JAY Z & Dame Dash Reunite

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Don’t know if anything other than the good reunion of friends will come out of this, but this is as good as Hip-Hop gets (remember how you felt when Nas & Jay reunited on stage? That’s what I mean). I can’t wait for one of these two explains how this came to happen.

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Nas & Harvard University Announce Hip-Hop Fellowship

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Full press release below.

Fellowship To Fund Scholars And Artists Who Demonstrate Exceptional Productive Scholarship And Exceptional Creative Ability In The Arts, In Connection With Hiphop

(July 12, 2013 – New York, NY) The two decade (plus) career of multi-platinum Def Jam Recordings artist Nas is at the heart of a joint announcement by the Hiphop Archive and the W. E. B. Du Bois Institute at Harvard University, to establish the Nasir Jones Hiphop Fellowship. The Fellowship will provide selected scholars and artists with an opportunity to show that “education is real power,” as it builds upon the achievements of those who demonstrate exceptional capacity for productive scholarship and exceptional creative ability in the arts, in connection with Hiphop.

The mission of the Hiphop Archive is threefold: to seek projects from scholars and artists that build on the rich and complex hiphop tradition; to respect that tradition through historically grounded and contextualized critical insights; and most importantly, to represent one’s creative and/or intellectually rigorous contribution to hiphop and the discourse through personal and academic projects. Personal projects of fellows may include manuscript projects, performance pieces, album work, curriculum planning, primary archival research, and exhibition preparation, among others.

“Having welcomed artists including Ninth Wonder and scholars including Mark Anthony Neal, the Hiphop Archive and Research Institute is uncompromising in our commitment to build and support intellectually challenging and innovative scholarship that reflects the rigor and achievement of Hiphop performance,” said Marcyliena Morgan, Professor of African and African American Studies at Harvard University and founder and director of the Hiphop Archive and Research Institute. “With the introduction of the Nasir Jones Hiphop Fellowship, we will continue to be the leading resource for those interested in knowing, developing, building, maintaining, and representing Hiphop.”

Professor Henry Louis Gates, Jr., the Alphonse Fletcher University Professor and Director of the W. E. B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research, added, “Nas is a true visionary, and he consistently shows how boundaries can be pushed and expanded to further the cause of education and knowledge. The work of the Du Bois Institute is enriched by the addition of the Nasir Jones Hiphop Fellowship.”

Nasir Jones, or Nas, critically acclaimed for his lyrical skill, social analysis and commitment, has helped usher in an original form of hiphop debate and analysis that reflects on and represents urban youth angst and conflict as well as intelligence, confidence and ambition. A quintessentially honest artist, Nas has taken great risks in exposing his deepest vulnerabilities while still staying relevant to a wide audience. He has tackled both intense political issues and hardcore street topics. In doing so, he has inspired a generation. This Fellowship honors his work while supporting the work of others. Fellows are chosen by a selection committee comprising members of the Harvard University faculty. The Nasir Jones Hiphop Fellowship is the result of a generous gift from National Advisory Board member Ben Horowitz.

LIFE IS GOOD (released July 2012), the most recent album by Nas, was his third consecutive Def Jam album to debut at #1 on the Billboard 200 albums chart. It followed the releases of the RIAA platinum, Grammy®-nominated Hip-Hop Is Dead (December 2006), and the RIAA gold, Grammy®-nominated untitled album (July 2008).
The first full-length album by poet and rhyme-master Nas arrived in 1994, the RIAA platinum Illmatic (Columbia Records). 1996 brought the breakthrough double-platinum It Was Written (#1 R&B for 7 weeks, #1 pop for 4 weeks). The streak continued with the double-platinum I Am in 1999 (again #1 pop and #1 R&B). Subsequent albums by Nas included: the RIAA platinum Nastradamus (1999, #2 R&B, #7 pop); the platinum Stillmatic (2001, #1 R&B, #5 pop); the platinum God’s Son (2002, #1 R&B); and the platinum double-CD Street’s Disciple (2004, #2 R&B, #5 pop).

In addition to his successful career in music, Nas has pursued a career in motion pictures that began with his co-starring role (alongside DMX) in 1998’s crime drama Belly, a film by director Hype Williams (with whom Nas has done several video clips). Subsequent appearances include Albert Pyun’s action crime thriller Ticker (2001, with Tim Sizemore and Steven Seagal); Carl Seaton’s Sacred Is the Flesh (2001, also co-written by Nas); a cameo as himself in Boaz Yakin’s comedy Uptown Girls (2003, with Brittany Murphy and Dakota Fanning); Lawrence Page’s Murda Muzik (2004, with Ron Artest and Chinky); the fictional hip-hop group bio-pic The Vapors (2008, with an all-star cast of Roxanne Shanté, Kool G Rap, Marley Marl, Biz Markie, and others); and the CBS tv hit series, Hawaii Five-O.

The Hiphop Archive was officially established at Harvard University in 2002 under the direction of Professor Marcyliena Morgan to support and establish the emerging research and scholarship devoted to the knowledge, art, culture, materials, organizations, movements and institutions developed by those who support and follow hiphop. The Hiphop Archive and Research Institute organizes and develops collections, initiates and participates in research activities, sponsors events and acquires material culture associated with hiphop in the U.S. and throughout the world.

Named after William Edward Burghardt Du Bois who, in 1895, was the first African American to receive a Ph.D. from Harvard University, the W. E. B. Du Bois Institute for African and African American Research is the nation’s oldest research center dedicated to the study of the history and culture of Africans and African Americans. The Institute was established in 1975 to sponsor fellowships that would facilitate the writing of doctoral dissertations in areas related to Afro-American Studies. Today, the Institute awards up to twenty fellowships annually to scholars at various stages of their careers in the fields of African and African American Studies, broadly defined to cover the expanse of the African Diaspora. The W. E. B. Du Bois Institute’s research projects and visiting fellows form the nucleus around which revolve an array of lecture series, art exhibitions, readings, conferences, and archival and publication projects.

For more information on the programming and mission of the Hiphop Archive and Research Institute, go to hiphoparchive.org.

For more information on the research and public events of the Du Bois Institute, go to dubois.fas.harvard.edu

Most Rappers Are Lying About Their Money (Businessweek)

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I’m sitting over here laughing at the Nas part of this graph. From Businessweek (it’s better to check it out in full over there, as the graph gets interactive and in more detail).

Fresh off of Jay-Z’s new album is the track Versus, on which he chides fellow hip-hop artists and their dubious tales of extraordinary wealth: “The truth in my verses, versus, your metaphors about what your net worth is.” Like Jay-Z, we’ve long been skeptical of just how wealthy some hip-hop stars claim to be, so we created a way to separate the truly rich from the loud-mouth lyricists.

Scroll over each bar in the chart below to compare specific lyrics with data from Forbes’s “Cash Kings of Hip Hop” and “Forbes Five” reports from the same year the given artist’s wealth-related rap song was released. You’re welcome, Hova.

PICS: Kanye West Celebrates 36th Birthday With Jay-Z, Nas, Beyonce & More In NYC

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UPDATE: Now we know what the pics are about….Kanye celebrated his 36th birthday in New York with his fellow A-List friends. In addition to Nas, Jay-Z & Beyonce, other attendees spotted included Aziz Ansari, Scott Disick, David Blaine, Jonathan Cheban and Plain Pat. You can check out addition pics below.

Not sure if they were in the studio or not….just a powerful picture of Hip-Hop at it’s best.

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RECAP: Gig It Launch Party In NYC

Taken from Miss Info, you can explain it better than me (being that she was there):

Gig It? We were pretty confused by the name, too. But last night, NYC media folks were invited out try out the new online game with a ton of special guests. 90% of them being rappers. Everyone from Rick Ross, Pusha T, Raekwon, Ace Hood, French Montana, Fabolous, Busta Rhymes, Nas, 2 Chainz, DJ Khaled, Slaughterhouse, Large Professor, Ace Hood, Ne-Yo, Jaime Foxx, T-Pain and more were roaming around the VIP. The game basically allows you to pick real rappers and customize a custom concert with every detail catered to your liking. You can choose the music, backup dancers, speakers, opening act, headline performers, wardrobes, sponsors, etc. So far all of the artists mentioned are in the game, with more big announcements to come.

Nas To Headline NASS Action Sports & Music Festival

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Sounds like thee party to me. You can get plenty more information on their website.

NASS returns to the Bath and West Showground, Somerset from 11-13th July 2013.

NASS is a three day festival for 15,000 lovers of music, skate and bmx to celebrate their lifestyle. Pitch your tent for a sick weekend in our action sports and music world: launch yourself into one of the music arenas, watch BMX gods and Skate legends or take part yourself. Purpose built skate and bike parks and 5 stages of dubstep, DnB, punk and rock.

Between our massive music acts and our raw action sports pros ruthlessly competing for gold… we are the home of action. Whether you ride or party, this is for you.

Nas Invests In Mass Appeal; Becomes Associate Publisher

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Nas is placing his bets on Mass Appeal Media, so much so that he dropped six figures. He’s also been appointed Associate Publisher of the magazine (check out his classic cover with Large Professor above). From Forbes:

Nas explained that he’d been dismayed at the lack of options for readers interested in all aspects of hip-hop culture, particularly on the newsstands. He considered starting his own publication, as Jay-Z did, but figured he’d have better luck using an existing brand as a launching pad.

“Mass Appeal has a legacy and respect,” he says. “It already has a foundation … I just feel like I can add on because I can lend my kind of cultural expertise and my professional acumen, and develop the business.”