| sean's profileRocafella RecordsPhotosBlogLists | Help |
|
December 01 Joke
November 30 YA LIKIN AKON'S NEW TUNE?Listen to Akon's new song - Pot of gold, on my SPACE and tell me here wot ya think of, good ? or not ?
CLICK ON COMENTS AND TELL ME IF YA LIKE IT OR NOT November 01 Sup Peeps Sup people, Cant Wait Until join the Amry In the (Infintry) Or (Sand Bag ) , But i ent wantin to leave me peoples behind, and my basketball OMG
DONT READ THIS THO NIKKI COZ I ENT LIKIN IT WEN WE TALK ABOUT IT LOL
Dj Clue, kid the hood legend Ditto
October 11 White Boy Hot Off The Blockyrical fire and venom the crowd and judges knew they were witnessing the birth of a new hip-hop force to be reckoned with. White Boy's incredible energy, delivery and raw, scrape-your-knees lyrics had the crowd cheering wildly. White Boy walked away with the title of 1st runner up that night and a deal with ICEE Records. However, the crowd had crowned him King of the competition. Hip-hop had a new young player that had just thrown a very big gauntlet down.
Chris "White Boy" Riley is a study of contrasts. The product of a stormy interracial union from the illtown streets of Rockford, IL, young Chris had to deal with the realities of being half this and half that, light white with a fly-away fro and the pain, suffering and loneliness that comes from being "that White Boy from 'round the way". Chris being one of millions of young street kids that learns how to survive on his own, took a ghetto nickname that could have reeked havoc on his life and made it his battle armor, his personal badge of honor for who and what he was and where he came from. White Boy was not invented; he was born and inherited the title from the streets that took him in.
His Grandmother raised him because Chris' Mother is currently serving time in jail and has been most of his life. He does not know his Father. His older brother, Quacy, down since day one, is also his best friend and his rap mentor. His 14-year-old sister, Destiny, is his heart and soul and though she's never said so he knows the bond is unbreakable. Chris humbly says of his brother Quacy "He is the real rapper to look out for. He is the one that I got the skills from". …his time is coming too…all in due time".
But right now the clock on the wall is pointed at White Boy. That's what time it is! ICEE Records signed the young protégée and is preparing to hit the rap industry hard with the as yet untitled debut album from Chris "White Boy" Riley. Scheduled for release in the spring of 2004, it is a collection of 15 songs that reflect what his young life has been represented by thus far. Glorifying the streetlife? No. Narrating his story of life on the streets. Yes. He tells of the violence, the drugs, and the sex because like so many other artists that's what he has seen and experienced. White Boy does it with a vicious and animated flow, rocking over a multitude of beats with relentless abandon, unraveling his street tales with a maturity and pace of someone way beyond his years on this earth.
Although, Chris received three academic scholarships to college and had planned to study music, his creative demons kept calling. Rather than give in to the constant temptations of the streets he focused on his rap skills. Opportunity knocked when he decided to enter the Chicago Idol competition this summer, and now, the rest is soon-to-be written music history.
When asked how he has survived through all the obstacles, he thinks of his Grandmother. He says of his Grandma, "She is happy for me, but when I graduated from High School she was really happy for me I was the first of her Grandkids to graduate from High School." Chris says proudly. Chris says that, "Rap has really changed. I have been studying it for a long time. In my generation, we look to Tupac and Biggie as the legends. There will never be anyone ever like them, ever! My biggest inspiration though is my brother, Quacy." "I want people to know everything about me," Chris says openly about his life "I want them to know about the important people in my life, my Grandma, my Mom, Quacy, my Sister, my 2 year-old Son, Tobias, everything, the streets, how I got here, all of it!" How much can "all of it " be in the life of an 18 year old? Just listen to the "reach" and "depth" of his rhymes and you will know. Chris began writing rhymes at age 14. He started rocking the crowds soon after and he has not stopped yet! For now, he wants to sharpen his rapping skills, learn all he can about the music biz and most of all be the dad to Tobias that his dad was not, " I want to take him fishing, I have never been fishing!"
ICEE Records Chris "White Boy" Riley seems destined to catch the big one and with the spring 2004 release of White Boys' definitive debut album, millions are about to get HOOKED!
February 02 Cam'Ron
Simply put Harlems favorite son Cam’ron is a movement unto himself. From literally changing the face of urban fashion with his trendsetting, redefining sense of style and signature pink wardrobe, to his mind-boggling ghetto nursery rhymes to the secret code he’s developed with his Diplomats crew - ‘Dip Set,’ ‘Byrd Gang,’ ‘Purple City,’ ‘Un Casa,’ ‘Sheist Bub,’ – ‘Killa Cam’ has turned Harlemworld into Cam’rons world. Cameron Giles - the flamboyant young cat who would go onto become Dip Set superstar Cam’ron - came up in Harlem’s grimiest streets with the same hopes, fears, talents and dreams as the other kids on the block; except young Cam was maybe that much better. Whether it was kicking rhymes with his friends, getting the latest gear just right, or playing ball, Cameron Giles had it. His love and gift for basketball was the first to truly shine: as a guard for Manhattan Central High School, young Cameron was named All-City, All-American and was eventually awarded a college scholarship based on his on-court talents. “I been this way since I was, like, three muses Cam’ron. From the moment I wake up at like seven in the morning in my boxers and socks, Im that fresh. I’m Cam. But soon, hed enter a different game entirely. Through friend and fellow-Harlemite Ma$e, Cam had a chance meeting with the late Notorious B.I.G. Though his city-wide reputation as a baller preceded him, Biggie Smalls was impressed with Cam’ron’s abilities on the mic. “Mase took me to his crib after he signed to Bad Boy and he just threw on a bunch of beats and I rapped for B.I.G. Cam remembers. Every beat he threw on I had rhymes, I had mad rhymes back then. Big said he wanted to sign me.” Biggie and partner Lance Un Rivera were astounded by Cam'ron's skills and immediately signed him to their Untertainment Records. Both his Untertainment debut, 1998’s Confessions of Fire, and his sophomore release, Sports, Drugs and Entertainment, went gold. But Cam, seeking to take his career to the next level, grew disenchanted with then-distributor Epic. Ever determined and creative, Killa Cam, as he was becoming known took matters into his own hands he and his Harlem Diplomats crew began putting out mixtapes for the streets, well before it was commonplace. Eventually, Cam’ron’s buzz had become larger than just mixtapes; the streets were crying for another studio album. Always an opportunist, his friend and former manager Damon Dash negotiated Cam out of his deal with Epic and signed him and his Diplomat Records to a deal under Roc-A-Fella. In 2002, Cam released his long-awaited opus Come Home With Me, which sold over one million units and catapulted Cam’ron to celebrity status. The monumental success yielded the smash single "Oh Boy,” which also rocketed protege Juelz Santana to fame. Now, with the release of Purple Haze, Come Home’s highly anticipated follow-up, Cam puts it down like only he can. “I’ve been working on this for about 7-8 months. I always grow every album. I’m around nice artists like Juelz, Jim Jones, J.R. Writer and a whole bunch of new people and it keeps me on my toes,” Cam says. “It’s like tough love and that’s why every album I do is better than the last one.” From the Jeep banger “Killa Cam,” to the certified street anthems “Get Em Girls” and “Shake,” to the radio hits “Hey Lady” “Lord You Know” featuring Jaheim and the new single, Cam’s spin on the Cyndi Lauper classic “Girls Just Wanna Have Fun,” Purple Haze continues Cam’s legend. Featuring appearances from the entire Dip Set crew – Juelz Santana, Jim Jones and Freekey Zeekey – as well as Kanye West, Jaheim, Lil Flip, and Twista, Cam’ron delivers his most diverse, creative and cinematic album to date. In fact, Cam plans to release a ‘Purple Haze’ short film in conjunction with the album. “I want you to have the visual, even if you don’t see the movie,” muses Cam. “Visualize it just by listening. Its like a verbal movie or even a book.” Purple Haze’s lead single, “Lord You Know,” features the thunderous crooning of thug-prince Jaheim. The song, a more introspective look at the streets, reveals Cam’s maturing view of the world. “The Jaheim joint is real soulful. I just wanted to give a tribute to all the people in jail. Jaheim came up with the hook and it was crazy. You feel that song in your gut,” Cam says. “I think that’s a big plus for everybody locked inside.” But Cam’ron reveals that his favorite song is one that strikes in the heart, not the gut. “My favorite song is ‘Ghetto Soap Opera.’ It’s about me and my son’s mom and what we are going through right now,” he reveals. Cam’ron, notorious for hisd tenacity, believes in constantly moving forward and Purple Haze is the culmination of that mentality. “If you do five albums and don’t grow, then you are just stupid,” Cam laughs. “That’s like going to high school for four years and still being in the 9th Grade. I went from artist to CEO to selling cologne to selling liquor.” True to his word, Cam’ron is one of the elite few artists that has been able to escape the confines of the game to expand Diplomat Records into a franchise. Along with the Purple Haze album and film, and his other ventures including “Oh Boy’ cologne, Cam’ron has taken his purple game to the spirit world as well – liquor that is. Along with his Diplomat partner Jim Jones, Cam has launched a cognac-based purple punch appropriately dubbed Sizzurp. Sizzurp has secured national distribution and is set to launch this summer. Be warned: Rap’s Pink Panther and Harlem’s freshest Diplomat – Cam’ron – is back with Purple Haze. |
||||||||||||||||||
|
|