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Ludacris has done a lot of living in the past eight years. But the one thing he hasn’t done during that time is release any new music. But in a new interview with BET, Luda said it’s time to get back into the game.
“Yeah, some music projects will be coming out next year. I don’t wanna fake, I don’t wanna stutter-step,” Ludacris said. “It’s definitely some music coming next year, but I don’t know if it’s like an EP or an LP. We’re going to figure it out.”

Asked why he’s been off the radar since his ninth LP, 2015’s Ludaversal — which debuted at No. 3 on the Billboard 200 and included features from Usher, Miguel and Monica — the rapper said his acting has definitely kept him out of the studio. Since his last album, he’s appeared in four Fast & Furious movies, as well as The Ride, End of the Road and the new holiday movie, Dashing Through the Snow.

“These movie projects like Fast & Furious and doing a lot of things like the Karma’s World project that’s on Netflix. You know, doing other art forms where I’m creative, where I’m putting my heart into that, I want to make sure that I leave a legacy on this earth,” said the MC who also got a honorary bachelor’s degree in music from Georgia State last summer. “So it was just taking a step back and getting hungry again, living some life. ‘Cause when you put out music, in order for it to be organic and real, you gotta talk about what goes on in your life. So if I had like nine consistent albums, sometimes you gotta take a step back and live some life so that you have a lot more to talk about and that’s what I was doing.”

As for what the new tunes will sound like, Luda said it’s a “little premature” to talk about it because he’s working on “a lot of stuff.” In the meantime, he’s been dropping freestyles on his social feeds, including a killer one on 4/20 and one last November in which he caught fans up on his prodigious career achievements.

Given his impressive movie resume, Ludacris said he still has some boxes he’d like to check on that side, including playing a villain on the big screen. “I definitely would love to be a part of the Marvel universe or DC universe, but I wouldn’t mind playing the villain that doesn’t die,” he said. “That’s what I’m looking for — one of those roles or like a Training Day villain-type role.”

It’s a few weeks before Travis Scott’s Utopia Tour, and the thought of rehearsal begins lingering in the mind of Teezo Touchdown. Opening up for one of music’s biggest daredevils should be a tall order, but not for Teezo. 

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“I seen Doja Cat’s VMAs performance [this year] and how she did a medley of three songs in five minutes. With my given set time, [I thought] how can I set this 40-minute experience in the time that I’m given?” Teezo began explaining his game plan. “We reached out to the crew that did the VMA performance and made a medley of the album, so the production of the live arrangement — if you love the album, this live show is gonna make you love it even more.”

Love might be an understatement, as Teezo’s climb up the mainstream ranks this year has been one of hip-hop’s best storylines. His debut album, How Do You Sleep at Night, shuns conventionalism and serves as a boundless leap of creativity as he fuses his love for rap, rock, and R&B. Whether he’s giving deep dives into his family issues on “Daddy Mama Drama” or thrashing naysayers on “Impossible,” nobody can stymie Teezo’s dreams of being a needle-moving artist. With cosigns from Travis Scott, Madonna, Janelle Monae, Tyler, The Creator, and Drake (who he worked with twice on For All the Dogs), Teezo’s eccentric flair and thrill for theatrics is quickly becoming a sight for sore eyes in the ultra-competitive music industry. 

“I used to say self-sabotage doesn’t always look like hitting your hand with a hammer. It can be not being organized, or not being on time,” says Teezo. “I think all of that organization is gonna fall on every aspect of my life.”

Billboard spoke to November’s R&B / Hip-Hop Rookie of the Month about making his debut album How Do You Sleep at Night?, overcoming low first-week sales, and dealing with trauma. 

You’re one of five kids and your pops was a DJ. Was that where your love for music emanated?  

I think so. That and I just said recently I always miss the DJ aspect of it, but I think another part he showed me was just how to be a fan. He used to have this drawer full of tour merch that was Frankie Beverly & Maze shirts. I used to always wear them to school and he would always get on me talking about, “Don’t touch my tour shirts” and how he would take care of his record collection. Even now you go to the house he has these panels of artists and their albums. He’s a true music fan and cinema fan. Just as expensive as the music collection is, the movie collection is as well.

When I FaceTime fans and I see they have a wall full of albums and stuff, it always kinda makes me think about my dad, especially when seeing a true music fan who don’t do music. Like one kid was going to school to be a nurse. I thought he’d be in music because he has so much music on his wall, but no, he just loves music. I think my dad definitely taught me just how to love the arts. 

You mentioned your dad being a movie buff. With your videos being innovative and inventive, did he somewhat kind of plant that seed?

No, because before I started shooting music videos, I had somebody teach me the three important things of a camera ,and I just took it and ran with it. We used to watch movies every Sunday like a family and stuff. I was just watching movies as a fan, but once I started shooting music videos, it just kind of changed it like, “Oh, that’s three-point lighting” or “they have the sound design for stuff like that.” So at first, I was just a novice watching movies.

You’ve often use the phrase “nobody phase,” when describing yourself. How have you balanced transitioning from that mindset and not being a product of self-sabotage?

The self-sabotage thing is an everyday battle. If I was doing music or not, that’s an everyday battle. As far as the nobody stage, it’s weird for me because I’ve been looking at the same person in the mirror every day for my whole life. I kinda still move like that nobody phase to the point my team has to remind me like, “Yo, you gotta stop little-broing yourself.” I kinda like that. I don’t like to walk in a room and expect people to know who I am. I still continue to move like nobody knows who I am. It’s some peace there because I still get to have human interactions and it’s just little icebreakers and stuff. 

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When you were penning a song like “Impossible” was that the origin of how the song came about?

That story will go into the same universe. It’s basically me just projecting and asking myself pondering what they look like. Maybe they want to be a painter, maybe they want to be a boxer, but who was the first person to say like, “You can’t do that”? That started a chain reaction to get us to where we are now. You post online, “You can’t do that,” all the way to where we are now. Someone post, “That’s impossible,” or you tell your friends and they try to make you aim for something more realistic. It’s actually my question, “Who was the first person to say you can’t do this?”

I read your GQ and The Guardian pieces and you mention so many influences, like Destiny’s Child, 50 Cent, Frank Ocean, and Future. How does that concoction lead to this debut album? 

I always joke I only know 10 songs. Because somebody would be like, “Do you know this song by such and such?” I’ll be like, “Nah.” I probably know who the artist is, but don’t know the songs. When I get in the studio and I’ll sit down, especially now, they’ll give me a prompt if I’m writing for something. I’ll be with the producer, “Let’s play Too Short, ‘Freaky Tales.’ Let’s play Sir-Mix-A-Lot, ‘Posse on Broadway.’” I think being a DJ for most of my life kinda helps my music library and database to be able to reference and research, but also understanding not to be an imitation or cover band. I can go play a Prince record if I want a Prince record. It’s how can I study them and pour it into me what I have going right now.

One of the things I’ve seen with your album and stardom growing is this “rock & boom” genre you created. When you bring in somebody like a Janelle Monáe or any outside artist, were they a little intimidated by that kind of sound or did they embrace it wholeheartedly?

They loved it. They loved it initially because [hip-hop A&R veteran] Dante Ross said something in passing that stuck with me, “On that first album, you don’t want to go too weird on ’em, ’cause you don’t want to push them away. You want to get there with them — and the people you do get there, you slowly give them more and more of what you really want to give them.”

I think with this first album, the musicianship is through the roof. The writing is through the roof but it’s also very palatable. More palatable than showing someone “Mid” or “SUCKA!” or “Handyman,” I think this is the more concentrated combination of everything. All of those songs had to happen for me to get to my debut album. I think I wanted to make this one very palatable. If you show someone a picture of me, it probably doesn’t look like you’re supposed to like an artist like this. A lot of the push-and-pull comes from my imagery, but you close your eyes and you hear what’s there. 

I know when you made this album, a lot of the music was geared for your sophomore project. What does that next album look like?

I’m enjoying my first one, first press run and performing this album. Just really enjoying this first album, because I’m never gonna get it again. If I start working on the next thing, I’d be so off this album and not wanting to promote it… but we’re going almost on a month and I still can’t stop listening to this album. So right now, for the foreseeable future, I almost want to personally deliver it to you and ask you, “Have you heard it?” Talk to you about your thoughts. Right now it’s [about] How Do You Sleep at Night?

When the numbers initially came out, they weren’t as high as some people envisioned them to be, yet it’s an acclaimed album. Have you sat with that balance?

We talk about the “nobody phase” and how I look at myself, I think people probably look at me with the co-signs and “he been on this album and this album,” but this is still my journey and my pace. However it was gonna happen, is however it’s gonna happen. I think that was more of a shock to them. I’m even flattered that it got a post like that. 

I feel like that’s reserved for bigger artists when they tell you how much they sold. I’m fortunate enough to fall in that category. I’m concerned with going through another pack of these and talking one-by-one to each person. That’s my focus every day. There’s 8,000 units, but I’m pretty sure more than 8,000 people heard the album. I’m happy with that. I know that I’m touching the people one-by-one every day. Only number I care about is one and I’m cool with that, because I’m trying to reach [fans] one-by-one.

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One of my favorite songs from the album was “Daddy Mama Drama.” How were you able to develop that bond with your parents knowing you pretty much carry out their flaws today?

We laugh about it. That’s a great medicine, and a great doorway to have that conversation, because it is a hard conversation. I will say to someone out there who wants to have that conversation: Just find how you could get your foot in the door. For us, it was joking about what would be a traumatic experience, and how I’m laughing about it — but after that laugh, really just expressing how that made me feel. With “Daddy Mama Drama,” I’m glad people are gravitating to that one because I hope that it promotes that conversation to have with family. 

A few people have come up to me with the second of “Daddy Mama Drama” and asking why it takes, like, this sexual R&B turn. I feel like I connected it to the sins of a father are passed down. It’s like my poor excuse of why my relationships are maybe the way that they are. Maybe the link of why I’m not so loving or only show my affection through gifts. It’s because of how I grew up. I haven’t talked to anyone about this on the journalist side of why “Daddy Mama Drama” makes that turn, but here it is from the horse’s mouth, why part one and part two happens. It’s a full conversation of showing a generation what happens to this person after what I lived. 

I read that your artistry really began after your girlfriend passed away from gun violence. Knowing where you’re at in your career, how have you dealt with that trauma knowing she’s not here to see the success you’ve been able to have?

I was just talking to a friend, but I haven’t talked to her in two years. I’ve missed my best friends’ birthdays in our 20s working on this or whatever. Not being able to talk to my family as much because of this grind and putting my head down and not even processing that loss that I had. I poured it into the work.

Recently, I really been working on being present in the moment and processing everything. Most of the time, I don’t really talk about it because most of the people I’m around don’t know her or my family. All they know is Teezo Touchdown. I use that to push forward. When I’m in these hotel rooms by myself, I process these things because it’s just me and the mirror. I’m working on being a better friend, son, and brother.

If you could title this chapter in your life, what word would that be and why?

“Organized.” Because I said in another interview they wanted me to manifest something and I said, “Teezo Touchdown will be the most organized artist in the world.”

Before I sing a note or go onstage, I think it starts with, “Where are my keys? Where’s my laptop?” It starts from there and if I start from as small as that all the way up to my professional, I’d be unstoppable and untouchable. That’s the thing that I’m attacking right now. I think that kinda goes with the self-sabotage thing. I used to say, “self-sabotage doesn’t always look like hitting your hand with a hammer. It can be not being organized, or not being on time.” I think all of that organization is gonna fall on every aspect of my life.

We are officially in awards season, folks! On Sunday night (Nov. 19), Billboard announced the winners of the 2023 Billboard Music Awards, with Beyoncé, Drake, The Weeknd, SZA, 21 Savage, Nicki Minaj and Metro Boomin reigning victorious in the rap and R&B categories. The 2023 Soul Train Music Awards were also taped last night; Keke Palmer will host the R&B-centric awards ceremony, which is set to air on Sunday, Nov. 26, at 8 p.m. ET/PT on BET and BET Her. SZA, Summer Walker and Usher lead the nominations with nine nods each.

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In the midst of all of the celebratory extravaganzas, New Music Friday (Nov. 17) proceeded with business as usual, dumping a plethora of new tracks to listen to over the holiday break. With Fresh Picks, Billboard aims to highlight some of the best and most interesting new sounds across R&B and hip-hop — from ScarLip’s fast-rising new hit to Inayah’s tender, Fantasia-nodding R&B jam.

Be sure to check out this week’s Fresh Picks in our Spotify playlist below.

Freshest Find: Inayah, “For The Streets”

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Since its release back in 2007, Fantasia’s “When I See U” has become a certified R&B classic — the kind of song everyone covers for fun but no one would dare try to truly make their own. Enter Inayah, a rising R&B star who flips an interpolation of the song’s lyrics and instrumental into a no-holds-barred takedown of ain’t s–t men. “I had your picture on my mirror/ I took that s–t down/ Finally see that you been a clown/ Been holding us down while you f–king ’round,” she opens the song. Inayah smartly delivers each line with a sneaky wink, nodding to the sublime amalgam of the unmistakably iconic aura of Fantasia’s original and the tongue-in-cheek gems of truths sprinkled throughout her own track.

41 & Jenn Carter, “Problems”

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One of the new tracks from 41’s “11-track EP” 41 World: Not the Album, “Problems” is a Jenn Carter solo cut that is yet another reminder that she’s one of the most captivating voices coming out of the Brooklyn drill scene right now. The Touchamill-produced tracks find her getting a bit introspective as she waxes poetic about a relationship in turmoil. Sonically in a lane most similar to the most lovelorn snap-laden ballads of A Boogie wit da Hoodie and Lil Tjay, “Problems” proves just how versatile Jenn is. “Takin’ all my еnergy, tryna’ keep you next to me / Wе been through the worst, but I know you want the best for me/ Why you keep on testing me?/ Like, you know these bitches texting me?” she spits.

Jay Rock feat. Bongo ByTheWay, “Still That Way”

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It’s been five years since Redemption, but Jay Rock has been making up for the lengthy wait between studio albums with a steady stream of new music this year. His latest offering is the Bongo ByTheWay-helmed “Still That Way,” a booming anthem that treads the familiar ground of celebrating success while still maintaining the grounding and authenticity of your roots. Triumphant brass and skittering hi-hats provide most of the instrumental’s background while Jay Rock’s commanding voice supplies the momentum.

ScarLip, “Blick”

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Since becoming one of this year’s biggest new stars with her rousing late-summer anthem “This Is New York.” ScarLip has maintained a consistent musical and online presence. Last week (Nov. 15), the Bronx rapper unleashed “Blick,” her catchy new single that combines the raw intensity of her DMX-nodding breakout hit with the dance-facing rhythmic qualities of Jersey club-inflected drill. Already soundtracking a TikTok dance challenge, “Blick” is looking to become a sizable hit — one that smartly reveals the different shades of her artistic ethos.

Mannywellz, “Be Alright”

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Appearing on his new Mr. Oúlala EP, Mannywellz’s “Be Alright” is a no-frills guitar ballad heralding peace and security in the knowledge that everything will eventually work out as it needs to. With a sweeping melody to add some weight to the simple lyrics in the chorus (“It’s gonna be alright”), Manny relies on the warmth of his tone and the idiosyncrasies of his enunciation and phrasing to add some dynamics to the song.

Terrace Martin & Gallant, “Tandem”

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In this subtly funky slow jam, Terrace and Gallant use an extended metaphor of a tandem bike to croon about how they and their respective lovers fit perfectly together. “We’re in tandem like bikes, why don’t you take a seat?/ You’ll be riding all night, I’ll be rocking in sync/ We might fuss, we may fight, never lose chemistry/ We’re in tandem like bikes, why don’t you take a seat?” Gallant sings. Terrace’s lush production, which features notes of funk and doo-wop, provides a sensual backdrop for Gallant’s come-hither coos, but it’s the restraint in his vocal performance that’s most impressive.

No Guidnce, “Long Walk”

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Rising British R&B boy group No Guidnce continues their ascension with a reflective new cut titled “Long Walk.” Sitting on the opposite end of the hip-hop-inflected R&B spectrum from “Spicy,” the quarter opts for a soulful drum-heavy beat courtesy of Ben Billions and Terrence Rolle. It’s a simple story about meeting someone new for the first time, but the contrast of the chugging drums with their yearning harmonies makes for a particularly immersive listening experience.

If true love is being able to hear your beloved’s signature laugh from across a crowded, noisy room, then A$AP Rocky is the love guru. During an interview over the weekend on the red carpet at the inaugural Las Vegas Grand Prix race, Rocky was preparing to answer a question when he heard a familiar chuckle from an undisclosed location that stopped him in his tracks.

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“I believe that…” Rocky began saying before his eyes got side and he glanced around with a look of pleasant surprise on his face. “What the f–k is that? What was that?” he asked with a smile.

The moment, of course, instantly bred a meme, with fans going hard on jokes about Rocky’s apparent delight in hearing the voice of the mother of their two children, RZA and Riot Rose. “Chile, ASAP heard Rihanna’s giggle and lost his train of thought tryna figure out who was making this woman laugh! Aww,” wrote one, while another paid tribute to Rocky’s Spidey sense.

While fans have been eagerly anticipating Rihanna’s follow-up to 201’s Anti album, according to People, during the race weekend A$AP said there is no reason for him to collaborate with Rih-Rih on a song because they’ve already made beautiful music together at home. “I think we do a real great job at collaborating [by] making children,” he said. “I think that’s our best creation so far! Nothing is better than [RZA and Riot] out there. I mean, we had a third designer come and help, a ghost designer named God, [who] shaped everything. And we had these beautiful angels, so that’s the best collaboration.”

The couple were among the bevy of stars who came out for Saturday’s first F1 race in Sin City, which included Brad Pitt, Anthony Mackie, Terry Crews, will.i.am, Steve Aoki, Rod Stewart, Shaquille O’Neal, Usain Bolt, Kylie Minogue, Lupita Nyong’o, Gordon Ramsey and many more.

Watch A$AP’s reaction and see some of the best memes below.

This too cute😂😂😂😂😂🥹💛— 🍭💋🍒Sugaa baddie🍒💋🍭 (@Gimoneyy071) November 19, 2023

Snoop Dogg giving up the smoke is like Slick Rick hanging up his signature neck-breaking chains: ain’t gonna happen, ever. But, last week the Doggfather momentarily pulled a fast one on all of us when he seemingly declared with a straight face that he was giving up his lifelong weed habit. “I’ve decided to give up smoke,” Snoop said in a statement on his socials.
It seemed unlikely that the MC who has rarely been seen without his trusty blunt for the past three decades would so suddenly and inexplicably give up the habit that has made him the world’s most beloved stoner. So, it should also come as no surprise that there was more than met the (bloodshot) eye to his announcement.

He cleared the air on Monday morning (Nov. 20), revealing that the “smoke” part of his statement was the key in unveiling his latest endorsement deal. “Go smokeless with Snoop Dogg,” read the headline on the website for the Solo Stove firepit company. The release noted that the brand’s limited-edition collab with Snoop includes a $350 “Snoop Stove” featuring the rapper’s logo, signature and a pair of dog paws emblazoned on the side, as well as a bucket hat and sticker pack.

In an accompanying video, a solemn Snoop intoned, “I have an announcement. I’m givin’ up smoke,” as he sat among chirping crickets in the woods by himself. “I know what you’re thinkin’, ‘Snoop, smoke is kinda your whole thing!’ But I’m done with it. Done with the coughing and my clothes smelling all sticky icky. I’m going smokeless,” he added as the camera panned back to frame the rapper sitting in front of a Solo firepit. The limited edition Snoop Dogg Solo stove is on sale now here.

In a statement, Snoop said, “I love a good fire outside but the smoke was too much. Solo Stove fixed fire and took out the smoke. They changed the game and now I’m excited to spread the love and stay warm with my friends and family.”

The company said that Snoop will partner with the company on “smokeless product innovation and contribute toward designing a new signature line of Snoop Dogg x Solo Stove products.”

Solo Brands CEO John Merris added in a statement, “We’re stoked to have a product so good, it even inspired Snoop to go smokeless. As the most popular smokeless fire pit in the world, Solo Stove is all about bringing people together and creating a vibe that encourages you to sit back, relax, and enjoy your time with friends and family. Snoop, like Solo, is about good moments, and we’re looking forward to welcoming even more people to the Solo Stove family.”

Watch Snoop’s smokescreen announcement below.

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As Americans gear up for the next year of election madness, Cardi B got a head start on endorsing a candidate for president on Sunday (Nov. 19) when she revealed who she’s planning to back in the expected second smackdown between Pres. Biden and former one-term president Donald Trump.
“I don’t give a f–k… I’m not endorsing no f–king presidents no more,” Cardi said in a heated 10-minute-long Instagram livestream rant in which she stridently expressed her views on New York Mayor Eric Adams’ announced budget cuts while slamming Biden’s support for funding the wars in Ukraine and Israel. “Joe Biden’s talking about, ‘Yeah, we can fund two wars. We can fund two wars.’ Motherf–kers talkin’ about ‘we don’t got it, but we got it. We’re the greatest nation.’ No the f–k we’re not! We’re going through some s–t right now.”

Cardi made news during the 2020 election when she interviewed then-candidate Joe Biden for Elle magazine, telling him “I just want Trump out” and endorsing the former two-time veep for president over the twice-impeached real estate mogul currently facing four indictments on 91 felony charges in cases tied to his alleged alleged election interference, retention of classified documents and financial misdeeds by his titular company.

But now as Biden tries to convince recalcitrant Republicans in the House to support his call for robust military aid for the wars in Ukraine and Israel, Cardi sounds like she’s basically done with politics and politicians.

“I’m an angry b–ch… I need y’all to spread this video, and if something happens to me, it’s because I’m speaking truth. So God forbid something happens to me, or my family or some s–t, it’s because n—as is after me because I’m speaking the truth,” Cardi said in the new clip in which she’s dressed down in a fluffy grey robe and purple hair bonnet.

“In New York, there is a $120 million budget cut that’s going to affect schools, public libraries, and the police department — y’all know I don’t give a f–k about the cops, but it is what it is,” she added. “There’s gonna be a $120 million budget cuts, with schools, with libraries and the cops… And a $5 million budget cut in sanitation. B–ch, we are gonna be drowning in f–king rats,” the Bronx-bred MC said.

Last week, embattled mayor Adams unveiled harsh budget cuts for the city’s police department and schools, with CBS News reporting that 653 schools — or 43% of the school system — will be impacted by mid-year budget cuts totaling more than $120 million. The announcement from Adams came after the mayor’s budget director said that the belt-tightening was necessary due to a $7 billion budget gap caused in part by the need to shelter asylum seekers and a reduction in federal COVID-19 relief funds.

“Where these kids gonna go. Like, I’m lucky. I’m blessed,” Cardi said. “I’m whatever the f–k, but what’s going to happen to my nieces? What’s going to happen to nephews? What’s going to happen to my cousins, my aunts, my friends that’s livin’ in the hood?… B–ch New York is already f–king super dirty.”

In addition to being incensed about the sanitation, safety and school cuts, Cardi seemed especially upset about Biden’s financial support of Israel’s retaliatory war against the terrorist Hamas group, which invaded the country and killed more than 1,200 and kidnapped over 240 citizens in its murderous Oct. 7 attack. She’s also seemingly mad about the administration’s continued financial and military aid to Ukraine’s war against invading forces from Russia.

“Y’all need to sit the f–k down with these people and find agreement. No we cannot fund these f–king wars!” Cardi said. “The world is in f–king shambles… we can’t fund these wars. We can barely f–king fund this country. Finish it! Y’all need to finish it! Stop frontin’ like you got the f–kin’ money! You don’t got no money. You don’t got no sugar for your honeys.”

Cardi warned that these kind of extreme cuts are coming to everyone’s states and that crimes will go up “through the roof,” kids won’t have places to read and streets will be filled with “rats and squirrels and raccoons” if the budget reductions go through.

Though the message from Cardi was full of dark foreboding about the future, it ended with something that sounded positive. “I’m gonna finish recording this motherf–in’ song… and I’m gonna go to bed. We don’t sleep over here, b–ch… I’m on a very tight schedule with this album. I’m almost finished, it’s almost there,” she said of her eagerly anticipated follow-up to full-length studio debut, 2018’s Invasion of Privacy.

Check out a capture of Cardi’s video below.

Cardi B goes off on the US government about the $120 Million Dollar budget cut in New York that’ll effect Schools, Libraries, The Police Department, & Sanitation while funding wars. pic.twitter.com/WwCrbFbvGS— Cardi B | Updates (@updatesofcardi) November 19, 2023

Drake added some more ink to his face recently, as seen in pictures over the weekend in which some Arabic script was spotted above the rapper’s right eyebrow. As spotted by HipHopDX, on Saturday (Nov. 18), photographer Brent Kore posted an image of Drizzy’s new face art on his Instagram Stories, capturing the phrase “miskeen” […]

In addition to honoring the top hitmakers of the year, the 2023 Billboard Music Awards are also celebrating hip-hop’s 50th anniversary with the invaluable assistance of three rap pioneers.
“Hip-Hop Through the Charts” finds Jermaine Dupri, Ludacris and T.I. sharing insider memories about their various career-building Billboard chart achievements as well as their reflections on hip-hop’s musical and cultural impact.

Watch all three interviews below with Vibe editor Datwon Thomas for illuminating sound bites excerpted from the trio’s individual chats :

Jermaine Dupri on…

“Money Ain’t a Thang,” featuring Jay-Z, from Dupri’s 1998 debut studio album Life in 1472 (No. 3 on Billboard 200; No. 1 for two weeks on Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums): “When I did ‘Money Ain’t a Thang,’ the company, Columbia, they didn’t have really no idea what Jay-Z meant to the culture. They were actually asking me like: Why did I want this song to be my first single when I had ‘Sweetheart’ with Mariah [Carey]? … They thought they could do more with ‘Sweetheart.’ It’s crazy, because that’s just like this era and this time of these 30 years ago. [It] was such a learning period for so many people.”

Mariah Carey’s “Always Be My Baby” (Billboard Hot 100 No. 1 for two weeks, 1996): “That record taught me that it wasn’t really about first and second singles. It’s just about great songs.”

Ludacris on…

What hip-hop means to him: “Hip-hop is everything to me. It’s how we talk, it’s how we dress, it’s how we walk. … Like, everything I do is to give back to the culture that gave me.”

Usher’s “Yeah!” featuring Lil Jon and Ludacris (Hot 100 No. 1 for 12 weeks, 2004): “Soon as Lil Jon sent me the record, I was like, ‘This is out of here’ before I even got my verse on there. That’s why you see me at the beginning of the record, a verse, and at the end: ‘Take that and rewind it back.’ I’m trying to get on as many parts of the record as possible. I knew what it was. It’s crossed three generations. … That’s when you have the hit record of a lifetime.”

T.I. on…

His long and successful career in hip-hop: “Man, it feels like a lot of work, a lot of hard work that paid off. I’m the proudest of the music we made then. It inspired so much to happen that has evolved to still be relevant now.”

“Whatever You Like” (Hot 100 No. 1 for seven weeks, 2008): “I think that was my first solo No. 1. We was on a run, you dig? And had a great time in spite of a pretty dark moment that I was going through. I was fighting a fed case and preparing for prison. My whole thing was just focus on doing the most we can … being as productive as we can and progressive as we can with this time. And ‘Whatever You Like’ was definitely the catalyst of that moment.”

Kanye West has returned with the new song “Vultures,” featuring Ty Dolla $ign, Lil Durk and Bump J. On the track, which premiered Friday night (Nov. 17) on WPWX Power 92 Chicago, Ye doubles down on some of his controversial statements from late 2022. “How I’m antisemitic? I just f—ed a Jewish b—-,” West raps […]

As Tyla‘s “Water” hit keeps getting hotter — and climbing higher on the Billboard Hot 100 — some big names in music are jumping on it: Travis Scott and Marshmello came out with two new remixes on Friday (Nov. 17). Explore See latest videos, charts and news See latest videos, charts and news Scott’s wavy […]