Archive for July, 2009

Fabolous feat. Red Cafe, Paul Cain & Freck Billionaire - "There He Go"

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

09 There He Go

Corey Gunz feat. Lil Wayne - "Get Down"

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

12 09 Cory Gunz-Get Down Ft Lil Wayne

Seattle Hosts 8th Annual Hip-Hop Congress Conference

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

As the urban community continues to make giant leaps onto the music scene, it will be given an opportunity to create further progress into the future for the art form. The culture of Hip-Hop will gather tomorrow in Seattle, Washington to spark off the 8th annual National Conference for the Hip-Hop Congress.

Partnering with the Umojafest P.E.A.C.E. Center, Dope Emporium, Seattle Hip-Hop Youth Council, 206 Zulu, Global Fam and countless other organizations, this conference will serve as a means for the Hip-Hop community to establish a (more...)

L.O.X. feat. Main Source - Set It Off (Throwback)

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

02 Lox-Set It Off Ft Main Source

Joe Budden - "Just To Be Different"

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

11 Joe Budden-Just To Be Different

Ace Hood: Miami's Young Gun

Tuesday, July 28th, 2009

acehoodblk

Young, dynamic and in his own words, ruthless, Antoine “Ace Hood” McCollister is a hometown success. Just barely old enough to buy a drink, the 21 year old had his first taste of success in high school shining on his Broward County Florida football field. In a twist of fate he was injured and saw his NFL dreams shatter, and the window to Hip-Hop open. After a fateful meeting with Florida heavyweight DJ Khaled, Ace Hood's been relentless in his pursuit to the top, muscling (literally) his way into the Hip-Hop scene. Feeling the pressure to supersede the faltered success of his first album, Gutta, We Da Best's golden boy sat down to talk with Hip-HopWired about his plans to make his stamp on the game, his mentor and predecessor DJ Khaled and his definition of Ruthless.

HipHopWired: So tell me a little bit about growing up, what was your childhood like?

Ace Hood: Growing up man, either you playin' ball or you in the streets. I'm actually the first out of my city to make it big and do what I do. In the city we looked up to the big time dope boys, seeing them dudes riding ‘24s and ‘26s, that's what motivated us. You know with the big money wads, the pretty women, that's what I grew up looking at. Those are the things I grew up motivated on in a sense. So as I grew older, ball carried me over. I had hopes of going to college, had letters from colleges but ended up getting hurt. Once I ended up getting hurt, I took music out my back pocket. I got with a local label in my city called Dollaz and Dealz and we pretty much got poppin', we had a lil' mini buzz. We had a lil' promotion and stuff and ended up building a single, “M.O.E. (Money Over Everything)”, ended up taking that to Khaled and everything else has been like history.

HipHopWired: Okay so let's talk about Khaled. Khaled's been really pivotal in your success. Tell me about the moment you met Khaled and you knew this man was going to be a big part of your success.

Ace Hood: Actually I didn't even have hopes of getting a record deal. When that situation went down I just wanted to perform at his birthday bash. I went to the station and he had a meeting to go to, so good thing I had my work together. Had the bio poppin', picture and all that, we put that together in an envelope. Khaled took a look at it and he said he seen something within me that I couldn't see within me. From then on he said, I'mma give you a call back, I'mma listen to it. So what he did was he actually called back at like 11:30, he called my manager back that night. So he sent me the “I'm So Hood” instrumental and I rapped over that record, ended up turning it in and I've been the face of that music and been holding that label on my back ever since.

HipHopWired: Yeah, so you're working with Khaled. You're signed to We Da Best music, besides you and your upcoming success, what else can we expect from We Da Best? What else can we expect from the label?

Ace Hood: You can expect me to take We Da Best to another brand, to another height. We gonna build just a bigger brand than Ace Hood, we gone put Ace Hood in magazines, we gone have a clothing line, we gone build our brand. We're gonna build our company into one of the biggest companies in the world. Sign some of your favorite artists and sign some of my favorite artists one day but we're definitely gonna keep escalating to the top with our whole We Da Best and Ace Hood brand so at the end of the day, we gone keep going overtime until we at the top and maintain champions.

acerosskhaled-785081

HipHopWired: Definitely, definitely. So speaking of the best, besides yourself who do you think is the best artist out right now?

Ace Hood: I would say Rick Ross. Not just because he's part of the camp and he's family but he makes great music and I've seen him grow from each album.

HipHopWired: Speaking of Ross, I know he's ya boy, I know y'all roll real hard. How do you feel about Ross and his beef with 50 Cent right now? Where do you sit with that? Are you involved with that too?

Ace Hood: At the end of the day one thing about me, Rick Ross is my brother and I'mma always ride for him, no doubt about that. But at the end of the day, I'm a new artist so there are other things that I'm focused on, other things I got my mind frame on and as far as me breaking into being a bigger artist then what I am today. People love to hear good music. Ross got an incredible album. He got the record “Magnificent” out, he got the “Maybach Music,” it's just good music man. That's what you like to hear, that's what I like to hear, that's what they like to hear. So at the end of the day that's what it comes down to. Ross my family man and he's on my album, so we getting it in man. I'mma always be a big fan of his, I'mma ride for him. Ya feel me?

HipHopWired: That's what's up. So I noticed you have “Star” tattooed on your hand, when did you know the moment that you were a star?

Ace Hood: When I look in the people's eyes. I would say the reaction from the fans. The first time someone ever acknowledged me as Ace Hood like you know what, “Ace Hood got this crazy record out right now,”…that's when I actually was like you know what, I'm a star. When I walk out into an arena and you know thousands of people are screaming for Ace Hood, that's when I realized I'm a star. When I wake up every day and be like you know what I'm a star, this is what I do. This is what God put me on this earth to do, this is what the people love.

HipHopWired: Definitely, okay. Where have you grown artistically from Gutta to Ruthless? How have you changed and developed?

Ace Hood: I just developed a lot more lyrically, a lot more topic wise as well. Just in general in every aspect I've grown more as far as my music. I'm trying to perfect my craft everyday and every hour I get the chance to do it. That was like the introduction of me so on the second album I just made it a lot more personal and I want you to know who Ace Hood is as a person. So I took it a little more personal than the Gutta album with Ruthless.

acehoodbest

HipHopWired: So what makes you ruthless?

Ace Hood: Ruthless man, that's my state of mind man. Ruthless is my life. Ruthless is what I've been through. That's what built my train of thought. Ruthless is just my mind frame as far what I've been through in my life. Being doubted man, they said I couldn't do something, being called stupid for quitting ball, doing music and stuff, as far as the hate and people saying this, and people saying that…that's what allowed me to build that ruthless state of mind and we gone get it by all means. So my train of thought is ruthless. The way I go hard for the people and the way I go hard on this mic is ruthless. Just my whole mentality, my whole demeanor, is just ruthless. It's just get it by all means necessary, whether they with us or they not. We stepping on ‘em if they not, that's just my whole demeanor, my mind frame.

HipHopWired: Okay, final question. What kind of statement do you want to make with Ruthless and where do you see this album sitting among the top rap albums of all time? Where would you put Ruthless?

Ace Hood:
I would put Ruthless as the number one album. Not just cause it's me, because it's my album. Just cause of the message I'm trying to get out with this album. I mean ruthless is just me, it's who I am. I got a record on there called “Take a Toast” where I just feel like music is no longer music, it's a celebration. So at the end of the day it's more of a personal album. I still got a lot of hood bangers but we still got some records for the women as well. I just gave them my struggles and my grind on this album. That's what I would say man. This album is a big album.

DJ P-Cutta

Monday, July 27th, 2009

pcuttablack

Origin: Southern, New Jersey

Representing: Philly, Jersey and D.C.

TOP 10 PLAYLIST

1. "The Winner" - Drake
2. "24/23" - Young Jeezy
3. "Ransom" - Drake feat. Lil' Wayne
4. "Who's Real (Ruff Ryders Remix" - Jadakiss
5. "Blow The Horns" - M.O.P. feat. Busta Rhymes
6. "Death Of Auto-Tune (D.O.A.)" - Jay-Z
7. "Successful" - Drake feat. Trey Songz
8. "Always Strapped (Remix)" - Birdman feat. Lil' Wayne, Rick Ross, Young Jeezy
9. "Do It Now" - Drake
10. "Pokerface (Make Her Say" - Kid Cudi feat. Kanye West & Common

HipHopWired: How did you get your start as a DJ?

P-Cutta: Basically, as a child, I was always into music and got my first DJ set. It was really in college at Howard University when I got more into it. I had some friends of mine that were DJs and we had our little crew and we used to promote house parties. I was also a barber, but I really got introduced into the mixtape game while I was in college and I realized that was my calling. I always wanted to do mixtapes and in my later years of college I came up with the concept of Street Wars which was a little different from what the other DJs, at the time, were doing. From there it really took off. I got introduced to it in college from doing different promotions on campus, at house parties and stuff like that.

I didn't used to have a title when I was first coming into it. Once I got into college and started doing the house parties the name was given to me because 1: I was a DJ and 2: I was a barber…so it kind of went together.

pcutta streetwar

HipHopWired: What made you interested in creating Street Wars?

P-Cutta: The controversy. I was always into battle-rapping with different artists talking to other artists. I was into it on the level where people would do it subliminally where you have to really know these different artists or where they're from or different songs with lyrics that they might have said in order to figure out that they might be talking about this particular artist. As I got into the mixtapes, there was a lot of that happening on the underground level and on a lot of different mixtapes. There were a lot of artists that weren't putting out the clearance on their albums, but were just doing freestyles or live performances or putting it on other DJs mixtapes. That's what made me come up with the Street Wars because I would be trying to explain it fully to people, as far as why the artists are going back and forth, but if you weren't into mixtapes the way that I was then you wouldn't know because you wouldn't have heard all of the different rebuttals.

I wanted to basically put it all on one CD to tell a story and in the order in which it happened. It was like the barbershop scene because a lot of the beef and the controversy going on was talked about there and I just wanted to put something together so I might as well put it on wax. It was more or less just for the barbershop because I didn't really know how to put mixtapes out there other than in the barbershop so I did that. After a while it became such big talk there that people started saying that I should put it out all around. At the time I was in DC and mixtapes from New York were reaching there so I figured that I should try and take it up there to New York. I went up there and they enjoyed it and after they started to call trying to figure out how I had put it all together so nicely.

HipHopWired: How do you weigh in on The Game's recent lyrical attacks on Jay-Z? Do you think that it is necessary for Jay to respond?

P-Cutta: As far as that beef goes, I think that Game, from what I have been putting out in relation to what he's said about Jay, has been going at Jay-Z for a reason that's really unknown. He's just been taking different shots at him and been trying to get at Jay for a minute. When he was asked about it he always was just like, ‘Nah, I ain't going at Jay.' When Jay had that line with him saying that he wasn't talking about him, it gave Game the chance to really go in. Now that Jay said his name, other than calling him a groupie and saying that he wasn't really dissing him, these days if you say somebody's name then they take it like a diss. All you need is an inch and they will run with it. He's kind of overboard off that small thing though. I think that a lot of it is just for publicity and some of it could be that he feels that Jay has been doing it for too long and wants him to sit down and let other artists shine. It's more or less that he's actually trying to shine and in any way that he can he is going to do it.

I think so just because of the fact that with Game going overboard with it, he should definitely address it in a line or two. I'm not saying that he should create another “Takeover” or use a whole song to do it though because I don't think that Game is really on his level for that. And now it's like, how relevant are you now that you're not with G-Unit? He's running with this like it's real beef. I can understand what he had with 50 Cent and G-Unit where their beef could have turned into something actually happening and he had to go hard at them. With Jay-Z though, why are you really going that hard at Jay? What did Jay do? Don't get it wrong though, since I do the Street Wars there's times where you wonder why he's going so hard, but this is what the people want to hear. If a battle did ensue between Game and Jay-Z, it would be a pretty good battle since Jay has been in classic battles.

pcuttastandtall

HipHopWired: What's going on with Rooftop Entertainment? Are you trying to open up a lane for new artists?

P-Cutta: Rooftop Entertainment right now is a marketing promotion company for new artists. I have a couple of artists that are signed to me that I promote and others that I am just trying to help break into the industry by helping on a consulting level. Eventually I would like to turn it into a label. As far as myself, I have an album that I have been working on which is more like a mixtape/album. It's basically almost done and it features some of the artists that are under Rooftop Entertainment. I've been working with one of the artists called Illanoise and we almost have an album finished for him with a lot of features. I'm looking to really turn it into a label, but I just need to figure out if I want to do it on an independent level or mess with a major. I think the independent route would be a lot better because I can control a lot more, but I'll still need that distribution on a major level. I want to do it where the project really gets out there. I've really just been marketing and promoting these artists. As I said I have Illanoise, then I also have Five and another cat from down South. It's all in the works right now.

HipHopWired: Who do you feel people should be on the lookout for on the underground circuit right now that you give the approval?

P-Cutta: In DC there's an artist named XO who is really making a lot of noise on the underground. He's really on his business and has a lot of exposure out there. There's another out there called Kingpen Slim that's really on his grind and another that I have worked with. Recently I think he got shot so he fell back a little bit, but he's a real intelligent artist from DC.

In the Jersey/Philly area there's an artist named Kid Kaboom and he's a battle rapper actually who is making a lot of noise out here. My artist Illanoise is from New York, but he's been living in DC for awhile so he has a nice buzz in DC as well as New York.

dondiva

HipHopWired: You spoke on stepping out of the mixtape circuit and releasing an album. Are there any details that you would like to elaborate as it relates to how much work has been put in so far?

P-Cutta: It's probably about 60-70% done. Right now the title is in the works and the date should hopefully be before the year ends or early next year. I can't really give a title just yet because I'm still sorting through things and even the artists as far as doing the clearances.

HipHopWired: Where do you usually spin records at?

P-Cutta: Really DC or New Jersey. I'm actually from the Jersey-Philly area so it's really in Philadelphia where I do different spins. I still go back to DC and do different events there. New York is a place where I want to start opening the market to and do events there. I just came from Atlanta last week and that's another city where I want to open up to.

In DC there's nothing particular right now, but if I do something out there I'm usually at Love Nightclub. In Philly, there's Fusion Night club and I also do events at the Trocadero.

HipHopWired: How do you feel about mixtape DJs and holding true to breaking new records whereas other outlets are strictly about what makes the dollar?

P-Cutta: That's the art of mixtape DJs. I'm the type of person that comes from the old-school in mixtape DJing so the exclusives and breaking new records is being the first to have it and expose it. That's what the game is about. There are DJs that are still grinding it out to get those exclusives and working hard for nothing, which is nothing easy especially in this day and age with the Internet and everything floating out there. It's harder to get exclusives because once it hits the Internet, it's not exclusive. I feel that I stay true to that, especially in dealing with new talent. That's one of the reasons that I'm still into the game because that's what it takes to keep the mixtape game going because if you don't have any fresh new stuff it becomes harder to get more exclusives. Once artists become major their music is just put out there and they want everybody to have it as opposed to new artists, which are more underground, who stick to a certain level of DJs or exposure to help push them. I definitely like working with new talent though, or should I say new GOOD talent that is about their business.

HipHopWired: Where do you think you'd be now had you not been accepted by Howard University where you became heavily interested in Hip Hop?

P-Cutta: I don't think I'd be too far from where I am right now just because of my love for the music. If I didn't go to Howard, I would probably be somewhere with a Doctorate degree in a hospital. I would probably be doing something with medicine because I went to school for physical therapy in the medical field. It was more of what my family was in to. Going to school and getting influenced in music took me towards that direction as opposed to physical therapy.

cutta drama

Michael Vick Reinstated

Monday, July 27th, 2009

He's back! Commissioner Roger Goodell officially reinstated Michael Vick Monday. Vick will be reinstated conditionally and can play in the final two preseason games if he can find a team to sign him. He will also be allowed to participate in preseason practices, workouts and meetings. He will not be allowed to play in games till October but can participate in all team activities. Goodell is calling for an afternoon press conference to make the official announcement.

African Albinos Murdered, Body Parts Sold to Witch Doctors

Monday, July 27th, 2009

A group of men have been jailed in Burundi, a province South of the country Rwanda, for murdering Albinos and selling their body parts to witch doctors, who believe that Albino flesh is good luck.

The leader of the henchman has been sentenced to life in jail in the Eastern Ruyigi province on charges of plotting and planning to execute Albino citizens.

Four others were also charged with attempted murder and kidnapping and between them will serve seven to 15 years behind bars.

"There is one who was found guilty of planning and executing the crime, the three others attempted to kill and kidnap a woman and a child," Dodolin Nahamasabo, the head of the court, told the Reuters news agency.

"Another one was condemned for mutilation and participation in the association of criminals ... We decided to release three of them because we didn't find enough evidence," Nahamasabo said."

Burundi officials believe that the mutilated body parts of 11 Albino men, women and children were smuggled across the border into Tanzania and sold to witch doctors, who believe the body parts of murdered Albino's bring about luck in love, life and business matters.

Isaac Mwaura, from the Albino Society of Kenya, said he thought the crimes were "an extension of greed," reports Middle eastern newspaper Al Jazeera.

"People are greedy to overcome their poverty and they do anything whatsoever, including killing their fellow human beings.

Witchcraft has been practiced for a very long time in Africa and it's just metamorphosed into our modern ways of life, so when richness is seen in terms of money and prosperity, people are going ahead.”

He also added:

"If you look at witchcraft, before people were told to bring a white hen or a black cat.

"But now they ... think these don't work and use people with albinism."

Of course African culture is the fabric of African-Americanism, but they could stand to learn a thing or two from us Western Black folks too, because sometimes the motherland be trippin'! Stop killing chickens, cats and Albino people for good luck. That's somebody's dinner, pets and family, that's being smuggled in the black market for money!

In all seriousness, to each his own but murdering people for their body parts is cruel and unusual punishment for genetic skin discoloration. A crash course in humanity is long overdue.

DJ Jazzy Jeff Set to Become New “DJ Hero”

Monday, July 27th, 2009

Fans of the legendary DJ Jazzy Jeff will have a chance to play his likeness in the follow-up to “Guitar Hero.” The Grammy award winning DJ has been added as a digital character in the new “DJ Hero” video game. The game, from Activision Publishing, Inc. allows players to scratch, blend and sample like some of the greats including Grandmaster Flash, DJ AM, DJ Z-Trip, DJ Shadow and the newly added, Jazzy Jeff. Jeff revealed his excitement for the project in a statement:

“I am very, very excited DJ culture is finally getting its due. To have a song in ‘DJ Hero' is a dream come true; to be a character someone can pick up the controller and select you and play is probably the biggest thing to happen to me in my career. Music is (more...)

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