Hip-Hop
Page: 104
Beyoncé and Jay-Z‘s daughter Blue Ivy Carter turned 11 this weekend, and Grandma Tina Knowles-Lawson couldn’t be more proud of her.
“The day that you were born was one of the best days of my life,” she wrote on Instagram on Sunday, the day after Blue Ivy’s Jan. 7 birthday. Beyoncé and Jay-Z, who are also parents to 5-year-old twins Rumi and Sir, welcomed Blue Ivy in 2012.
“I was really praying and pushing your mom to have you on January 4 which is my birthday,” she recalled of her daughter Beyoncé giving birth. “I really wanted you to share my birthday, but like your auntie Solo you decided to come when you were good and damn ready and that was on January 7 three days after my birthday. Knowing you and your personality now, I realize that you needed your own day because you were such a queen and you are so very special!”
Knowles-Lawson gushed, “You can sing dance, play basketball, play, volleyball, paint draw, sculpt, sew, write poetry, write songs , , create, act , play the piano ! I could go on and on. Because there’s really nothing that you can’t do .You are funny and beautiful and graceful , Kind , and so smart. I could not ask for a better granddaughter Ms. Blue Ivy Carter!”
“I could not be more blessed , grateful , and completely in love with another human,” she said of her talented granddaughter. “You truly bring me joy!!”
See the sweet Instagram snapshot of them together that she posted below.
New year, new Diplo — or a new version of a past version of Diplo…or something.
On Friday (Jan. 6), the producer further teased his already announced collaboration with Kodak Black and Koe Wetzel, “Wasted.” An extension of Diplo’s country project, Thomas Wesley (his given name), the teaser features an urgently strummed guitar over images from the forthcoming music video.
The clip shows Diplo driving a speedboat at breakneck speeds with Black riding shotgun and Wetzel in the back. “Met up with some friends in Florida,” the producer captioned the video, a shout out to his home state.
Other decidedly Floridian imagery in the clip includes bottles of beer, jorts, watersports, bonfires and Diplo in a lawn chair strumming an acoustic guitar stamped with image of the American flag. Diplo previously shared behind the scenes footage from the boat that included another preview of “Wasted” at the tail end of 2022.
The track marks Diplo’s first collaboration with Black and the Texas-born outlaw country artist Wetzel. “Wasted” also marks a return to country for Diplo, who released his debut album in the genre, Diplo Presents Thomas Wesley, Chapter 1: Snake Oil, in 2020.
The lead single from the album, the Morgan Wallen-assisted collaboration “Heartless,” spent 39 weeks on the Billboard Hot 100, peaking at No. 29. The album, which also included collaborations with Leon Bridges, Noah Cyrus, Cam, Zac Brown, Julia Michaels and more, spent 25 weeks on the Billboard 200, and peaked at No. 50.
Watch the clip from “Wasted” below.
Ten people were injured when gunfire erupted outside a restaurant in Miami Gardens, Florida on Thursday night (Jan. 5) during what witnesses said was a video shoot for French Montana. According to WSVN 7, Miami Gardens Police and Miami-Dade Fire Rescue units responded to reports of shots fired at The Licking Gardens during an incident that reportedly involved three different crime scenes; the other two scenes were not identified at press time.
Explore
Explore
See latest videos, charts and news
See latest videos, charts and news
7News reported that MGPD detective Diana Gorgue said Thursday night that police were still working the scene, which involved “multiple shots… multiple cases,” with four victims reportedly airlifted to a local trauma center and four others transporting themselves to a hospital. Witnesses told police that the gunfire erupted while Montana was shooting a music video outside The Licking.
One witness said they came to watch Montana’s video production, during which a fellow bystander was allegedly robbed of his watch, keys and wallet. “[He asked to] call his mother and see if we can get spare car keys and make sure, you know, he’s OK, and then the gunshots went off,” said witness Ced Mogul, a local rapper. “At least 13, 14, 15 gunshots. It was very rapid, it sounded like an assault rifle.”
It was unclear at press time whether someone shot into the crowd or if there was an exchange of gunfire, according to 7News. “I took off running, and I was looking back, but I was like, ‘You know what? Let me just duck first, and then people started asking me, you know, ‘Can you help me?’” Mogul said. “When I realized people were asking for help, there was nothing you could do about it when you got shot.”
NBC6 reported that police said an altercation that started at a different location eventually ended at the restaurant, where New Orleans rapper Rob49 was reportedly among the victims.
At press time it was unclear where Montana was during the shooting, though it appears that he was not injured in the incident; a spokesperson for Montana could not be reached for comment at press time and a public information officer for the Miami-Dade PD had not returned a request for an update on the investigation at press time. TMZ reported that a witness said Montana’s security team hustled the MC out of the area safely and without incident after the gunfire erupted.
Mogul also shared a video with a local NBC affiliate that he said showed Montana, wearing a red shirt, sitting in the back seat of a car and looking at some wardrobe options reportedly filmed just prior to the shooting.
Montana dropped the latest edition of his long-running Coke Boys series, Coke Boys 6, on Friday morning (Jan. 6), featuring guest spots from A$AP Rocky, Benny the Butcher, Kodak Black, Max B, King Combs, Est Gee, Jeremih and more. The rapper promoted the mixtape on Thursday morning in Instagram and Twitter posts, but did not appear to have commented on the shooting incident on his socials at press time.
With beloved danceable tracks like “TWIST & TURN” and “ALL I NEED” under their belts, fans know exactly what to expect when Popcaan and Drake get together. Their latest release “We Caa Done” is no exception to the rule.
Explore
See latest videos, charts and news
See latest videos, charts and news
The dancehall phenom teased his and Drizzy’s new cut in a preview snippet via Instagram on Wednesday (Jan. 4), and unveiled the cover art for his upcoming fifth studio album Great Is He via OVO Sound, showing the Jamaican artist in 19th-century threads with a pensive expression. “New year, new Gear, new blessings, new money, new music! #GIHE,” the caption reads.
“We Caa Done” is co-produced by TRESOR and Batundi and accompanied by a visual directed by OVO mainstay Theo Skudra, shot in the beautiful island scenery of Turks & Caicos. “‘We Caa Done’ is all about persevering,” Popcaan said in a statement. “We don’t think about limits. We’re living the life we’ve dreamed of, and despite what the haters and naysayers have to say, we will only be greater.”
Prior to the Drake-assisted single, Popcaan dropped single “Set It” and the love song “Next To Me,” featuring Ton-Ann Singh, in preparation for the upcoming album.
Popcaan enjoyed success with his last three albums, all peaking at No. 3 on the Billboard U.S. reggae chart.
It’s possible the music video was filmed back in August, when Drake and Popcaan went on a boys’ trip with fellow artist J. Cole and NBA star Kevin Durant to Turks & Caicos. The crew was seen riding jet skis and posing together by the water during their tropical festivities.
Watch “We Caa Done” and stream the new track below.
Kanye West‘s recent public embrace of antisemitic stereotypes and hate speech are the canary in the coal mine of a larger wave of intolerance, according to experts. With a social media reach many times larger than the world’s entire Jewish population, a storied music career that has garnered two dozen Grammy Awards and a once-unbeatable reputation as a musical savant, the disgraced rapper (who now goes by Ye) and fashion mogul’s career crumbled in late 2022 in the wake of a months-long string of interviews in which he denigrated the Jewish people.
And whether you believe his claims of affinity and admiration for the Nazi regime (including proudly telling conspiracy theorist broadcaster Alex Jones, “I like Hitler“) are a product of his history of mental health struggles or an attempt at headline-making gone horribly dark, Ye’s comments have raised alarms among academics, music industry leaders and Jewish organizations.
The damage to Ye’s public image and bank account has been swift and comprehensive. But with the rapper purportedly plotting a second long-shot White House bid in 2024 amid the disturbing rise in antisemitic attacks (assault, harassment and vandalism) in the U.S. in 2021, Billboard reached out to a panel of experts to ask whether the public should take Kanye West’s embrace of antisemitism seriously, and if his hate speech is a harbinger of a dangerous wave of hate on the horizon.
The Oldest Hatred
The Southern Poverty Law Center notes that antisemitism is often referred to as the “oldest hatred,” one that reaches back 2,000 years and is often the first step toward additional racist and xenophobic activity.
“He has more followers on social media than there are Jews on earth, and his comments come at a time when antisemitic incidents are at the highest point in memory,” says Jonathan Greenblatt, the CEO of the Anti-Defamation League, the oldest anti-hate organization in America. The ADL reported this year that hate crimes against Jews and Jewish institutions rose 34% in 2021, to the highest number in recent history.
“At a time when the community is dealing with this level of hatred to have one of the most well-known entertainers in our culture making statements like ‘I like Hitler’ and showing up on [Alex Jones’] InfoWars is not just vile and offensive, but it’s also endangering Jews by giving people permission to express the kind of prejudice,” Greenblatt continues. “People in the mainstream did not make such overtly awful, inflammatory comments before like this.”
Greenblatt says the ADL has seen a disturbing “normalizing” of antisemitism over past few years, with the incidents piling up in just the past few months: from antisemitic vandalism at schools and walking trails in the Washington, D.C. area, to swastikas carved into a menorah in Beverly Hills, Calif. on the first night of Hanukkah, to an apparent attempt to explode a propane tank outside a Birmingham, Ala. synagogue in November. Also, during an attack on an elderly Jewish man in New York’s Central Park in December, the assailant allegedly yelled “Kanye 2024” while violently striking the 63-year-old victim.
“We have no choice but to take it seriously,” says Greenblatt, whose organization does not have any up-to-date polling on whether West’s hate speech has directly inspired or encouraged attacks on Jews. And while it’s disturbing to have an artist with a megaphone spouting hate, Greenblatt notes that the rapid response from companies and celebrities cutting personal and business ties with Ye is a “silver lining” during this troubling time for the Jewish community.
Ye’s social media bully pulpit
Music authority Alan Light — founding music editor (and later editor-in-chief) of the Quincy Jones co-founded R&B/hip-hop magazine Vibe and SiriusXM Volume host — compares the rush of Ye-related hate speech to the metaphor of a frog slowly boiling in a pot of water. “This stuff has lived in the shadows, but it is now more visible than ever before,” says Light, a former Rolling Stone and Spin editor and author of books on Tupac, Beastie Boys and 2014’s Let’s Go Crazy: Prince and the Making of Purple Rain.
Reaching back to an earlier furor over antisemitic lyrics on Ice Cube’s 1991 single “No Vaseline” — not to mention Cube’s posting of racist Jewish tropes on social media in the midst of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020 — Light, who is Jewish, noted that it’s become more difficult in the past seven-to-eight years to make sense of what is targeted hate speech and what might be attention-seeking s–tposting on Twitter.
“I do think for a long time there’s been this sense of latitude around him [Ye] that, ‘oh, he’s crazy, but he’s a genius… he says wild stuff all the time,’” Light says of the reaction to West’s penchant for serial provocation — including his confounding “White Lives Matter” shirts — as balanced against Ye’s reported struggle with bipolar disorder. “So he’s clearly been given a wide lane with that understanding around it … but the far right media is so desperate for any celebrity or modicum of cool that they have been boxed in, and they are bending so far over backward to embrace him in their tent and now they’re stuck with this.”
As an example, Light pointed to Fox News talking head Tucker Carlson editing out West’s antisemitic remarks from an Oct. 2022 interview that aired before the rapper went on his months-long tour of mostly right-leaning media, in which he doubled, tripled and quintupled down on anti-Jewish hate speech.
While fellow hip-hop figures Cube and Public Enemy — the latter via their controversial on-and-off Minister of Information Professor Griff — have trafficked in antisemitic tropes in the past, Light says the ubiquity of social media has vastly multiplied the spread of Ye’s dark, twisted fantasy of a world allegedly controlled by a shadowy Jewish elite. Before he was booted from Twitter a second time after posting an image of a swastika, West’s following was in excess of 32 million, a figure that’s more than four times the amount of Jews (7.6 million) currently living in America and twice the number of Jews in the entire world. “That amount of followers allows for an amplification that is very different than when these things surfaced in the past or within the media,” says Light.
While West has previously garnered headlines for norm-flouting provocations, the extremity of what he is saying this time is not being taken lightly. From multiple soundbites expressing his admiration for Hitler and the murderous Nazi regime (“I see good things about Hitler also,” West told Jones), to his demand during an interview with white nationalist Proud Boys founder Gavin McInnes in December that “Jewish people — forgive Hitler today,” West has crossed a societal red line he may never come back from. And his message appears to be reaching an eager audience of antisemites and white nationalists, including a group of demonstrators who hung a banner that read “Kanye is right about the Jews” on an L.A. overpass in October while raising Nazi salutes; a week later, a similar message scrolled on a video board outside the home of the NFL’s Jacksonville Jaguars during a college football game at TIAA Bank Field.
“Others have made [antisemitic] comments, but the volume of how Kanye gets heard and the unprecedented sentiments he’s expressing both feel like new territory,” Light says.
A decades-long obsession with Nazis
The outburst of Nazi fetishism caught some longtime observers off-guard, even with the rapper’s long history of poke-in-the-eye trolling. But according to a recent Rolling Stone story, the obsession may go back to the very beginning of Ye’s rap career and his 2004 studio debut, The College Dropout, with a number of unnamed insiders saying his positive view of Hitler and the Nazi regime was a well-kept secret for decades.
“It’s not a stretch to now compare Kanye’s ‘by any means necessary’ methods and tactics with Adolf Hitler’s,” an unnamed former longtime collaborator told RS of the MC who allegedly took inspiration from Nazi propaganda strategies during his rise to fame. Another said that Ye frequently quizzed those around him about their feelings on the Nazis until he received an answer he was satisfied with, i.e., one that included an acknowledgment of the “good” things Hitler achieved.
In addition to reportedly trying to convince others of the positives of the Nazi dictator, RS noted that Ye unsuccessfully pushed to name his eighth studio album Hitler.
While Ye’s statements have drawn endless headlines and screen time on cable news, what’s dangerous about the content of his hate speech is that it breaks a taboo about meditating on Nazism and Hitler in the same way that West’s 2018’s claim that “slavery was a choice” essentially “said the quiet thing out loud,” according to Elliot Ratzman, chair in Jewish Studies at Earlham College.
“Kanye West does not command an army of African-Americans,” says Ratzman, who has studied and taught courses on antisemitism, race and Judaism. “Jews think that when they hear a prominent Black person saying something antisemitic it means, ‘We are in danger.’ That in itself is antisemitic, because Black people don’t take their marching orders from Black celebrities,” he says.
If anything, West’s embrace of white nationalist and neo-Nazi talking points is the most recent proof of what Homeland Security Sec. Alejandro Mayorkas told senators in May 2021: that the greatest domestic threat facing the U.S. is from within, thanks to “racially or ethnically motivated violent extremists… specifically those who advocate for the superiority of the white race.”
Ratzman adds that the quixotic nature of having a prominent Black entertainer become a shill for virulent antisemitism — given the long history of cooperation among Black civil rights leaders and Jewish allies in the 1950s and ’60s — creates the mistaken impression that the danger in the rise of anti-Jewish sentiment is coming from the Black community.
“To frame it as ‘Black antisemitism’ is, as a rabbi recently said to me, a ‘racist framing,’” says Ratzman, who notes that Ye coming out as “Nazi-curious” after decades is in keeping with the rise of such rhetoric during the Obama years, which accelerated steeply during one-term president Donald Trump’s time in office. It was on Trump’s watch that the nation saw torch-bearing white nationalists chant “Jews will not replace us” during the deadly 2017 march in Charlottesville, Va., which Trump famously described as an example of “fine people” on “both sides.”
“It’s not Black antisemitism, it’s just antisemitism being used by some parts of the far-right white nationalist world to promote themselves and that’s where the danger lies,” Ratzman says. And with West claiming he’s running for president again (though at press time the Federal Election Commission told Billboard there was no evidence of any paperwork filed for the bid) in an election that also finds former President Trump running, the 2024 race could feature two men who are embraced by the dangerous factions Mayorkas warned members of Congress about.
Hate speech and free speech are not the same
Rain Pryor grew up in a house where outrageous speech was the norm. The actress/comedian/singer and daughter of late comedy legend Richard Pryor has spent her adult life dissecting what it means to be a Black Jewish woman — including in her acclaimed one-woman show Fried Chicken and Latkes. For her, Ye’s claim in a recent Chris Cuomo interview that Black people cannot be antisemitic because “Black people are also Jews… I classify as Jew,” doesn’t hold any water.
“When you say you’re going to go ‘death con 3’ on the Jewish people, that’s wishing death upon them… it doesn’t matter to me if you say the first man on the planet was Black. If you say ‘kill all the Jews’ you are spreading hate speech and violence upon your people,” she says. Pryor, host of a 2022 A&E docuseries entitled Right to Offend: The Black Comedy Revolution, says the lessons she learned from her envelope-pushing father and other edgy comedians is that intent is a huge part of speech.
“When you’re in a position of great influence and you use your power for speech that is derogatory, hateful and abusive as a way to justify your belief system, I have an issue with that,” Pryor says. “We are all allowed to offend and say what we want to say, but if it incites violence against someone else you have to be held accountable for that.”
The difference between a comedian such as Dave Chappelle — who drew fire from some Jewish leaders for an SNL monologue in December that some saw as amplifying “Jews run the media” messaging rather than decrying it — and Ye’s statements in 2022 center on intent, according to Pryor. “Comedians usually have no vitriol in what they’re trying to do… they want to look at something and laugh by using tropes that we all understand are stereotypes,” she says. “Not because they’re hateful and wish death on someone.”
West has been called out by a number of other artists and media executives, but the relative quiet from the wider hip-hop community, from rappers to executives, is not surprising to Light. “The first emotion is not to pile on, and that’s true of whichever minority community [is being attacked]… that’s always the first reflex,” Light says.
And while some pointed to Ye’s mental health diagnosis or the frequently cited speculation that he is either in the midst of a bipolar episode or not taking his medication — which West has said was prescribed by Jewish doctors for a mental health condition he now says he does not have — Light and others interviewed don’t see that as a reason to excuse or justify such bigotry. “So many wild things Kanye has said get those, ‘Oh, you know, it’s Kanye being Kanye’ [justifications],” explains Light of the countervailing voices that say we should not take Ye’s goading seriously because of his diagnosis and history of pushing buttons. “But at some point, that is no longer a strong defense when he confirms that what he says is what he meant.”
A “one-of-one” situation
As far as Afro-Jewish studies scholar Dr. Andre E. Key sees it, West’s descent into anti-Jewish bigotry doesn’t appear to be part of an organized movement, but more of a “one-of-one” situation. Key, an associate professor of African-American studies at South Carolina’s Claflin University, says he’s studied a wide variety of religions and encountered “all kinds of Black folks” over the course of his life and career, but has yet to meet even one who asked him if he thought Hitler had some good ideas.
While Key also doesn’t necessarily see Ye’s rhetoric sparking a dangerous mass cultural movement, he does see a potential risk in the way people are going about checking the embattled rapper’s behavior. “In many ways he’s become like the real-life Clayton Bigsby,” Key says, referencing the clueless Black white supremacist famously portrayed by Chappelle on the comedian’s eponymous sketch series.
Similarly, Ratzman sees West’s look-at-me statements as a “clownish side-show” to the very real rise of the far right, as emboldened by Trump’s post-Charlottesville “both sides” statement and the election to Congress of such conspiracy theorists as Marjorie Taylor Greene.
“That’s who he is now, hanging out with [white supremacist] Nick Fuentes… with the blowback pushing him further into the camp of real-life neo-Nazism,” Ratzman says of Ye. “In some ways, going too far is making him more likely to become a representative for actual neo-Nazis, even if they’re not totally invested in and playing with his new identity.”
No choice but to take it seriously
The ADL’s Greenblatt says even if West is shouting into a void or simply begging for a 16th minute of fame, we have “no choice” but to take it seriously. “Irrespective of what is in his mind or heart, this kind of raw rhetoric leads to real-world violence,” he says, pointing to the Central Park attack and the arrest in November of a man who had stockpiled semi-automatic weapons — and who was found in NYC’s Penn Station with a Nazi armband, black ski mask and large hunting knife — after he allegedly made online threats against a New York synagogue.
“What makes this moment so dangerous for the Jewish community — and I believe for our democracy — is that people who have radically different ideologies, and who have nothing else to agree on, suddenly find themselves agreeing on one thing: that Jews are the problem,” says Jackie Congedo, the chief of community engagement for the Nancy & David Wolf Holocaust & Humanity Center in Cincinnati, whose mission is to tell the stories of victims and survivors of the Nazi atrocities while shining a light on injustice today.
“The Holocaust didn’t start with bullets, it started with words,” she says, adding that in the wake of West’s hate spree, she’s had people approach her and state that they are not antisemitic while asking, “Do Jews really control Hollywood?” With prominent Republicans who ran for office in 2022, such as just-seated Ohio Senator J.D. Vance and failed Pennsylvania gubernatorial candidate Doug Mastriano, accused of making antisemitic comments during their campaigns while West spread falsehoods about the Jewish people, Congedo says the mainstreaming of such tropes can lead to lethal action and “create an environment where that kind of action is normalized, and that’s very scary.”
We are all connected
Congedo says the best way to combat the rhetoric of bad actors such as West is through education and speaking out. “It’s not enough to say your Jewish friend or people you don’t know might be affected,” she says. “We are all connected, and hate for Jews is a problem for all of us. All minority communities are all intertwined, and we all have a lot to lose.”
In the end, White says, it’s hard to know what the goal is for West or how history will treat him, but as it stands now it seems like it will be “very difficult” for him to proceed with his music and fashion careers for the near future at least. “We were one wrong turn away from having our democracy collapse [on Jan. 6, 2021] and I feel like what he’s doing is adding to that. But I don’t think he can be a catalyst in any way to what’s already going on,” says Key, who agrees that as his mainstream appeal rapidly fades, at the least the increasingly isolated rapper is mostly a danger to himself.
In a nation that embraces free speech, Pryor says, sure, the Ku Klux Klan can march in your town, but if they’re doing it to intimidate or to scare someone into moving out a neighborhood, then there has to be some accountability. “If I’m the head of a business, and someone comes in and uses the n-word, I fire them — because they are offending people I work with and offending what I stand for,” she says.
Ye’s 2020 presidential run was mostly seen as a no-shot lark, though it gained ample media attention and 60,000 votes out of 160 million cast after the rapper made it onto the ballot in just 12 states. After his 2022 hate tour, it’s possible Ye will be taken even less seriously this time around, even by the right-wing outlets that briefly embraced him. The fuse, however, has been lit, and Congedo worries that West has given a level of legitimacy that might cause some to “come out of the woodwork” and consider the rapper’s poisonous rhetoric as fact.
As 2022 came to a close, West appeared to tap the brakes on the pace of his confounding rhetoric, though no apology or explanation for his hate spree appeared imminent. So, if there is a small upside, it’s that Kanye is losing his privileges because he is being held accountable for bringing harm to people or causing some to fear that they may be harmed, Pryor says. And, this time, he isn’t getting a pass, regardless of what you might suspect is motivating him.
“If you go back to The College Dropout, on the last track [“Last Call”] he’s narrating a story about getting his record deal, and he’s always had this idea that ‘you all don’t believe in me and let me prove you wrong,’” says Key. “Now it’s, ‘Let me show you how smart I am by embracing these ideas that no one will touch.’ Except this time it didn’t work out the way he expected.”
The man accused of murdering Migos rapper Takeoff was released from a Houston jail late Wednesday (Jan. 4) after posting a $1 million bond, court records show.
According to filings in Harris County court and from the Harris County Sheriff’s Office obtained by Billboard, Patrick Xavier Clark posted bond on Wednesday and was released at 8:47 p.m. local time. He’s due back in court for a hearing on March 9.
Bond had initially been set at $2 million, but Clark’s lawyers argued that that figure was excessive and potentially unconstitutional — essentially a backdoor to simply denying bond altogether. After they demanded the figure be lowered to $100,000, the judge agreed to reduce it to $1 million on Dec. 14.
Court records show Clark will still be under 24/7 hour arrest, cannot have any contact with anyone involved, and will be required to wear a GPS monitor that can immediately notify prosecutors and defense attorneys of any violations. He must also submit to drug testing and cannot drink alcohol, as court records indicate that “alcohol was a factor in the offense.”
A representative for the late star did not immediately return a request for comment on Clark’s release. Clark’s lawyer also did not respond to a request for comment.
Takeoff (born Kirshnik Khari Ball), 28, was shot and killed Nov. 1 during a private party he attended at 810 Billiards & Bowling in downtown Houston with his uncle and bandmate, Quavo. The musician was killed by “penetrating gunshot wounds of head and torso into arm,” according to a report from the Harris County coroner’s office. Clark, 33, was arrested on the east side of Houston on Nov. 1 and charged with murder; another man, 22-year-old Cameron Joshua, was arrested and charged with the unlawful carrying of a weapon.
Sony Music has reached a settlement to end a lawsuit that claimed the name of Future’s chart-topping album High Off Life infringed the trademark rights of a creative agency that uses that exact same name.
High Off Life LLC sued Sony in 2020, alleging the label had “destroyed” the smaller company’s brand by using the name for the title of Future’s eight studio album. Though Sony argued an album name was protected by the First Amendment, a federal judge refused to dismiss the case last year.
But in a motion filed Tuesday, both sides agreed to end the case. The terms of the settlement, like whether any money exchanged hands or any names would be changed, were not publicly disclosed. Attorneys for both sides did not return requests for comment.
High Off Life reached the top spot on the Billboard 200 in May 2020. It was originally set to be titled “Life Is Good” – the name of the album’s third single – but the name was switched at the last minute as the COVID-19 pandemic swept made life somewhat less than good.
That was a problem for High Off Life LLC, which filed a trademark infringement lawsuit in October 2020 against Sony and Future’s Freebandz Productions. The company claimed it had been selling “High Off Life” apparel since 2009, had launched a creative agency under the name in 2017, and operates a hip-hop YouTube channel called “High Off Life TV.”
The case claimed that Sony’s promotion of Future’s album had buried the smaller company in search results: “Overnight, Defendants destroyed HOL’s investment of many years and many thousands of dollars into building consumer recognition.”
To beat the lawsuit, Sony and Freebandz cited something called the Rogers test — a legal doctrine that makes it very difficult to win lawsuits over the use of brand names in “expressive works” music. The rule says that authors have a First Amendment right to use trademarks in their work unless it explicitly misleads consumers, or is completely irrelevant to the artwork.
That argument might have prevailed eventually, but U.S. District Judge Scott Hardy ruled in April that it was too early to make that call. The decision allowed the case to proceed into discovery, where both sides to gather evidence and build their cases.
Quavo mourns his late nephew Takeoff on the new solo track “Without You.” The heartbreaking gospel-tinged song that dropped on Wednesday night (Jan. 4) is both a somber homage and a tear-stained list of cherished memories of the Migos member who was gunned down in Houston on Nov. 1.
The accompanying video features a contemplative Quavo sitting in a leather chair in the studio, eyes closed, as he burns a blunt and runs down their good times, while wishing a time machine could bring Takeoff back for just a few more rounds.
“Tears rollin’ down my eyes/ Can’t tell you how many times I cried/ Days ain’t the same without you/ I don’t know if I’m the same without you,” Quavo raps over the song’s skeletal beat before he runs off a list of highlights they shared together.
“Remember the days we smoked big blunts together?/ Remember the days we rocked out Coachella?/ Remember the days we ain’t have our s–t together?/ On the Nawfside, times were hard, but them days was better,” he raps on the first new track he’s dropped since Takeoff’s killing. “I wish I had a time machine/ Just so you can take a ride with me/ I miss just how you smile at me/ Unc and Phew until infinity.”
The song, with an intro from singer Vory, was co-produced by Zaytoven and Mike Dean and it finds Quavo dreaming about a time when uncle and nephew (born Kirsnik Khari Ball) will be reunited in the afterlife. “Out in the galaxy, up in the stars/ Over the universe, it’s bigger than Mars/ See you in heaven, see you in heaven/ When I see you in heaven, i’mma be with my dawg,” Quavo croons. As the tune fades an inconsolable Quavo adds, “Taaaake… I’m sorry.”
Takeoff, 28, was shot and killed at a downtown Houston bowling alley in Nov. where he and Quavo were attending an afterparty, with Takeoff named an “innocent bystander” by Houston police in what has been described as a dice game gone wrong. The suspect in the shooting, Patrick Xavier Clark, 33, has been charged with murder and a second man, Cameron Joshua, 22, was arrested and charged with the unlawful carrying of a weapon.
Following Takeoff’s death, third Migos member Offset and Quavo remained relatively tight-lipped, privately mourning their massive loss. But both rappers honored Takeoff during a three-hour memorial on Nov. 11 at Atlanta’s State Farm Arena.
“Without You” is just the latest tribute to Takeoff from the Migos camp since then, following on the heels of Offset writing on Dec. 21 that he was finding it hard to find any happiness in the wake of his cousin’s death. “S— not easy fake smiling and s— tryna keep walking with my head up,” Offset captioned an onstage photo of Takeoff flashing the peace sign in the post last month.
Watch the “Without You” video below.
A prominent ’90s hip-hop duo is suing Universal Music Group for withholding royalties tied to what they’re alleging is a “sweetheart” deal the label reached with Spotify in the late 2000s.
Filed Wednesday (Jan. 4) in U.S. district court in New York by attorneys representing Andres Titus (Dres) and William McLean (Mista Lawnge), members of the hip-hop duo Black Sheep, the lawsuit claims UMG owes its artists approximately $750 million in royalties deriving from the company’s stock in Spotify. Under a licensing deal they claim UMG and the streaming giant reached in 2008, the label agreed to receive lower royalty payments in exchange for equity in the then-nascent streaming company. But Titus and McLean say the label breached their contract with Black Sheep and other artists by withholding what they argue is the artists’ rightful 50% share of UMG’s now-lucrative Spotify stock — and otherwise failing to compensate them for the lower royalty payments they received as a result of the alleged deal.
“Rather than distribute to artists their 50% of Spotify stock or pay artists their true and accurate royalty payments, for years Universal shortchanged artists and deprived Plaintiffs and Class Members of the full royalty payments they were owed under Universal’s contract,” the complaint reads. Titus and McLean further claim that Universal deliberately omitted from royalty statements both the company’s ownership of Spotify stock and the lower streaming royalty payments that resulted from its alleged deal with the streaming service.
“Over time, the value of the Spotify stock that Universal improperly withheld from artists has ballooned to hundreds of millions of dollars,” the complaint continues. “These and the other wrongful conduct detailed herein resulted in the Company’s breaching its contracts with artists, violating the covenant of good faith and fair dealing that is implicit in those contracts, and unjust enrichment at the expense of its artists.”
In a statement sent to Billboard, a UMG spokesperson denied Titus and McLean’s claims: “Universal Music Group’s innovative leadership has led to the renewed growth of the music ecosystem to the benefit of recording artists, songwriters and creators around the world. UMG has a well-established track record of fighting for artist compensation and the claim that it would take equity at the expense of artist compensation is patently false and absurd. Given that this is pending litigation, we cannot comment on all aspects of the complaint.”
According to the lawsuit, Titus and McLean signed a record contract with Polygram in July 1990 (later amended and revised in July 1991) as Black Sheep — the duo best known for the hit rap single “The Choice Is Yours (Revisited)” from their RIAA Gold-selling 1991 album A Wolf in Sheep’s Clothing. Black Sheep’s record contract was then assumed by UMG after the company merged with Polygram in 1998.
UMG acquired just over 5% of Spotify shares “in or around the summer of 2008” in a licensing agreement in exchange for lower royalty payments, the complaint adds, citing a 2018 Music Business Worldwide report. It claims that Universal acquired additional Spotify shares through its 2011 purchase of EMI, which had acquired shares in the streaming company around the same time, the suit alleges. It then cites UMG’s own prospectus, released in September 2021, revealing that the label held roughly 6.49 million, or roughly 3.35%, of Spotify shares as of June 30, 2021, valued at 1.475 billion euros ($1.79 billion).
It’s worth noting that UMG’s stake in Spotify has become significantly less lucrative since June 30, 2021, however. As of Wednesday’s closing price, UMG’s stake in Spotify is now worth just $560 million — the result of Spotify shares falling 70.5% over the past 18 months. Notably, Spotify isn’t the only streaming service UMG has equity in; according to the same prospectus, it also owns 0.73% of Tencent Music Entertainment shares, a stake that’s currently worth $112.5 million.
Included as an exhibit in the complaint is Black Sheep’s amended July 1991 contract with Polygram, which states that royalties paid to Titus and McLean “‘shall be a sum equal to fifty percent (50%) of [Universal’s] net receipts with respect to’ the ‘exploitation’ for any ‘use or exploitation’ of ‘Master Recordings’ created by Plaintiffs.” The plaintiffs claim they and other UMG artists are thereby entitled to 50% of the labels’ Spotify stock but that UMG has failed to pay it. This demand stems from a couple of broad assumptions: that all artists in the class signed similar contracts and that they were similarly not compensated with a portion of UMG’s stock holdings in Spotify.
The plaintiffs are asking for compensatory damages, punitive damages and an injunction “or other appropriate equitable relief” requiring UMG “to refrain from engaging in deceptive practices” as outlined in the lawsuit.
UMG isn’t alone among the major labels in acquiring Spotify stock — both Sony and Warner Music, as well as indie Merlin, also have or had stakes in the company. In May 2018, Sony sold half of its 5.707% stake in Spotify for an estimated $761 million, while that same month Merlin announced it sold its entire stake for an unknown amount and had shared the proceeds with its members. Warner followed suit in August 2018 when it sold its entire 2% stake in the streamer for $504 million, with the company announcing that around $126 million of the proceeds would be paid out to the company’s artists.
UMG has yet to sell any of its stock in the streaming giant.
-Additional reporting by Glenn Peoples
You can read the full lawsuit below.
The hip-hop community is mourning the death of pioneering Southern female rapper and former Three 6 Mafia member Gangsta Boo, who has died at the age of 43.
Drake, Missy Elliott, Ty Dolla $ign and Freddie Gibbs are among the many musicians remembering Boo, who was found dead on Sunday (Jan. 1) at a home in Memphis, Tennessee, according to Fox 13 in Memphis, Commercial Appeal and other reports. The cause of her death had not been released at press time.
“Rest in heaven Gangsta Boo,” Drake captioned a throwback photo of the late pioneering rapper in his Instagram Story.
Elliott shared a similar sentiment, tweeting, “Rest Peacefully @GangstaBooQOM.”
Ty Dolla $ign also took to Twitter to remember the late artist. “Long live my home girl Gangsta Boo Queen of the M,” he wrote.
Gibbs, meanwhile, shared what appeared to be a recent photo of himself hanging out with Boo. “Damn we was just together,” the rapper tweeted. “RIP Queen.”
Shortly after the news of her passing, Three 6 Mafia’s DJ Paul and Juicy J posted tributes to their former bandmate on Instagram. DJ Paul shared an captionless photo of the late rapper, while Juicy J posted a snapshot of the pair accompanied by a broken heart emoji.
“Man we was jus together three weeks ago,” Lil Jon commented in DJ Paul’s post. “Rest well quenn.”
The Three 6 Mafia members’ tribute posts also garnered comments from Ludacris, Bun B, Outkast’s Big Boi, Ty Dolla $ign, Jay Rock, Krayzie Bone, Cypress Hill’s B-Real, and others.
On New Year’s Eve, Boo shared a video on Instagram about her accomplishments from the past year. “Some of the things that I did in 2022! So fun and productive, climbed out my shell alot!! 2023 go be 23’n! #JORDAN #BOOPRINT #recap Happy New 2023 everyone!” she captioned the clip.
Boo, whose real name was Lola Mitchell, was born in the Whitehaven section of Memphis on Aug. 7, 1979. She joined local hip-hop collective Three 6 Mafia — founded by DJ Paul, Juicy J and Lord Infamous — at the age of 15 in 1994. That same year, she recorded her first solo song with the group, “Cheefa Da Reefa.” The track would set the tone for the Memphis femcee, who later unveiled her most popular hit “Where Dem Dollas At?” from her 1998 debut album, Enquiring Minds.
She went gone through a number of transformations during her career, renaming herself Lady Boo in 2001 and releasing numerous solo albums. In 2013, she joined Da Mafia 6ix before the passing of band member Lord Infamous in December of that year. In 2014, she and Da Mafia 6ix’s other femcee La Chat, also recorded Witch together.
In recent months, Boo was featured on GloRilla and Latto’s collaboration “F— The Club Up,” a play off Three 6 Mafia’s “Tear Da Club Up.”
“This one hit different,” Latto tweeted after discovering her passing. “I’m just glad I got to feel your embrace & give u ur flowers before u left us BIG BOO 4L.”
See more musician reactions to Boo’s death below.
Long live my home girl Gangsta Boo 🖤🤞🏾 Queen of the M 👑 !— TyDolla$ign (@tydollasign) January 1, 2023
Fuck these wee wee holding ass niggas. RIP Gangsta Boo ❤️— Big 🐰 (@FreddieGibbs) January 2, 2023
Damn!! Not gansta boo 🤦🏾♂️— Jermaine Dupri (@jermainedupri) January 1, 2023
As God as my witness Gangsta Boo ALWAYS been in my top 5 female spitters. I can’t believe 2023 startin like this. #RIP to a QUEEN 🙏🏿❤️— Rah Digga (@therealrahdigga) January 1, 2023
Wow not Gangsta Boo!!!That’s my fuckin homie!!!🙏🏾❤️🕊️— DJ Premier (@REALDJPREMIER) January 1, 2023
wow gangsta boo was literally one of the kindest and most genuine people i have met since i started making music. she ALWAYS rode for me, she came to my first ever show in Atlanta with Speakerfoxxx and they were onstage turning up. always so fun. just making ppl happy. RIP boo.— kitty (@kittaveli) January 1, 2023
State Champ Radio
