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KRS-One Archives - Page 5 of 5 - AllHipHop

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Legendary NY Station KISS No More; Merges With WBLS

(AllHipHop News) Urban radio in New York has undergone a major transformation, as 98.7 KISS FM will merge with 107.5 WBLS. The merger will end 30-plus years of KISS, which is owned by Emmis Communications, broadcasting to listeners in the New York/New Jersey areas. “I extend my gratitude and deepest thanks to the many special people that created the memories and sense of community that KISS FM delivered for 30 years,” said Emmis’ New York SVP/General Manager Alexandra Cameron. “Emmis will be forever grateful. We are so very glad that a part of KISS will remain remembered through WBLS programming as they welcome beloved personalities like Shaila and Lenny Green.” In the coming weeks, ESPN Radio will take over Kiss’ famed 98.7 frequency. KISS is recognized as being the first commercial radio station in the United States to play Hip-Hop, back in 1983, with the addition of Kool DJ Red Alert. WBLS responded by hiring Mr. Magic and the legendary DJ’s saturated New York radio with Hip-Hop music. In addition to regularly playing rap music by future icons like Run-DMC, Whodini, Kurtis Blow, Boogie Down Productions, KRS-One and Afrika Bambaataa, KISS helped launch the career of media personality Wendy Williams. Emmis Communications, which also owns Hot 97, bought KISS in 1994. It switched to an all-R&B format in 1999. “WBLS and WRKS have been the voice of the tri-state black community for 30 years and we plan to merge the best of both stations to create a stronger voice to deliver the best in R&B music while also super serving our community,” added WBLS VP/General Manager Deon Levingston. All this weekend both stations will run programming celebrating 98.7 KISS FM’s role in shaping the urban/Hip-Hop landscape.

Exclusive FLICKS: Ice T’s Upcoming Doc “Something From Nothing: The Art of Rap”

Directed by Ice T, a bonafide Hip-Hop legend and one of our favorite actors on “Law & Order SVU” these days, the film “Something From Nothing: The Art of Rap” takes a look at rap music’s evolution. The documentary gives us access to the personal lives of many of Hip-Hop’s pioneers, including Doug E. Fresh, KRS One, Rakim, MC Lyte, Marley Marl, Ice Cube, Nas, Snoop Dogg, and many more! If you have yet to see the trailer, watch below: [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TFDQxKC_JXY&w=640&h=360] BONUS: Nas Checks In As One of the Doc’s Stars [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=o6LVHT7Qm9w] BONUS: Doug E. Fresh Discusses His Three Favorite Rappers: [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hQQNwirrWZA&w=640&h=360] “Something From Nothing: The Art of Rap” hits theaters on June 15.

Brooklyn Bodega Announces 4th “Show & Prove Competition” For This Year’s Brooklyn Hip-Hop Festival

(AllHipHop News) Brooklyn Bodega, the producers behind the 8th Annual Brooklyn Hip-Hop Festival, have announced this year’s “Show & Prove Competition” where up-and-coming MCs can compete for the opportunity to perform at this year’s festival. The “Show & Prove” competition takes place over the course of three months and consists of three preliminary contests to be held on April 12, May 10, and June 14. The three preliminary contest winners will compete for an opening slot during the festival’s “Performance Day.” Wes Jackson, executive director of the Brooklyn Hip-Hop Festival had the following to say about the competition: “We conceived Show & Prove as a way for up-and-coming MCs to play New York’s biggest stage. Show & Prove is in many ways the heart and soul of The Festival. Amidst the hype and buzz, pure talent, professionalism, and artistic integrity are given an avenue to shine. Show & Prove has helped give a platform to a number of talented artists. I am excited to see what this year will bring.” According to Brooklyn Bodega, the Brooklyn Hip-Hop Festival is “New York City’s largest Hip-Hop cultural event. The Festival showcases the positive aspects of Hip-Hop culture by highlighting Hip-Hop’s legacy as an agent of artistic progression, community building and social change. 2012 events will continue to reflect the full range of Hip-Hop culture, which spans music, film, academics, grassroots empowerment and more.” Since its inception, the Brooklyn Hip-Hop Festival has featured such headliners as Brand Nubian, KRS-One, Q-Tip, De La Soul, Pharoahe Monch, Ghostface Killah, and Big Daddy Kane. For more information, visit BrooklynBodega.com.

UK Week on AllHipHop.com: Meet Durrty Goodz

In case you didn’t know, Durrty Goodz is one of the best MCs to come from the UK underground. He engaged in a classic battle with Wiley in the early days of grime, and has collaborated with KRS One, Caron Wheeler from Soul 2 Soul, and Stephen Marley amongst many others. In 2007 after some time spent in prison, he returned to the grime scene with a classic EP entitled, Axiom. The EP solidified himself as a force to be reckoned with on the mic, with storytelling skills akin to artists like Slick Rick and fierce double time flows that would leave many an MC “shaking in their boots.” 2009 saw him release the mixtape/album Ultrasound, and in 2010, the free download album, Born Blessed, which was hosted by “The Teacher,” KRS One. AllHipHop.com managed to grab some time with Goodz for a quick fire Q&A, whilst he was putting the final touches to grime album, Overall – which is out now on iTunes. We talked about the history of the scene, his relationship with jungle and more: AllHipHop.com: How long have you been emceeing? Goodz: I’ve been an MC for years, bro, ever since I was allowed in a youth centre. AllHipHop.com: What made you start spitting? Goodz: The Most High, I guess, and listening to music. AllHipHop.com: What would you say your main influences are musically and artistically? Goodz: My main influences are reggae music and Bob Marley – my favourite lyricist. AllHipHop.com: How much has jungle been an influence to your style of emceeing? Goodz: I used to love jungle, I used to rave a lot to it. I loved the energy. AllHipHop.com: Who influenced you from the Jungle scene? – I have heard you name check Stevie Hyper D and also worked with Skibadee [2 Fast 2 Ferocious]? Goodz: Every big mic man from the times, I use to watch them buss up the mic before I was. Yeah man, Hyper D is legendary, along with the many others that helped paved the way like Navigator, Ragga Twins, Skibadee, Shabba D and the many others behind the scenes that helped those dons be heard. [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xCGQSyXMxyo&w=425&h=349] AllHipHop.com: Following jungle you were known to frequent ‘Delight FM’ – how long were you on there for and what was the connection between you and So Solid? Goodz: That’s a while back G, but that was their [So Solid] radio station and I use to go there and bars up [MC in] the place with some of them. AllHipHop.com: How much do you think So Solid had to with the evolution of grime? Goodz: They did their thing and helped other artists get a look in. It’s great these things happen. AllHipHop.com:What was the big change for you when garage evolved into grime? Goodz: Check my tune, “Switching Songs Part 2.” It’s all in there. [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=71ufGS8XcUU&w=425&h=349] AllHipHop.com: What do you see your role in that era to where you are positioned now? Goodz: We played the biggest role by being there (in those times) and being hot then and being hot now, pioneering the art (of grime). AllHipHop.com: Last year you released the ‘Born Blessed LP’ – KRS-One appeared, were the excerpts specifically for the project? Goodz: I’ve never made any project that has just been thrown together. Everything is always a well thought out process. [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lJ1Awk-cQKI&w=425&h=349] AllHipHop.com: How much of an influence has KRS-One been on your style? Goodz: Loads, he’s a massive influence, just like many more pioneers – but he’s ‘The Teacher’ and had one of the first classic battles and the story is real similar to mine if your looking at the birth of grime. AllHipHop.com: Tell us about ‘Overall’ and how that compares to your previous output. Goodz: Overall is the best grime album ever to be made, and that’s how it will be every time I’m coming out, fresh and innovative. [youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-XwyP2fjj-8&w=560&h=349] AllHipHop.com: Where do you see the UK/London MC going from now? Goodz: Higher levels, making music that keeps getting better and better. AllHipHop.com: Any other points you would like to get across? Goodz: I want to thank all those supporting grime god Durrty Goodz. Support me and you will always hear real music. Overall is out now and available on iTunes. For more information on Goodz and to download the free KRS One-hosted album, Born Blessed, visit his website at www.therealdurrtygoodz.com. Jamie B-C is a writer and online music marketer, who has been passionately involved in UK underground music since the late 90’s, he currently writes a blog which follows UK rave and Hip-Hop culture. Follow Jamie B-C on Twitter at @beatcultureldn and on the Web at www.beatculture.net.

Jamal Simmons: Political & Media Guru Gives Back

Over the past three years, with regular appearances on CBS News, CNN, and MSNBC, Jamal Simmons has become one of the media’s most recognizable political analysts. Simmons’ candid commentary has established him as a “fresh voice,” and he has been featured in the New York Times, International Herald Tribune, and Politico. Channeling the power of social media, Simmons has launched an innovative fundraising campaign for the Rosa Parks Scholarship Foundation: “$40 for 40 Kids.” With his help, 40 high school graduates in Detroit and surrounding Michigan will receive financial assistance to attend college. Simmons received a Parks Scholarship in 1988 and enrolled in Morehouse College; he graduated from the college and recently received their Presidential Award of Distinction. Simmons also earned a Master’s degree in Public Policy from Harvard University. As he prepares for the official launch of the “$40 for 40 Kids” campaign, Simmons squeezed time out of his busy schedule for an interview with AllHipHop.com, reflecting on the value of strong communication skills, his evolution as a political analyst and the importance of receiving his father’s “tough love”: AllHipHop.com: When you reflect on your personal life and the decisions you’ve made over the years, what can you attribute to your upbringing and parents’ influence? Jamal Simmons: I have been influenced in two primary ways. My parents and my grandparents loved me unconditionally. They told me that I could be whatever I wanted to be, and they expected me to do the best I could at whatever it was I chose; but they never told me what to be. And I think having the freedom to make those choices for myself was incredibly important, but I also had the discipline of expecting me to perform at whatever it was that I was doing. AllHipHop.com: Since you were never explicitly told what to do, is there a particular life event that catapulted you into political journalism? Jamal Simmons: My dad has always been involved in politics. My grandfather was also, but he was more of a union organizing guy, and my dad was involved in electoral politics in Detroit where I grew up. My dad worked for then Mayor Coleman Young back in the 1980s. So I grew up around it. I grew up handing out leaflets, going door-to-door on Saturdays for hot dog money! [laughing] As I got older, it was something I had then developed an interest in myself; and so I continued to volunteer on campaigns and do all those menial tasks that really mean so much in a campaign, like door knocking and phone calls. Before email, letter stuffing. AllHipHop.com: Having started out so young, when you look at your experiences, are there any lessons or pieces of advice that have guided you through the years? Jamal Simmons: Yes, I’ve had a couple. First of all, despite the fact that I really did come from a loving family; it wasn’t really very traditional. My parents were never married. They split up when I was less than two years old; but I lived with both of them at different periods. I lived with my mother until I was 13, and then I went to high school. I was getting a little rambunctious, so I went to live with my father. We went to see Boyz N the Hood, and we were laughing about how similar the story was. Where we grew up in Detroit, was a similar neighborhood to the neighborhood in that movie. It was a pretty tough neighborhood. You grow up in a tough neighborhood in the inner city and all the things happen that happen. You get robbed and you get in fights and friends die, and there’s drugs and all that stuff that goes on. But again, I came from parents who exerted a lot of discipline on their kids. And the second thing I’d say came from experience. I got in trouble when I was in college. I got cut off from my parents and had to sit out of school. I had a false arrest that ended up getting taken care of. All this happened at the same time, and I think there was a moment where I had to look at myself in the mirror and decide what I was going to do. And I credit my dad now – for having the will to cut me off – despite the fact we got into a huge argument and we stopped speaking to each other for months. I had to go out and get two jobs; go to work and save money; and eat potatoes and ramen noodles every night. One of my jobs was in a restaurant on the weekends. At the very least, I knew that I would get two good meals on the weekends. During this time, I really learned how to take care of myself.  If you don’t work, you don’t eat; and that’s an incredibly important lesson in life. AllHipHop.com:  Is there a particular obstacle that kept you grounded? Jamal Simmons:  Other than being hungry? [laughing] Well, you have certain problems that come along with being young. You have roommates that cause you trouble. We had problems paying the rent some months. It’s just all the stuff that happens when you don’t have any money. So I certainly went through a lot of that. I had another experience when I was a little bit older and I was in graduate school. I did a summer at Citibank. I thought at one point I may want to go be a banker. But after I got into trouble, I got myself into school with the help of my parents, and we decided we were going to split the cost. I had to pay for all my living expenses, and they paid for the tuition. I made the honor roll every semester after that. I really just kind of buckled down and got my act together. So, by the time I got to graduate school, I thought I […]