Cole sits down with Muve Music Sessions to discuss two tracks off of his debut studio album, Cole World: The Sideline Story. Cole speaks on recording "In The Morning" in his apartment when he owed about $6,000 in rent. His landlord, Muhammad (a man he mentions in his raps) believed in his ability and trusted Cole would make it big one day and pay him.
BET.com's Jabari Johnson recently sat down with J. Cole in the UK to discuss becoming an international performer and what he's got planned for his second album.
Haven't heard from Ghost in a while. Montreality sat down with the Wu-Tang member to chat about life, the industry, and what to expect in the future from the Killah. Ghost reveals he's working on his next album, which will be titled Supreme Clientele Presents Blue and Cream. Ghost also touches on Ludacris' diss track towards Big Sean and Drake.
GQ talks with Odd Future affiliate and rising R&B star Frank Ocean, getting him to reveal what he learned from Kanye and Jay while working with them on Watch The Throne. The magazine also titled Ocean "Rookie of the Year" for 2011, which is hard to argue considering he went from unknown to internationally known in less than twelve months.
For many reasons, this interview is one of my favorites of the year. First off, Westwood and Game are at a packed club with bottles of Grey Goose and an assortment of mixers gathered at a table in front of them; Game's wearing green/yellow contacts, giving him the appearance of a werewolf with cataracts; Westwood approaches Game about his kids by saying "you're pretty big in the baby father game"; and lastly, Westwood refers to Game's fiancee as "shorty baby." The two also talk about a possible beef with Big Sean and the arrest of Jimmy Henchman, Game's manager.
In hip hop we have characters, gangsters, lyricists; we have fads, trends, mainstays; only occasionally are we blessed with storytellers capable of carrying an entire generation. Enter Kendrick Lamar. We cover him on this site as often as possible for good reason. One of the most personable, respectable, level-headed, philosophical, all the while, fire-breathing, artists hip hop has seen, Lamar, just 24 years-old, represents hip hop in its most purified and capable form. This interview displays all of that promise, and also provides some terrific information and insight. A Lamar/Cole album is on the horizon, as is Lamar's first studio album release for Top Dawg Entertainment. In the Interview, Lamar reveals the content and aim of his first major label drop, due out in 2012.