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Archive for March 2nd, 2008

DP Next Generation on a Steady Course

Posted by bigced on March 2, 2008

With 14 years of rapping accredited for, since debuting on Dr. Dre’s “The Chronic” album, Tha Dogg Pound certainly doesn’t need an introduction. Get ready to witness one of the strongest comebacks in Gangsta Rap history with the introduction of DP Next Generation. Now focusing on a positive future for the West Coast, these Mutli-Platinum artists are back again, bringing another generation with them, the winners of the contest “DPGC Idol” held by Daz, Kurupt, and Arnold White.

Remember, these DP Next Generation rap cats came strong with tracks like “Still Blazin’” which played in major markets like Atlanta, Dallas, Oklahoma City, and up and down the West Coast from Seattle to Los Angeles.

They have tracks produced by Nitti, a producer with massive hit singles like “It’s Goin’ Down” by Young Joc. They have a sonic sound with a boom to boost the group’s image with songs by Nitti like “Tapp Out” and “Gangsta Rap Will Never Die.” The album is bound to be a solid, well-produced project. With the mixed styles of DP Next Generation, rest assured the album will graciously put the gutter in your ear with the release of their summer album “Idolized.”

The rap game continues to unfold the rebirth of the Dogg Pound Next Generation. The DP Idol contest has moved from the realm of competition to being repositioned. This is a phase of being “idolized” by others. The group is on a steady course and there’s been a lot of grinding to get the DP Next Generation name out there. The group has hit the scene in Las Vegas and Atlanta to pre-promote and record for the upcoming album.

The members (Meko aka Mr. Murder, Dangerous Rob, Montana, 45, J-Tripz, and Chaotic,) come from different corners of the continental US with their own unique experiences and tales from the hood. Like the native tribes of the badlands, this ensemble proves to be the grimiest evolution of a rap group to raise up off the block. These six members are collectively making moves to get their names in the annals of rap history. Check them out at on the web by visiting them at www.myspace.com/dpnextgeneration. Make sure to check out the big homie, Snoop Dogg, on E! in the hit TV Series, Father Hood. Snoop Dogg’s album, Ego Trippin’, will be released on March 11, 2008. Daz Dillinger’s much anticipated album, Only on the Leftside, is slated to release this Spring/Summer 2008. Make sure to join all of the DP Next Generation in Tulsa for the 6th Annual Family Affaire hosted by Dangerous Rob located at Cheyenne Park on April 6th, 2008.

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Del the Funky Homosapien Announces Tour Dates, Includes SXSW Showcases with Spoon, Dizzee Rascal, El-P, and Devin the Dude

Posted by bigced on March 2, 2008

Just days after releasing his brand new video for “Workin’ It, the first single off of his soon to be released album Eleventh Hour, Del the Funky Homosapien has announced a string of tour dates, including two performances at this year’s South by Southwest music festival in Austin, Texas. The West Coast MC will kick things off with two sure to be high profile events on Thursday, March 13th – first opening for indie rock hotshots Spoon in a free outdoor event at Lady Bird Lake Stage and later that night taking the stage at the Def Jux showcase alongside fellow Jukies Dizzee Rascal, El-P, and more at The Scoot Inn. He’ll then hit the road for a March 20th appearance on the MySpace stage at Atlanta’s A3C Festival before a string of shows up the east coast culminating in a March 26th performance at New York’s Highline Ballroom. See below for full tour dates.

The video for “Workin It” premiered Monday, February 25th on mtvU’s THE LAB. Those who missed the show (or who just can’t get enough of “Workin It”) can check it out online now. The track is also available for download at all major digital music stores. Eleventh Hour, Del’s long anticipated eighth studio album, hits stores on March 11th via Definitive Jux records. Audio/Video available for posting:

Listen to Del the Funky Homosapien’s “Bubble Pop” from Eleventh Hour (Definitive Jux)
http://dev.theorchard.com/jaclyn/mp3/del_the_funky_homosapien_bubblepop.mp3  

Watch a clip from Del the Funky Homosapien’s 11th Hour DVD
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yKIhPuLBGvo

Del the Funky Homosapien tour dates: March 13 – Opening for SPOON, 7PM.  Auditorium Shores Stage (Lady Bird Lake)   (Riverside Dr & S 1st St) FREE SHOW! March 13 – SCOOT INN (SXSW) 11PMMarch 20 – A3C Festival – Atlanta, GA (MySpace sponsoredevent)March 21 – Cat’s Cradle – Carrboro, NCMarch 22 – Toad’s Place -Richmond, VAMarch 23 – 9:30 Club – Washington, DCMarch 26 – Highline Ballroom – NYC, NY Buy Del the Funky Homosapien “Workin’ It”:

iTunes: http://phobos.apple.com/WebObjects/MZStore.woa/wa/viewAlbum?id=274324192&s=143441

Amazon: http://www.amazon.com/Workin-Foot-Down-Single-Explicit/dp/B0013RAZE0/ref=sr_1_7?ie=UTF8&s=dmusic&qid=1202856128&sr=1-7

eMusic: http://www.emusic.com/album/Del-The-Funky-Homosapien-Workin-It-Foot-Down-Single-MP3-Download/11157389.html 

Rhapsody: http://www.rhapsody.com/delthefunkyhomosapien/workinitfootdownsingle

Del The Funky Homosapien Eleventh Hour track list:  1. Raw Sewage2. Bubble Pop3. Back In The Chamber4. True Endevours5. Situations6. Naked Fonk7. Hold Your Hand8. Foot Down9. I’ll Tell You10. Workin’ It11. Last Hurrah12. Str8t Up and Down13. I Got You14. FunkyhomosapienDigital bonus tracks “Drop It Lower” and “Full Throttle”

Visit Del The Funky Homosapien online:

http://www.myspace.com/delthefunkyhomosapien    

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Year of the Hip-Hop Women Officially Begins March 2008!

Posted by bigced on March 2, 2008

NO MORE! ENOUGH OF BEING CALLED B*tches and H**s! Powerful, intelligent, self-respecting women in Hip-Hop do exist. They’re on the microphone, off-camera, and behind the scenes. They hold significant positions at the top echelons of the industry’s professional food chain. They are anonymous shining stars. Why don’t we know about them? Because they are silently tucked away due to a lack of media exposure, male-centric programming, and adverse images that present a one-sided perspective of women in Hip-Hop.

THE WOMANHOOD LEARNING PROJECT (WLP) is a wake-up call. It is a sound out to all the B-Girls and Hip Hop Queens—women who have transformed music and culture. The WLP is a project of the Hip-Hop Association [H2A], in collaboration with Social Services of Hip-Hop, We B*Girlz, Where My Ladies at? Interactive Film, and We Got Issues! The mission is to restore and revive the Hip-Hop Woman through the Womanhood Learning Project by exploring the role of women in leadership and other sectors within Hip-Hop culture and the community. WLP will examine the negative media and power struggles that hinder the growth and awareness of women in the hip hop generation.  It will focus strong attention on how these factors impact the youth, especially young girls. The WLP is intended to unify women in Hip-Hop by creating a space for them to learn, build, and bring about concrete change. This will occur through a yearlong campaign that includes a resource book, lecture series, workshops, an online community and a case study.

Hip-Hop girls and women deserve acknowledgement. And the world deserves to know about how these women have become successful by negotiating the sexist system of Hip-Hop. The H2A and its partners, through the Womanhood Learning Project, will study and promote these invisible, yet talented women, and provide tools and resource to empower educators, social workers, parents, youth and most of all, women and girls.

The H2A has convened an Advisory Committee of progressive and accomplished women in Hip-Hop and education and culture for the Womanhood Learning Project. It includes luminaries such as Dr. Roxanne Shante, Martha Cooper, DJ Beverly Bonds, Maria “Toofly” Castillo, Raquel Cepeda, Suhier Hammad, Toni Blackman, Raqiyah Mays, Michaela Angela Davis, and Dr. Irma McClaurin. H2A, the WLP Advisory Committee, and our partners—the Social Services of Hip-Hop, We B*Girlz, Where My Ladies at? Interactive Film, and We Got Issues! are all committed to making the WLP a success and celebrating the Year of the Hip-Hop Woman.
The Womanhood Learning Project’s primary resource will be an encyclopedia of pioneering and trend-setting women entitled, Fresh, Bold, and So Def: Women in Hip-Hop Changing The Game, edited by Martha Diaz and Felicia Pride. The volume contains 300 profiles of international artists, industry professionals, and social activists. It is groundbreaking and informative focusing on how they have persevered and broken down barriers to make a difference in Hip-Hop culture and society at large. Fresh, Bold, and So Def: Women In Hip-Hop Changing The Game is written to serve as an inspiration for educating girls and women, boys and men, young and old, and everyone else on the historical legacy of women in Hip-Hop.
The Year of the Hip-Hop Woman is about change. It is not a blame, shame or game campaign. It is about appreciation and respect; it is about acknowledgment and positive depictions of women. It pays homage to women who help create Hip-Hop, but whose stories have not been told in their entirety.
Womanhood Learning Project H2A Team
Martha Diaz, President of the Hip-Hop Association
Mona Ibrahim, Director of Community Building and Program Development
Nakia Alston, H2A Communications and Development Coordinator
Beth Sachnoff, Head Researcher, H2Ed Communications and Development Coordinator
Kompalya Thunderbird, Director of Media Acquisition and Communications
Deanne Ziadie-Nemitz – Preservation Coordinator
Amanda Cumbow, Researcher
Ebonie Smith, Researcher

Womanhood Learning Project Partners
Jineea Butler-Graham – Hip-Hop Analyst, Social Services of Hip-Hop
J-Love – Activist, Author – White Girl, We Got Issues!
Leba Haber – Director of the interactive film, Where My Ladies At?
Nika Kramer – Writer, Translator, Activist – We B*Girlz (Germany)

Womanhood Learning Project Advisory Committee
Toni Blackman – Freestyle Union and US State Dept. Ambassador
Beverly Bond – DJ, Activist – Black Girls Rock Foundation
Maria “Toofly” Castillo – Graffiti Artist, Activist –Younity
Raquel Cepeda – Filmmaker, Author, Journalist
Rosa Clemente – Cultural Critic, Activist – Know Thyself
Martha Cooper – Pioneer Photographer, Author – We B*Girlz
Michaela Angela Davis – Fashionista, Cultural Anthropologist
Tamara Dawit – Activist – What’s the 411? (Canada)
Caridad “La Bruja” De La Luz – MC, Poet, Activist – Latinas 4 Life
Dowoti Desir – Director, Malcolm x & Dr. Betty Shabazz Memorial & Educational Center
Delphine Diallo – Photographer, Filmmaker, Visual Artist (France)
Johanna Guevara – 7one8Designs
Suheir Hammad – Poet, Author, Activist
Indy Hunjan – Kala Phool, Rising Styles (England)
Maori Karmael Holmes – President of the Black Lily Film and Music Festival
Raqiyah Mays – Managing Editor, The Ave and Radio Host for Hot 97/98.7
Dr. Irma McClaurin – Scholar, Poet, Writer, Author
Elisha Miranda – Filmmaker, Author, Activist, Sister Outsider/Chica Luna
Felicia Pride – Journalist, Author, The Message
Rokafella – B-Girl, Activist – Full Circle Productions
Dr. Tricia Rose – Pioneer Scholar, Author, Black Noise, Brown University
Marcella Runell Hall – Author, Activist, Educator, NYU
Dr. Theda Palmer Saxon – Life coach, Pres. of Seasoned Woman, Inc., Author, Pace U.
Raquel Sanchez – Alphabet City Design
Dr. Roxanne Shante – Pioneer MC and Psychologist
Akiba Solomon – Journalist, Author – Naked: Black Women Bare All About Their Skin, Hair, Hips, Lips, and Other Parts
Noelle Theard – Photographer, Activist


The Womanhood Learning Project (WLP) Interactive Lecture Series
The WLP Interactive Lecture Series is a yearlong talking tour that serves as a space for women to discuss issues affecting women in Hip-Hop. The topics include Media, Politics, Gender Roles, Entrepreneurship, Education. This is a preliminary schedule based on existing events.  

Part I – W.A.R. (Women Armed and Ready)!:Defining the Reel Images of Women in Hip-Hop
March 2, 2008 – 5th Annual NYC Grassroots Media Conference www.nycgrassrootsmedia.org

This is a 90-minute candid interactive workshop focusing on the role media plays in the portrayal of women in Hip-Hop, and the issues and effects that women have to deal with as a result. From Queens to whores, the roles of women have changed dramatically over the last 30 years. From misogyny to hypersexual behavior, a whole generation of young men and women have been desensitized and programmed through negative media images. It’s time to confront the media outlets, and step up as media-makers and concerned citizens to take control of our images, redefine our selves and create a new perspective of women. Martha Diaz – President of the Hip-Hop Association; Maori Karmael Holmes – Producer/Director, Scene Not Heard; Melissa Ulto – Editor, The Art of Love and Struggle; and Toni Blackman – Hip-Hop Ambassador, Artist, Writer will discuss how their work addresses these issues, how their work is creating media justice, and they will share clips of their projects. Sponsored by the Hip-Hop Association

Part II – Uplifting, Empowering and Educating By Any Means Necessary!
March 26, 2008 – Malcolm X and Dr. Betty Shabazz Memorial & Education Center (NYC)

This event includes a press conference, benefit reception, and performance showcase. Sponsored by the Social Services of Hip-Hop

Part III– Herstory: The Power of Women Community Leaders and Entrepreneurs

March 29, 2008 – Sponsored by Urban League of Alaska (Anchorage, Alaska)

Part IV– Conscious Women Rock The Page

April 18, 2008 – HHEAL Festival (Bronx, NY)
This workshop focuses on the collaboration among four women known in socially conscious Hip-Hop circles: Jennifer “JLOVE” Calderon, author of That White Girl; Elisha “E-Fierce” Miranda, author of The Sista Hood; Sofia “Black Artemis” Quintero, author of Picture Me Rollin’; and Marcella Runell Hall, co-editor of The Hip Hop Education Guidebook. They have enlisted a diverse team of activist educators to design lessons. The lessons and activities spark discussions on issues such as race, gender, class, sexual orientation and more. Sponsored by We Got Issues!

Part V – Surviving The Entertainment Industry
May 2008 – Black Lily Film and Music Festival (Philadelphia, PA)


Part VI – Fresh, Bold, and So Def: Who Are the Media Moguls?

June 25, 2008 – H2O International Film Festival (NYC)

Part VIII – Our Stories: Documenting and Preserving Our Legacy
August 2008 – We B*Girlz Festival (Berlin, Germany)

This event is a one-month multimedia festival sponsored by Women for Women to celebrate the 4 elements of Hip Hop and more.

Part IX – Freedom Talk Tour Commences
December 2008 – Sponsored by We Got Issues!

About Hip-Hop Association:

The Hip-Hop Association [H2A] is a 501(c)(3) media, education, and arts community building organization. Our projects are designed to encourage critical thinking, education reform, cross-cultural unity and civic engagement. The H2A empowers the community through the use of media, technology, resources, social entrepreneurship, and leadership development. We are producers of the largest annual international Hip-Hop film festival, and Hip-Hop Education forums. www.hiphopassociation.org
About Social Services of Hip Hop:
The Social Services of Hip Hop is a psychology based service agency that identifies and remedies issues that affect the growth of the Hip Hop community by presenting revenue generating and community building activities. The company serves as a technical assistance intermediary that organizes and enhances programs that interact with the Hip Hop Community. Our mission is to empower Hip Hop citizens to their maximum level of functioning by providing effective tools, resources and services. www.ss-hiphop.com
About We Got Issues!:

We Got Issues! mission is to awaken a new brand of feminine centered leadership and social/political activism in America. Through rigorous training and development we strengthen young women’s internal resources and capacity to lead, through outreach and education we facilitate the creation of networks and collaborations that leverage young women’s best knowledge, skills and resources and through advocacy and recognition we promote new models of bold courageous and empowered leadership by honoring the often overlooked contributions young women make to their respective communities and to society as a whole. www.wegotissues.org
 

About We B*Girlz Festival:
The We B*Girlz Festival – Berlin 2008 is a multimedia festival by women for women celebrating the 4 elements of Hip-Hop and more. We B*Girlz wants to present a strong role model for adolescent girls. We want to show that women master skills in all aspects of Hip-Hop and have earned a place in Hip-Hop history. We will celebrate their creativity with a one-month festival in August 2008 in Berlin, Germany with workshops, panels, exhibitions, screenings, battles, shows and concerts. The event series will close with a big two-day festival with battles, shows and concerts on August 29 and 30. www.bgirlz.com
About Where My Ladies At?:
Where My Ladies At? is an interactive film website that encourages dialogue about “pop culture porn” through blogs, video diaries, SMS forums, and conversations with female Hip Hop pioneers. Although Where My Ladies At? targets Hip Hop, the film tackles larger societal issues and can be used to discuss issues of pop culture, sexuality and media representation with young people. The film is both a critique and celebration of Hip Hop, and women’s accomplishments are showcased in a timeline of artists and pioneers. www.wheremyladiesat.com

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Catch Syntax Records in the New Film Definitely, Maybe

Posted by bigced on March 2, 2008

Syntax Records hit the big screen recently with Universal Pictures’ romantic comedy Definitely Maybe starring Ryan Reynolds (Just Friends) and Abigail Breslin (Little Miss Sunshine). The film features two songs from Syntax’s own Night Owls vol. 1: Nocturnal Doctrine and Fashion Expo: Round1: TruHipHop. Listen close to get an earful from these albums during selected scenes.
Sackcloth Fashion’s Fashion Expo released in 2000, breaking records and raising the bar. More than 30 rap artists came together on the project, making it one of the biggest collaborations in hip-hop history. Those who lent their talents include GRITS, KJ-52, Ill Harmonics and POD member Marcos Curiel.
Night Owls vol. 1: Nocturnal Doctrine was the premier record in the now infamous “Night Owls” series. Nocturnal Doctrine started it all by introducing music moguls, hardcore fans and newcomers to rising hip-hop stars. Night Owls vol. 4: A Shot in the Dark released in January 2008 on Syntax Records and has set up residency on the CMJ Charts.
This isn’t the first time that Hollywood has highlighted the Syntax catalog. In fact you can hear Syntax in the following (but not limited to) films:
  • MGM Pictures: It Runs In The Family starring Michael Douglas (3 songs)
  • Warner Home Entertainment: Red Doors (4 songs)
  • Lions Gate Entertainment: The Prince & Me 2
  • Showtime Pictures: The Mudge Boy (4 songs)
  • Forty Shades of Blue starring Rip Torn
  • Love The Hard Way starring Adrien Brody and Pam Grier
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