Kelly Rowland Joins X-Factor As A Judge

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The big announcement was made on Facebook, where you can read the full drawn-out press release:

Simon Cowell will be surrounded by women when THE X FACTOR returns for its third season this fall on FOX. Grammy Award-winning artist Kelly Rowland and international pop star Paulina Rubio join him and Demi Lovato as judges on the hit singing competition series.

Simon Cowell said today, “It’s taken more than a decade but I’m delighted to finally be on a panel with three girls (I think!). Paulina and Kelly both have great taste and massive experience in the music industry and together with Demi, this is going to be a fun panel. It just feels like the time to do something different.”

“I am very excited to be reuniting with Simon Cowell and THE X FACTOR family,” said Rowland. “It feels great to be able to take this journey here at home in the states!”

“I love THE X FACTOR! I can’t wait to find the next big music star here in America,” added Rubio. “I’m so thrilled to be part of the show as a judge. Simon, be careful what you wish for, let’s see if you are ready to handle me, empieza la fiesta, amigo!”

Jay Electronica – The Complete Discography (As Of May 2013)

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I don’t even think that I need to explain this past what the artwork states, but here it goes: No-Buzz.net took the time to put together every single song that Jay Electronica has ever released into the fold. Every one. Now stop reading this and hit the download link (and check out the below tracklist).

Download: Jay Electronica – The Complete Discography (As Of May 2013)

Solo Tracks:
Jay Electronica – @FatBellyBella
Jay Electronica – 2 Step
Jay Electronica – A Million in the Morning
Jay Electronica – A Prayer for Michael Vick & T.I (Prod. J Dilla)
Jay Electronica – Abracadabra (Prod. J Dilla)
Jay Electronica – Act I Eternal Sunshine (The Pledge) [Abridged – Verses Only]
Jay Electronica – Act I Eternal Sunshine (The Pledge) [Full 15-Minute Version]
Jay Electronica – Act I Eternal Sunshine (The Pledge) [No Intro]
Jay Electronica – Act I Intro
Jay Electronica – Act I Part 1 – Eternal Sunshine of the Spotless Mind
Jay Electronica – Act I Part 2 – …Because He Broke the Rules
Jay Electronica – Act I Part 3 – Voodoo Man
Jay Electronica – Act I Part 4 – FYI
Jay Electronica – Act II (Rough Demo Version)
Jay Electronica – Annakin’s Prayer
Jay Electronica – Attack of the Clones
Jay Electronica – Be Easy
Jay Electronica – Bitches And Drugs (Prod. J Dilla)
Jay Electronica – Call of Duty MW3 feat. Prodigy
Jay Electronica – Candy Man
Jay Electronica – Colors
Jay Electronica – Dealing
Jay Electronica – Dear Moleskine (Prod. Just Blaze)
Jay Electronica – Dear Moleskine (Remix) feat. Kendrick Lamar (Prod. Just Blaze)
Jay Electronica – Defcon 4
Jay Electronica – Departure
Jay Electronica – Dimethyltryptamine (Prod. J Dilla)
Jay Electronica – Exhibit A [Transformations] (Prod. Just Blaze)
Jay Electronica – Exhibit B (Exhibit A Remix) feat. Mos Def (Prod. Just Blaze)
Jay Electronica – Exhibit C (Prod. Just Blaze)
Jay Electronica – Exhibit C [Rewind Version] (Prod. Just Blaze)
Jay Electronica – Extra Extra
Jay Electronica – Forever
Jay Electronica – Get ‘Em feat. Guilty Simpson & Mr. Porter
Jay Electronica – Girlfriend
Jay Electronica – Glass Everywhere [FYI] (Act I Encore)
Jay Electronica – Googly Eyes (Live)
Jay Electronica – Hagler Demo
Jay Electronica – Hard To Get feat. Mr. Porter
Jay Electronica – I Feel Good
Jay Electronica – Jazzmatazz (Prod. DJ Premier)
Jay Electronica – My World (Nas Salute)
Jay Electronica – Not a Disturbance
Jay Electronica – Not Too Far From Nothing
Jay Electronica – Prelude To A Freestyle (Rough Quality)
Jay Electronica – Renaissance Man (Prod. J Dilla)
Jay Electronica – Retro Electro
Jay Electronica – Roadside Freestyle in Nepal
Jay Electronica – Scenario 2004
Jay Electronica – Shiny Suit Theory feat. Jay-Z
Jay Electronica – So What You Sayin’ (Prod. J Dilla)
Jay Electronica – Something To Hold On To
Jay Electronica – Spark ‘Em Up
Jay Electronica – Stay Dougie Freestyle
Jay Electronica – Suckas (Prod. J Dilla)
Jay Electronica – Swagger Jackson’s Revenge
Jay Electronica – The Announcement
Jay Electronica – The Cauldron
Jay Electronica – The Ghost Of Christopher Wallace (Abridged)
Jay Electronica – The Making of Act II (Preview) feat. LaTonya Givens (No Verse)
Jay Electronica – Trolley Stop
Jay Electronica – Untitled (Ruff Act II – Unreleased) feat. Muhammad Ali
Jay Electronica – Uprock
Jay Electronica – Uzi Weighs a Ton
Jay Electronica – Victory Is in My Clutches feat. Tone Treasure
Jay Electronica – Walk With It feat. Lil Flip
Jay Electronica – When the Levees Broke
Jay Electronica – Who’s Gonna Save My Soul feat. Gnarls Barkley

Features:
Jay Electronica – Atom Anthem feat. D-Prosper
Jay Electronica – Close Your Eyes feat. The Bullitts & Lucy Liu (Abridged)
Jay Electronica – Cool Relax (Original) feat. Naledge
Jay Electronica – Cool Relax feat. Naledge (Abridged)
Jay Electronica – Cool Relax feat. Naledge
Jay Electronica – Hail Mary feat. CETO
Jay Electronica – Higher (Abridged – Verse Only)
Jay Electronica – Higher feat. Game & Swizz Beatz
Jay Electronica – Holiday feat. Mos Def
Jay Electronica – Just Begun feat. J. Cole,Talib Kweli & Mos Def
Jay Electronica – Live It feat. Paul Wall, Raekwon & Yelawolf
Jay Electronica – Live It feat. Yelawolf (Abridged)
Jay Electronica – Love Czars II feat. Sa-Ra & Ta’Raach
Jay Electronica – Love Czars II feat. Sa-Ra (Abridged)
Jay Electronica – Posers feat. The New Royales (Abridged)
Jay Electronica – Posers feat. The New Royales
Jay Electronica – Prowler 2 feat. Ski Beatz, Jean Grae, Joell Ortiz & Mos Def
Jay Electronica – Run & Hide feat. The Bullitts [Abridged]
Jay Electronica – Shucken’ An Jivin’ feat. Big Dame & Tone Treasure
Jay Electronica – Shut Shit Down feat. Orianday & Big Dame
Jay Electronica – The Day feat. Curren$y & Mos Def (Prod. Ski Beatz)
Jay Electronica – The Day feat. Mos Def (Abridged)
Jay Electronica – They Die By Dawn feat. Yasiin Bey (AKA Mos Def) & The Bullitts [Abridged]
Jay Electronica – Walking (J. Period Remix) feat. Nneka & Nas
Jay Electronica – Walking (J. Period Remix) feat. Nneka (Abridged)

A-Trak Writes Open Letter On Drug Use In Hip-Hop

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The apparently squeeky clean DJ A-Trak recently wrote an open letter that appeared in the Huffington Post where he spoke on his stance about the rise of drugs in Hip-Hop music and culture (note: there’s never been any rise or any fall; drugs have always had a heavy presence as far as I can remember).

Anyways, check out the letter below.

I don’t know anything about drugs. Never tried them. Yet as I write this, I am trying to sign a group with a song called “Bath Salts” and an album titled “D.R.U.G.S.”. Danny Brown, my record label’s marquee artist, calls himself the Adderall Admiral, openly does interviews high on Molly and raps, “it’s a miracle I’m living.” I happen to think he is one of the most enthralling artists out. How do I reconcile my respect for Danny and the fact that so many of his wildly creative and entertaining songs revolve around drug usage?

I believe hip-hop has entered its psychedelic age. Turn on the radio: Molly, Xanax and cough syrup references are ubiquitous. One of the most acclaimed new mixtapes out is matter-of-factly titled Acid Rap. The spiritual guru of the era is the Juicy J, a Memphis veteran whose group Three 6 Mafia helped shape the sound of Southern rap. His hedonistic songs are anchored by irresistible hooks, hypnotic beats and jovial rallying cries. I have no idea what he’s rapping about, but the lullaby cadence of his music draws me in. Not everyone is as light-hearted as the Juiceman though. In the R&B outfit The Weeknd, singer Abel Tesfaye spins disturbing, dark tales of cocaine and abandon, but that’s a genuine breakthrough in a genre that rarely strayed away from the themes of romance. Tesfaye is daring not only in his subject matter but also in his choice of avant-garde production, thereby pushing R&B forward.

It takes more than a reference to MDMA to keep up with the times, though. Hearing Ludacris and Juelz Santana’s Molly raps du jour make me cough up the word “bandwagon” – no promethazine needed. Just think: if Rick Ross said no to drugs he’d still be slinging Reeboks. But for the most part, what I’m noticing is a level of abstraction that has helped rap reach a further orbit of expressionism. The genre hasn’t felt this free since the Daisy Age. It may have started with Lil Wayne’s 2008 masterpiece of stream-of-consciousness rap “A Milli,” although I would also credit Lil B’s “based” style for opening this generation’s minds. Is it all due to the unshackling and relaxing effect of drugs? Probably not. But one can’t deny that the current climate of trippy and experimental mainstream rap has coincided with the breaking down of geographic and sexual prejudices in a notoriously territorial and homophobic culture.

That said, the closer I get drawn into it, the more I tend to wonder whether I am just enjoying this music from a safe arm’s length as I silently endorse it? Is there any hypocrisy in the fact that I, clearly not an advocate of drug use, made a track with Juicy J and Danny called “Piss Test”? We don’t appreciate rap songs based on the moral value of their lyrics, but rather on their artistic merit. Danny and Juicy are part of a long tradition of great, unhinged rap. Yet for all the talk about syrup and Molly, it seems like we’re only being exposed to a partial, romanticized account. Rap went from glorifying selling hard drugs to glamorizing their effects. And beneath the surface there may be a profound lack of understanding of these substances.

What worries me is the unspoken aspect of the story; that is the real elephant in the room. Just recently, Lil Wayne almost died from multiple seizures, yet he vehemently denies that there was a relation to his codeine intake. When legendary Houston rapper Pimp C passed away, the cause of death remained hush. Closer to home, my good friend DJ AM died from a drug overdose four years ago at the height of his fame. There needs to be more open dialogue about this. It won’t stop us from enjoying the music. A handful of rappers have spoken out: Kendrick Lamar ends his “Bitch Don’t Kill My Vibe” video with a coffin lowered into the ground and “Death To Molly” written above it, and Rhymefest calls the drug a “crack pill.” While that analogy may be oversimplified, I believe that any conversation on this matter is healthy. I even think the pill popping Trinidad James himself deserves a smart interview (you know, make him sweat a little). He probably has more insight than we think. My stance is: we can rap about it, but let’s also talk about it.

T.I. x Lil Wayne – Wit Me (Video)

As promised, T.I.’s drops off his brand new single with Lil Wayne, “Wit Me”. The Lil C-produced track will be kicking off their “America’s Most Wanted’ nationwide tour this summer, which launches July 9th 2013 and runs until September 1st 2013.

In other news, T.I. is officially independent, and this single is being released via his digital Hustle Gang imprint and distributed by EMPIRE Distribution.