Freddie Gibbs Shot At In New York

2 wounded After Night Club Shooting in Brooklyn

Spotted in the New York Post:

Two people were shot in a trendy section of Williamsburg, Brooklyn, early Tuesday, in what was purportedly a rap beef.

Hip-hop musician Freddie Gibbs, who had just performed at a record store called Rough Trade, claimed he was the intended target when shots were fired at 1:13 a.m. while he was sitting in a black GMC Denali at North 9th Street near Wythe Avenue.

Gibbs’ crew had barely rolled one block away when the gunman — dressed in a dark hoodie — ran up to their ride and fired several shots inside, the rapper said.
“They tried to kill Tupac. They tried to kill me,” Gibbs told The Post outside the club. “I’m still alive.”

Asked why he would be targeted, Gibbs said: “I’m Freddie Gibbs. They tried to kill me, but I’m still alive.”

Gibbs said he jumped out and ran to safety back at Rough Trade. He spotted the gunman fleeing east on 9th Street.

The gunman was seen on security video inside Rough Trade, trying to blend into Gibbs’ entourage while his crew was hanging out inside the club’s Guardian Green Room, police said.

“He [the shooter] was standing around you guys all night,” an investigator told Gibbs. “He was stalking you guys. We can tell on camera, he wanted it to look like he knew you, but it’s clear he didn’t. When you guys left, he was waiting for you outside.”

Cops showed Gibbs pictures of the gunman, and another man seen inside the club with him, but the rapper didn’t recognize either man.

Rough Trade doesn’t have metal detectors and doesn’t check customers for weapons, police said.

“They don’t have metal detectors, they don’t use wands,” the investigator said, “nothing prevents somebody from bringing in a gun.”

The gunman could have shot Gibbs inside, but instead opened fire when they were all outside.

“At one point, he [the shooter] was standing right next to you,” the investigator said. “The opportunity was there if he wanted to shoot.”

One victim was hit in the leg during the attack, and the other in the hand. Both are expected to survive their wounds, police said.

Both victims were transported to Bellevue Hospital and listed in stable condition. Police did not identify the victims.

There were no immediate arrests.

Jeezy Gives His Side Of The Story In Freddie Gibbs Beef

Jeezy and former CTE artist Freddie Gibbs beef is very much publicized, mainly thanks to Gibbs being very vocal about his riffs with his former boss. Now, in an interview with Elliott Wilson for The Truth, we finally hear Jeezy’s side of the story:

I put him on a song with Eminem. I put him on a song with T.I. I put him on numerous mixtapes that I had. I took him on tour. Took him around the world. I spent money on videos that he didn’t use cause he didn’t like them, and it wasn’t his money.

So at the end of the day, my whole thing was to him was ‘I took you to every label in the game. They don’t wanna sign you. I don’t have no reason—I love you. You know what I’m saying? I think your music is dope, but they don’t want to sign you.’ So at the end of the day, when I called him up I was like, ‘Yo, I can’t really spend my money on you. I got family, other shit I gotta take care of. So, I’ll help you all I can, but I can’t fund it anymore.’

Cool. Conversation went well. We got off the conversation it was straight love. I hear diss records. What I’m supposed to do? I’m not replying to that. Nigga we getting money. YG just sold a million fuckking singles. At the end of the day, we all tried. It didn’t work. That shit happens in business all the time…

I still ain’t surprised, cause I don’t give a fuck. I’m still getting money. I’m still on top. You’re not gonna knock that. And I’m still having success around me, but when you listen and good things happen – we celebrate like with YG.

Deep. Other topics included the new album Seen It All, YG’s success and more. You can watch the full interview above.

Madlib & Freddie Gibbs Talk Piñata, Drugs, (Not) Working With Kanye

MadGibbs talks creativity, industry bullshit and more in this new interview.  I’ve included two excerpts below, check the whole thing here.

Madlib:

At one point there was talk of you working with Kanye?

I don’t know what happened. Maybe he didn’t wanna pay my fee, or maybe he didn’t wanna go in that direction. Probably the money thing, he wanted to put his name on my— I actually don’t wanna talk about that. A lot of people record over my music and it don’t come out.

Freddie Gibbs:

So you think Jeezy didn’t really know what he was doing when it came to running a label?

Of course he don’t know what he doing. Hell nah, he don’t know what the fuck he doing. And I’mma stay on his punk ass till he say something about it. I’mma keep drilling his punk ass into the ground.

But a lot of people don’t know how to run a label — that’s something you gotta learn. I’m gonna take the necessary steps. That’s why I got the right people around me. I don’t just got people around me sucking my dick. That’s his problem, too many fucking yes-men, not telling you the real. I made mine in this game —

[Phone rings in the background.]

… that’s my trap phone ringing …

[Phone silenced.]

… I never took a dollar from nobody. Not no label, not nobody. And I remain to be relevant. I might not be a household name but when you think of the best rap lyricists, you gotta mention my name, or you slipping. You can’t name five mothafuckas that rap better than me on the planet. On the planet! It ain’t about the record sales, it ain’t about the radio spins, it ain’t about the b*****s twerking on my shit. I’m all about making the best product.

Madlib & Freddie Gibbs – Cocaine Piñata Tracklist/Cover

Freddie Gibbs took to Instagram to unveil the cover for his upcoming album with Madlib, and DGB got their hands on the tracklist.

01. Supplier
02. Scarface
03. Deeper
04. High (feat. Danny Brown)
05. Harold’s
06. Bomb (feat. Raekwon)
07. Shitsville
08. Thuggin’
09. Real
10. Uno
11. Robes (feat. Domo Genesis & Earl Sweatshirt)
12. Broken (feat. Scarface)
13. Lakers (feat. Ab-Soul & Polyester The Saint)
14. Knicks
15. Shame (feat. BJ The Chicago Kid)
16. Watts (feat. Big Time Watts)
17. Piñata (feat. Domo Genesis, G-Wiz, Casey Veggies, Sulaiman, Meechy Darko & Mac Miller)

Freddie Gibbs & Madlib Reveal Album Release Date; Upcoming Shows

gibbs

March 18th is the date. Press release and upcoming tour dates below.

Freddie Gibbs is the product of violent, drug-laden streets, but unlike most rappers with similar resumes, he brings the block to the booth without inhibition or an exaggerated rap persona. Piñata, a 17-track collaboration with producer Madlib, is the best distillation yet of his transparent approach to making music, combining stark honesty with electrifying talent as a lyricist and performer.

Piñata is “a gangster Blaxploitation film on wax,” Gibbs says, and the full-length result of a process that began in 2009. It’s an album with a sound that couldn’t be any further from the radio, where, according to the Gibbs, every rapper is Superman, or the dope dealer of the century, who has grinded to the top, never made a mistake and has no chinks in his armor.

“I will show you my flaws, I’ll show you what I’ve done wrong and what I’ve fucked up at,” says the native of Gary, Indiana, the former steel town best known for producing Michael Jackson. “I don’t regret shit, but I’ll show you the things I’m not proud of.”

Gibbs is joined on Piñata by Mac Miller, Earl Sweatshirt, Raekwon, Scarface, Domo Genesis, Ab-Soul and a host of others in setting his soliloquies of the streets alongside film snippets and dusted funk, soul and prog musical tapestries. While this is the latest in a series of single-artist collaborations for Madlib, after Jaylib (J Dilla), Madvillainy (MF Doom) and the street-centric O.J. Simpson with Detroit’s Guilty Simpson, the pairing is unique as it is the first time for Gibbs working with just one producer.

There’s also Madlib’s own self-awareness of his style as a producer. “My stuff, it ain’t fully quantized…it has more of a human feel, so it might slow down or speed up,” he says. “So you have to be the type of rapper, like Doom or Freddie, who can catch that, or else you’ll be sounding crazy.”

Gibbs admits it was a challenge rapping over beats with chops and changes as unpredictable as the man who created them, but says-with conviction and supreme confidence-“I think I did it to perfection.”

The perfection is apparent on the album, where Gibbs shifts from textbook lessons in robbing and drugging on tracks like “Scarface” and “Knicks,” to perhaps the album’s most personal song, “Broken,” a collaboration with Scarface, who, along with Tupac, DMX and 50 Cent, make up the rapper’s own Mount Rushmore of MCs (“You’re getting a hurricane of all those motherfuckers hitting you at once when you listen to Freddie Gibbs,” he says). “Deeper,” a Gibbs favorite and the third single from the album after “Thuggin'” (2012) and “Shame,” (2013) is an ode to hip-hop in the mold of Common’s “I Used to Love H.E.R.”; “High,” featuring Danny Brown, is self-explanatory and just what you would expect from Gibbs, Madlib and one of Detroit’s finest; while on “Real,” Gibbs addresses an old score just as Michael Corleone settled all family business on baptism day.

It’s tracks like “Real” that makes fans believe Gibbs’ claim that “I’m about to show niggas how to rap again.” And he’s just as loyal. “As long as I keep satisfying them,” he says, “everybody else is going to fall in line.

As a producer, Madlib, quite simply, is music, and ten years into his career-a time when other artists become comfortable-Gibbs remains restless, focused, with an eye on the competition and their position relative to his ascent. This is because mentally, he’s still on the corner hustling, which would be the downfall of the average rapper. Gibbs, however, isn’t average.

“When it comes to the nuts and bolts, the nitty gritty of this shit, flat-out spitting verse for verse,” he says. “Niggas ain’t on my level.”

– Ronnie Reese

3/7/13 – Chicago, IL – Metro
3/8/13 – Denver, CO – Cervantes
3/15/13 – Austin, TX – North Door (Stones Throw showcase) #
3/21/13 – Boston, MA – Middle East Downstairs #
3/22/13 – New York, NY – Gramercy Theatre
3/27/13 – San Francisco, CA – 103 Harriet
3/28/13 – Los Angeles, CA – Echoplex
# = Madlib solo

Tech N9ne Announces ‘Independent Grind Tour’ With Freddie Gibbs

tech-n9ne-tour

The tour will also be supported by Krizz Kaliko, Jarren Benton and Psych Ward Druggies. You can check out the dates for the huge tour (which is how Tech N9ne can only do it) below; more information is on the above flyer.

April 9, 2014 Springfield MO
April 10, 2014 Little Rock AR
April 11, 2014 Baton Rouge LA
April 12, 2014 Mobile AL
April 13, 2014 Birmingham AL
April 14, 2014 Pensacola FL
April 15, 2014 St. Petersburg FL
April 16, 2014 Ft. Lauderdale FL
April 17, 2014 Orlando FL
April 18, 2014 Jacksonville FL
April 19, 2014 Atlanta GA
April 20, 2014 TBA
April 21, 2014 Charleston SC
April 22, 2014 Greensboro NC
April 23, 2014 Washington DC
April 24, 2014 Norfolk VA
April 25, 2014 Philadelphia PA
April 26, 2014 Sayreville NJ
April 27, 2014 Worcester MA
April 28, 2014 TBA
April 29, 2014 Rochester NY
April 30, 2014 Cleveland OH
May 1, 2014 Detroit MI
May 2, 2014 Cincinnati OH
May 3, 2014 Indianapolis IN
May 4, 2014 St. Louis MO
May 5, 2014 Kokomo IN
May 6, 2014 Chicago IL
May 7, 2014 Milwaukee WI
May 8, 2014 Des Moines IA
May 9, 2014 Omaha NE
May 10, 2014 Minneapolis MN
May 11, 2014 Sioux Falls SD
May 12, 2014 TBA
May 13, 2014 Fargo ND
May 14, 2014 Bismark ND
May 15, 2014 Rapid City SD
May 16, 2014 Casper WY
May 17, 2014 Billings MT
May 18, 2014 Missoula MT
May 19, 2014 TBA
May 20, 2014 TBA
May 21, 2014 Boise ID
May 22, 2014 Spokane WA
May 23, 2014 Seattle WA
May 24, 2014 Seattle WA
May 25, 2014 TBA
May 26, 2014 Portland OR
May 27, 2014 Bend OR
May 28, 2014 Ashland, OR
May 29, 2014 Arcata, CA
May 30, 2014 Reno NV
May 31, 2014 Sacramento CA
June 1, 2014 Santa Cruz CA
June 2, 2014 San Francisco CA
June 3, 2014 Riverside CA
June 4, 2014 Los Angeles CA
June 5, 2014 San Diego CA
June 6, 2014 TBA
June 7, 2014 Tempe AZ
June 8, 2014 Tucson AZ
June 9, 2014 Las Vegas NV
June 10, 2014 Salt Lake City UT
June 11, 2014 Grand Junction CO
June 12, 2014 Colorado Springs CO
June 13, 2014 Ft. Collins CO
June 14, 2014 TBA
June 15, 2014 Albuquerque NM
June 16, 2014 El Paso TX
June 17, 2014 Lubbock TX
June 18, 2014 Oklahoma City OK
June 19, 2014 Austin TX
June 20, 2014 San Antonio TX
June 21, 2014 Houston TX
June 22, 2014 Dallas TX
June 23, 2014 TBA
June 24, 2014 Tulsa OK
June 25, 2014 Wichita KS
June 26, 2014 Manhattan KS
June 27, 2014 Columbia MO
June 28, 2014 Kansas City MO

Freddie Gibbs Continues To Slander Jeezy

gibbs

This was in a recent interview with XXL, which you can check out here….the Jeezy shit is below.

On Why He’s Still Going After Jeezy:
“Honestly, I can give two fucks about Jeezy. I ain’t got nothing to prove to Jeezy. From a rap standpoint, I gotta say what’s going on. I gotta say how I feel. If I don’t like a motherfucker, I’m not about to act like I like a motherfucker. For the media, I ain’t about to act like I like a motherfucker. For this fake ass Hollywood shit, I’m not doing that. I flat out don’t fuck with dude. He a liar. That is what it is. To me, it’s not real. Until you formally make that shit right with me…all the motherfucker gotta do is [say], “My bad, Gibbs.” But, motherfuckers act like I am crazy or some shit. I’m not about to make the media make me think I am crazy. I am not about to let motherfuckers trick me into [thinking], “Oh man, why are you doing that?” That’s how I feel about that punk ass nigga, and any other rap nigga that I got a motherfucking issue with. I’ma motherfuckin’ put they ass on blast, nigga.

“I say shit when I want to say it, how I want to say it. Until I’m done talking about that shit, I’ma speak on it. I think I got one more shot to bust in that clip. When I bust that shit, it’s over with. However it come out, I talk shit about a motherfucker in an interview. I talk shit about a motherfucker on the radio. I talk shit about a motherfucker on TV. I talk shit about a motherfucker in a song. I don’t give a fuck. Like I said, man, all a motherfucker gotta do is be square with Gibbs. I am one of the easiest guys to deal with. I think I get the reputation that I am difficult to deal with because I dealt with so many pussy ass niggas in this industry. So that’s why I stick to myself. I don’t really deal with too many rap niggas and all that shit. Because at the end of the day, most of these niggas frauds. There’s niggas that I got songs with that I really don’t fuck with no more. These niggas, you just see their true colors.”