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Off Da Glass » 2010» July

Off Da Glass

Northwest Ohio’s Urban Entertainment Source

Archive for July, 2010

Jul-30-2010

Video: Bun B -”Let Em Know” In-Studio Performance with DJ Premier

Bun and Preemo let you in the studio to hear their song together.

Spotted at DGB

Posted under Music
Jul-30-2010

Gucci Mane Talks About New Album With Greg Street

Gucci Mane lets Street know whats up with Georgia’s Most Wanted: The Appeal.

Posted under Music
Jul-30-2010

Young Lace Ft. Dubb and Skeme – Takin’ Ova

Here’s the video for Young Lace’s “Takin’ Ova”. The track features Dubb and Skeme Produced by The Dynamic Circle Productions

Posted under Music
Jul-30-2010

Yelawolf feat. Gucci Mane – “Wanna Party”

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Posted under Music
Jul-30-2010

Kendrick Lamar – “For The Homies”

Kendrick Lamar PW - Issue84

Posted under Music
Jul-30-2010

Huey feat. Murphy Lee – “Do Them Bad”

Huey Redemption LP Cover Art

Huey’s new album Redemption is due out September 14th.

Posted under Music
Jul-30-2010

Almost Famous Six Year Anniversary Performance Auditions

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Performance auditions for the six year anniversary of Verseus Entertainment’s Almost Famous showcase will be held this Saturday, July 31st, in Atlanta, GA, at Sam Ash music store. Judges include record executive Kenny Kold, producer Kane Beatz, Chuck Woo (Earwax Digital), SIR Magazine and BE Magazine. For more information on Almost Famous and the six year anniversary auditions, log on to almostfamousshow.com.

Posted under Music
Jul-30-2010

Three 6 Mafia feat. French Montana – “Money Weed Blow”

Posted under Music
Jul-30-2010

Video: Princess Talks Diamond and Crime Mob

DJ Smallz sent this video over a couple days ago, but I think that was the day Kanye West joined Twitter and everything else in life got overshadowed. But Smallz sat down with Princess of Crime Mob (or is it Princess formerly of Crime Mob? I’m honestly still confused), and she talked about somewhat kissing and making up with Diamond, and how the dudes in Crime Mob still rap about dumb sh*t (that’s just how I interpreted that). Once again, salute to DJ Smallz.

Posted under Music
Jul-30-2010

Bun B feat. Drake – “It’s Been a Pleasure”

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Bun B’s Trill OG album drops on Tuesday. Support that. UGK 4 Life.

And since a lot of people have been waiting to hear this one…

Bun B feat. Pimp C, 2Pac & Trey Songz “Right Now”

Posted under Music
Jul-30-2010

Vide: Yung L.A. Still On Grand Hustle

In case you were wondering, Yung L.A. (you know the guy that sings “Ain’t I”) is still on Grand Hustle (along with 45 other artists). Rumors said he got dropped, which you would think since we haven’t heard much from him, and T.I. had that line in “I’m Back” that seemingly describes Young La, “tight jeans, funny hair, dancing on the screen,” but T.I. said he wasn’t talking about Yung L.A. (riiiiiight).

Anyways, DJ Smallz cleared up all the rumors with the man himself. DJ Smallz and Yung L.A.’s Suntrust Leland mixtape drops on August 24th. The first single off the mixtape “One Level Above” featuring Wale and Pill is below.

Posted under Music
Jul-30-2010

Sparkdawg “@SparkDawgMusic 2: Re-Tweet” Cover Art

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Spark aka SparkDawg releases brand new cover art for “@SparkDawgMusic 2: Re-Tweet” hosted by DJ Woogie & Empire Mixtapes

Posted under Music
Jul-30-2010

Yelawolf’s First Chicago Show

Here’s some footage of Yelawolf rippin the stage in the windy city for the first time.
[Video Via Ruby Hornet]

Posted under Music
Jul-29-2010

Soulja Boy’s Live 20th Birthday Celebration

Who streams their birthday party live on Pay-Per-View? Soulja Boy does! If you’re cheap like me check out the video above and see what you missed out on. Photos of the party under the cut

[Video Credit: HipHollywood Photo Credit: Celebrity Mound]

Posted under Music
Jul-29-2010

Core DJs x Hutch Daddy Dollar: Bash At The Bay Music Conference

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The Core DJs and Hutch Daddy Dollar recently held their annual Bash At The Bay music conference over the weekend. Among the guests were Jagged Edge, DJ Drama, Frankie and more and the weekend included  a car & bike show, bikini party and artist showcase. Check out some of the photos from the event below. More in the Ozone Gallery

Posted under Music
Jul-29-2010

Phene – “Writing On The Wall”

Atlanta transplant, Phene, takes fans on a lyrical trip back to his hometown of Pittsburgh. New album, God On A Greyhound coming September 2010.

Posted under Music
Jul-29-2010

Ozone Feature: Kokane

Talking to Kokane is like opening up a buried time capsule. Full of stories, ideas and visuals, Kokane has seen, heard and a experienced enough to write a tell all book on the music industry if he wanted to. The son of a Motown song writer and a founding father of West Coast Hip Hop, Kokane has just about witnessed all there is to see about your favorite artists.
After spending nearly two decades behind the scenes as a singer and hook writer, Kokane is finally ready to put his face and talents on the forefront with his new album Gimmie All Mine.


So what have you been up to today?

Well, I just got the kids off to school.

So that’s the daily routine, how many kids?

Eight kids by the same woman, they range from ages 5 to 19, the oldest are identical twin boys. We’ve been together 21 years. The best thing about that is that at the end of the day, after you’re finished with work, or done with this music industry, the best thing you can have is God and your family.

So what have you been up to as of late?

I just got off the Malice and Wonderland tour with Snoop. I sung on the song “Secrets.” I have my label Buddy Boy Entertainment with Fontana. I recently put out my first mixtape, On the Back Streets with DJ Crazy Toones who is Ice Cube’s DJ. It features Ice Cube, Above the Law, Snoop Dogg and WC. Its for free, I didn’t want to charge the fans for this one. I’ve been featured on everybody’s stuff. I’ve practically worked with everyone one so I wanted to use that mixtape to let people know that. I have a single called “Twilight Zone” on iTunes right now.

People automatically think of Nate Dogg when they think of hook guys or collaborators as far as the West is concerned. You’ve worked with more people than him but you keep a rather low profile and many people still don’t know about you. How do you handle that or do you like it that way?

A lot of times some artists do things and people don’t see their face, but hear the voice. After 21 years, we’re fixing all of that. But I’ve worked with more than just West Coast rappers. I’ve worked with George Duke and Stanley Clark. I’ve worked with Diddy and Busta. I’m not just a West Coast artist. I have East Coast roots too. I was born in the South Bronx and moved to the West Coast when I was 3 years old. One of my strong points is coming from a lineage of musicians. My dad Jerry Long was a writer. He arranged and produced classic songs like The Temptations’s “Just My Imagination,” The Four Tops “Still Waters Run Deep,” and the song “Smiling Faces.” So music was always in my life. But in 2010 you have to move according to how God makes the season. This has allowed me to learn the game from Eazy E, who had the blueprint. If it wasn’t for Eazy it wouldn’t be no Dre, Cube, 50 Cent, etc. So now in 2010, we’re putting it out there to match the face. I don’t boast about this, I’m a humble cat, but I’m all over. People are enthusiastic about my music, they call me the Rich Little of the game. People didn’t know I was on [Bad Azz’s] “Wrong Idea” or Dr. Dre’s “Some L.A. NIggaz” and eight songs on Snoop’s Last Meal album. Even back in the day I was the first voice you hear on N.W.A.’s Niggas 4 Life album. We are educating people on it. If you don’t, people won’t know.

Coming from your father’s lineage and then getting involved with what people were labeling “gangsta rap” did you ever feel conflicted?

As far as my dad, back in the old Motown, certain people couldn’t say things unless they wanted their legs broke. But in my era, you can say things. He did so many things at Motown and they took so much credit and money from him, everything, even time. I never had the opportunity to be raised by my dad. I saw him often but wasn’t raised by him. I was raised by my grandmother in a suppressed environment. Everything I saw as a child shaped my character. It reflected in my music and lifestyle. When you’re a child you develop calluses on your heart from what you see. That’s what Eazy loved about my style.

And I’ll always love him for sticking by me. There used to be a misconception about my name, I was ahead of my time. People didn’t like my name, but now look at Joey Crack, Tony Yayo. I wasn’t talking about advocating drugs. I was using the slang, it meant dope.

After Eazy passed, was it hard for you to get work? Death Row’s influence on the game made him look pretty bad. Were you considered guilty by association? Was it hard to stay afloat?

I started going to studios and just singing hooks and people like E-40 and Too $hort started putting me on. That’s how I started my niche, getting on the road doing hooks. I started doing that from ‘94 on up, it became second nature. People wanted that George Clinton/Rick James sound. Then in ‘99 me and Snoop rekindled our relationship. Because at one time it was Ruthless vs Death Row.

Yeah, when you came out with your tribute to Eazy, it seemed like people thought, “why do this and who is this?” What was it like being involved in that war so to speak?

Yeah, before I talk about that let me clear something up. When we checked into the game, we didn’t call it Gangsta rap. Some journalist started calling it that. Above the Law got signed to Ruthless in 1989 and came out in ‘90. I did a 3 song demo, Eazy heard it and he signed me too. Easy brokered one of the biggest deals at the time with Epic Records. It was for Po’ Broke N Lonely, Above the Law and Kokane. A guy by the name of Kenny Camersol was afraid of my name. But Eazy had vision, people wasn’t gonna accept NWA when they first came out either.

There was a movie coming out in ‘91 called Deep Cover. This was before Death Row had even started. Eazy and Dre always had differences in the studio, creative differences but Eazy always had the last word because it was his company. At the same time Niggaz4Life came out, we had Calvin Broadus who you know as Snoop Dogg and Warren G around. Above The Law was the first group to really give Calvin his props, or discover him if you will. This happened in Inglewood in ’91. We was all mad at Eric at the time, we thought he was playing with the money. Suge was D.O.C.’s body guard and he was my manager back then. We all was supposed to have a meeting in Inglewood to see what was up. But Dre never came to the meeting, he went and started Death Row with Suge. But he was still under contract with Eazy. Kokane and Above The Law rekindled our relationship with Eazy. Snoop didn’t want to wait for me to drop my second album, so Warren G took him over to Suge and them. That landed the deal. All the while the Deep Cover soundtack is coming. I had a song on there “Nickle Slick Nigga.” Of course many people know that soundtrack for Dre and Snoop’s title track.
Then Snoop started badmouthing Eazy. We all was like why you do that? He said he was riding with them, which I understood, he was a new fresh artist. So that started the beef between Ruthless and Death Row. Eazy didn’t want to beef, because he was getting more money off those records than Dr. Dre was. Then I did my album Funk Upon A Rhyme. We felt that Snoop and Dre took our concepts, we was the first to do G-Funk and on top of that one of my groups was called The Aftermaths. This is all facts and on the back of the CDs and liner notes. [Above the Law producer] Cold 187 brought a lot of that funk to Dre too. But all the fans was running to them, they ain’t know any better. We going back and forth but all the fans are rolling with them.

But to catch up to speed, I was just doing just doing hooks. Snoop said he wanted to squash the beef. He sent a message through his homeboy Lil Half Dead to come to the studio. I was only supposed to do a couple songs, but we wound up doing a lot. This was ’99 and Snoop said he wanted to do a group called The Eastsiders. Working with them also rekindled my relationship with Dr. Dre and I wound up doing the hook to “Some L.A. Niggaz” with Knoc’Turnal. After that Snoop asked me to get on The Last Meal and we’ve been doing good after that.

That’s good that after all of those years, you could put those misunderstandings and beefs to the side. Do you think the same can happen with this new “old west vs new west” thing that’s going on?

Whenever a house is divided a house will fall. We’ve supposedly lost the flag. When you look from radio to the streets, you don’t hear us. Whenever you have denomination, it separates people. You can’t go to the East Coast and say this is the New East Coast or the old. You can’t do that with the South either? Why are we doing that on the West? We have to perpetuate unity, if we don’t do that ignorance comes into play. There is no New or Old West, its just the West Coast. People need to get stuff off their chest, but after that we have to come to some agreement with each other, you can’t survive separated. I embrace everybody, Cube, Jay Rock, G.Malone, Nipsey. But you have to really look at what Cube did. You want to trip because he only put a couple artists on? He made it accessible for doors to be open. Its about longevity, its called pay your dues. You have to look at it for what it is. People always want to be put on, but never look at the contribution. Isn’t the contribution bigger than just putting one or two people on? Why give somebody French fries when you trying to give somebody the game to get a franchise. At the same time, us as OGs, we have to put our pride in our pocket to talk to these brothers. That’s why I play the diplomatic role. Go right so you don’t get left.

Are you going to try and do that with your music?

My music always been cut of 70s cloth. Gil Scott Heron, Roy Ayers, George Clinton, Rick James. I actually have a whole record with George Clinton and I lived with Bootsy and them. I’m trying go touch on reality and social ills with my music. Right now everybody is playing on a beach but no one thinking that a psunami can hit. But I’m telling you, music is so powerful, it can throw you left or make you go right. I’m not perfect, but I want to put some positivity out there. With my stuff I’m here to uplift people who have nothing to relate to. There’s nothing wrong with dancing. Those songs are cool, but we need to transition Marvin Gaye’s doo wop to “What’s Going On.” We need to wake people up. There is a problem when we have 10,000 kids that know 10,000 dances and 10,000 ringtones before they know how to put a business plan together. Before they even know two sentences of scripture. What happened to X-Clan and Public Enemy? That was shut down on purpose. They don’t want that positivity. That’s why I’m naming my album, Gimme Mines Back. Give me back what’s mine devil. I have a song on my album called, “What Change Have You Made in Your Hood Today?” Each one teach one. It’s a Public Enemy twist with NWA with 70’s grooves. We want to get back to what Curtis Mayfield was doing. People are hurting out here. The minute you try to say something, they try to discredit you. The people that want to spread ignorance think saying “fuck you” is more important than saying “I love you.” We have to perpetuate a message of love. Love isn’t like African medallion chains, in one day and out the next. We have to have love again.

Posted under Music
Jul-29-2010

Tity Boi feat. Yo Gotti-”Boo”

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Tity Two Chains hooks up with the cocaine guy.

Posted under Music
Jul-29-2010

Gucci Mane Is For Blacks Only?: White Male Assaulted By Black Teens For Listening to “Wasted”

Taken from NY Post:

A Florida man says he was the victim of a racially motivated attack Monday, when he was punched by a black teenager for listening to rap music.

David McKnight, 22, was playing the song “Wasted” by Gucci Mane when, he says, he was confronted by 14-year-old Joshua Lamb, WFTV.com reports.

“The argument involved the black male suspect saying, ‘You shouldn’t be listening to rap music because you’re white,’ ” said Palm Bay police spokeswoman Yvonne Martinez.

When McKnight, who is Caucasian, refused to turn off the music, Lamb and a group of friends assaulted him.

“I couldn’t get away fast enough,” McKnight told WFTV. “One of them spit on me, punched me, knocked me down … I got a couple of kicks in from a couple of them.”

McKnight told police Lamb was with at least seven others.

“I told him to drop it. I was like, ‘Just drop it, let’s go, there is eight of you and one of me. Just drop it,’ ” McKnight said. “And he says, ‘I’m not dropping anything.’ Bam! [He] punched me.”

McKnight did not retaliate and, according to the police report obtained by The Smoking Gun, he “fled before any further battery could take place.”

But WFTV reported that he suffered a swollen eye, broken toe, concussion and choke marks around his neck in the fight.

“I feel it’s a racial thing, really,” McKnight said.

Police officers who showed up shortly after the incident arrested Lamb on battery charges, and he is currently being held in a juvenile detention center.

If state prosecutors decide to charge Lamb with a hate crime, the battery charge could turn into a felony.

There’s plenty of songs that people, Black or White, should have their ass beat for listening to (and making), but “Wasted” probably isn’t one of them.

Posted under Music
Jul-29-2010

Dorrough Interview With Hip Hop At Lunch

Dallas’ pride and joy talks about working with Nitti, Jim Jones and following up his single “Get Big” with “Hood Bitch Fetish” featuring Yo Gotti.

HHAL

Posted under Music
Jul-29-2010

Fiend-”International Jones: Connecting Flight”

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Sleepy Eyed Jones rakes up some frequent flyer miles with this one.

Spotted at DGB

Posted under Music
Jul-29-2010

Video: Lil Twist feat. Bow Wow – “Little Secrets”

Bow Wow’s “Put That On My Hood” video featuring Sean Kingston is in the cut. I’m not sure what hood Bow Wow is from, but whatever you say, Shad.

Posted under Music
Jul-29-2010

Video: Big Hud feat. Curren$y – “Summertime Ish”

Posted under Music
Jul-29-2010

Rick Ross – “Hard In The Paint (Remix)”

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Another Ricky Ross remix. Teflon Don is in stores and iTunes now.

Posted under Music
Jul-29-2010

Mya Attends Clinton Portis “All White” Charity Cocktail Party

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Here are some photos of Mya attending Clinton Portis’ All White Charity Party. The event raised money for Gulf Coast relief efforts

[Photos Via Love Mya]

Posted under Music
Jul-29-2010

Video: Young Buck – “Breach Of Contract”

Posted under Music
Jul-29-2010

Bun B – “Chuuch!!!”

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Bun B’s Trill O.G. album will be out on Tuesday.

Hit the cut for the Trill O.G. album commercial.

Posted under Music
Jul-28-2010

Legislation to Reduce Crack/Powder Cocaine Sentencing Disparity Passed By Congress

While most of the world was buzzing about Kanye West joining Twitter yesterday, Congress passed a historic law.

Taken from Huffington Post:

Today, the House passed legislation reducing the two-decades-old sentencing disparity between crack and powder cocaine offenses. The Senate passed an identical bill in March and the legislation is now heading to President Obama, who supports the reform effort.

This is a historic day, with House Republicans and Democrats in agreement that U.S. drug laws are too harsh and must be reformed. The tide is clearly turning against the failed war on drugs.

Before the changes, a person with just five grams of crack received a mandatory sentence of five years in prison. That same person would have to possess 500 grams of powder cocaine to earn the same punishment. This discrepancy, known as the 100-to-1 ratio, was enacted in the late 1980s and was based on myths about crack cocaine being more dangerous than powder. Scientific evidence, including a major study published in the Journal of the American Medical Association, has proven that crack and powder cocaine have identical physiological and psychoactive effects on the human body.

The 100-1 ratio has caused myriad problems, including perpetuating racial disparities, wasting taxpayer money, and targeting low-level offenders instead of dangerous criminals. African Americans comprise 82 percent of those convicted for federal crack cocaine offenses but only 30 percent of crack users, and 62 percent of people convicted for crack offenses were low-level sellers or lookouts.

Advocates pushed to totally eliminate the disparity but ultimately a compromise was struck between Democrats and Republicans to reduce the 100-to-1 disparity to 18-to-1. The compromise also eliminated the five year mandatory minimum sentence for simple possession of five grams of cocaine (about two sugar packets worth). The repeal of that mandatory minimum is the first repeal of a mandatory minimum drug sentence since the 1970s. Overall, the compromise bill is expected to reduce the federal prison population by thousands of offenders and save an estimated $42 million in criminal justice spending over the first five years.

I’m overjoyed that thousands of people, mostly African American, will no longer be unjustly subjected to the harsh sentencing laws enacted in the 1980s. The compromise is not perfect and more needs to be done, but this is a huge step forward in reforming our country’s overly harsh and wasteful drug laws.

Posted under Music
Jul-28-2010

DJ Drama At Club Stoudemire’s (Phoenix, AZ)

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Check out some flicks of Mr. Thanksgiving at Mixtape Sundays as he rocks the stage for the entire city of Phoenix.

[Photos Via VIP Enterprises]

Posted under Music
Jul-28-2010

DaVinci feat. Big K.R.I.T., Webbz x J. Rockwell – “The Beginning”