go strictly by what you hear on the radio, nowadays, you would swear that Hip-Hop was made up of people with low IQs and short attention spans. The music that once prided itself on being the “Black CNN” now sounds more like a pornographic version of Sesame Street. Sad thing is that some of today’s rappers are, actually, intelligent. Now, I’m not claimin’ that they are rocket scientists but they aren’t the bumblin’ buffoons, that you hear on the radio either.
So the question becomes, why do the smartest rappers make the dumbest raps?
Malcolm X once said the difference between a clown and a wise man is “the clown never imitates the wise man but the wise man can imitate the clown.” However, on a three-minute song on the radio, it’s kinda hard to tell the difference.
Case in point is the hottest rapper in the game right now, 2 Chainz. Some may find it hard to believe that the rapper who gave us such songs as “Birthday Song” and “No Lie” is actually Tauheed Epps , a gifted high school student who, in 1996, got an athletic scholarship to play basketball at Alabama State University; thus, putting him in the company of such athletic, scholar entertainers as Paul Robeson.

However, it would be easier to find your favorite rapper’s Illuminati membership card than it would be to find an actual record of 2 Chainz’s academic prowess. So the story goes that he was either an academic genius who graduated in three years with honors, or a college dropout who only attended a couple of semesters at an institution of higher learning. However, the fact remains that he is far more intelligent than the music that he makes. If you ever listen to an interview when 2 Chainz briefly breaks out of character and reverts back to Tauheed Epps, you can tell that you’re not dealing with a dummy.
So why the charade?
One can make the argument that the rappers of today were not the first to make dumb music. Back in Hip-Hop’s early years , there were songs by The Rappin’ Duke and Bobby Jimmy and the Critters. But raps by artists like Biz Markie were seen for what they were – comedy. The songs were just an occasional break from the more lyrically complex Hip-Hop of the time. No no one in his right mind wanted to hear “Pickin’ Boogers” all day, everyday on the radio. But today the airwaves are flooded with mentally-challenged music that has dumbed down the culture.
The defenders of commercial rap are always quick to point out how Hip-Hop is the most influential art form to ever grace the planet, and how it has impacted countries around the world, socially and economically. However, when you hit them with a socio-economic analysis of the music, they accuse you of “thinking too deep,” and all of a sudden, the great culture of Hip-Hop becomes merely “entertainment for kids,” like some Saturday morning cartoon. But the critique must be done.
If we break down the meaning of “2 Chainz, “ we will see that in order to enslave a people it takes two chains – one physical and one mental. Of the two, the most powerful is the mental chain as taught by scholars such as Dr. Na’im Akbar, author of the book, Breaking the Psychological Chains of Mental Slavery. Because even when the physical chain around the wrist is broken, the mental chain around the brain remains.
The emancipation from mental slavery has always been the hardest task for those trying to free a people who have been, as the scripture teaches, “destroyed for a lack of knowledge.” This is made more difficult when those who “reject knowledge” and dumb themselves down are portrayed to the youth as models of success.
However, all youth are not going for the okie doke. Recently, the group Watoto from the Nile released a video called “Letter to Nicki Minaj”, which features a powerful scene where “Harriet Tubman” removes the chains from Minaj’s wrists, symbolically meaning that the chains will eventually drop from her brain. (Good luck with that one.)

It is no accident that the deeper we entered into the information age, the dumber the music became. It was once said that ‘if you want to hide something from a Black man, put it in a book.’ But today, you don’t even have to take the bus to the library, as the information is literally at the tip of your fingers. So, the mental chains had to become reinforced. The music industry has been involved in a “brain drain” where they take our best and brightest artists and turn them into ratchet rappers.
While it may be argued that teenage rappers like Chief Keef are too young to know any better, that’s no excuse for rappers like 2 Chainz who are old enough to be their fathers. They have made a mockery out of the saying “with age comes wisdom.”
It’s time for us to break the chains. Hip-Hop artists must be pressured to stop the musical mumbo jumbo.
Like KRS said on “Still #1″:
“Many of you are educated/open your mouths and speak…”
TRUTH Minista Paul Scott’s weekly column is “This Ain’t Hip Hop,” a column for intelligent Hip Hop headz. For more information on the No Warning Shots Fired lecture series, contact info@nowarningshotsfired.com, 

Nicki Minaj "Pink Friday Roman Reloaded: The Re-Up" Cover Art




Nicki Minaj "Pink Friday Roman Reloaded: The Re-Up" Cover Art
UPDATE #2: Nicki Minaj plans to repackage her sophomore album "Pink Friday: Roman Reloaded."
Nicki Minaj isn't letting go of her sophomore album Pink Friday: Roman Reloaded. Last night on the red carpet at the 2012 MTV Video Music Awards, the Harajuku Barbie told E! (via Rap-Up) that she plans to repackage and re-release the LP as Pink Friday Roman Reloaded: The Re-Up.
The album is slated for release in November, and will feature additional new songs. The Young Money rapstress also revealed that her new single from the project will drop next week.
"I'm releasing my album in November. It's called Pink Friday Roman Reloaded: The Re-Up and I'm putting lots of new songs on there," she said. "I'm actually going to drop my new single next week. So Barbz, you are going to spaz, you are going to love it, you are going to go crazy."
Pink Friday: Roman Reloaded released in April 2012, debuting atop the Billboard Hot 100 with 253,000 copies sold.
[September 7]
UPDATE: Nicki Minaj took to Twitter to announce that her repackaged album Pink Friday Roman Reloaded: The Re-Up will release on November 19th.
[October 10]
UPDATE #2: Nicki Minaj has revealed the cover art for her repackaged album Pink Friday Roman Reloaded: The Re-Up. Check out the artwork below.
nicki