Tuesday, 27 May 2008

Shawty Lo Says T.I. 'Ain't No Jay-Z'; Ne-Yo Hopes To Make Collab Album With Fabolous: Mixtape Monday




Artist: Ace Hood

Representing: Miami

Mixtape: Ace Won't Fold

411: Ace Hood says his name means he's a force to be reckoned with. "Every time you think of 'ace,' you think of 'one.' I always took myself as an army within itself.

"This whole mixtape, I gave them a series of different looks," he added about his new mixtape, Ace Won't Fold. "I can swag it either way, not just giving them one perspective of me."

Ace is the lead artist from DJ Khaled's We the Best Records and has the stupidly hot "Cash Flow" song out with T-Pain and Rick Ross. He got along with Khaled by being a professional. The charismatic spinner had already heard of Ace's reputation through the underground circuit, but Hood met the DJ at a Miami radio station and brought him a package with a demo, picture and bio — none of that "Put me on, son!" crap.

"The music I provided him with and the bio was an extra boost," Hood said. "When he heard it, he was like, 'Yeah, and hit my manager back.' He was like, 'I like his swag. I wanna hear him on a bigger record.' "

Khaled sent him "I'm So Hood" just to see how he would sound over that, and Ace served the track. A couple of weeks later, he was signed to Khaled's label. A couple of weeks after that, he was inked to Def Jam.

"When I seen him, I seen that star glow in him," Khaled said. "He made me stop. I heard the music, and I was like, 'He's gonna be one of the best.' When I vibed with him, he fits in with the family immediately. It feels good to bring the future to life."

Ace's Gutter LP comes out August 26.

"That's just a representation of me. The bottom," Ace explained of the album. "It represents [Florida's] Dade County, Broward County. We can be fly at moments in that Louis V, but we can kick it in the white tee. I felt that way right out the womb: gutter."

Rick Ross, T-Pain, Plies, DJ Nasty, Justice league and Flo Rida are all onboard. Ace's second single is the title track, which features Trick Daddy.

Joints To Check For

» "Collection Plate." "That's a big cut," Hood said. "It's relevant. It kind of throws them off. If you have a pile of money, that's your collection plate. It's an offering song. It's relevant to what's going on. Like 'Cash Flow,' we're coming to see you. This is our collection plate: Put your offerings in."

» "400 Degrees." "It was just a ride-out record," Ace said. "It was just how I was feeling. I was feeling fly at that moment. We was just swaggin'. I felt so proper in the booth that day. 'First off, it's a rich ni--a that you lookin' at/ Ace Hood making movies like Cinemax.' I went in the booth, no pad, no pen. Let me get 'em."

» "We Here." "That's the introduction to you nonbelievers," Ace said. "Just in case they didn't know who I was, that 'Dunn Dunn' beat goes hard. It's the type of record that everything you say is heard clear because it's not too much going on with the beat. The beat is big. Shouts out to Shawty Lo, he's doing his thing.

'Hood's Heavy Rotation: Bubbling Below The Radar

» CNN (featuring the Clipse, Tha Dogg Pound, Maino and Uncle Murda) - "My Hood" remix

» Dame Grease - "9's Out"

» Maino - "Getaway Driver"

» N.E.R.D. - "Spazz"

» Ne-Yo - "Nobody"

» Uncle Murda - "Anybody Can Get It"

Celebrity Faves

At least Ne-Yo isn't trying to gas us up. Unlike a lot of other celebs who have hyped up huge collaboration LPs and not delivered (a Lil Wayne/ T-Pain LP is a big rumor floating around), he's talking realistically about the Best of Both Worlds-type LP that he and his good friend Fabolous have been thinking about.

"We've been talking about doing some stuff," Ne-Yo explained. "For whatever reason, me and Fab, our energies together make a lot of sense. Our voices sound good together, and it works out. So who knows? Jay and R. tried it. For whatever reason, it didn't exactly go the way it was supposed to go. Maybe we will try it. We have been definitely talking about it, but nothing is set in stone. So don't hold your breath waiting on that album, but don't assume it's just not gonna happen. It's possible."

Don't Sleep: Other Notable Selections This Week

» DJ P Exclusivez and Young Buck - My Interview

» DJ Diggz and DJ Rated R - The Most Infamous

» DJ Spinatik and Lil Wayne - Got What U Need Pt. 2

» P Cutta - Street Wars 21

» Superstar Jay - My Award Speech

The Streets Is Talking: News & Notes From The Underground

Well, now that the elephant in the room has been addressed, everyone can move to the next phase. No, this has nothing to do with Fat Joe and his feud with the G-Unit — we're talking about the long-brewing back-and-forth between T.I. and Shawty Lo.

T.I. recently told MTV News that he was calling out Lo on "No Matter What." Then, when Tip had a phone interview with an Atlanta radio station recently, he compared the D4L founder to a canine. "It's like a dog barking and howling at the moon," T.I. told radio station 92Q Jamz. "That dog don't even know why he's barking and howling at the moon. The moon don't care. The moon is so far away. The dog can't touch the moon. The dog cant shut the moon off. He just sits there. Eventually the dog will get tired of barking and he, too, has to admire the moon as it shines. Just let the moon shine, dog."

"He ain't no moon," Lo responded. "I feel like he ain't no Jay-Z or nobody like that. He's the clouds, but I ride through clouds every day. He gotta meet me eye to eye. I can't beat him at arguing. He's like a girl. A girl will win an argument every time.

"His name ain't Tip, it's 'T. Lie,' " Lo continued via cell from Atlanta. "Yeah, T. Lie. That's his name."

While Lo rapped on "Dunn Dunn" that Tip should acknowledge him, he didn't mean like this. "We ain't finnin' to hint no more. We ain't gotta hint no more," Shawty said about the subliminal bantering between the two.

Lo said it all started around the time Tip dropped his "King" song. Lo had another song with "king" in the title and even tried to collaborate with T.I. He says Tip turned him down and made reference to it on "Big Sh-- Poppin' " with the line: "I said it on 'King,' and them lames started laughin'/ And same suckers now want the King on a track with 'em."

Still, Lo insisted that he wasn't really sweating it too tough. He said he even enjoyed T.I. as a rapper. "He did put Bankhead [the rappers' shared Atlanta neighborhood] on the map. I can't take that away from him," Shawty added. "But he ain't from Bankhead. It wasn't no problem. He was screaming our 'hood. I liked him. ... We ain't have no rapper repping for our 'hood. You had Jermaine [Dupri] and Ludacris from the south side, and then you had people repping for the east side, but nobody for us. He had a pass."

Lo said he's calling T.I. out now because of his lines on "No Matter What." "He disrespected me on a song," Lo said. "Pass over with. Time to tell the truth. He ain't no real street n---a. We been letting him get away with it for a long time. Tell him to come to Bankhead like he went to [Houston neighborhood] Cloverland with [Lil] Flip."

For the record, Tip has brought the MTV News cameras down to Bankhead before, and people did acknowledge him as being from around there.

Lo just released a "Foolish" remix, which features DJ Khaled, Rick Ross, Jim Jones and Baby and he raps, "Cross your T's and dot your I's/ I'm the real Bankhead man, that no lie/ ... I said it before, I'm a real D-boy/ You can't be me, folk."

"I ain't gotta respond," Lo said about his records that go after Tip. "I ain't trying to get in no battle rap with T. Lie. That's what he do; he's a rapper. I'm a street n---a. I'm a trapper. I really lived it. I got 28 arrests, four convictions. My name is Carlo Walker — look it up." ...

While Rocko's claim that he's "the best thing since electricity" is still up for debate, the Atlanta thoroughbred is staying committed to his grassroots game plan of gaining plans. He's hitting several markets in promotion of his debut album, Self-Made, performing twice a day sometimes.

His "Tomorrow" video was recently released and "Umma Do Me" is getting regular spins, as if it weren't almost a year old ("Dis Morning" is working out well for him on Southern radio as well). And while he's letting fans marinate on his current album, Rocko began working on a second LP. He tells us he's dropping another mixtape in June called Swag School.

"My next mixtape comes out on June 14. I got a release date. I got a whole campaign around it," Rocko said. "Like how my single started off in Atlanta, I'm using that same formula. I got this mixtape called Swag School. I start it off, first song I take them to school. Anytime somebody mentions the South and swag, my name comes up in the same sentence. I said I'mma capitalize off that. ... My new mixtape, it'll have a few exclusives from my upcoming project, and I'm dropping more records for the ladies. ... I'm really a ladies' man, and at the same time, I represent the streets and the struggle, 'cause I'm a new artist. But I can't shake these ladies, and I know that."

Rocko said the ladies outnumber the men 10-to-1 at his shows. ...

Will "Thanksgiving" drop somewhere around Turkey Day? Mr. Thanksgiving, DJ Drama, is in the midst of putting together a follow-up to his official Gangsta Grillz album that was released last year. Barack O'Drama has the end of 2008 as his tentative due date for the next one. Prior to that, though, his Aphilliate Music Group will be releasing solo album by brothers La the Darkman and Willie the Kid.

"When you look at the success of my album and the numbers I did compared to the mainstream exposure I may have had, I did good," Drama told us in Atlanta. "My album, from beginning to end, is quality hip-hop music. I'm very excited about it. It's only right that I'mma go back in. I already started working on the new one. I'mma put an album out, try to get it done before the end of the year. You're gonna see everybody on there, of course. The Aphilliate movement is crazy. We just put the La the Darkman mixtape out, The Notorious L.A.D. La and Will, the two of them as a duo is crazy. You don't see that a lot in hip-hop."

And now, a little something from Rick Ross: He's a fan of the "Hottest MCs" show. We know you are as well. To see how the 2008 roundtable panned out, tune in to MTV on Friday at 10 p.m. ET to see the special "The Hottest MCs in the Game." Log on to MTVNews.com directly afterward to see a more in-depth analysis of the MCs who made the list.






See Also

Sunday, 18 May 2008

Avalon

Avalon   
Artist: Avalon

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   Metal: Progressive
   



Discography:


Avalon   
 Avalon

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 12


Eurasia   
 Eurasia

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 12


Vision Eden   
 Vision Eden

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 10




 






Thursday, 8 May 2008

James Lavelle

James Lavelle   
Artist: James Lavelle

   Genre(s): 
Electronic
   



Discography:


Fabriclive Series 01   
 Fabriclive Series 01

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 1




Experimental rap outfit U.N.K.L.E. were i of the original artists releasing material through noted U.K. label Mo'Wax, which helped launch the instrumental mid-'90s downtempo breakbeat resurgence finally termed trip-hop. Though just the label's highest profile chemical substance mathematical group, U.N.K.L.E. book of Numbers among its members label-head James Lavelle, world Health Organization formed Mo'Wax spell still in his teens as an antidote to the increasingly dusty sulphurous jazz/Northern Soul pic. Denudation the music down to its barest of essentials -- bass, percussion, minimum samples and heavy personal effects -- the Mo'Wax sound (best exemplified by the second Mo'Wax label comp, Headz, as substantially as its sequel, the bipartite Headz 2) apace gained reputability and a big consultation. Although not as fertile as other Mo'Wax artists such as DJs Shadow and Krush, Lavelle's chemical substance chemical group still played a totally important role in cementing Mo'Wax's betimes sound though their Fourth dimension Has Amount two times EP, the latter of which featured remixes of the title of respect racetrack by Plaid, Portishead, and U2 producer Howie B.


The chemical substance group comprises the trio of Lavelle, Tim Goldsworthy -- a pit of Lavelle's since puerility -- and producer Kudo, of seminal Japanese label Major Force (and a member of the on-again, off-again psychedelic beat work party Skylab). Previous to his entree into product, Lavelle along with Goldsworthy was deep into Freshly House of York rap and electro, the emerging late-'80s Sheffield beep shot, the English elvis malarky view (which he covered as a editorialist for Straight No Pursuer magazine), and of line the elvis business firm and techno explosions that were redefining the Side counterculture at the time. The mate hooked up with third-member Kudo through and through the growing rep of the latter's Love T.K.O. project. whose outbound interpretations of breakbeat and loony toons idle words whoremaster John Drew Lavelle's ear. Spell Goldsworthy and Kudo persist more heavily mired in nuts'n'bolts production (especially granted the winner of Mo'Wax, with Lavelle writing an talkative partial possession cover with A&M Records in 1996), Lavelle is heavy knotty in the conceptual and organisational end, crafting beat up coevals and eggs laying out vague sketches his partners then spread come out of the closet into full-blown tracks. Disdain the scarceness of released material, U.N.K.L.E. get fully grown to wider clap recently through and through and through remix projects for the Jon Spencer Blue devils Explosion and Tortoise. An album is referable formerly in 1998. Trey days later, Lavelle issued his debut album Fabriclive.01, a to a greater extent or less a retrospective of his popular setlists from his residency at the illustrious Greater London clubhouse, Cloth. He marked his debut for Global Metro in 2002 with the stylish Global Underground: Barcelona going away. His mo installment in the series, Global Resistance: Romania followed 2 long time later.






Friday, 2 May 2008

Sophie B. Hawkins

Sophie B. Hawkins   
Artist: Sophie B. Hawkins

   Genre(s): 
Other
   



Discography:


Tongues and Tails   
 Tongues and Tails

   Year: 1992   
Tracks: 11




 





Bolt Thrower

Behind the scenes with Matchbox Twenty

Behind the scenes with Matchbox Twenty





THE FL rockers' Australian turn has been a resounding success. But how did it happen? What goes on backstage, in the fertilization rooms and corridors the fans never get to see?

Rob Seth Thomas is drenched in sudor. ‘‘That was goodness,'' he says, grinning in the direction of guitar player Saint Paul Doucette. Bassist Brian Elihu Yale runs up the stairs behindhand his singer. ‘‘I couldn't stop laughing,'' Yale tells tour keyboardist/guitarist Jeff Russo.
Pictures: To a greater extent exclusive snaps backstage in Melbourne with Matchbox TwentyThe bay fills with steam from the hexad sweaty rockers who've simply waved bye-bye to their fans, and gathered round a small trolley car of essentials -- cigarettes, beer, Powerade, tea, tissues, chewy, a change of Tee shirt -- to rev themselves up for the encore. ‘‘Deuce to a greater extent shows,'' says guitar player Kyle Ready -- that's how long it should hold before the band gets 1 pesky song right. ‘‘I stuffed up on that 1,'' drummer Ryan MacMillan shakes his head. Radios crepitate. It's encore meter. ‘‘Better Be Home Soon so Bear on, right?'' asks Doucette, heading back towards the stage. The low show of Matchbox Twenty's Australian hitch has been a resounding success. But how did it chance? What goes on backstage, in the dressing rooms and corridors the fans never draw to view? IT'S 3.30pm on present twenty-four hour period when Matchbox Twenty dollar bill come at Rod Laver Sphere. Doucette goes heterosexual person to the main arena, directing the techs as they essay to get quaternity giant star video screens workings. His bandmates conjoin him to soundcheck in front man of an eerily empty scene of action. Cook begins busting out a riff from INXS's Want You Tonight. Then a bit of Hells Bells. Doubting Thomas tries his best Bon Scott voice. Not a goodness theme. At least Matchbox acknowledge which country they're in. The striation run through bits of their hits as techs put ears to speakers. Saint Thomas checks his Blackberry 'tween every sung, and jokes just about the ‘‘depressing turnout''. He sits at the forte-piano. ‘‘I like my volume a little lour, 'cos it makes me play harder,'' he says. Spell wholly of this happens, 13 lucky fans get congregated in the bowels of the Bowl, clutching T-shirts, Expatriation on Mainstream CD covers and inflatable gifts. They'll shortly acquire to encounter the band, world Health Organization like their contact and greets just so: quick picture with from each one bunch of fans, followed by 20-30 minutes of freeform chatting. Fan golf club members Dee, Christine and Kate are glad the elbow room is full of ‘‘real fans''. They've been on board since Long Day, Christine says. She greets Doucette with a breathless: ‘‘We're so glad you're back!'' ‘‘We're gladiolus to be back,'' he replies. Trey hours until stage time. In the US, the band have gymnasium equipment and air hockey set up backstage. No such toys for the boys Knock down Under. Cook is in the dressing room, glued to his MacBook. ‘‘We had a treadmill in the States, so sometimes I'll hit that,'' he says of his pre-show turn. ‘‘Simply no real rituals. It's boring.'' Lavatory anything come about backstage that affects what happens on stage? ‘‘Uh, alcohol,'' Fix says with a laughter. ‘‘Sometimes when you've got crime syndicate . . . just knowing Mum's out in the interview makes me nervous. That throne affect the resultant of the demo if you've got Mum run around, and Nan and Grandfather, you've gotta make sure everybody's got their seating area.'' There ar incessantly friends backstage at shows in the US. In Melbourne, it's a touch town. Even the WAGS (wives and girlfriends) induce taken tonight away. ‘‘It is truly tranquillity indorse here in Australia. Goodness thing we're non bingle any more, it wouldn't be so quiet,'' Cook says, laughing. It appears we've turned up a decade too tardily. If we were backstage at a Matchbox gig in, say, 1999? ‘‘Finish orgy,'' Prepare says. ‘‘It was a little weirdo. At that place was a circle of partying sledding on 10 long time ago. Just no Marilyn Manson sulfur, simply your usual girls, drinks, entirely that.'' These years, it's more about spelling than spilling beer. Cook is updating his MySpace thomas Nelson Page. ‘‘How do you spell appalled? Is it two p's or i p?'' Dylan Marlais Thomas enters, picks up his have MacBook and starts typewriting. He's not updating his MySpace. ‘‘MySpace, Facebook, completely that clobber, it's a rage,'' he declares. ‘‘If you're 35 and you don't experience a stripe, simply you make a MySpace account, you need more friends in your aliveness.'' ‘‘What if you're a i girl?'' Cook asks. ‘‘If you're a grown womanhood and you meet a grown man that has a MySpace business relationship, you shouldn't marry the guy,'' Thomas replies. ‘‘Your future's credibly bleak.'' As stage metre draws closer, Thomas begins to warm up up his song chords, Cook and Doucette grab much-needed trims from an in-house stylist, and the ever-casual Yale puffs on another fag. Ten-spot minutes to go. Matchbox XX begin the walk to the stage. A crowd together of 11,000 people sit only if a stairwell and a mantle away. ‘‘Where's Kyle?'' The other band members are already in place when the guitarist jogs toss off the corridor. He's light-emitting diode out to a stepladder, hidden behindhand a verbalizer stack at stage right. Doucette is doing the lapp at stage left -- he ascends, starts battering out the drum to How Far We've Come. Cook climbs, is handed his guitar, and launches into the riff. Elihu Yale begins bounce on his bass. Lowell Jackson Thomas approaches the mic . . . it's show time. Matchbox XX return for a final Rod Laver Orbit show on Apr 24. Word of God at Ticketek. Expatriate on Mainstream (Warner) come out now.









Lee Ryan denies assault charges

Lee Ryan denies assault charges



Former Blue principal Rose Louise Hovick Ryan has appeared in courtyard today, pleading non guilty to an violation charge.
The 24-year-old singer has denied attacking a taxi driver followers a youngster dealings fortuity in Oxted on New Year's Eve.
Ryan has been ordered to re-emerge at Redhill Magistrates' Court in Surrey for trial on 7 English hawthorn.




Raul Seixas

Diana King

Diana King   
Artist: Diana King

   Genre(s): 
R&B: Soul
   



Discography:


Respect   
 Respect

   Year: 2002   
Tracks: 13


Think Like a Girl   
 Think Like a Girl

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 14


Tougher Than Love   
 Tougher Than Love

   Year: 1995   
Tracks: 11




After her appearance on the Notorious B.I.G.'s 1994 platter album Set to Die, Princess of Wales Billie Jean Moffitt King received a compact with the Work tag end. Antecedently a collaborator of Andrew Tarradiddle, the reggae/dancehall singer released 2 albums during 1995, Tougher Than Love and Shy Guy. Think Like a Girl followed in 1997. International tours pushed her find to the forefront, however King remained small key. She took a few eld off to blow over more prison term with her children. By the fresh millenary, King was in negotiations with Maverick. In 2002, Male monarch issued the funkadelic third record album Obedience.





Death Cab For Cutie Go The Extra Mile (And Then Some) With Eight-Minute 'I Will Possess Your Heart' Video

Corrie's David just 'wants to be loved'

Corrie's David just 'wants to be loved'



'Coronation Street' histrion Jack P Sheepman has claimed that his character reference Jacques Louis David Platt is misunderstood and "just wants to be loved".
According to the show's official site, the doer told InsideSoap Yearbook: "David can do roughly malicious things but I guess he just wants to be loved. He craves a bit of affection."
"He's ne'er had much attention from his mamma, Gail. She was always running round after David's brother, Chip, and Sarah and then she moved on to caring around Bethany, so David just feels like he was pushed to one side," he said.
"He's base that by being bad he gets rafts of attention. That's the only time Gail really notices him."
Shepherd said: "David could go polish a really iniquity way, merely there are different sides to him. David is an emotional theatrical role and he can do comedy - he's quite a a comedian sometimes."
"I think he does cause different dimensions to his character, which makes him so much fun to view. Simply probably his main strength is being a nasty, evil, twisted little git."