safe and sounds

daily dos

wed 1/7/2009

 

Listen to the official version of "Crack a Bottle," Eminem's new single featuring Dr. Dre and 50 Cent.

 
 

The Game vs. T.I.

versus

tue 9/2/2008

 
A collage of rappers The Game and T.I.
name Jayceon Terrell Taylor. Clifford Joseph Harris, Jr.
hometown Los Angeles, California. Atlanta, Georgia.
birthdate November 29, 1979. September 25, 1980.
style West Coast hip hop. Southern hip hop.
also known as Hurricane Game, Murda Game and Chuck Taylor. T.I.P., Rubberband Man and King of the South.
got nickname from His grandmother. His grandfather.
powered by Dr. Dre. L.A. Reid.
signature look Fitted hat, tank top and Converse All-Stars. Sunglasses, slick jacket and dog tags.
debut album The Documentary (2005). I'm Serious (2001).
killer collab Hate It Or Love It with 50 Cent. What's Yo Name with Pharrell.
as seen in Street Kings. American Gangster.
beef Rivalries with Death Row Records, Roc-A-Fella Records and 50 Cent. Dissed Lil' Flip, Shawty Lo, 50 Cent and punched Ludacris' manager.
legal troubles Charged with resisting arrest and disorderly conduct. Under house arrest for posession of illegal firearms (machine guns).
most recent release LAX. Paper Trail.
the critics Hip Hop DX: "The Game is 50 Cent. He's Tupac, Biggie, Jay-Z, Nas, or Jadakiss. He's the gangsta rapper of right NOW for a generation that demands its own
ghetto soldier, someone who has lived a life to which they can escape."
Rolling Stone: "T.I. rhymes about the perks and pains of megastardom, and flashes Glocks in order to remind us he's still street, all the while darkening and amping up his sound with a king's ransom of keyboard-driven bangers."
webprops 685,099 friends on official MySpace. 2,066,292 friends on official MySpace.
best video moment Living the hard life with Lil Wayne in My Life. Offering the world to a girl in Whatever You Like.
 
 

attached

daily dos

wed 8/27/2008

 

Dr. Dre's 20-year-old son, Andre Young, Jr., was found dead this past weekend at his home in California, according to Dr. Dre's representative.

 
 

fittin' to ride

daily dos

thu 8/7/2008

 

Dr. Dre has signed a deal to release signature brands of both cognac and vodka.

 
 

d talks

daily dos

thu 7/24/2008

 

Dr. Dre will release his highly-anticipated album, Detox, in November or December. The 43-year-old producer-rapper has also announced that the album will feature appearances by Nas, Jay-Z and Lil Wayne.

 
 

international players

daily dos

fri 6/27/2008

 

In a radio interview, Snoop Dogg revealed that Detox, Dr. Dre's long-awaited follow-up to Chronic 2001, is finished: "You know me, I was starting to doubt it myself and then I went up in there and he played so much music for me it knocked my head off." (via The Daily Swarm)

 
 

building an army

daily dos

tue 1/8/2008

 

Dr. Dre teams with Monster Cable to unveil a line of $400 headphones called "The Beats."

 
 

falling down, falling down

daily dos

mon 9/24/2007

 

Mega-producer and rapper Dr. Dre says that his forthcoming album, Detox, seven years in the making, will be his last.

 
 

neighborhoods watch

daily dos

tue 8/21/2007

 

Hip hop mega-producer Dr. Dre is suing now-bankrupt Death Row Records for the rights to his multi-platinum debut album The Chronic.

 
 

Joell Ortiz

whodat

thu 5/17/2007

 
Joell Ortiz sits in a bodega.

When Dr. Dre hears your mixtape, calls you at home and asks if you'd like to meet, you do two things: you say "hell yeah" and hop on the first flight to California. That's precisely what 26-year-old Brooklyn MC Joell Ortiz did. Two days after meeting the West Coast legend, he returned to his native New York as the first Latino rapper signed to Dre's Aftermath Entertainment imprint. Although the heavy-set lyricist's razor-sharp delivery and full-bodied flow have earned him comparisons to fellow Boricua Big Pun, hardcore fans are heaping even greater praise on Ortiz: he's being touted as the MC who can bring that long-lost New York swagger back to mainstream hip hop.

The six-foot-two Ortiz claims he was a high school basketball star with a jaw-dropping SAT score of 1400 when he decided to turn his part-time music hobby into a full-time career. Despite receiving academic and athletic scholarship offers from various colleges, Ortiz would decide to stay home, to both work on his rhymes and take care of his drug-addicted mother. Magazines like The Source and XXL began to take notice of his blue-collar hustle. A victory in the 2004 EA Sports Battle secured his song "Mean Business" a place on video game NBA Live 2005 and record contract with rapper-producer Jermaine Dupri. In a bizarre twist, that contract fell through when the So So Def label head reneged on the deal – according to Ortiz, because the label didn't think it could market a chubby Puerto Rican.

Instead, the occasional street hustler and self-proclaimed "voice of the underdogs" released a well-recieved mixtape, Who the F**k is Joell Ortiz, which eventually found its way to the hands of Dr. Dre's assistant. The good doctor, who provided a shot in the arm to the careers of Eminem and 50 Cent, was instantly impressed, flying Ortiz out to Los Angeles. After a 10 minute meeting, Dre offered Ortiz a two-album contract. Ortiz, however, had already agreed to put out an album with the indie label Koch. Where another artist might have broken his word, Ortiz took the high road.

Last month, Ortiz released The Brick: Bodega Chronicles. The album features guest appearances from La Bruja, Akon, Ras Kass, Big Daddy Kane and The Alchemist as well as Ortiz' own rugged, self-effacing, realer-than-most rhymes. With his mother now clean and sober, a legendary producer in his corner and a new gym membership, the confident yet humble Ortiz could well become the next king of hip hop.

 
 
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