R&B/Hip-Hop
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Vic Mensa (and his dad) are bringing clear water to their homeland.
Born Victor Kwesi Mensah, the Chicago-made rapper and creative remembers his roots, capitalizing on his success and resources to bring a better quality of life for his fellow Ghanaians through access to clean water. Mensa visited his ancestral village alongside his father who was born in Ghana and heads a non-profit called Let Them Drink Water, and bore witness to the community’s severe water contamination issue. The pair decided to develop a solution, by building a new Borehole — a manual pump which provide clean water, but are unfortunately rare across Africa. After one successful borehole that brought access to water for hundreds of thousands, Mensa decided to build two more in nearby villages.
“We’re building 3 Boreholes in different communities in Ghana to provide clean drinking water; the first being the Asokore Zongo in Koforidua where my family lives, which is already built. The other locations are a nearby community called Efiduase and then our ancestral village in the Volta Region Amedzope,” Mensa said in a statement. “Most people in communities like this in Ghana experience constant water borne diseases.”
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To help fund the boreholes that can cost up to $15,000 each to build, Mensa partnered with the Black Star Line Festival taking place in Accra Ghana on Jan. 6. The festival will feature performances from Mensa, Chance the Rapper, Erykah Badu, T-Pain, Jeremih, Sarkodie, Tobe Nwigwe, Asakaa Boys and M.anifest. “This festival is about connecting Black people of the globe,” he told TMZ in an interview. “Beyond all of those colonial boundaries. It’s something that has been on my mind for a long time.”
Following his death in May at age 24, YSL rapper Lil Keed’s cause of death was revealed to have stemmed from eosinophilia, according to the Los Angeles County Medical Examiner-Coroner.
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Eosinophilia is a rare condition in which the number of eosinophils — a type of white blood cell — is greatly increased, according to cancer.gov. TMZ reported that Lil Keed complained to friends about stomach pains in the days preceding his death. He was eventually hospitalized one evening due to the severe pain, with reports that his liver and kidney began to fail, suffering a seizure on his way to the hospital. Hours later, the budding rapper died.
“He had been sick in bed for 4 days with complaints of stomach and back pains,” the coroner’s report reads, per People. “His brother noted that the decedent’s eyes were jaundiced and drove him to the hospital in a private vehicle.”
The Atlanta-born rapper was one of seven children and brother to fellow rapper LilGotit, who took to Instagram following Keed’s death in the spring. “Can’t believe I seened u die today bro I did all my cries I know what u want me to do and that’s go hard for Mama Daddy Our Brothers Naychur and Whiteboy,” Gotit wrote in a post alongside a photo of the siblings.
Keed’s family has yet to comment publicly on the reported cause of death.
Keed signed to Young Thug’s YSL, an imprint of 300 Entertainment, in 2018. The rapper released two projects on the label, including his song “Nameless,” which peaked at No. 42 on Billboard‘s R&B/Hip-Hop Airplay chart. Keed’s critically acclaimed 2019 debut album Long Live Mexico peaked at No. 26 on the Billboard 200. He was also featured on Young Thug’s Slime Language 2 album, which topped the Billboard 200 in 2021.
May 2022 was a tragic month for the YSL crew, with the arrests of Young Thug and rapper Gunna coming just days before Keed’s death. Keed himself was not among those named in the indictment.
YoungBoy Never Broke Again will release his new album I Rest My Case on Friday, Jan. 6, Billboard can confirm.
I Rest My Case marks the rapper’s first release since he signed to Motown Records in October. The Baton Rouge, Louisiana, native broke out in 2015 and signed to Atlantic two years later, going on to become one of music’s top acts. Since, he’s charted 24 albums on the Billboard 200 — 11 that were top 10, four of which hit No. 1.
Just last year, YoungBoy debuted six projects on the chart — five solo endeavors and one collaborative set with DaBaby (Better Than You). He’s charted four top 10 albums on the Billboard 200 in 2022 — more top 10s than any other act this year — and has released four albums in the past two months: The Last Slimeto, Realer 2, 3800 Degrees and Ma I Got a Family.
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His most recent studio album, The Last Slimeto, topped Billboard‘s Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart and reached No. 2 on the Billboard 200.
Take a look at the cover art below.
YoungBoy Never Broke Again’s ‘I Rest My Case’ album cover
A loaded god complex, cock it and pull it! Cardi B celebrated New Year’s Eve on Saturday (Dec. 31) by covering Fall Out Boy‘s seminal hit “Sugar We’re Goin’ Down.”
The superstar’s delightfully emo moment came during her performance at Miami’s E11EVEN nightclub to ring in 2023. With a drink in one hand and a mic in the other, Cardi excitedly launched into the 2005 single in a fan-captured TikTok video. “Anything you wanna hear/ But that’s just who I am this week/ Lying in bed/ Next to the mausoleum,” she wailed a capella as the crowd excitedly sang along.
“Cardi b singing fall out boy first thing after midnight on new year’s day is exactly how i wanted to start my year,” the TikTok user wrote on the clip, which also features Offset on stage, playing to a different part of the packed crowd.
Released as the lead single off 2005’s From Under the Cork Tree, “Sugar We’re Goin Down” served as the foursome’s breakout hit, becoming their first top 10 smash and ultimately peaking at No. 8 on the Hot 100. (The pop-punk anthem also reached No. 3 on the Alternative Airplay chart as well as No. 2 on Pop Airplay.)
Funnily enough, Cardi’s appreciation for Pete Wentz and co. plays into a tweet she posted earlier this fall expressing her love for the “emo kids” at her high school who were “actually really cool and will give me free cigarettes.”
Weeks before her New Year’s Eve performance, Cardi promised that her long-awaited follow-up to 2018’s Invasion of Privacy is set to be released sometime in 2023 and even treated the Bardi Gang to a seven-second snippet of an unreleased song via Twitter.
Watch Cardi playfully cover Fall Out Boy below.
Angela Simmons is going into the new year with a glow. The star took to her Instagram Stories on Monday (Jan. 2) to share a sweet sentiment.
“Happier than I ever been,” Simmons wrote on a black screen, adding a pink heart emoji. The post comes just a day after she made her relationship with rapper Yo Gotti Instagram official with a series of sleek professional photos.
“You are all I need and more,” she captioned the post, in which the happy couple is seen dressed up in dazzling looks as they pose against a black Rolls Royce.
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Gotti has been open about his crush on Simmons for years. On his 2015 hit “Down in the DM,” he raps, “And I just followed Angela (Simmons) / Boy, I got a crush on Angela Simmons / They like, ‘Damn Gotti, you bold’ / F— it, I’m gon’ let the world know.”
Later, in 2017, Gotti shoots his shot again in “Save It For Me,” which was release after Simmons got engaged to Sutton Tennyson. “Passed my number to Angela / I thought I had her / Her n—- cuffed her, married, it made me madder/ I respect it, I’m moving on, but the truth is I want her badder / Maybe me sayin’ her name made him move faster,” he raps.
If you thought that Snoop Dogg was the top dogg in the 1990s, think again. The 51-year-old rapper recently opened up about a time when none other than Dionne Warwick — legendary vocalist and unofficial queen of Twitter — once put him in his place. Or as he puts it, “out-gangstered” him.
In the new CNN film Dionne Warwick: Don’t Make Me Over, the “Heartbreaker” singer and Snoop recalled a time when she set up a meeting with a group of prominent ’90s rappers after deciding she’d had enough of the misogynistic lyrics notoriously present in the decade’s rap canon. The “Drop It Like It’s Hot” artist, Suge Knight and more were invited to arrive at her home no later than 7 in the morning — a prospect so intimidating, Snoop says he and his peers were all in her driveway by 6:52 a.m.
“We were kind of, like, scared and shook up,” Snoop said. “We’re powerful right now, but she’s been powerful forever. Thirty-some years in the game, in the big home with a lot of money and success.”
Once they arrived, the rappers were confronted by Warwick, who demanded they call her a “b—h” to her face. After all, that was the term many of them had been using to describe women in their lyrics.
“These kids are expressing themselves, which they’re entitled to do,” Warwick recalled thinking at the time. “However, there’s a way to do it.”
“You guys are all going to grow up,” she told the group. “You’re going have families. You’re going to have children. You’re going to have little girls and one day that little girl is going to look at you and say, ‘Daddy, did you really say that? Is that really you?’ What are you going to say?”
“She was checking me at a time when I thought we couldn’t be checked,” added Snoop, who actually did go on to welcome a daughter in addition to three sons. “We were the most gangsta as you could be, but that day at Dionne Warwick’s house, I believe we got out-gangstered that day.”
The Death Row Records owner says he was then inspired to change his musical approach, starting with his 1996 record Tha Doggfather. “I made it a point to put records of joy – me uplifting everybody and nobody dying and everybody living,” he continued. “Dionne, I hope I became the jewel that you saw when I was the little, dirty rock that was in your house. I hope I’m making you proud.”
De La Soul has made a career of being ahead of the pack. The legendary New York hip-hop trio’s debut album 3 Feet High and Rising was beloved upon its 1989 release because of its hippy-esque, hyper-positive approach and unpredictable sampling, often being cited as the genesis of what’s referred to as “alternative hip-hop.” De La also co-founded the Native Tongues collective, alongside like-minded groups the Jungle Brothers and A Tribe Called Quest, and kicked off what the group referred to as the “D.A.I.S.Y. Age” (short for DA Inner Sound, Y’all) in rap – though they would move beyond that early sound and image in acclaimed subsequent releases like 1991’s De La Soul is Dead and 1996’s Stakes Is High.
So when music industry red tape and sample clearances prevented their all-time great catalog from becoming available on digital marketplaces and streaming services, their modern-day accessibility suffered in a way unfitting of their massive legacy. Still, the trio continued to make their presence felt in other, less-conventional spaces.
In 2009, they connected with Nike to release Are You In?, an album that was part of the company’s Original Run series. Five years later, the group celebrated the 25th anniversary of 3 Feet High, by making nearly their entire catalog up to that point — six albums between 1988 and 2001 — available for free download, essentially bootlegging their own music. And in 2015, they launched a Kickstarter campaign to fund their ninth album, the live band-backed …and the Anonymous Nobody. They’ve stayed busy on the road, while also making a huge crossover appearance on Gorillaz’ Grammy-winning 2005 smash “Feel Good Inc.,” and most recently scoring a major synch for their 3 Feet single “The Magic Number” in the 2021 blockbuster Spider-Man: No Way Home.
But in 2021, the rights to De La Soul’s former label Tommy Boy were acquired by the music rights firm Reservoir Media — with whom the group secured a deal to retrieve their masters, finally giving them the ability to re-release their music on their own terms. Now, their first six albums will all be available on streaming platforms (along with exclusive merch, vinyl, CDs and cassettes), via their label AOI, distributed by Chrysalis Records. The campaign starts on January 13, with “The Magic Number” being made available for streaming and their website hosting a 7″ vinyl and cassette single for sale — and the group’s first six albums are scheduled to arrive in full on streaming on March 3.
Billboard spoke to two-thirds of the group, Posdnous and Dave, about the path to getting control of their music, whether or not they think hip-hop is currently accommodating veteran artists, and their take on the 21 Savage and Nas debate over “relevance.”
What happened within the last year or two years that made it possible to finally reach the point where the albums are coming out?
Posdnous: When the catalog got back in the hands of the original owner, Tom Silverman, he was in the process of clearing things and trying to get the music up. But he basically wanted for us to pay for old debts, that would have obviously been written off. That stalled it for the next three or something years after he got the music back. He wanted to put it back up, but we didn’t want to put it up until worked out a better deal.
I’m not trying to be correct and political; I wish that man no harm in his life. And I don’t mean physically, I mean in terms of his name. At one point, people could feel like that was being tarnished; there were a lot of fans who loved us and were disrespecting him in comments, and that wasn’t what we were trying to do at all. We just wanted to benefit from our work. It almost felt like we were being erased from history, because our music wasn’t up.
When Reservoir acquired it, they worked out what we needed to be worked out, which was great. But once it got into our hands, along with Reservoir assisting us, once again, there were a lot of samples and things that needed to be taken care of. It was long, but it wasn’t grueling. What’s great is that a lot of these owners, writers, and publishers were De La Soul fans, and they had publicly understood what was going on. They were happy to see that was in our hands now, and when we went to try to clear things, everyone pretty much came to the table to really work it out and get it done.
It was a long journey when we got to this point, but it was still a great journey to see that people were willing to help. People weren’t trying to make it that hard for us. And we got to really revisit a lot of the albums, which brought about a lot of great memories.
As outsiders, a lot of those conversations seem to focus on the ultimate goal of acquiring the masters. But for you guys, it sounds like acquiring the masters is where everything began, not where it started.
Dave: Yeah, it actually did begin at that point. You think that you own your stuff and that now it’s on cruise control, waiting for the checks to come in. But it is not that way at all. There’s a lot to do. Maybe you’re lucky and you don’t have to clear samples, maybe you don’t have to broker deals with different publishers, and there’s no one around to claim anything or to risk anything. But we had a job to do.
If we didn’t have the help of Reservoir, who picked up the project and is collaborating with us to do this release, I don’t know where we would turn to. It would have been even more work. So you do need collaborators, you do need help, you do need to rework back into the system and not necessarily be the lone commissioner of this project. You need allies, you need companies to work with, you need people to hire, and we learned a big lesson from that. It definitely wasn’t just, “We got our masters back!” It ain’t that.
With this music coming out again, you’ve got diehard fans who’ve been around the whole time who are going to finally have it on streaming, as well as fans who have wanted to hear your music but didn’t have the opportunity because it wasn’t on DSPs, and people who have rarely known much about you at all. How do you plan to reach out to all these newer fans?
Posdnous: We’re blessed to have people even feel that this is classic music, that it was very important to different references within the timeline of hip-hop. All I’m trying to say is that it’s still a part of what we were already doing. If we’re rolling with the Gorillaz, all those fans have been De La fans. If we never missed as one of the longest-touring groups in hip-hop from almost 15 years ago, we’re already seen as a generational group.
Our fans passed us down to their children. We always have people say, “I found out from you from my uncle, my brother, my moms.” So as much as our music needed to be up in this digital world, the people who were touched by our music made sure that it didn’t lose a beat in their life, and they made sure people around them learned about it.
In my DMs, a person was like, “Yo, after [“The Magic Number” appeared in Spider-Man: Long Way From Home], I couldn’t find it, then my grandfather pulled out his [record] and showed me.” I know my age, but I still feel like I’m cool as s–t, so this is weird that I could be a grandfather. [Laughs.] But it’s all coming together, and it’s great that the music that needs to be up [on streaming] will be there.
Usually, when we’re speaking about acts in hip-hop that have been out for a long time, we don’t even speak about them in terms of getting new fans; we just think about them in terms of catering to the fans that they’ve already had. Is finding new fans something that you guys find important?
Dave: I wouldn’t say important. But the opportunity for people to hear this thing regardless of what they know about it, and maybe inspire some kid that wants to be different or sound odd, and gain fans at the same time, it’s something that we appreciate and want to happen. It isn’t really about, “We got to do something for these people who’ve never heard our music,” it’s just that the exposure could open so much more. We want people to hear it, and maybe run off and do something amazing that’ll impress us, and it keeps going back and forth.
We’ve always talked about the lopsided aspect of hip-hop. I think hip-hop has a sound right now that needs balancing. It’s important to us that we create balance and pull people in and make this thing bigger and better. And if our music can be a part of that, then yeah, we’re trying to do that.
Over the past five to six years, there are more rappers in their mid-to-late 40s who are still making great music — whether it’s Hov, Nas, Busta. But I feel like your music had already matured considerably by the first Art Official Intelligence album in 2000. Rap has long been criticized for not respecting its veterans enough. Where do you think hip-hop is now in terms of respecting the artists who have actually paid their dues?
Posdnous: I still think it has a ways to go. We learn from our own elders — when you really think about it, my elder was like a Melle Mel, he was maybe 17 when he started what he was doing. Now, in this friendly competition – when it was friendly, it was still about, “I’m better than you.” There’s a level of respect that sometimes is not really there fully. Because we just really gotta learn to respect ourselves, to respect each other, and didn’t respect the entire craft. But as a group, we’re blessed to be here.
I feel the majority of our music fits into something that feels timeless. There always will be a reason to say “One Love,” and you can hear all these great Bob Marley records. There’s always a reason to say “Fight the Power.” So these things that, unfortunately, still exist in the world, the music will be relevant to it. And I think that it’s the same with us. There’s always a level of understanding yourself, individualism, “Me, Myself, and I”; there’s a reason for those albums and those in those worlds to exist.
What I’ve actually loved and appreciated about some of the younger guys, they’re really honest and saying, “Even I don’t see myself talking about popping bottles, bugging out, and drinking lean when I’m 31.” They’re thinking of it like, “This s–t is just a way to get me to where I need to be. So when it’s over, all these business moves I made, I’m good.” But it is good when you can see those same people respect what has gotten them there.
I don’t think that hip-hop is the only victim. We use the internet all day long, and no one would necessarily care who created the internet. I think hip-hop is the same way. I tell younger kids, “When it comes to some street s–t, though, you respect who Al Capone is. That’s the same reason you should respect who Kool Herc is. These people helped create this tool that you use to better your life.”
Along with all of the incredible music you guys did for the first six albums, you guys have been responsible for a couple of my favorite moments in the past 10 years. One of them is when you guys basically bootlegged your own catalog. What was that experience like, and what did you learn from it that you can apply to this experience of putting it back out on streaming?
Posdnous: I’m not sure what the other guys would say, but I didn’t really learn anything. It’s what I already knew. And I feel like I could say that about the rest of the group. We knew how much people wanted and needed this music. Without the music even being up, we were still blessed to be a group that was always afforded or awarded the opportunity to travel all over the world. Everywhere we go, there was people who are so grateful for us to be there, letting us know, “but d–n, where’s your music?”
And we were trying our best to explain to Warner, who was in control of our music at that point, “Yo, it’s really in your best interest, along with us, to figure this out.” Because people wanted it. They were mad. But what was great about it was it helped them to see the data, that “yo, we really should be working to get this s–t out.” So it wasn’t a learning experience (for us). It was helping other people who needed to know to learn that we were still valuable to this culture.
You guys also had the Kickstarter campaign for the album …and the Anonymous Nobody. What was that process like doing for the first time, and being able to connect with your fans directly versus working with a label?
Posdnous: There were way more pros than cons. The cons, for me, were the phone calls that we spent working and figuring all that out man, they were long. And like you said, we’re men who have families and other responsibilities, along with just the responsibilities of being De La Soul. I almost felt — and I know Dave has said this as well — like, “Yo, are we begging for money?”
When we started this process of working on the album, we were working on a conventional De La album in the sense of producers getting us beats and we write rhymes over them. That was happening, and that album was going to be called You’re Welcome. But we just started working on this band project, and it just took on such a refreshing level to our creative psyche. Even friends of ours in the industry who happened to work at labels, they were like, “Yo, we’ll give you money for this.” So it wasn’t even like there wasn’t interest in putting out this album with labels. But it was a level of understanding that maybe we should put it out ourselves. So that took a lot of time to understand what Kickstarter was and how it’s being applied. It was a learning process, and it was fun learning it.
I feel weird asking this, just because you’re about to re-release six albums at once. But where are you guys with new music? You’ve spoken about the album with Primo and Pete Rock; I saw Prince Paul speak about work on a new De La album…
Posdnous: We definitely have a lot of work to do. We definitely want to get something done with Paul. What Paul was just referring to was the work he was putting in and helping us with the older catalog. So it’s not like we were working on new projects, but we’ve all discussed that as well. With Premo and Pete Rock, it’s the same thing. We were so drawn into what to do with this [release of the older material]. And then if there’s times where if we don’t have a lot on our table, we were like, “Let’s get up.”
But maybe Preem had too much to do, or then Pete was running the world doing what he had to do. We were just so at a point – and I know De La is [at that point] – of just wanting it to sound the way it needs to sound. So we was willing to keep trying to put in the work to get the right music. We have a few, and we just need a few more. [sighs] I really want that to come out, God willing. Me and Preem actually spoke about two weeks ago when I was in New York. “Come through, let’s try to cook some stuff up.” So hopefully we can get that done soon. A Gangsta Grillz with Drama would hit too, I would love to do that. So there’s a lot of things that I would love to see done. With new music, for me, it’s always about new along with what’s classic, what’s timeless.
Funny enough, Yasiin was around us not too long ago, he was always saying that, “As a musician, I just always want to put music out. I want to put something to something.” I was like, “Yeah,” and I totally agree. That’s why you always see me pretty much [recording] out of the group. I’m always featuring on something else, keeping the pen sharp and my mind moving with doing music.
There was a big conversation recently about 21 Savage and Nas, and the idea of “relevance.” They already worked out any misunderstandings there may have been, and made a song together. But I think that De La is interesting, in the sense that the music has lived on, and you’ve also done things that have kept you relevant – whether it’s releasing all your music that I mentioned before, the Kickstarter campaign, or your song appearing in the Spider-Man movie. Should relevance be a conversation for older artists, or is it just something you’ve done well?
Posdnous: Whether anyone wants to admit it or not, relevance will always be a conversation. But what is your checklist on why or what makes you relevant? My son is 17, and he has learned why Martin Luther King Jr. is relevant. But he can see a kid next to him from another culture, another race, who doesn’t find no relevance. They may know who he is, but they can just be like, “aight.” But does that stop Martin Luther King from being relevant? My son is perceived as African-American, but I understand why he immediately can click into it and some people won’t.
Same with music. I may see the name De La here and there, but that may not hold relevance to me, because I’m from the Bay, and they don’t mean something to me the way the OG E-40 means something to me. I could care less about sea moss when I was younger, I would never touch that s–t; now, I can’t go a day without my sea moss. [Laughs.]
Something can come into your life and you’ll be like, “D–n, I was really trying to like stay away from it. This is great.” I’ve had the biggest De La fans be like, “Yo, man, I can’t front, that [1993 album] Buhloone Mindstate, I wasn’t f–king with that when it came out.” And guess what? They can turn around now and be like, “now that I’m in my late 30s, this Buhloone Mindstate hits different now!” Things are meant to find people. I think that everything can stay in a place where it will hold its relevance to who it needs to hold it to. Some people will join in, some people will never join in, but you can’t let that s–t bother you, man.
The 21 thing was taken out of context, but a lot of young people try to shoot that gun at the OG, because the people who love the OG are so quick to down the young people on what they’re doing. But people around them are making them feel that since they’re young, what they’re doing doesn’t mean anything to the culture. And I feel that is 100% wrong. I didn’t sound like Kool G. Rap, I didn’t sound like Run-DMC. But you’re not going to tell me I didn’t know everything about Kool G. Rap and everyone else who was down with him, and I didn’t need someone trying to tell me to take my “Flower Power” s–t and get the f–k out the way. So you got to just kind of let these kids be who they are.
I do feel that a lot of the content can be poisonous; it can be unhealthy if that’s all you’re listening to. So if we have a problem with that, I as the OG shouldn’t have a problem talking with these younger kids and hanging with them. But to make them feel bad when they’re just using what they’re given? I’ve always grown up to be the type of person who is like, “Maybe I should have been did a better part, maybe Native Tongues should have been a better part.” I think that’s a better way to approach it, than to act like these kids landed from a whole ‘nother planet to f–k up hip-hop.
Looking back at your catalog and seeing that it’s about to come out again now, is there anything that you’ve done that you think would be seen differently if it dropped now versus when you dropped it before?
Dave: I think 3 Feet High and Rising, as much as people might claim it to be a hip-hop masterpiece – it’s a hip-hop masterpiece for the era in which it was released. I think the element of that time of what was taking place in music, hip-hop, and our culture, I think it welcomed that and opened up minds and spirits to see and try new different things. I think releasing 3 Feet High and Rising right now, even to maybe the age group that was listening back then, I think hip-hop as a whole just wouldn’t get it. I think hip-hop would possibly look at it as obnoxious, soft, that kind of thing.
But I think it’s also because where we’re at in hip-hop right now, hip-hop is about what you got on, who you’re impressing, what can you do, how much you got, how much you’re spending, and how much is in that bag that you got around you? I don’t think the impact of what 3 Feet High and Rising and what it meant back then would mean anything now. I feel like there are people who will get it, but I don’t know if there’s that acclaim to it in this day and age if it was something we’d never heard before.
I think the innocence that we had back then was brave, but we were in a time where innocence was so cool. Not sampling James Brown, but sampling Liberace; I think it was shocking [when] we came out [that] we sampled Liberace. I don’t know if it’d impact the same way [now].
I was thinking yesterday about something I think I’ve taken for granted with De La: How have you three stayed together all this time?
Dave: Man. It ain’t easy, but it’s the reality, it seems like. Even during the pandemic, I think there were talks of doing solo albums, or feeling like one person might want to record something at home and start working. There’s always been talk about stuff like that, Mace and Pos pushing me, like, “Yo, do a record.” We support each other in those ideas –, but at the same time, I think the magic really happens when it’s the three of us. I’m not trying to crack that formula, and I don’t think anyone else is, either.
When you get mad, and somebody blew your high, and maybe even somebody might feel disrespected – when those things happen, they’re real. We might not speak to each other for three weeks or months. But at the end of the day, when you’re craving that magic, that high that we get, you revert back to brothers and family. It’s like, “Yo, I think we need to talk about what happened.” For the sake of getting that feeling back, that’s really it. I think everybody could move on and do their own thing, and maybe not do their thing at all and just chill. But the magic happens with us three on the phone, in the same conversation, in the room together, in the studio, and hanging out on the tour bus. That’s where the magic happens, so that’s why we’re still here. We don’t want to interrupt that magic.
If a new group was asking you guys for advice on how to stay together, what would you say?
Dave: Fight, but remember that you’re fighting for the team. Even if you don’t agree, you’re fighting to get your point across for the team, not for you personally. Sometimes, we hold our tongue and we’re not as honest as we could be. One person is talking to someone else in the group, and they become allies. Taking one person’s problem and going to talk to his or her group of friends over here, and that becomes some sort of animosity.
Nah, man. I say this because many of my friends are people I know in the industry, and that’s how the breakups happen. Sometimes it’s about money, but then there’s an element of: We don’t get along because we haven’t been honest with each other. Get through that honesty, move on, and keep going – because it feels good going. Fight it out, get it all out, and come back know
Don’t go chasing waterfalls, they say, but what if your new man once starred in Jumping Ship? That’s right, Rozonda “Chilli” Thomas and Matthew Lawrence are officially a couple, the TLC singer’s rep confirmed on Tuesday (Jan. 3).
The two stars were first photographed together vacationing in Hawaii last summer, but reportedly didn’t get together romantically until just before the holiday season.
“I’ve been with Chilli since 2005 and I’ve never seen her this in love,” Christal Jordan, the singer’s publicist, tells Billboard. “She is glowing. They are really cute together.”
Chilli and the middle Lawrence brother — whose divorce from ex-wife Cheryl Burke was finalized last September — even spent both Thanksgiving and Christmas together according to Jordan, and the actor met the “Unpretty” singer’s family in Atlanta.
On New Year’s Eve (Dec. 31), Chilli and Lawrence fueled speculation about their romance by posting a sweet Instagram video together lip-syncing a-ha‘s 1985 classic “Take On Me,” complete with matching onesies and a filter recreating the look of the song’s animated music video. “#newyearsshenanigans #onesiegang #wecute,” the duo captioned the video. The ’90s heartthrob’s former Boy Meets World co-star Danielle Fishel commented, “This makes me very happy!!” with two red heart emojis.
In October, Kim Kardashian’s daughter North West paid adorable tribute to Chilli with a spot-on Halloween costume and lip sync performance with two of her gal pals to “No Scrubs.” Kardashian also got in on the fun by dancing with her oldest child to “Waterfalls.”
Check out Chilli and Lawrence’s New Year’s Eve pajama party for two below.
Meek Mill is planning to have an ambitious 2023 when it comes to his music. To ring in the new year, the “All Eyes on You” rapper took to Twitter and Instagram on Sunday (Jan. 1) to share what fans can expect of his creative endeavors this year.
“It’s not even albums nomore [sic] we really making full docuseries music!!!! Scientist!!!!” Mill tweeted, sharing a link to an Instagram post with video previews of several new tracks in a highly produced, cinematic format.
The 35-year-old captioned the video post, “‘Dream catching’ the movie … date soon come #2023 first quarter,” with a series of sparkle emojis. “Leave a comment! I been loading up for a reason let’s ball!”
But that’s not all. Mill told fans on Twitter Jan. 2 that music will be regularly arriving throughout the year, writing, “this year a [sic] album every quarter!!!!!!”
Mill’s fifth studio album, Expensive Pain, was released on Oct. 1, 2021. The set — which features singles “Flamerz Flow,” “Sharing Locations” and “Blue Notes 2,” and guest spots from Lil Baby, Kehlani, Young Thug and more — charted at No. 3 on the all-genre Billboard 200, where it would spent a total of 19 weeks on the chart.
More recently, Mill released the Flamers 5 mixtape on Nov. 22. At the time, he used the release to tease “My album coming in the next 8 weeks.”
Check out the teasers for Mill’s project below.
In the year of twenty-double-two, there were a lot of artists who doubled up in the studio. Collaborations on songs — and, in one case, an entire album — offered up twice the star power on the radio, charts and streaming services this year, especially where hip-hop, pop and Latin music were concerned.
In some cases, collabs in 2022 saw two titans of the same genre teaming up together. There was Bad Bunny with Rauw Alejandro, Drake with Jack Harlow. There was Rauw Alejandro, again, with Shakira, and Drake, again, with 21 Savage. And then there was pop royalty of different decades unifying for one epic remix. (Props to Elton John and Britney Spears.)
In other cases, some of the year’s notable collabs featured two artists from different styles coming together for one amazing track. Dua Lipa brought her dance-pop flair to Megan Thee Stallion‘s rap prowess on the latter’s “Sweetest Pie” from August album Traumazine, and Charlie Puth had one of K-pop’s biggest stars, BTS‘ Jung Kook, join him on his single “Left and Right.”
“With everything that it takes to make hits, to be able to share those moments with other artists is just beautiful,” Future, one of this year’s biggest serial collaborators, previously told Billboard about his projects with artists such as Drake, Gunna and Young Thug. “Just being able to get there in the studio, gel with other artists well and be able to come up with songs is special.”
Keep reading to see Billboard‘s roundup of some 2022’s biggest collaborations below — and hey, maybe even grab a friend to read it with you.
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