Jeymes Samuel (The Bullitts) Speaks On Jay Electronica’s Upcoming Album

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Frequent Jay Elect-collaborator Jeymes Samuel throws his two cents in the pot for his homie’s upcoming (and very long-awaited) album….from NME:

Samuel is one of the producers on the Jay-Z-signed rapper’s debut release. Speaking to NME, the English artist said: “Honestly, it’s in the last stages of recording. It’s just tinkering. Just putting the final… you know when a builder builds a house? And when he’s finished the walls he gives them one little brush over, like a once over? And then the album will be done.”

Signed by Jay Z to Roc Nation in 2010, Jay Electronica tweeted, “ok, now it’s my turn,” hours after Jay Z released his latest album ‘Magna Carta Holy Grail’. Samuel explained: “His album is amazing, it’s remarkable. It is the perfect… It goes hand in hand with ‘Yeezus’ and ‘Magna Carta…’. They go hand in hand… Also, also… It’s weird how Jay Z is intricately involved with all of us, but all the albums sound so different.”

Pharoahe Monch On ‘The Process With Peter Rosenberg’

From Complex TV:

In our latest installment of The Process with Peter Rosenberg, Pharoahe Monch details his writing technique during his early years in Organized Konfusion. The New York rapper says it was a joint effort through and through, with him and Prince Po bouncing ideas off each other. “Back then, we were doing the music as well, so I would do a beat, Prince [Po] would do a beat, the crew would do a beat, and then we would conceptualize.” Describing the process as, “Straight pen to paper,” Monch also breaks down his “alphebet style” approach to rapping.

Later in the conversation, Pharoahe Monch talks about making a conscious effort to be conscious in his raps. “As long as you are true to who you are, it will cut through,” Pharoahe states. “I feel like if you don’t express all the different facets of who you are, you’re fronting regardless, because nobody is cerebral all the time.”

Monch also details his classic record, “Simon Says,” which he describes as a complex record despite its playful tone. “Everything in that song is calculated and thought about, even in its freestyle simplicity,” Pharoahe explains. “Because of the energy of the beat, this is not a song chorus-wise where you would ask of anything. You have to demand of something.”

Lauryn Hill Sends A Message From Prison

Lauryn Hill & Mos Def In Concert - June 4, 2011

This is from her Tumblr page:

Ms. Hill has received a lot mail, and would like to let everyone know that she is doing well. She also asked me to pass along this message:

“I have known since very young to look for the purpose and lesson in everything, including the trials. Although it has taken some adjustment, I cannot deny the favor I have encountered while in here, and general warm reception from a community of people who despite their circumstances, have found unique ways to make the best of them. Thank you for the letters of concern and well wishes that I receive in the mail every day. Although I may not be able to write everyone back, please know that they have been received, read, acknowledged, and appreciated. With Love back, MLH”

Ms. Hill would like to thank the following people for their words of encouragement and support:

Jessica Lucas, Victoria, BC
Debbie J. Duncan, AL
Bessie Williams, Henderson, NC
King Solemon Kamali, Santa Clara, CA
Jahi, Oakland, CA
Candice Hughes, Las Vegas, NV
Cherisse Pittman, Alpine, AL
Joshua Curry, Benton, AR
Ana Rodriguez, Cranston, RI
Dr. Marcus Anthony Hunter, New Haven, CT
Naty Marrufo, Seaside, CA
Re Grace, Lake Forest, CA
Carter Grant, New York, NY
David Cruz, Hartford, CT
Terryl Lee Elder, Jr., Ansonia, CT
Sundiata Sadiq, Ossining, NY
Daisy, Tannersville, PA
Jerald Miller, New York, NY
Sister Souljah, New York, NY
Heidi Salcedo, Bethel, CT
Devon Young, Newark, NJ
Ralph Mitchell/Carthage Financial Group, Quincy, MA
Patrick Lanary, New York, NY
Tomeka Ramocan, Burlington, NJ
Birk Paluzzi, Elmwood Park, IL
Ms. Kirema Colbert, Hartford, CT
Derek Singletary, Astoria, NY
Steven Marcus, North Hollywood, CA
Rashad Hawkins, Alpharetta, GA
Diane L. Martin, Philadelphia, PA
Shareen Arroyo, Charlotte, NC
Mr. Daniel Aguilar, Brownsville, TX
Nadisha Postell, Bronx, NY
Claudia Bruno, Los Gatos, CA
Ms. Mamie Scott, Reading, PA
Maurad Ouazine, France
Robert D. Boyd, Maricopa, AZ
Aframerican Bookstore, Omaha, NE
Dr. Cynthia Chapman

Kanye West Is Now Under Investigation For Attacking Paparazzi At LAX

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From People:

The Los Angeles Police Department has launched an investigation after West allegedly attacked videographer Daniel Ramos outside Los Angeles International Airport on Friday.

The altercation, caught on camera and posted on TMZ, took place after Ramos filmed the rapper and asked him questions as he walked out of the airport to a waiting car.

At one point in the video, an irritated West, 36, breaks his silence and accuses the paparazzo of trying to provoke him. “You’re trying to get me in trouble so I have to pay you, like, $250,000,” West says in the footage. He then appears to lunge at Ramos.

President Obama: “Trayvon Martin Could Have Been Me 35 Years Ago.” (Video)


UPDATE: Video of the speech added above.

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From NBC News:

President Barack Obama made a surprise appearance at the White House Friday to discuss African Americans’ reaction to last weekend’s verdict in the George Zimmerman case, saying that “Trayvon Martin could have been me 35 years ago.”

He also suggested that the outcome of the case could have been different if Martin were white.

“If a white male teen would have been involved in this scenario,” he said, “both the outcome and the aftermath might have been different.”

The nation’s first black president, Obama said that it is impossible for the African-American community to not view the Martin case without filtering it through a long history of racial discrimination.

“The African-American community is looking at this through a set of experiences and history that doesn’t go away,” he said.

Obama said that, before he was elected to the Senate, he was also profiled in department stores and viewed suspiciously on the street.

The president also nodded to the Justice Department investigation to see whether it makes sense to bring federal civil rights charges against Zimmerman. But he also urged state and local officials to review their own procedures to see how to improve their law enforcement practices.

He also called for a review of so-called “Stand Your Ground” laws, a central issue in the confrontation between Zimmerman and Martin.

“If Trayvon Martin was of age and was armed, could he have stood his ground on that sidewalk?” Obama asked. “If the answer to that question is at least ambiguous, then it seems to me that we should examine those laws.”

And though Obama sidestepped the idea of demanding a new, national conversation on race — and while he said that racism was far from eliminated — the president ended on an upbeat moment, expressing his view that race relations are “getting better.”

“We’re becoming a more perfect union,” he said. “Not a perfect union, but a more perfect union.”