KENDRICK LAMAR and SZA: ‘BLACK PANTHER’ Lawsuit Over Song
Kendrick Lamar and SZA were monumentally huge artists and that’s what propelled the soundtrack for “Black Panther” … not a 19-second clip an artist claims was a rip-off of her artwork.
Kendrick and SZA just filed legal docs asking a judge to give Lena Iris Viktor the boot in her lawsuit which claims Kendrick and Co. ripped off her artwork in the music video for “All the Stars.”
Kendrick and SZA claim in the new docs … even if the artwork in the video was a rip-off, she’s not entitled to the profits they made from the song because “common sense and logic dictate that the alleged 19 second use of the artwork in the video” is not what generated the success of the song.
The duo goes on to say the success of the album is the result of his “worldwide popularity as well as numerous accolades, including a Pulitzer Prize and dozens of Grammys.”
Kendrick and SZA also give credit for the album’s success to the incredible cultural impact of the “Black Panther” flick.
Article via: KENDRICK LAMAR & SZA: ‘BLACK PANTHER’ LAwsuit Over Song
Childish Gambino Shares 2 New “Summer” Songs: Listen
Donald Glover returns with “Summertime Magic” and “Feels Like Summer”
Donald Glover is back with more new Childish Gambinomusic. Glover has shared a pair of new songs, “Summertime Magic” and “Feels Like Summer,” this morning. Check them out below. They appear on streaming services under the title Summer Pack, and will also be on his upcoming fourth studio album, his first under new label Wolf+Rothstein/RCA.
Glover previously debuted a song called “Saturday” on the “SNL” episode for which he was both host and musical guest. Also on the episode, Glover performed his single “This Is America,” which received a political Hiro Murai-directed visual.
This fall, Childish Gambino heads out on tour with Rae Sremmurd and Vince Staples. He is also set to perform new music during the New Zealand edition of his Pharos live experience in November. Glover has previously said that the next Childish Gambino will be the last under that name, explaining, “I think endings are good because they force things to get better.”
Read “What Does Atlanta Hip-Hop Think of ‘Atlanta’ the Show?” on the Pitch.
Article via: Childish Gambino Shares 2 New “Summer” Songs
Elfen’s NEW Neosoul Hip Hop Music Tuesday presents E. Jones REVISTED
As of 2019 I still bang my head to this album!
This week I found a headbanger of an hip hop album! Peeping at Spice Adams FB Fan Page I saw he was featuring E. Jones in one of his skits Anthony Spice Adams is a true underground hip hop head. He listens to anything 9th wonder. Anything old school hip hop and underground. But I’m straying away from this DOPE ASS album Deadstock vol 2 from E. Jones.
I know some of ya’ll may disagree with sampling. I call it an art. To take a song like I found love on a two way street and add a Funky beat and loop the Chorus O M G. All 22 tracks are just 52 minutes of deliciousness. I’ve been listening to E. Jones all weekend and most of today. TRUST ME this is the dopist album so far this year.
Elfen’s Neosoul Hip Hop New Music Tuesday Black Thought Streams of Thoughts Vol 1 EP
This week I felt a little militant and discovered Black thoughts new EP album Stream thoughts. Who is Black Thought? He’s is the lead MC of the hip hop group The Roots. Black Thought has done several collabos through the years. This I believe is his first solo. His polictical 16 bars are hard and fast. I’ve been listening to his album all weekend. All 5 tracks are lyrically sound. Trust me you won’t be disappointed.
The Carters Have Some Competition: Ashanti and Ja Rule Have an Album in the Works
Who would have thought that Ashanti and Ja Rule would be coming for the Carters?
Jay-Z and Beyoncé always come out on top; the pair currently have the No. 2 spot on Billboard’s Top 200 Albums, but it looks as if they’ll soon have some “competition.”
According to an Entertainment Tonight interview at the BET Awards, Ashanti and Ja Rule have been thinking about recording a joint album.
“Listen, me and Rule, it’s so funny because we’ve been talking about that for so long, but I think now he’s like, ‘OK, now it’s time to do it,’” Ashanti said.
She added that they’d be freeing up their schedule to work on the project. “So we’re going to carve out the time and make it happen,” Ashanti said.
Ja Rule put out a tweet Saturday, suggesting that he and Ashanti should also do a joint album…..
READ MORE———> https://thegrapevine.theroot.com/the-carters-have-some-competition-ashanti-and-ja-rule-1827145323?utm_medium=socialflow&utm_source=theroot_facebook
Iconnic… The Carters… New album is dope!!! @ashanti I think we should do one of these joint albums haha… #fortheculture #iminspired #iconn 👑 rp https://t.co/fKFl76CiRf https://t.co/BrOivmx0C8
— Ja Rule (@jarule) June 23, 2018
Now let me remind or introduce ya’ll who these two are….
Elfen’s EXTRA EXTRA DOPE NEOSOUL HIP HOP MUSIC VIDEO A Tribe Called Quest The Space Program
A Message from ATCQ. From their 2016 album We got it from here…. thank you for your service. The Space Program.
The Secret History Of One Of The Most Sampled Albums Of All Time
In July, members of Vinyl Me, Please Classics will receive the first official U.S. release — with the original artwork — of Lafayette Afro-Rock Band’s Soul Makossa, the debut LP from a cracking U.S. funk band that recorded in France and which provided the backbone for much of early rap music. You can can sign up here.
In 1971, the Bobby Boyd Congress fled Long Island due to funk saturation and fear of death. Both were ineluctable realities that could torment any band aspiring to breakthrough in a New York City convulsing with kinetic break beats, opiate addiction, and the casket lottery of the Vietnam draft. So in the tradition of Josephine Baker and James Baldwin, the band decamped for the city of lights.
No one would mistake the Paris of 1971 for a funk mecca. The suave chansons of Jacques Brel and Serge Gainsbourg’s Lolita-lite baroque pop ruled the airwaves as a Gaullist government attempted to erase the lingering specter of 1968’s near-revolution. The change offered the Roosevelt natives the potential for adventure and opportunities ostensibly occluded in a five boroughs world controlled by funk linchpins, Mandrill, the Fatback Band and B.T. Express.
Things didn’t go as planned. Despite his prodigious gifts as a singer, songwriter, saxophone player and bandleader, Bobby Boyd failed to even become the most famous musician named Bobby Boyd (a Texan country songwriter outranks him). His eponymous 1971 debut later became a holy grail of rare groove fetching up to 1500 Euro’s a copy, but the limited edition run of 300 vanished into the Gauloises-wreathed attics of the left bank. Swiftly reconsidering his decision to expatriate, Boyd returned to American anonymity, leaving his band to parse the New Wave wanderings of a post-Weekend world.
The Americans in Paris established their habitué inside the clubs of the Barbes district, a swath of the 18th arrondissement largely populated by North African immigrants. Amidst the avenues of vegetable stalls and halal butchers, kebab stands and African hair salons, the New Yorkers conjured a vulcanized funk, durable and lubricious, adopting the ras el hanout of the neighborhood to their loose-limbed American swing. Discovery was imminent and arrived via a peripatetic Parisian harmonica player who had once attempted to teach French to a pre-adolescent Stevie Wonder under the orders of Berry Gordy.
His name was Pierre Jaubert, a raconteur whose storied resume almost reads like a one-man “Losing My Edge.” The stories bequeathed seem almost too surreal to be true. He was in Detroit in 1962, teaching Lil Stevie how to sing in French and turning down Gordy’s offer to run Motown’s international operations (Pierre hated the idea of being in an office). He met Smokey Robinson and watched the sorcery of Motown’s in-house Merlin, Norman Whitfield, brewing masterpieces inside that converted house studio, Hitsville USA, with low-hanging ceilings and a grand piano. He rubbed shoulders with Marvin Gaye and flirted with a teenaged Diana Ross, before “settling” for Mary Wells.
He was in Chicago to witness the birth of Windy City soul, catching the nascent sessions of Curtis Mayfield and Phil Upchurch and the Dells. If you listen close on some of those Kennedy-era spells, he once claimed you could hear him breathing. Then sometime shortly before the Age of Aquarius took hold, he returned to Paris because in America, everything seemed to be at “right angles.”
The story somehow only gets more random. In Paris, Jaubert doubles down on his jazz roots, laying down tracks with Charlie Mingus and Archie Shepp. He doesn’t merely dabble in the blues, he commences sessions with John Lee Hooker and Memphis Slim. On a return sojourn to America, a chance encounter with a Bay Area packing clerk named John Fogerty leads to the discovery of Creedence Clearwater Revival.
“The subsequent alchemy would yield a grease fire funk classic that became one of the most sampled albums in hip-hop history.”
“He told me, oh I have a group,” Jaubert recalled in 2011. “I heard his tape. It was very good. So when I spoke to Saul [Zaentz, the owner], I said, ‘Hey, the guy who is working for you, you should record him.’ So that is how Creedence Clearwater Revival ended up on Fantasy records.”
As a reward for ushering “Proud Mary” into the world, Jaubert successfully finessed the rights for a friend to release CCR’s music in France. That victory led to Jaubert being given free rein to indulge any sonic whim. This is when the Lafayette Afro-Rock Band finally glides into the mise en scene.
In the wake of their front man’s flight, the one-time Congress rebranded themselves as “Ice,” an alias they were still using when Jaubert received a phone call from a friend. Said friend had a studio and recognized Ice’s talent, but didn’t know what to do with an American soul-funk crew. So he called up his friend Jaubert, the house producer at Parisound Studios. In Jaubert’s 2011 recollection, the call went a little something like this: “Look, I have these guys from New York. Please take these guys. I don’t want to see them again. They want money for their music, please take care of that. Bye Bye.”
Money was a practical consideration almost entirely absent from the subsequent proceedings. Their initial foray with Jaubert, Each Man Makes His Own Destiny, flopped miserably. The music was fine, but it was commercial kryptonite. If not for a chance conversation with the Cameroonian afro-funk legend, Mani Dibango, it’s possible that it would’ve been the last anyone ever heard of the transplanted New Yorkers. But Dibango insisted that Jaubert should continue working with them and try to score them a hit. First, there was the matter of their name.
“I could not call it Ice, because first legally you cannot register the name Ice. There are many names like this that you cannot record under or register commercially. That is why you have so many variations. Ice Cube, Ice T, everybody is using Ice,” Jaubert said in 2011. “I thought, I’ll make a name that is easy to register to record under. In France we use complicated names, so the Lafayette Afro-Rock band, that name was kind of complicated. So I invented that and registered the name immediately. It was a group that did not exist. There was no such group as [The] Lafayette Afro-Rock Band. I had to invent them.”
Inspired by what he’d learned from Gordy, Jaubert conceived the Lafayette players as a rotating ensemble that could double as the Parisound house band — the Gallic equivalent of Motown’s Funk Brothers. Jaubert owned the name and swapped in a fungible cast of guest players, but the core trinity was comprised of Frank Abel, the keyboard player and pianist; Michael McEwan, the electric guitar player; and Arthur Young, who handled drums and percussion. The subsequent alchemy would yield a grease fire funk classic that became one of the most sampled albums in hip-hop history.
Source: http://www.vinylmeplease.com/magazine/classics-soul-makossa-july-18/
Elfen’s Neosoul Hip Hop New Music Tuesday Flux By Deca
I have always been drawn to creative. The mad crazy artist. Music with a rhythm and a beat brings out my words, sentances and phrases for a blog, a quote or a poem. This weeks what’s new to me is old to you. What old to you is new to me comes from Deca. Deca’s new album flux. Gives you that instrumental hip hop flow. With a head bobbin’ beat. Say what you want about sampling. The samples he uses are EVERYTHING.
DECA BIO
Deca makes use of an experimental style as a doorway to a stylistic everchanging evolution and not as a goal in itself. Great inventor of oneiric charms, he was at first inspired by the cosmic school and later he created his personal alchemy of tradition and innovation, blending natural and synthetic sounds. He has found inspiration in different musical genres but always remaining elusively versatile, so as not to be easily identified in one particular style.
He is an eclectic performer, his music ranges from pure electronic to a minimalist pianist-oriented style, but he doesn’t like to follow trends, he rather changes continuously following his own path and tries to avoid the mainstream. A path which began in predictable ways (descriptive music, techno-pop) and then led him to compose the more complex and cryptic, obscure concept-albums he has since produced. Famous music critics and musicians appreciate some Deca’s works as important chapters of electronic sound evolution, putting titles as “Simbionte” inside the gotha of contemporary avantgarde artists.
One of his recognized peculiarities is a great mastery of the sound: in his compositions he creates and works, almost with a manic care, on the tones and he often ends up with embryonic ideas for other future albums. He often has been defined as a sound alchemist.
He has been part of the international electronic and industrial scenes for twenty years now, but he has always preferred to make editorial choices without compromising his individuality in the slightest, with a limited production of records addressed to an audience of lovers and collectors and a distribution reduced to specialized routes. He has also contributed to other projects as well, involving himself in different artistic fields: for example in theatre, cinema, multimedia, even to ballet and giving shape to his personal research into the contamination of the genres.
He has an MA degree and one in geography, he studied classical piano for long years and has become quite versatile with the synthesizer in the studio as well as on stage. His career began back in the 80s, and while playing the piano on a mainly classical basis he made use of sequencers and electronic sounds. He then developed his first recordings in his first two official albums.
Deca is hardcore band from Vrnjačka Banja, Serbia. It consists of four sick maderfakers: Luka, Ivan, Ognjen and Miša. Band was formed in 2010 and they’re still thrashin’ and smashin’.
Bio Source: https://www.last.fm/music/Deca/+wiki
Wooooow, Cardi Really Got Married Out Here
CARDI B AND OFFSET SECRETLY MARRIED LAST YEAR!!!
Many of the Becardi Gang suspected that Offset was an opportunist and that he was not that interested in Cardi outside of the hip-hop couple image they could project together.
Of course many speculated that this union would not last. But then Cardi turned up pregnant despite his numerous affairs:
And now TMZ is reporting that Cardi and Offset got married last year.
“There are so many moments that I share with the world and then there are moments that I want to keep for myself! Getting married was one of those moments! Our relationship was so new breaking up and making up and we had a lot of growing up to do but we was so in love we didn’t want to lose each other.”
She continues, “I said I do, with no dress no make up and no ring! I appreciate and love my husband so much for still wanting for me to have that special moment that every girl dreams of when he got down on his knee and put a ring on my finger and he did that for me!!
TMZ did some digging and found out they got a marriage certificate in Fulton County, GA on Sept. 20, 2017. For you single folks … the marriage certificate is filed with the court AFTER a couple does the deed as proof the marriage really happened.
When Migos won Best Group Sunday at the BET Awards, Offset said excitedly, “I thank my wife. You should thank yours.”
The secret marriage puts a new perspective on their big public engagement. You’ll recall, Offset got down on one knee back in October during their performance in Philly.
Turns out … Offset and Cardi are a true showbiz couple ’cause that was all for show. Now, we know they were already husband and wife for a month at that point.
Now, all we’re waiting on is for Cardi to drop that baby!
Article via: Cardi B Is Married