Keyshia Cole & Chrisette Michele Announce Woman To Woman Tour

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Keyshia Cole & Chrisette Michele are hitting the road in March, and they want you to be a part of it (because if not, Michelle Williams wins). Dates are below.

March 28: Westbury Theater, Westbury, NY
March 29: Chrysler Hall, Norfolk, VA
March 30: Warner Theater, Washington, DC
April 2: Orpheum, Boston, MA
April 4: Beacon Theater, New York, NY
April 5: Oakdale Theater, Wallingford, CT
April 6: Borgata, Atlantic City, NJ
April 7: Tower Theatre, Philadelphia, PA
April 9: Danforth Music Hall, Toronto, ON
April 11: Motor City Casino, Detroit, MI
April 12: State Theater, Cleveland, OH
April 13: Star Theater, Merrillville, IL
April 14: Murat Theatre, Indianapolis, IN
April 16: Verizon. Dallas, TX
April 18: Celebrity Theater, Phoenix, AZ
April 19: Club Nokia, Los Angeles, CA
April 20: Humphrey’s, San Diego, CA
April 21: Fox Theater, Oakland, CA

Young Buck Feat. Tha City Paper – I See Why

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G.A.S. (Gangsta & Street) 2 drops March 15th. Not only is Young Buck still making tunes, but it looks like he’s back to trying to get in touch with 50 Cent again:

[audio:https://jukeboxdc.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/02/Young-Buck-I-See-Why-f.-Tha-City-Paper.mp3]

Cash Money Sued Over Sample Used On An Old Bow Wow Song

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From TMZ:

Lil Wayne and Birdman’s label Cash Money Records is in the hot seat over allegations it illegally used a sample from a 70s song in one of Bow Wow’s recent tracks.

The septuagenarian behind the lawsuit is Robert Poindexter from the 70s band The Persuaders.

Poindexter claims Cash Money sampled his band’s song “Love Gonna Pack Up (and Walk Out)” and illegally lifted the tune in Bow Wow’s 2010 track “Still Ballin.”

As for “Love Gonna Pack Up (and Walk Out)” — the song was recorded in 1972 and reached the top of the charts … and Poindexter says neither Cash Money nor Bow Wow ever obtained permission to sample it.

Poindexter claims he reached out to Cash Money for an answer, and was redirected to Bow Wow’s attorneys, who then directed him back to Cash Money … which is why Cash Money’s currently in his crosshairs.

Poindexter wants $600,000 in punitive damages, plus interest. Cash Money has yet to respond to the suit. We reached out to the label for comment — so far, no word back.

Jay-Z & Justin Timberlake Announce Tour

The 55th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Show

 

Jay-z & JT is not only  headlining London’s Wireless Festival on July 12 and 13,  they also officially announced their Legends Of The Summer tour. No dates yet, just the venues.

Yankee Stadium, Bronx, New York
Hershey Park Stadium, Hershey, Pennsylvania
Citizen Bank Park, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
M&T Bank Stadium, Baltimore, Maryland
Soldier Field, Chicago, Illinois
Ford Field, Detroit, Michigan
Rose Bowl Stadium, Pasadena, California
Candlestick Park, San Francisco, California
Sun Life Stadium, Miami, Florida
Fenway Park, Boston, Massachusetts
BC Place Stadium, Vancouver, Canada
Rogers Center, Toronto, Canada

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Updated: Dates below via Billboard

July 17: Toronto, ON (Rogers Center)
July 19: New York, NY (Yankee Stadium)
July 22: Chicago, IL (Soldier Field)
July 26: San Francisco, CA (Candlestick Park)
July 28: Los Angeles, CA (Rose Bowl Stadium)
July 31: Vancouver, BC (BC Place Stadium)
August 4: Hershey, PA (Hershey Park Stadium)
August 6: Detroit, MI (Ford Field)
August 8: Baltimore, MD (M&T Bank Stadium)
August 10: Boston, MA (Fenway Park)
August 13: Philadelphia, PA (Citizen Bank Park)
August 16: Miami, FL (Sun Life Stadium)

 

Bondax (@bondaxuk) – Gold (Video)

Bondax’s “Gold” is a low-tempo fusion of garage, house and hip-hop that illustrates their honed-to-perfection songwriting and production skills.

Barely out of their teens, Lancaster’s George and Adam have carved a unique sound for themselves, and it’s a sound that’s already won them a host of worldwide admirers; a fact cemented with their debut US tour at the start of December taking in dates through 11 major cities.

The single is out now on Justus/ Relentless here.

Macklemore On “Wing$” Criticism

800px-Macklemore_WittenbergEarlier this month, Macklemore and Ryan Lewis track “Wing$” was licensed in a commercial for the NBA All-Star break. The placement received some backlash Macklemore responded to the “sellout” accusations last night on his website.  Some people will never be pleased.

Over the past couple days, I’ve read numerous tweets and a couple articles about the use of our song “Wings” as the intro for the 2013 NBA All Star Game.  While most people were congratulatory over the television appearance, it seemed like there were a fair amount of people that were quick to throw out the good, old-fashioned “sellout” statement.  The bigger our profile gets, the more I’m getting use to the phrase and the “purists” who toss it around so liberally.  But I figured I should probably break it down from my perspective to let you know where I stand.

The song “Wings” is about the pursuit of identity through the means of consumerism.  The attempt is to dissect our infatuation and attachment to logos, labels, brands and the fleeting happiness that is intrinsically linked to the almighty power of the purchase.  The subject I use in the song is shoes, but its aim is to paint a broader picture of being a consumer and tracing the lineage back to my first memory of retail infused desire.

I love the NBA.  Always have, ever since I was a little kid.  When we got offered the TNT All Star game intro it was a no-brainer.  I showed up that day to a middle school gym in LA and as I was reading the script I was informed that they re-arranged the structure of the song.  I didn’t know prior to that day that my lyrics were going to be edited.  But to be 100% honest with you, I didn’t really care once I learned that they were.  The only thing that I was a little “ehhhh” about was the last bar.  But I put it on the ethics scale, and the last bar alteration wasn’t outweighing the potential reach that I saw in doing the video.

In any licensing deal they are going to edit your music.  A 4 minute song does not fit into a 30 second movie trailer.  Lyrics have to get cut in order for the trailer/ad to make sense with what the company is promoting.  And a song about consumerism doesn’t fit into an NBA All Star Game intro without some tailoring.  There is a story telling aspect of Wings that chronicles loving basketball, being a kid and wanting to be like Jordan.  That’s the side that the NBA wanted to use.  Makes sense.  Probably doesn’t make sense for them to use the part that’s breaking down our obsession with the shoes that 90% of the players in the NBA wear, right?

The All Star game intro was seen by millions of people on Sunday who had no idea who we were.  My thinking was, if they liked the song they will go and listen to the full version.  Those who hear the original song in its entirety will get the core of what gives the song depth.  Some might even buy it and become real fans.  And guess what version they get?  Not the TNT chopped up edit, but the full one.

In my stripped down definition, selling out is compromising your artistic integrity for money/fame.  In my heart I can tell you that my personal artistic integrity remained completely intact over the weekend.  TNT used our song.  They’re still my words.  They picked the parts that fit their ad campaign, and visually matched it to us performing, threw in a highlight reel of crazy dunks and had a bunch of kids singing the hook in a gym.  Word.  I’m all for that.  If you take away the consumerism cautionary core of Wings, a story still remains.  And that story is one that I’m still proud of, and it’s dope to me that it’s relatable enough for TNT to want to use it.

I would understand the “Macklemore sold out” complaints more if we matched Wings to a shoe commercial.  That would be blatant irony, it would completely contradict the song and would appear as a sell out move.  But an NBA commercial?  The NBA has very little to do with what Wings was really about.  The songs subject is about shoes, but the guts of the record are about consumer culture.  Is the NBA tied up in this culture and related in some way?  Of course.  All companies selling a product are.  But this is the result of American culture.  Does the NBA happen to fall under the capitalist umbrella?  Absolutely.  But it’s no different than the brands you’re currently wearing, the company that manufactured the couch that you’re sitting on or the computer/phone you’re staring into while reading this.

If there was any trace of irony by Wings being one of the official songs of the 2013 All Star Game, that’s great.  That means that we won.  The song about consumerism was embraced on a national level, and played to the entire country of sports fans that tuned in.  More people download the song, got the truth (the actual/full song) and we converted strangers that didn’t know who we were into fans.  If that’s selling out to you, word.  But to me that’s nothing but an all around win.

-Macklemore