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Yasiin Bey & Talib Kweli Detail How Black Star’s Upcoming Album Came To Be

For nearly two years, Hip-Hop fans have heard bits and pieces surrounding a second album by Black Star. In February of 2018, Yasiin Bey (fka Mos Def) told concert-goers in Colorado that he and Talib Kweli were recording. “New Black Star with Madlib, Talib Kweli, Yasiin, coming soon!,” said the MC/singer. He added, “All Madlib, all day. 2018, Madlib, Black Star.” Kweli since corroborated those reports, recently proclaiming that he now listens to the yet-unreleased album regularly. 2018 came and went without new Black Star music. However, the Brooklyn, New York duo celebrated the 20th-anniversary of Mos Def & Talib Kweli Are Black Star with a series of reunion concerts. Since then, Yasiin has released a new album, Negus, as a museum art installation. Additionally, he worked with Kanye West, Kid Cudi, and Robert Glasper as well as an early taste of recent Madlib work thanks to Freddie Gibbs and Otis’ “Education,” also featuring Black Thought. Meanwhile, Talib Kweli has moved into media with his People’s Party show, along with features for Gang Starr, Diamond D, and Brother Ali, to name a few. Talib Kweli Is Recording An Album Produced By Diamond D. Take A Look. (Video) In a Sole DXB panel discussion moderated by Bobbito Garcia and reported on by The National, the two MCs updated fans on the album, while speaking together, side-by-side.

“This new album is ridiculous,” Bey told applauding fans in Dubai. “And I don’t really care if you all don’t like it. This just means we like different things, and that’s fine.” Black Thought, Yasiin Bey, Pharoahe Monch & Tobe Nwigwe Make A New “Live At The BBQ” (Video) Kweli, who has been much more prolific with releasing music over the last decade, says that he felt pressure from fans. “People kept saying, ‘When is the next album coming up,’ so much that it got to a point that for me, personally, I caught myself also [asking] ‘When is the next album out?’ in all my conversations with Yasiin [Bey].” He says of a period around the mid-2010s, “I had to check myself because that can’t just be what our relationship is all about.” Upon a visit to South Africa to his friend, band-mate, and onetime business partner, Kweli approached the time together purely on humanity. “When I went there, I made it a point to not talk about music or Black Star. We have been friends for so long, and I couldn’t remember just breaking bread with Yasiin.” This friendship-focused energy reportedly persisted in hangs throughout Europe in the weeks and months that followed. Kweli says that his rhyme partner’s changes since the late ’90s have an impact on his songwriting. “Because Yasiin is so focused on making sure that what we say with the music is deeper than just patting ourselves on the back and connected to a real compassion, there will be rhymes that I will kick, and he will say ‘ehh…’ because the rhymes are too braggy, and they are too much about me.” After making some revisions, Talib reflects, “Now I feel the new album is good and I really stepped my game up. It’s not that I am always rapping about those things, but he made me realize that I just don’t have to at all.” Talib Kweli Rocks A Rawkus Records In-Store At Fat Beats (AFH TV Video) Not unlike JAY-Z and Kanye West’s 2011 Watch The Throne album, Black Star’s sophomore LP was recorded in hotel rooms using mobile studio technology. Barcelona, Copenhagen, Paris, and Amsterdam reportedly played host to some of the sessions. Yasiin notes that after three songs were made during the Denmark sessions, he felt confident in the momentum of the recording. “That is my template for an album. The first three songs that you record will be the vibe of the whole record. Whatever follows after this will follow the tone of those three.” The pair reveal that comedian Marlon Wayans is among those who have heard the recordings. Madlib & Freddie Gibbs’ Tiny Desk Concert Is An Education On 1 Of 2019’s Best Albums Madlib is replacing a cast of producers including Hi-Tek, Da Beatminerz, J. Rawls, Shawn J. Period, 88-Keys, and others for the 1998 Rawkus Records LP. Videos of Talib Kweli, including freestyles and interviews, are available at AFH TV. We are currently offering free 7-day trial subscriptions. Music from Yasiin Bey and Madlib is presently on the official Ambrosia For Heads Playlist.

Source: AmbrosiaForHeads.com

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Talib Kweli Is Recording An Album Produced By Diamond D. Take A Look. (Video)

Earlier this year, Diamond D released his latest album, The Diam Piece 2. On that LP, “The Zone” features Talib Kweli as well as Terror Van Pooh, and Niko Is. The Bronx, New York producer, MC, and DJ and the Brooklyn, New York MC, entrepreneur, and show host have some history together, including “The Truth” on Pharoahe Monch’s Internal Affairs, which also had Common as a guest. On the first Diam Piece volume, Kweli and Skyzoo guested on “Where’s The Love.” This morning (November 25), Diamond confirmed with Ambrosia For Heads that he and Kweli are creating a collaborative project. Revealing that the two are already eight songs deep, the D.I.T.C. veteran shared a two-minute video that shows Talib listening to the playback of one of the tracks. It features Kweli using wordplay to big up Diggin’ In The Crates. Twista & A-F-R-O Bridge 2 Generations Of Rapid Fire Flows To A Diamond D Beat (Video) Previously, Diamond produced a full-length for Brand Nubian’s Sadat X, 2017’s The Sum Of A Man. For The Diam Piece 2, Diamond has released videos, including “Maintaining” featuring Lord Tariq, Peter Gunz, and a-Kash, “I Can’t Lose” with Elzhi and Blake Moses, “Watch Yo Back” alongside Buckshot, General Steele, and Rockness. More recently, Diamond gave fans visuals for “Bodied,” featuring David Banner, Big Rec, and Edson Sean as well as “Hold Up,” featuring A-F-R-O, Dillon, and Twista. Talib Kweli Says The New Black Star Album With Madlib Is Done Earlier this year, Diamond D spoke at length with AFH TV about The Diam Piece 2. He also recalled his years working with many Rawkus Records artists, including Kweli’s Black Star co-founder Mos Def. D also described early years around Madlib, who is producing Black Star’s first album in more than 20 years. We are currently offering free 7-day trial subscriptions.

Source: AmbrosiaForHeads.com

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Talib Kweli & El-P Recall Rawkus Records Taking A Chance On Underground Hip-Hop

Run The Jewels and Company Flow co-founder El-P is the latest guest on Talib Kweli’s The People’s Party Podcast, with co-host Jasmin Leigh. The two natives of Brooklyn, New York have plenty of history together, including Hip Hop For Respect. They were label-mates at Rawkus Records during an inflection point in both artist’s careers, making albums that galvanized an iconic underground Hip-Hop label that reached the mainstream. The two men relive some history from the mid-1990s when each hungry Hip-Hop artist found a home that was down to put out music by their respective groups. Ahead of the 30:00 mark, El-P remembers working at Lower Manhattan’s Tower Records with Co Flow band-mate Bigg Jus. Notably, some years later, Kweli recalls a job selling incense and oils outside that same Lafayette Street music store. El recalls Company Flow using Tower’s postage to ship demo materials to record labels. “We’d take our money that we earned there, and we’d go record at night,” he remembers of early songs like “8 Steps To Perfection” and others. The trio (also including New Jersey producer/DJ Mr. Len) had room on the 12″ recording. That birthed the eight songs on 1996 Official Records’ Funcrusher. “That was literally as simple as it was,” El says. “Why are we just putting a song and an instrumental on this piece of plastic? It’s gonna cost the same amount of money to put eight of these songs on here.” Talib Kweli Says The New Black Star Album With Madlib Is Done Talib brings up the years that followed. “[You and I] were signed to Rawkus at the same time. Black Star was more jazzy, melodic. We were in the same circles, in terms of crews, but sonically, not so [much]. Did you ever feel like there was a competition between Company Flow and Black Star? Because we were operating in the same spaces and sort of vying for the same fan-base, just different sides of people’s brain.” El responds with what appears to be a joke, “Nah. The only time I ever thought there was a competition was when you got to the B.D.P beat before me. I was like, ‘F*ck those dudes.’ I was mad about that one.” He is referring to DJ Hi-Tek’s “Definition” track for Black Star, which samples Boogie Down Productions’ “The P Is Free (Remix).” El continues, “I think my influences were really rooted in sh*t like B.D.P, and [Public Enemy], and Run-D.M.C., and old Schoolly D, and Fat Boys, sh*t like that, and Slick Rick—big, big Hip-Hop records with stabs. To this day, that’s kinda my thing.” Kweli then reflects, “Like, we weren’t as lo-fi as a Madlib, but it was definitely a warm, fuzzier thing that we were doing.” “For sure,” El agrees. “And that’s why it worked. That’s why we coexisted. Because, to be fair, it never felt like a competition. You were always doing your thing. The thing about that period of time, and that era, which was so special, is that there were so many people doing different sh*t. The ones that really stood one—the ones that ended up being some of the groups that we’d call defining of that era, I think Company Flow is included, and I know Black Star is, and I know there’s a couple others—everybody had their slot that they filled that created this picture. There’s a lot going on in this movement. There was. You remember the open mics and sh*t; everybody would get up and have a style, and everyone was into that different style.” Evil Dee Details What Led To The Demise Of Rawkus Records Talib continues, “For me, when I got to Rawkus, what was exciting about [the label] to me was [Missin’ Linx member] Black Attack was there, and Shabaam [Sahdeeq] was there, and Sir Menelik was there; I wasn’t familiar with Menelik, but I was familiar with Kool Keith, and Company Flow was there. Y’all established it before we got there.” “I feel like Rawkus co-opted this whole ‘independent as f*ck’ thing.” El responds, “I think that Rawkus certainly recognized it, and I think they had the ability to do something about it.” El says that Company Flow came up with the mantra while hand-designing artwork at a kitchen table using glue-sticks. It would eventually become a moniker in the late 1990s and early 2000s Rap underground. Kweli recalls being introduced to Rawkus co-founder Jarret Myer, who produces The People’s Party through then-Fugees affiliate John Forté. “I remember Jarret and Brian [Brater], these two white guys from Brown University, they came to the hood—they came to Crown Heights, and John Forté was there. Everybody was rhyming their ass off; everybody had a blunt and a 40 [ounce beer]. Everybody was trying to get a record deal, rhyming their ass off. At this point, I don’t even think that they had y’all yet. I remember John Forté being like, ‘Why ain’t you rappin’?’ I’m like, ‘This indie label sh*t? I’m trying to get to a major.'” The Reflection Eternal and Black Star co-founder continues, “A short two years later, now my girl is pregnant, now I lost my job. Mos Def [aka] Yasiin Bey comes to me, he’s like, ‘Yo, I think I’ma do a single with these Rawkus dudes.’ I’m like, ‘Jarret and Brian?’ He’s like, ‘Yeah; they gave me some money.’ I’m like, ‘They gave you some money? [Laughs] How much money they give you?’ My whole thought pattern changed.” El-P, J-Live & Breeze Brewin Rap At Fat Beats’ Grand Opening (AFH TV Video) “Meeting those guys, it was very interesting, and I think Jarret can attest to this. Basically, we were having a moment in the underground, but we had very quickly—through people like Stretch & Bobbito—we had started to get a lot of attention, just from the little music that we had put out.” An assortment of major and independent labels took an interest in the New York-New Jersey trio. “Rawkus were the ones who said yes to what we thought it should look like. We were like, ‘We want to do this, and we want to own the masters. We want a 50/50 deal. And we don’t want to promise more than one album, ’cause we don’t know how it’s gonna work out. At the time, these were ludicrous thoughts. At the time, there was no [artist leverage]. We went into these guys’ offices and said the same thing that we’d said to other [labels, and they agreed]. I think that was a really genuine place for us to jump off with that sh*t. Because if they’re in that head-space where they respect that idea, and they’re willing, also, to give us money, then these guys are serious. So when you say the co-opting of the [‘independent as f*ck’ mantra], I think what they did was they [finalized] or expanded the thought. We had the thought of ‘independent as f*ck,’ the thing that became a rallying cry in our collective. We helped define that attitude.” El expands, “There was no independent record label system for dudes like us. Either you were on a major or you just were going around to different places freestyling—Washington Square Park or Nuyorican [Poets Café]. There was no middle-ground. Rawkus became the first step for a middle-ground. [They were] the first people to recognize and say—and they felt the same way that I did, politically—’this stuff actually has a monetary future. We can actually sell this, and not take this and try and change it.'” He expounds that the label offered a step apart from the politics and nepotism of the old-guard label system. El-P and Company Flow broke from Rawkus. El launched Definitive Jux Records, another heralded 2000s imprint. Juss created Subversive, and Len opened his Dummy Smacks company. Talib, who remained with Rawkus until the label was sold, has co-founded labels, including Blacksmith and Javotti Media. While both El and Talib criticized their former label on wax at times, they seemingly look back at the imprint’s positive qualities more than 20 years after signing. 10 Things You May Not Know About Rawkus Records (Audio) Elsewhere in the interview, El-P describes Zack De La Rocha living and recording with him in the days following the Rage Against The Machine breakup. He also remembers Def Jux, and confirms that Rick Rubin is not producing Run The Jewels’ fourth album. Last week, Talib Kweli confirmed that Black Star’s sophomore album, which is reportedly produced by Madlib, is completed. Talib Kweli Rocks A Rawkus Records In-Store At Fat Beats (AFH TV Video) Videos from Rawkus Records-era Talib Kweli and El-P are available at AFH TV. We are currently offering free 7-day trials.

Source: AmbrosiaForHeads.com

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Yasiin Bey Will Return to His Mos Def Roots With a ‘Black on Both Sides’ 20th Anniversary Concert in Brooklyn

Yasiin Bey, the artist formerly known as Mos Def, has made some classic albums in his decades-spanning career. However, one that stands out prominently for Hip-Hop fans is his first LP, Black on Both Sides. To celebrate the album’s 20th anniversary next month, the GRAMMY, Golden Globe and Emmy-nominated rapper will soon be performing the entire album live during a homecoming show of sorts in the city that birthed him.



The album, first released by Rawkus and Priority Records on October 12, 1999, spoke to a handful of social issues, whether it saw Mos calling for Black people to shine their light on the world (“Umi Says”) or being an early supporter of water preservation (“New World Water”) that we now see people like Jayden Smith fighting passionately for today. The show will go down at Brooklyn Steel, with an opening set by ’90s rap duo Camp Lo. A chance to hear “Ms. Fat Booty,” “Mathematics,” “Brooklyn” and “Luchini AKA This Is It” all in one night? Sounds like a night to remember!

The 20th anniversary Black on Both Sides concert by Yasiin Bey/Mos Def goes down on November 3 at Brooklyn Steel starting at 8PM (doors at 7PM), with tickets scheduled to go on sale this Friday (September 13) at 10AM EST. Cop your advanced tickets soon by clicking here.

The post Yasiin Bey Will Return to His Mos Def Roots With a ‘Black on Both Sides’ 20th Anniversary Concert in Brooklyn appeared first on The Source.

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Pharoahe Monch Just Released A New Song & It’s Pure Crack (Video)

Pharoahe Monch may have just released the most exciting new song in the first week of 2019. Last year, the esteemed lyricist partnered with M.O.P’s Lil Fame for the menacing a la carte video single, “24 Hours.” The Queens, New Yorker also made standout appearances on Masta Ace & Marco Polo’s A Breukelen Story, 9th Wonder Presents: Jamla Is The Squad II, Apathy’s The Widow’s Son, and new song mixes from Wu-Tang as well as Saukrates.

Premiering at Ambrosia For Heads, Monch now releases “Yayo.” Even in his statement to AFH about the song, the veteran uses wordplay, “Peace. I hope everyone had a white Christmas and an exciting new year. ‘Yayo’ is my second stand-alone track, not attached to any project. ‘Yayo’ is alarming, but a giant metaphor for cocaine. Now let’s get it cracking in 2019.”

Pharoahe Monch Details His Upcoming Album. He Vows It’s His Hardest To Date (Audio)

Twenty-plus-year Pharoahe collaborator Lee Stone produces the energetic song. In his conceptual bag, the MC begins “Melodic embargo / Please, you know what’s in the cargo / I ship keys, my ni**a, never eat escargot / Key a cop’s car, cop keys in Key Largo / Queens get cheese, we don’t bang / Y’all ni**as get caught with the keys and all sing / Singin’-ass ni**as be outta key, you can’t hang / The whole key to why sh*t’s f*cked up in the game / Now you lame,” before claiming that many rappers spit about what they see in Narcos and Fargo. Those works of art, as well as GoodfellasPulp FictionNew Jack CityThe Wolf Of Wall StreetTrafficThe HangoverTraining Day, Lean On Me, and Chappelle’s Show, among others, are presented in careful sync (thanks to Milton Walker IV) with the charged-up bars of symbolism.

The lyrics are also rich with references in the delivery to artists like M.O.P., Sugarhill Gang, and Naughty By Nature. Meanwhile, Monch’s rap describes where the dope comes from, why, and who is using it—from celebrities to athletes to types of people. For an MC who is one of the finest conceptual songwriters in the genre, he starts ’19 with a rush. The song’s scratches are from veteran turntablism DJ Boogie Blind.

The Live Mixtape With Black Thought, Rakim & Pharoahe Monch Is Here (Audio)

Pharoahe Monch, Sean Price, Tek, and Wu-Tang’s “Pearl Harbor (Remix)” is currently on the official AFH playlist.

Photograph provided by Pharoahe Monch.

Pharoahe Monch may have just released the most exciting new song in the first week of 2019. Last year, the esteemed lyricist partnered with M.O.P’s Lil Fame for the menacing a la carte video single, “24 Hours.” The Queens, New Yorker also made standout appearances on Masta Ace & Marco Polo’s A Breukelen Story, 9th Wonder Presents: Jamla Is The Squad II, Apathy’s The Widow’s Son, and new song mixes from Wu-Tang as well as Saukrates.

Premiering at Ambrosia For Heads, Monch now releases “Yayo.” Even in his statement to AFH about the song, the veteran uses wordplay, “Peace. I hope everyone had a white Christmas and an exciting new year. ‘Yayo’ is my second stand-alone track, not attached to any project. ‘Yayo’ is alarming, but a giant metaphor for cocaine. Now let’s get it cracking in 2019.”

Pharoahe Monch Details His Upcoming Album. He Vows It’s His Hardest To Date (Audio)

Twenty-plus-year Pharoahe collaborator Lee Stone produces the energetic song. In his conceptual bag, the MC begins “Melodic embargo / Please, you know what’s in the cargo / I ship keys, my ni**a, never eat escargot / Key a cop’s car, cop keys in Key Largo / Queens get cheese, we don’t bang / Y’all ni**as get caught with the keys and all sing / Singin’-ass ni**as be outta key, you can’t hang / The whole key to why sh*t’s f*cked up in the game / Now you lame,” before claiming that many rappers spit about what they see in Narcos and Fargo. Those works of art, as well as GoodfellasPulp FictionNew Jack CityThe Wolf Of Wall StreetTrafficThe HangoverTraining Day, Lean On Me, and Chappelle’s Show, among others, are presented in careful sync (thanks to Milton Walker IV) with the charged-up bars of symbolism.

The lyrics are also rich with references in the delivery to artists like M.O.P., Sugarhill Gang, and Naughty By Nature. Meanwhile, Monch’s rap describes where the dope comes from, why, and who is using it—from celebrities to athletes to types of people. For an MC who is one of the finest conceptual songwriters in the genre, he starts ’19 with a rush. The song’s scratches are from veteran turntablism DJ Boogie Blind.

The Live Mixtape With Black Thought, Rakim & Pharoahe Monch Is Here (Audio)

Pharoahe Monch, Sean Price, Tek, and Wu-Tang’s “Pearl Harbor (Remix)” is currently on the official AFH playlist.

Photograph provided by Pharoahe Monch.

Source: AmbrosiaForHeads.com

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