So you`re working on a new album?

Transcription

So you`re working on a new album?
PUBLISHER/EDITOR:
Julia Beverly
MUSIC REVIEWS:
ADG, Wally Sparks
CONTRIBUTORS:
Bogan, Cynthia Coutard, Dain Burroughs, Darnella Dunham, Felisha
Foxx, Felita Knight, Iisha Hillmon,
Jaro Vacek, Jessica Koslow, J
Lash, Katerina Perez, Keith Kennedy, K.G. Mosley, King Yella,
Lisa Coleman, Malik “Copafeel”
Abdul, Marcus DeWayne, Matt
Sonzala, Maurice G. Garland,
Natalia Gomez, Noel Malcolm,
Ray Tamarra, Rayfield Warren,
Rohit Loomba, Spiff, Swift
SALES CONSULTANT:
Che’ Johnson (Gotta Boogie)
LEGAL AFFAIRS:
Kyle P. King, P.A. (King Law
Firm)
STREET REPS:
Al-My-T, B-Lord, Bill
Rickett, Black, Bull, Cedric
Walker, Chill, Chilly C,
Chuck T, Controller, Dap,
Delight, Dereck Washington, Derek Jurand, Dwayne
Barnum, Dr. Doom, Ed the
World Famous, Episode,
General, H-Vidal, Hollywood, Jammin’ Jay,
Janky, Jason Brown, Joe
Anthony, Judah, Kamikaze, Klarc Shepard, Kydd
Joe, Lex, Lump, Marco
Mall, Miguel, Mr. Lee,
Music & More, Nick@Nite,
Pat Pat, PhattLipp, Pimp
G, Quest, Red Dawn,
Rippy, Rob-Lo, Statik,
Stax, TJ’s DJ’s, Trina
Edwards, Vicious, Victor
Walker, Voodoo, Wild Bill
ADMINISTRATIVE:
Melinda Paz, Nikki Kancey
CIRCULATION:
Mercedes (Strictly
Streets)
Buggah D. Govanah (On
Point)
Big Teach (Big Mouth)
Efren Mauricio (Direct
Promo)
To subscribe, send check or
money order for $11 to:
1516 E. Colonial Dr.
Suite 205
Orlando, FL 32803
Phone: 407-447-6063
Fax: 407-447-6064
Web: www.ozonemag.com
Cover credits: Pimp C and Baby
photos by Julia Beverly; Bun B
photo by Matt Sonzala. OZONE
Magazine is published eleven
times annually by OZONE Magazine, Inc. OZONE does not take
responsibility for unsolicited
materials, misinformation, typographical errors, or misprints.
The views contained herein do
not necessarily reflect those of
the publisher or its advertisers.
Ads appearing in this magazine are
not an endorsement or validation
by OZONE Magazine for products
or services offered. All photos and
illustrations are copyrighted by their
respective artists. All other content
is copyright 2005 OZONE Magazine,
all rights reserved. No portion of this
magazine may be reproduced in any way
without the written consent of the publisher. Printed in the USA.
Hate it? Love it?
Send your comments to:
[email protected]
OZONE reserves the right to edit
comments for clarity or length.
I just read your mag for the first time today,
and I know I’m late. I read the second annual
sex edition: November 2004! The first thing I
turned to was the picture of Jasun Wiggins with
his wet jocks on. My boyfriend got a little offended when I said, “Damn, brotha showing lots
of dick!” and promptly snatched the mag outta
my hand. I let that nigga know that the mag
was now my personal property! Anyway, I really
enjoyed this issue. I am from Columbia, SC and I
am a single working mom and college student. I
don’t have cable (sad, I know) so this mag helps
me keep up with the entertainment world.
I’m like a damn fiend. I still have aspirations
for living the celeb life. I know I’m late, but I
promise to be a faithful OZONE Magazine reader
from now on. I actually did read this mag from
cover to cover and I enjoy your writing. I can’t
wait to see a recent edition! - Ms. Swizzle,
[email protected] (Columbia, SC)
Just wanted to say congratulations to OZONE
for joining forces with MTV Jams. That is amazing, keep up the great work. It’s not often that
you can start something from scratch and see it
grow to such a level that OZONE has reached.
It has to stay true and be about the music, and
you have proven it with every issue. It’s a true
insider’s guide to the industry. – Trey Wilson,
[email protected]
10
a rapper breathing (that goes for North, South,
East, West, Midwest) that can put together a
better 16 than T.I.P., period. If it’s based on
sales, Jermaine Dupri would be in the top 5,
no doubt! Outkast would be a hands-down #1,
and UGK ain’t sold that much throughout their
careers. Ludacris’ career sales are more than
triple UGK’s sales. If the list is based on money,
J.D., Master P, and Outkast would be the top
three. As far as contributions to the South, J.D.
would still be in the top 5, along with Goodie
Mob. This list needs an extreme makeover. Define the criteria of the list first and stick to it,
please. The list has to be based on the personal
opinion of the author. – Anthony Ingram, [email protected]
Okay, I just read your 25 Greatest Southern
artists list. Why is Pastor Troy #16? He started
crunk music. He should have been higher, at
least in the top 10 if not the top 5. I like Petey
Pablo but he should have been lower. How in
the hell was he higher than Pastor Troy? I’m glad
8Ball & MJG were on the list. – Abdullah Zakiya,
[email protected]
Whoa, you’re making the South look so horrible.
Half the artists on your list sucked. Ludacris is
supposed to be in the top five, at least. – Leuri
Mejia, [email protected]
Your 25 Greatest Southern artists list is trash!
First of all, UGK and the Geto Boys should not
be in front of Outkast. None of them has put out
as many albums as Outkast. It should have been
2 Live Crew/Uncle Luke first, then Outkast.
No other rapper on the list has had as many
Grammys as Outkast! Outkast revolutionized
the game for all Southern artists! Outkast put
the South on the map! Furthermore, there are
other issues. Ludacris should be higher. Mystikal should be higher based on his body of work.
Mystikal has done more than T.I.! 8Ball & MJG
should be higher than UGK. – Ben and Shannon
Shaw, [email protected]
Y’all are on some bullshit. Just to let y’all know,
I didn’t spend any money on your piece of rag
magazine. I saw your so-called top 25 list on
allhiphop.com. Tell me how Outkast is rated
#4 when everyone knows ‘Kast is probably the
greatest group in all of hip-hop. How the hell is
Goodie Mob #19? Are you seriously saying the 69
Boyz, Pastor Troy, and T.I. had a bigger impact
in the region than Goodie Mob? I’m highly disgusted at your bullshit and your audacity to try
to rate something you obviously have no idea
about. Fuck OZONE. I predict your magazine
folds before you print out 12 issues. – Robinson
Karanja, [email protected]
I read your 25 Greatest Southern artists list. I’m
not hating on anybody on the list, I just hate the
list itself. What was the criteria for this? Lyrics?
Album sales? Money? Contributions to the South?
This list is bullshit. If it was based on lyrics, then
how in the hell is 2 Live Crew #2? And non-rappers like DJ Screw and DJ Magic Mike, why are
they on the fucking list? I mean, 69 Boyz? Get
real! Y’all put Mia X on the list but left off CMurder, Soulja Slim, and Fiend, the real niggas
that were spittin’ on No Limit. If you’re basing
it off lyrics, Goodie Mob and Lil Wayne would at
least be in the top 10. Hell, Tip would be in the
top 5 off lyrics alone. I don’t feel that there is
Editor responds: We’ve already printed 33 issues.
OZONE MAY 2005
Y’all are killing the game. When I first subscribed to OZONE, I was just trying to support
another independent since you put the articles
online. But man, nobody is really coming close
to y’all with the quality of the material that
y’all are putting out. I put y’all at the forefront
of indie music magazines, so I just wanna say
keep it up. This 25 Southern artists thing is off
the chain. You and your staff are killing it right
now. And for the groupie confessions, I want you
to try to find some male groupies to confess.
Try to see if any female rappers done did they
thang! Ha! Anyway, we wish you continued success. – Focus, [email protected]
Y’all are holdin’ it down with y’all magazine.
Y’all ask the real questions while most magazines beat around the bush, like that Lil Wayne
sex interview! Somethin’ serious! – Jasmine
Bentley, [email protected]
I’m just writing to congratulate OZONE Magazine for your partnership with MTV Jams. God
moves through people, and OZONE is quickly
becoming hip-hop’s next big magazine. Coming
from the South, it shows our entrepreneurial
spirit and hustle. - Robert Robinson, robert3.
[email protected] (Tallahassee, FL)
I tuned into your Southern countdown on MTV
Jams and was very disappointed at some of
your positioning. I think you guys should do
more homework before you try to have your
own countdown. Jay-Z is from New York!
My advice for any other countdowns you
have is, Tighten up! - Jeremy Londergan,
[email protected]
Editor responds: Jay-Z wasn’t on our 25 Greatest Southern artists list. “Big Pimpin’” was
used in the countdown because it’s the only
commercially released video featuring UGK.
Dirty Down Records would like to respond to
your March 2005 interview with Khia:
1. Contrary to her statements, Khia was signed
to Dirty Down Records as an artist and she was
also signed to our management company, Ty
Joyce Management. We “upstreamed” her to
Artemis and retained our equity position with
her album in the process.
2. Taz Williams, CEO of Dirty Down Records,
produced and co-wrote Khia’s “My Neck, My
Back.” Just check the album credits and the
ASCAP registration; there are no other individuals mentioned as producers. With the exception
of “K Wang,” Taz produced the entire Thug
Misses album.
3. According to their last financial statement,
Artemis/Sony spent over 2 million dollars
marketing the Thug Misses album, and the
video cost over $150,000 (noted video director Diane Martel has never shot a video
for $20,000! Where does Khia get her information?).
4. Whatever happened to Khia in New
York was unfortunate, but we had
nothing to do with it. However, that sad incident reminded us all that people should
watch what they say (and who they say it to)
when they are on the road. Bark on the wrong
person, and it can go down, anywhere and at
any time. Remember, the streets are always
watching, so you can’t get caught slipping or
run your mouth at strangers. Star or not, female or not, some folks just ain’t having it.
Khia learned that firsthand that fateful night
in NYC! Thank God she wasn’t seriously hurt,
because she certainly might have been.
5. Khia has submitted countless demos and solicited deals from almost every major label in
existence (the A&Rs call us every time she submits a new CD), but she has still not been able
to get signed. She certainly is talented enough,
but her reputation for being difficult and lack
of business savvy precedes her everywhere she
goes. Khia may be the only first-time “out the
gate” who platinum artist can’t get another
major record deal!
6. Regardless of the difficult times we had
when she was signed to us, Khia is truly an extraordinary talent, and made us a lot of money
as well. We’d gladly work with her again, with
no hard feelings.
Fuck BET’s Spring Bling. Yeah, I said it.
I’m not saying “fuck BET” because they play a
full 24 hours of Gospel programming on Sunday to
atone for the other six days of ass-shaking. I’m not saying “fuck BET” because the guys get eye candy like Free
and we’re stuck with AJ’s boring dreadlocked/braided ass. I’m
not saying “fuck BET” because they film College Hill with video
cameras from the year 1874. I’m not saying “fuck BET” because
they forcefeed us Omarion and Bobby Valentino. I’m not saying
“fuck BET” because they thought Fatty Koo would be a good name
for a show. I’m not saying “fuck BET” because they replaced Tigger
with Mad Linx (sorry, Tampa). I’m not saying “fuck BET” because
they charge people $15k to play their garbage videos on Uncut.
No, the reason I’m saying “fuck BET” is because of two ladies in
their “corporate communications” department who don’t know
how to communicate shit. When will people learn, you DO NOT PISS
OFF THE MEDIA? He (or she) who has the pen has the power. I’m
not going to put their names out there, because that’s irrelevant.
They’re on the bottom of the totem pole. They’re just mad cause
they’re ten years older than me and still walking on eggshells to
hold onto their bi-weekly paychecks, while I own my own shit. I
know it’s not very politically correct to say “fuck BET.” But I’ve
been holding it in for too long. Every year at Spring Bling, it’s the same bullshit. I kissed their
ass last year; I sat in the hot media tent for three long days with potato chips and water and
took pictures of the artists with cheesy poses in front of the corny BET poster. Never again.
7. We would like to offer Khia one million dollars to re-sign with us for three albums, which
will be distributed and marketed by a major
label. Since we parted ways with Khia, we
have released two albums through major labels
(DSD’s Play Wit It on Warlock/Sony and Tampa
Tony’s Y Not on EmpireMusicwerks/BMG).
It all started about three years ago when these lovely ladies took over. In 2003 a BET staffer
was escorting Killer Mike past the “media area” and he stopped. “Aren’t you JB from OZONE
Magazine? I’ve been hearing about your mag. I want to do an interview with you.” What followed was an absurd twenty-minute exchange, in which Mike kept asking me and Noel to follow him to do the interview, and BET staff kept attempting to stop us from interviewing Mike.
Since I am such a rebellious troublemaker, they’ve been watching me closely ever since.
Thanks, OZONE, for doing your part to keep
Southern hip-hop alive and well. We look
forward to every new issue. - G. Alexander
Jenkins, Esq., COO of Dirty Down Records,
[email protected]
So this year, 2005, the first performers for Spring Bling were Mike Jones, Slim Thug, PaulWall,
and David Banner, all of whom have been featured in OZONE as far back as two years ago - so
clearly we don’t need BET’s help to get interviews with them. In fact, Mike Jones was on our
March cover. Alumni clothing made a nice shirt for Mike Jones to wear for Spring Bling with the
OZONE cover and his phone number on it. So, five minutes after I arrive, PaulWall is standing
near the “media room” and gives me a hug. We snap a few pictures. I show him the shirt for
Mike. He says, “Mike is back here, c’mon,” and leads me back to their dressing room.
Thanks for your article on Yo Gotti and the
Block Burners. Everything they rap about is
some true shit. They speak the truth from the
bottom of their hearts. Fuck what other folks
think. I fuckin’ love Yo Gotti. He is like a role
model to me. I’m 15 years old. Any song he
made, I can rap it out for him no mistakes.
– [email protected]
I think artists like Lil Flip and B.G. should’ve
been in the top 10 of your Greatest Southern
Artists list. Lil Flip’s first album went gold with
no video, and his second and third albums went
platinum with only one video. He’s from HTown and he was named the freestyle king by
DJ Screw, who you had listed at #5. As for B.G.,
his reputation speaks for itself. T.I. should be
#25. His second album took four videos to go
gold. What does that tell you? Come on. I love
your prison diary, though. I think y’all should
make that a monthly section, because there’s
a lot of rap artists in jail that everyone wants
to hear from, like Pimp C, Turk, and Mystikal.
– Luis Reyes, mafi[email protected]
I’m a talented R&B female singer with no record deal yet. Why don’t you print record label
contact info so that unsigned artists can call
the record label of our choice and see whether they would like to sign us? – Jessica Ekeh,
[email protected]
Editor Responds: If it was that easy, everyone
would do it.
Once inside the dressing room, I hand Mike the shirt. Before he can put it on, BET staff tell him
he can’t wear it onstage because his phone number will get blurred out. They begin filming for
Access Granted. I’m sitting in the back corner, not bothering anyone, minding my own business, waiting til they’re done filming so I can get a quick picture of Mike with the shirt.
But no, here comes the Wicked Witch. Knock, knock. “IS JULIA BEVERLY IN HERE??? MEDIA IS
NOT ALLOWED TO BE IN THE DRESSING ROOMS!” I am dragged outside and savagely beaten
(just kidding) where the bitch has four huge security guards to take my media pass and escort
me “off the premises” into the Hilton lobby. So I’m sitting in the lobby on the phone, trying to
straighten things out. A security guard and three cops circle around me and tell me I’ve been
asked to leave the premises. If I’m not a registered guest, I will be arrested for trespassing.
I talk a little shit, head for the sidewalk. After a few quick phone calls, I’m now a “registered
guest.” As soon as I step inside to pick up my room key, I’m surrounded by nearly a dozen
(seriously) security guards and cops. During BCR weekend, the city of Daytona always brings
in fourteen million police officers who have nothing better to do than harass people. They
couldn’t argue with my room key, though, and I got better pictures hanging out in the Hilton
lobby than if I’d been stuck in BET’s boring media room anyway. How ironic that BET treats
OZONE like shit and their closest competitor, MTV Jams, aired 3+ days of OZONE programming
that same week! So BET, what’s up? Let’s do an OZONE TV show and all will be forgiven.
I got the last laugh already, but I can’t discuss that part.
- JB the Troublemaker ([email protected])
Guilty pleasures: Natalie “Goin’ Crazy”
& Maceo “Hoe Sit Down”
Boo Rossini f/ Young Jeezy “Rap Shit”
Keyshia Cole “I Just Want It To Be Over”
Chamillionaire f/ David Banner “Talkin’ That Talk”
Mike Jones f/ Lil Bran “Scandalous Hoes”
Juvenile f/ UTP “Sets Go Up”
Jody Breeze f/ Jazze Pha “Stay Fresh”
T-Pain “Sprung”
Rich Boy “D-Boyz”
OHB “Paralyzed”
Pastor Troy “Murda Man”
Young Jeezy “We Jook”
Ludacris “#1 Spot”
3 YEARS and counting
W
hen T.I. filmed his first low-budget video for “Dope Boyz” in Bankhead, OZONE was there. Back when Mystikal was free to perform at grimy
hood clubs, OZONE was there. When Camoflauge was alive and roaming the Savannah projects, OZONE was there. When the Ying Yang Twins
first dropped the novelty hit “Whistle While You Twerk,” OZONE was there. Back when Lil Jon & the Eastside Boyz shows didn’t pull a crowd,
OZONE was still there. When David Banner signed his reported $10 million deal with SRC/Universal, OZONE was right there with him on the Mississippi border, shooting his cover photos.
Remember when Coco Brother confronted Khia with a magazine printout of her 19 mugshots on How I’m Livin’? That was OZONE. When T.I. brought
out the “Game Over” posters and dissed Lil Flip at Hot 107.9’s Birthday Bash, OZONE was in the front row. Back when no one had heard of Ciara,
OZONE was on the set of “Goodies.” When Young Buck brought the entire G-Unit crew through the ‘hood in Nashville and nearly caused a riot, OZONE
was there. When B.G. and Lil Wayne reunited on-stage in Tampa, OZONE was there.
Pitbull. Akon. Mike Jones. Lil Scrappy. Slim Thug. Young Jeezy. Jody Breeze. Lil Boosie & Webbie. Jacki-O. Trillville. PaulWall. Check our back issues:
OZONE has a history of featuring artists long before they get signed and become household names.
Don’t be fooled by all these folks jumping on the Southern bandwagon. Over the past three years, OZONE has covered Southern artists and events
that no other media outlet thought was worth mentioning. It’s the original Southern magazine, up-close and personal. For us, by us.
Don’t believe me? Let’s revisit the past year of OZONE:
12
May 2004 (Pastor Troy / BloodRaw)
Memorial Day 2004 (Pitbull)
June 2004 (Pitbull)
BloodRaw dropped by the OZONE office with
a slab of raw meat for his cover shoot for our
two year anniversary edition. Mike Jones, Jody
Breeze, Young Jeezy, and Boo Rossini all made
their OZONE debuts in this issue.
For this special mini-Memorial Weekend edition
of OZONE, we hung out at Lil Jon’s mansion on
South Beach, caught up with David Banner on
the road, and featured two of Miami’s finest:
Pitbull and Jacki-O.
In this hustler’s edition, Pitbull explained everything you need to know about the dope game
and Jacki-O broke down the strategies of a Miami booster. We had to seriously edit both interviews to prevent them from getting indicted.
Memorable quote: “Andre 3000 got up at an
awards show and said, ‘The South got something
to say.’ That inspired me and kept me rolling.
The South still got something to say, and nothing is gonna stop us. Nothing.” - Dirty States of
America DVD producer FLX
Memorable quote: “Every time [people in my
hometown] turn on the TV and see the ‘Mississippi’ on my back, that’s what means the most.
It’s hard to compete with people that stay in
New York or Los Angeles because they can bump
into a camera anytime.” - David Banner
Memorable quote: “There are a lot of artists
out there who don’t care about ownership and
control. A lot just want fame. And any major
deal can give you fame, without the money, as
long as they work you properly.” - Rap Coalition
founder Wendy Day
July 2004 (Terror Squad / DJ Khaled)
Aug. 2004 (Don Yute / Birmingham J)
September 2004 (Temmora)
OZONE spent Memorial Day at the Eden Roc for
these dual Terror Squad covers. We conducted a
very scientific Pimp Juice vs. Crunk! Juice taste
test at TJ’s DJ’s, and chased down both Lil Flip
and T.I. to get the real story behind their beef.
Birmingham J took us on a tour of the city’s grittiest spots, while Don Yute brought the Jamaican vibe. We checked in with Jadakiss, Twista,
former Terror Squad reps Triple Seis and Cuban
Link, and DJ Drama of Gangsta Grillz fame.
Memorable quote: “Everyone always wondered
what it would be like if Cash Money and No Limit worked together. Soulja Slim actually brought
B.G. to me...so his death has been real hard for
both me and him.” - former Beats By The Pound
producer KLC
Memorable quote: “[The success of Southern
music] is a testament to how smart these artists
have become. They’re stepping their game up to
have a bigger piece of the pie. To control your
career, you’ve got to prove that you can handle
it.” - TVT’s VP of Urban A&R Bryan Leach
Damn near every bubbling Southern underground
artist appeared in our second annual “Patiently
Waiting” edition, including Chamillionaire,
DirtBag, Grandaddy Souf, Mr. Magic, Kamikaze,
Play-N-Skillz, P$C’s Big Kuntry, Miss B, and Rasheeda. By popular demand, we checked in with
Mike Jones and Chamillionaire to find out if they
really had beef.
OZONE MAY 2005
Memorable quote: “[My label] doesn’t give a
fuck about me. It’s a savage industry.” - Grandaddy Souf
Oct. 2004 (Mannie Fresh / Tom G)
November 2004 (T.I. / Chingy)
Dec 04/Jan 05 (Trick Daddy/Young Cash)
In addition to the cover features on Mannie
Fresh and Tampa’s Tom G, we checked in with
Lil Wyte, West coast representative Guerilla
Black, and reggae artist Tanya Stephens. TJ
Chapman, owner of the South’s largest record
pool/networking function, kicked some industry
knowledge.
Ah, yes. The sex issue. A true classic. The groupie confessions landed in the New York Post and
blew up from there. We learned that Lil Scrappy likes to get his ass licked, Jacki-O wants Lil
Wayne, Larenz Tate used to fuck Halle Berry,
and Mr. Magic and Mike Jones are good boys.
We chased down Trick Daddy for the cover story,
and got the real story behind Young Cash’s “hustler” tattoo. This issue also featured interviews
with Jazze Pha, Devin the Dude, Lil Wayne,
Fabolous, Cuban Link, Do or Die, Yung Wun, and
Slim Thug.
Memorable quote: “I just try to do songs that
people can relate to. I think that right now, saying, ‘I’m rich, bitch!’ is something that everybody can relate to.” - Mannie Fresh
Memorable quote: “[Jay-Z] is boring in bed,
but he has the biggest dick you will ever see
in your life. Huge. Like a one-liter Pepsi bottle...It’s beyond huge. It could block the sun.”
- Anonymous Jay-Z groupie
Memorable quote: “As long as you have something to fall back on, you’re never gonna go
200%. If you put your life on the line, you’ll find
a way to succeed in whatever you’re trying to
do.” - Bad Boy/Power Moves Shawn Prez
Super Bowl 2005 (Ms Cherry)
Feb. 2005 (Ms Cherry / Boyz N Da Hood) March 2005 (Mike Jones / Nivea)
When the NFL headed to Jacksonville, so did
OZONE. This special mini Super Bowl edition
featured 50 Cent, David Banner, Mike Jones,
Young Jeezy, Webbie, and Ms Cherry along with
Jacksonville favorites like Young Cash, Cool
Runnings, and Kashus Deniro.
ATL’s female pimp Ms. Cherry and the Southern
version of N.W.A, Boyz N Da Hood, graced the
cover of this “pirate radio edition.” We reluctantly interviewed the much-overhyped 50 Cent
and asked Akon how it felt to be “Locked Up”
and “Lonely.”
Memorable quote: “I mostly play gangsta music in the clubs, and with all that killing on the
record sometimes you get caught up. When [my
son drowned], it opened my eyes.” - Cool Runnings’ DJ Bigga Rankin
Memorable quote: “Hip-hop is our CNN. That’s
why there’s a big fight to get rid of it. Our communication, man. They can’t take this shit. We
need a new form of the underground; another
form of independence.” - Uncle Luke
April 2005 (Pitbull / Out Da Cutt)
BCR 2005 (Tigger)
May 2005 (Pimp C / Baby)
Classic issue. If you missed this one, go read it
on our website (www.ozonemag.com). Our 25
Greatest Southern Artists of All Time edition was
also a feature on MTV Jams, hosted by our cover
artist Pitbull. We paid homage to the groundbreakers and showed love to the newcomers.
Tigger and his Grand Lenare cognac models attracted a lot of attention on South Beach during our cover shoot for this first annual Daytona
Beach BCR special edition. In addition to our
features on Pimp C, Trillville, and Pastor Troy,
we featured some up-and-coming Central Florida artists like Bedo, Wes Fif, and Slim Goodye.
For this current issue (our 3 year anniversary),
we headed out to Texas to visit Pimp C behind
bars and stopped by the Cash Money offices in
New Orleans. We had lunch with Michael Watts,
roamed South Beach with Tigger, and spoke with
the most slept-on artist in Georgia, Bohagon.
Memorable quote: “Without the Geto Boys,
people like me wouldn’t even be here. They
paved the way for all these rappers.” - Chamillionaire
Memorable quote: “[I dissed Lil Jon because] as
he got bigger, I felt like the ATL movement became more like a competition.” - Pastor Troy
We headed out to the Swisha House to interview
Mike Jones, and and spoke with a very pregnant
Nivea by phone for the March edition. C-Murder
contributed the very first “prison diary,” and
we learned a little too much information about
Noreaga in the fourth installment of “groupie
confessions.” Other features included Trillville,
the Outlawz, and Slim Thug’s live performance
back home in Houston.
Memorable quote: “It’s definitely 90% grind,
10% sleep.” - Mike Jones
Memorable quote: “If ‘Pac hadn’t got out of
prison, he might still be alive today. Maybe
there was a worse fate out there waiting for
me.” - Pimp C
OZONE MAY 2005
13
01: Bedo and video models @ Firestone on the set of his video shoot for
“Go Head” (Orlando, FL)
02: RegReg, Mario, and Young Cash
@ The Moon for TJ’s DJ’s (Tallahassee, FL)
03: HellaFlow Records and Cool
Runnings @ Kartouche (Jacksonville, FL)
04: Street Grinderz and Strictly
Streets reppin’ OZONE @ Firestone for Jamlando Record Pool
Meeting (Orlando, FL)
05: Antonio Tarver, Baje,
and Karate Mac @ Heroes
for Grandaddy Souf’s video
shoot for “Run It” (Orlando,
FL)
06: GhostWridah, Smilez,
Southstar, and Viper @ Club
Fuel (Daytona Beach, FL)
07: Mel and J-Kwik @ TJ’s
DJ’s (Tallahassee, FL)
08: Lil Jon and Yo Gotti @
Webster Hall (NYC)
09: New Edition and
Nicole Robinson @ Hot
104.5 (New Orleans, LA)
10: J-Deezy and DJ Walgee reppin’ OZONE @ JJ
Whisper’s (Orlando, FL)
11: Tony Sunshine and
Terrell D. Jones @
Madison Square Garden
(NYC)
12: Lil Scrappy and
MiMi @ Webster Hall for
Lil Jon’s AOL concert
(NYC)
13: Wyclef and Jerry
Wonder @ Club Fuel
(Daytona Beach, FL)
14: Carol, Kim Brennan,
and Kelli Shaw @ Purple
City album release
party (NYC)
15: Trae and Jayton @
The Moon for TJ’s DJ’s
(Tallahassee, FL)
16: Krunch One, Wiz,
Big Al, and 5th Ward @
Grandaddy Souf’s “Run
It” video shoot (Orlando,
FL)
17: Three 6 Mafia’s Juicy
J, Grandaddy Souf, and
DJ Paul @ 102 Jamz (Orlando, FL)
18: Tiny, T.I., and Lil Mo @
Bed for Baby’s Lugz Rock
Star shoe launch (NYC)
19: DJ Enuff, Mike Jones,
and D-Roc of the Ying Yang
Twins (Daytona Beach, FL)
20: Joe Pro reppin’ OZONE
(Daytona Beach, FL)
21: DJ Demp, DJ Nasty, and
Freestyle Steve @ The Moon
for TJ’s DJ’s (Tallahassee, FL)
Photo Credits:
General: #14
Julia Beverly: #02,04,05,06,
07,08,12,13,15,16,17,19,21
Malik Abdul: #10,20
Marcus Jethro: #09
Ray Tamarra: #11,18
Sophia Jones: #03
Spiff: #01
14
OZONE MAY 2005
Disclaimer: These interviews are anonymous,
so we cannot verify if they are true or not. All
details (cities, club names, hotel names) have
been removed. These stories do not necessarily represent the opinions of OZONE Magazine.
These stories did not necessarily occur recently,
so if you are currently seeing one of these fine
gentlemen, no need to curse him out. These
stories are from different women.
me to come see him perform. He had
us on stage, it was awesome. I’ve always been real attracted to him, especially when he was younger. That night
was the first time we had sex.
How was the sex?
It was cool, especially since he’s an older
guy. He ate me out. He was real passionate;
kissing me all over. Loving it. He was real into
me.
If you have a celebrity confession, send an
email to [email protected] and we
will reply with a phone number where you can
call anonymously to be interviewed.
Is he married?
No, but I heard he’s living with his kid’s mom.
TRACY McGRADY:
What’s Tracy McGrady like?
He’s real boring. He’s a jerk. He’s a fucking asshole, actually. When I really needed help from
him he didn’t help me out. He wanted me to
come see him anytime, I was always sneaking
over to his house wasting my gas, time, and energy. But when I needed money, Oh well. He was
like, “If I was in town, I got you,” just giving me
the runaround. I was like, Are you serious? Your
boy? Western Union? Nothing? I been fucking
you for [a long time], and you can’t hook me up
with a thousand dollars? That’s crazy.
How did you meet him?
I met him at a club. I was there by myself. He
had somebody come up to me and ask if I dated
black guys. I just looked at them like, “Yeah,
why?” He said his friend wanted to meet me
and he brought me into VIP. I was standing next
to Tracy. He was real
corny. He was like, “Oh,
so you like black guys?
How old are you? Do you
have a man?” I was kinda ignoring him. I was
dancing and looking at [a rapper] in VIP. He got
behind me and was dancing all up in my ass. I
hate that. He stopped and was like, “What, are
you scared?” I had to wake up early the next
day, but he kept inviting me to this party or to
breakfast and I was like, “No thanks.” He said
he had to go somewhere and was gonna come
right back and talk to me. I figured he was trying to diss me cause I didn’t want to leave with
him, but he actually did come back about a half
hour later and asked for my number.
He says it makes his skin soft. He’s real, real
boring. Watch TV, start kissing, turn around,
from the back, turn around, cum. Every single
time. Same thing. I used to give him head just
cause I was bored. He’d make me stop cause he
was gonna cum.
Were you attracted to him?
Yeah, I was physically attracted to him. I liked
his lips. He looks cool. But he’s kinda a square.
Were you dating him or just fucking?
He used to give me tickets to his games, but
when I started asking he’d say he didn’t have
any left or some bullshit. It was just a fuck
thing basically. I asked him if he had a girl and
How’s his size?
He’s okay. He’s not big, just average. But he’s
real good, real active. He’ll flip you, turn you
over, eat you, kiss you, everything. He’s all over
the place. I liked it.
How long did you stay in contact?
I ended up talking to him for a while, but he
isn’t doing too many shows right now so I didn’t
see him that much. Every time he comes to
[my city] he still calls me. I didn’t like going
out with him place though. He gets real drunk,
starts fighting with people, and then he wants
to drive. He thinks everybody’s out to get him.
He tried to play me; he disrespected me. We
lost touch. I think I’ve still got his number, but I
don’t have any reason to call him.
Are there any other rappers you’ve slept
with?
No, but I’ve got a
story about Nas. Nas
was supposed to be at
[a club] and me and
my friend wanted to
meet him. I went to
the club by myself, and I’m sitting inside the
VIP waiting. My friend comes into VIP and sits
next to me and says, “Guess who I’m leaving
with? I’m going with Nas!” I’m like, “What?
Nas isn’t even here yet!” She’s like, “Girl! I’ll
tell you later!” and points to this guy that was
coming in with him. So, she told me the whole
story later. She was outside, trying to get into
the club to meet Nas, and his bodyguard or
whatever asked her what she was willing to do.
He took her to the van or bus or whatever and
started playing with his dick. He took it out,
and she started sucking it. He said the head was
whack and he was getting annoyed, so he told
her to stop. He got her in, though. He took her
all the way inside the VIP area and sat next to
Nas. She kept smiling or whatever, and when it
was time to go she’s like, “Nas says he’ll let you
come too.” I was like, “Oh my God, no. Are you
crazy?” She was acting like Nas was doing her a
favor, to “let” her come. I told her everybody
was looking at her crazy for leaving with them.
She called me the next day and told me what
happened. She left her car there at [the club]
and when they got back to the room they had
sex. He just hit it from the back. She said his
size was okay. She said she tried to kiss him and
he was like, “I don’t kiss.” After they finished
having sex, she went in the shower. When she
came out, he took a picture of her naked. She
was like, “What are you doing?” and he said,
“That’s it.” She gave him her number and was
like, “Whassup, let me get your number?” and
he’s like, “Nah, I don’t give out my number.”
She was telling me all this shit; too much shit.
She was complaining to Nas that she couldn’t
get back to her car, and he gave her $100 to
catch a cab.
“[Nas’ bodyguard] said the head was whack and he
was getting annoyed, so he told her to stop.”
Did he call you?
Yeah, he started calling me every night. I really wasn’t feeling him at first. He was corny
on the phone. I didn’t know who he was until
my brother told me. He would call me and talk
bullshit, ask me if I knew how to cook. When he
came back in town I met him and his boys at [a
restaurant] and rode with him to his house. We
didn’t do nothing that night, just chilled. He
tried, though. He had me in his room, talking
about my butt and this and that. We had sex
for the first time a few days later. It was quick.
It was fast, rushed. He didn’t use protection,
either. Most of the time he used a condom but
not the first time. There were a few times he
didn’t. He’s real arrogant; he likes to do things
his way.
How was the sex?
His dick is thin, like regular length. He’s real
boring. I could tell you what he’s gonna do
before he does it. I fucked with him for a
long time. At first we used to tongue kiss
but after a while I didn’t even wanna
kiss him no more. We’d watch TV first,
while he put baby powder on his bed.
he said no. I went to his house all the time, and
I never saw anything in his room [from another
girl]. When I heard he was engaged, I asked him
about it. He was like, “If I had told you, I never
woulda got it,” and I was like, “Yeah, you’re
right.” So it was just a fuck thing.
Why did it end?
He changed his numbers and we just stopped
talking. He said he didn’t wanna fuck with me
after he found out I had a man. He would want
me to come over at random times; he’d call me
in the middle of the night or in the morning and
want me to meet him at his house. I didn’t want
to tell him I had a man so I’d just lie. Eventually
I told him, “I got a man so I can’t just be leaving
whenever you tell me to.” He was like, “I don’t
fuck with anybody that got a man.” He wasn’t
really callin’ me too much at the end.
GURU:
What is Guru like?
He’s got a drinking problem. When he gets
drunk he’s a fucking asshole, but he’s really a
sweetheart. When he drinks he’s out of control.
I ‘m not in touch with him anymore, though.
How did you meet Guru?
He was doing a show a few years ago. I love Guru.
He was one of my favorite rappers. When I met
him I was just starstruck. He was like, “That’s
crazy, a female like you liking me? You’re my
type!” I was like, “Really? I love you! I listened
to you growing up!” he thought I was fuckin’
with him. We exchanged numbers and kept in
touch. We didn’t hook up that first night. The
next time he performed in [my city] he wanted
OZONE MAY 2005
15
01: Young Capone and the So So Def
crew @ Jamlando Record Pool meeting (Orlando, FL)
02: Cool Runnings and Grill @ Kartouche (Jacksonville, FL)
03: Lil Scrappy and Pooh Baby @
Webster Hall (NYC)
04: Melinda, Mike Jones, and
Anna reppin’ OZONE (Daytona
Beach, FL)
05: Chaos and Lex showing off
his Hustler Award @ The Moon
for TJ’s DJ’s (Tallahassee, FL)
06: Jae Millz reppin’ Big L at
his video shoot for “Who”
(NYC)
07: Mykel Myers and crew
reppin’ OZONE (Daytona
Beach, FL)
08: Mr. Magic reppin’
OZONE (Daytona Beach,
FL)
09: Fats and Ron Browz
on the set of Jae Millz’
“Who” (NYC)
10: DJ Paul and DJ Black
@ 102 Jamz (Orlando,
FL)
11: Fiend and Slim Thug
@ House of Blues for
Stiletto Sundays (New
Orleans, LA)
12: JD Hawg and Mike
Jones reppin’ OZONE
(Tampa, FL)
13: Jeffery and Jill
Strada @ Power 95.3’s
Brooke Valentine promotion (Orlando, FL)
14: DJ Chubby Chubb
reppin’ OZONE @ Club
Rumors (Boston, MA)
15: Melyssa Ford and
Tigger (Daytona Beach,
FL)
16: Mr. C, Get Cool,
Dre, and Zay @ Heroes
for Grandaddy Souf’s
“Run It” video shoot
(Orlando, FL)
17: Bun B, Jacki-O,
Pitbull, and Julia Beverly
@ Webster Hall (NYC)
18: Three generations:
Bobby, Damon, and Boogie Dash @ the Apollo for
the premiere of Death of
A Dynasty
19: Phifty-50 @ TJ’s DJ’s
(Tallahassee, FL)
20: Rahiem Shabazz,
Dylan, and cast members
on the set of The Sun Will
Rise (Atlanta, GA)
21: Ed the World Famous,
J-Kwik, and DJ Q45 on the
panel @ TJ’s DJ’s (Tallahassee, FL)
Photo Credits:
Julia Beverly: #01,03,05,07,0
8,10,15,16,19,21
Julia Schell: #06,09
KG Mosley: #12
Malik Abdul: #04,13,14
Marcus Jethro: #11
Rahiem Shabazz: #20
Ray Tamarra: #17,18
Sophia Jones: #02
16
OZONE MAY 2005
If you have a comment or question for C-Murder,
email it to [email protected] or write him
(do not send CDs):
Corey Miller #58815110
P.O. Box 388
Gretna, LA 70054
01: B.G. and Tampa Tony @ The Moon
for TJ’s DJ’s (Tallahassee, FL)
02: Treal and ADG reppin’ OZONE @
Firestone for Jamlando Record Pool
meeting (Orlando, FL)
03: Purple reppin’ Crunk Juice @
Webster Hall (NYC)
04: Stat Quo, Pitbull, and Juelz
Santana @ 102 Jamz (Orlando,
FL)
05: Dapa with Hittmen DJs
Frank Luv, Kaspa, and Crazy T
@ TJ’s DJ’s (Tallahassee, FL)
06: Mike Jones and cheerleaders (Tampa, FL)
07: Power 95.3’s Brooke Valentine promotion (Orlando,
FL)
08: Fiend, KLC, and Young
City (New Orleans, LA)
09: Pastor Troy reppin’
OZONE @ Firestone (Orlando, FL)
10: Stephanie and Shiest
Bub @ the Green Room
for Purple City’s release
party (NYC)
11: Jim Jones and his
son in Harlem on the
set of Jae Millz’ “Why”
(NYC)
12: Averi-Minor reppin’
OZONE (Chicago, IL)
13: Hell Rell reppin’
OZONE @ the Green
Room for Purple City
release party (NYC)
14: PaulWall reppin’
OZONE (Daytona Beach,
FL)
15: O-Eazy and Slim
Goodye @ Icon for
Slim’s mixtape release
party (Orlando, FL)
16: Rob Jackson and GMack reppin’ OZONE @
The Moon for TJ’s DJ’s
(Tallahassee, FL)
17: P$C’s C-Rod, Mac
Boney, T.I., Big Kuntry,
and A.K. @ Bed for
Baby’s Lugz Rock Star
shoe launch (NYC)
18: Pretty Ricky, Pitbull,
and Cubo @ Webster Hall
for Lil Jon’s AOL concert
(NYC)
19: Killa Kyleon, Mike
Jones, Slim Thug, and Ray
Face @ Club Fuel during
BCR (Daytona Beach, FL)
20: The Ying Yang Twins
and Tigger reppin’ OZONE
(Daytona Beach, FL)
21: Shaheed, Grimlock, and
DJ Killa Groove @ The Moon
for TJ’s DJ’s (Tallahassee, FL)
Photo Credits:
Averi-Minor: #12
General: #10,13
Julia Beverly: #01,02,03,05,1
4,16,18,19,20,21
Julia Schell: #11
KG Mosley: #06
Malik Abdul: #07,09,15
Marcus Jethro: #08
Ray Tamarra: #17
Spiff: #04
18
OZONE MAY 2005
How are you affiliated with Jazze Pha?
It’s more of a production situation. Everybody
thought it was some label shit, but it wasn’t.
I mean, it was a situation we was working on,
but it didn’t work out.
You’ve already got a good street buzz as a
solo artist and a deal with Def Jam, so how
does it benefit you to be a part of the group
Boyz N Da Hood which is signed to Bad Boy?
The group shit helped me get radio play. I was
getting blackballed on the radio and shit with
a lot of my music. Doing this shit with Puff just
brought to light that I was an artist.
Why were you getting blackballed?
Just because of some street shit. Niggas knew
me in the city before I got in with the rap shit,
so that was the whole big thing. I was a real
street nigga. I really don’t know what it was.
I guess a lot of industry cats don’t like to let
street niggas in. I see that now. It’s they world.
They figure, once you let a couple street niggas in, they’ll all come in.
With the buzz that you have as a solo artist, do you think it somewhat hurts the other
members of Boyz N Da Hood? Like, you overshadow them?
Nah. My buzz is more of a street thing. Puff is
gonna take it to another level, to some household name type of shit. I don’t think it hurts
the group, because every group needs someone that’s really visible.
Do you agree with the description of Boyz N
Da Hood as the “Southern N.W.A”?
If it’s accurate, shit, I’m gonna be Ice Cube.
That’s how I feel. But I don’t like to be compared to nobody. I love and respect everybody’s music, though. I think that’s what it is.
I don’t think you should or could compare it.
It’s two different types of lifestyles. As a consumer, though, I’m a big fan of N.W.A.
When do you plan to drop the solo and group
albums?
My solo album drops June 28th, it’s called
Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101. The Boyz N
Da Hood album comes out on June 7th.
Since you rap so blatantly about the drug
game, are you worried about any backlash?
Are the hip-hop police after you?
Nah, I’m just tryin’ to survive. You got niggas
talkin’ about killin’ niggas on records all day
long. Being an American, I’ve got the right to
freedom of speech. For me to connect with
my people, I’ve gotta speak about what I’ve
seen. I get that harassment, too, if that’s what
you’re asking. I mean, that’s all I know. What
I’ve seen and what I’ve come across. I couldn’t
possibly rap about anything else right now.
You talk about making money from the drug
game, but what about the flip side? Do you
plan on talking about the negative aspects?
I think that’s something I’ll grow into. It
wasn’t something that was on my mind at
that time; I was in a different frame of
mind. I do talk about the ups and downs of
the game. It ain’t glorifying the drug game,
I just speak on what I know and a lot of
people can relate to the ups and downs.
Right now is just the beginning for me, so
I’m gonna get the chance to do all that.
I can’t come out and give them everything at one time. I gotta get them
caught up in the movement.
If you didn’t have money, would you consider
yourself a failure?
I’m a hustler, so I couldn’t see myself without
anything. I’ve always been able to provide for
myself and my team. That’s a big thing for me;
weathering the storm and maintaining. That’s
what I think about every day: mathematics.
Speaking of mathematics, why did you decide
to get into the rap game? Are you making more
money than you did in your previous career?
I think it’s a different feel. In the street shit,
you could be that nigga in your city with the cars
and the whips. But with this, whenever I’m out
of state, I’m Jeezy. People I don’t recognize approach me and tell me they appreciate my music, so it’s just a different feel.
Any features on this album?
Definitely. I got my man Young Buck, T.I., Trick
Daddy, Akon, my man Slick Pulla, and USDA. I
didn’t want too many features. I wanted to hold
it down myself, but I still wanted to work with a
lot of the other artists that I respect. I’m a fan of
a lot of indie music. I’m diggin’ Mike Jones, too.
Are there some more personal, in-depth songs
on your album?
Yeah, all that. With my mixtape shit, it was just
street swagger. With your album, you can get a
lot more personal. I’ve got a song called “Let Me
Talk to Them” which is talking to my homeboys,
my grandmother who’s deceased, and a lot of
people I ain’t get the chance to talk to. It’s a
dedication. I definitely got some personal songs
on there but I still did my street thing.
Since you have such a hardcore sound, when
you signed the group deal with Bad Boy were
you worried about P Diddy controlling your
sound creatively?
Nah, Puff knows me so he knows I wasn’t going for that. For real, before we even sat down
and did business I let him know that I stood on
my own. I’m a real nigga, so I can’t make those
type of [commercial] records. I can only make
the type of records that I feel.
Since you signed to Def Jam, they’ve been going through a lot of internal changes.
I’m a team player, so I just weather the storm.
Things are looking good right now. Everybody’s
excited with the project. I’m working with my
man Jay-Z, he’s excited about the project. He’s
a businessman, like me. We both businessmen
and we don’t like to fail.
Have you been getting love beyond Atlanta?
Yeah, cause I’m a street nigga. For all street
niggas, it ain’t about where you from. We got
the same vibe. When I’m at the crib I listen to
Dipset shit, and they all the way in Harlem.
I hear niggas talk about my shit in Compton.
It’s that love; it’s the streets. We cut from the
same cloth with that gangsta music.
Do you think your lyrics are too gangsta to
reach a mainstream audience?
My whole shit was thug motivation, so I wasn’t
really worried about that. I mean, the numbers
do matter. Of course I want to be successful, but
at the same time I can’t sell out to sell records.
I’m gonna stay true to what I do and let that
take me wherever I’m supposed to go. Everybody ain’t supposed to crossover like that. You
see what happens to some cats when they try
to hard to crossover; they lose their whole fan
base, even the ones they was tryin’ to reach.
What are you working on besides the music?
I’ve been working on this book for a minute, it’s
called “Thug Motivation 101.” Def Jam is tryin’
to find me a publisher right now. It’s about the
struggle, and there’s a couple of good messages
in between. There’s a lot of niggas locked up,
reading books they can’t relate to. I’m working
on my clothing line, Snowman. I love clothes. I
always wanted to wear my own shit.
Anything else you want to say?
Plug that album, baby, all day long. June 28th:
Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101. Get one for
the car, one for the house.
- Interview and photo by Julia Beverly
OZONE MAY 2005
19
01: Maceo, Kaspa, and Rich Boy @ The
Moon for TJ’s DJ’s (Tallahassee, FL)
02: Lonnie Ferguson, Cheryl BrownMarks, Bryan Leach, Rob Mac, and
Michael Sterling @ Webster Hall
(NYC)
03: Viper, Smilez, and Southstar
@ Grandaddy Souf’s “Run It”
video shoot (Orlando, FL)
04: Stat Quo and Spiff @ Firestone (Orlando, FL)
05: Purple City’s Shiest Bub
and Agallah @ The Green
Room for their release party
(NYC)
06: DJ Prostyle and Tigger @
Club Fuel (Daytona Beach,
FL)
07: Grandaddy Souf and
the Gutta Boyz @ his
video shoot for “Run It”
(Orlando, FL)
08: Bun B and Grafh @
Webster Hall (NYC)
09: Geezy, Felisha Foxx,
and Dawgman @ TJ’s DJ’s
(Tallahassee, FL)
10: Garfield and D’Ville
@ Bedo’s “Go Head”
video shoot (Orlando,
FL)
11: JC Crunk and DJ Will
@ Webster Hall (NYC)
12: Greg G and J Love
reppin’ Slim Goodye @
Icon (Orlando, FL)
13: Averi-Minor and
Three 6 Mafia (Chicago,
IL)
14: Stat Quo @ The
Moon for TJ’s DJ’s (Tallahassee, FL)
15: Stax, Benz, and
Janky @ TJ’s DJ’s (Tallahassee, FL)
16: Vickie Charles,
Baby, and OJ Wedlaw
@ Bed for Baby’s Lugz
Rock Star shoe launch
(NYC)
17: Piccalo and Trick
Daddy @ Club Fuel (Daytona Beach, FL)
18: Jay-Z and Audemars
president Francois-Henry
Bennahmias at their press
conference introducing his 10th Anniversary
timepiece (NYC)
19: Greg G, Slim Goodye,
and Malik Abdul @ TJ’s DJ’s
(Tallahassee, FL)
20: Big Cee Jay, Marco Mall,
and DJ Dap @ TJ’s DJ’s (Tallahassee, FL)
21: Lil Jon and his publicist
Joe Wiggins giving each other
the finger @ Webster Hall
(NYC)
Photo Credits:
Averi-Minor: #13
BrightStar: #04
General: #05
Julia Beverly: #01,02,03,06,07,
08,09,11,14,15,17,19,20,21
Malik Abdul: #12
Ray Tamarra: #16,18
Spiff: #10
20
OZONE MAY 2005
So you guys are all blood brothers?
Yeah, we’ve got the same daddy.
Did he come up with the idea to form the
group?
Yeah, it was our daddy. He came up with the
idea and we ran with it. He kinda put it together about seven years ago. You see how
many pictures you got of us in OZONE, so you
know we been at it for a long time!
Yeah, and we always tease you guys about
the glitter outfits you wear in the photos.
Who’s idea was that?
Basically we just tried to be unique and different, cause all the other artists are wearing
their little white tees. We just wanted to be
known everywhere, to be seen. Everywhere
we go, the glitter gets stuck in their heads.
Well, the glitter caught everybody’s attention. But what’s the next “look” for you
guys? Are you going for a more grown-up image now?
We gonna do it all. We got like a hundred
looks. We ain’t nothing to be expected. The
glitter got us where we at right now, but we
gonna try a bunch of stuff. One day you might
see us in some army fatigues and a bulletproof
vest. I don’t know how to explain it; we just
do what we do.
Right now there’s a void in the music industry as far as “boy bands,” like, now that B2K
has broken up, there’s no groups really filling in that slot. Is that your goal, to appeal
to the younger female audience?
We targeting girls like you. We targeting everybody; we tryin’ to get you freaky-deeky super wet. Everybody in the group got a different category. If a girl don’t like the pretty boy,
she can get the lil’ wild thug. But, we make
music for everybody, and our album comes
with two versions: clean and dirty. You know
how politics are. [Our single] “Grind On Me” is
kinda explicit, so we recorded two albums so
everybody could listen to our music.
I first heard you guys when you had the song
“Flossin’” out a while back. It seems like
you have real songwriting abilities. Where
do you think that came from?
We make feel-good music, and evyerobyd in
the group is talented. We write our own music. Our daddy had a record label back in the
day with Piccalo, Black Haze, and everybody
in Miami, so when we was growing up, we
learned a lot just from being around them.
Pitbull and Trick Daddy are like our uncles.
We got a strong leader, old boy, so we just focused. We already know what we need to do.
Pitbull and everybody from Miami done taught
us the game, so we just moving like that. We
gonna stay focused regardless.
(l to r): Slick ‘Em, Spectacular, Baby Blue, and Pleasure
ventures you’d like to do in the future?
We gonna be the next Russell Simmons and the
next Puff Daddy. We got our own clothing line
coming out, it’s called Marco de Bleu. We’re
gonna have a cartoon coming out, and we got
a reality show on MTV we’re working on. We’re
gonna be the next sex symbols out of the South.
What’s the name of your album?
Blue Stars.
Do you have a release date?
Blue Stars comes out on May 24th.
Is most of the material on the album similar to
“Grind On Me”?
Everything we do is for the ladies. We got a couple joints for the fellas, though. We try to cover
everything. We’ve got love songs, hate songs,
sex songs, everything. We’re trying to bring
slow music back to the club. We try to cover everything, though. We got other records for the
freaks out there, we got some club records, and
we got some thug records. We just try to cover
the whole nine yards.
What label are you signed to?
We got our own label, Blue Star Entertainment,
and we’re on Atlantic.
Did you have any formal music training in
school?
Nah, we just learned everything on our own.
It’s basically natural. This is just the tip of
the iceberg as far as what we can do. Everything in music is just common sense for us.
If it’s a guitar, drop it in the studio and give
us a month or two to learn how to use it
and we gonna learn how to play that shit.
Back in the day, it wasn’t no instructions,
we just had to figure it out.
How did you get your deal with Atlantic Records?
“Grind With Me” ended up being the #1 most
requested record in the history of Miami [on
Power 96] and Craig Kallman from Atlantic Records came down to see us. We performed for
him at the hotel. We ain’t really know who he
was. That was during Martin Luther King weekend. We invited him out to our show, and the
girls were chasing us. They were breaking down
the barriers and screaming. We had to get police
escorts because the girls were tryin’ to get to
us. When we got in the van we had them running
like four blocks chasing us. After that, it was a
done deal.
Aside from music, do you have any
plans for other companies or other
The screaming girls convinced him?
He was like, “It’s unbelievable that you aren’t
signed yet.” Yup, the glitter did it for us. So for
everybody who didn’t like the glitter, y’all can
keep hatin’.
Do you have a second single picked out to follow up “Grind With Me”?
The crazy thing is that we can’t decide on the
single. We’ve got so many songs. We’ve been
doing it for so long, any song that we pick out
of all of them could be singles.
Are there any major features or producers on
your album?
We work with Jim Jonsin a lot as far as production. He did “Let’s Go” for Trick Daddy and
“Dammit Man” for Pitbull. That’s about it. We
tried to keep the album hometeam. We gonna let everybody know that we could do it in
Florida the same way ATL and New York are doing it. You be everywhere, so you know how it
is. It’s time for all of Florida to come together
and do it. We tryin’ to keep it hometeam. We
did a record with Pitbull, too. We got another
feature from Static, he wrote a lot of songs for
Aaliyah and Genuwine. And there’s gonna be an
international album.
What’s gonna be different about the international album?
It’ll have the reggaetone version of “Grind With
Me” and stuff like that.
Do you have a tour planned? Where can we
see Pretty Ricky over the next few months?
On the road, on the road, on the road. That’s
how they got us right now. We just workin’,
goin’ from city to city.
Anything else you wanna say?
Check out www.prettyricky.com and make
sure you go get that album on May 24th. Check
out Soul Train on May 7th. You can catch us in
the May edition of Vibe Magazine, and OZONE,
of course we all over that. Julia, we wanna interview you for the next sex issue!
- Words & photo by Julia Beverly
OZONE MAY 2005
21
There’s many opinions when it comes to the
origins of Southern rap music. But one fact
that can’t be denied is that two brothers
from the swamps of Port Arthur, Texas, had a
huge influence on many other rappers from
the South. UGK was formed in 1987, while
Bun B and Pimp C were still in high school.
At the time, both were involved in fledgling groups and decided to come together
because the rest of their partners couldn’t
keep up with their relentless work ethic.
After a chance meeting with a man named
Russell Washington at the famed Big Tyme
Record Shop in Houston, the group recorded their first release on cassette tape, The
Southern Way. The album spawned the hit
“Tell Me Something Good,” and things skyrocketed from there. The duo signed to Jive
Records, which was home to hip-hop heavyweights like Too Short and KRS-One. Unfortunately, the New York-based label couldn’t
really get a grasp on their Southern sound.
Nowadays, everything’s a bit different. Or is
it? We sat down with Bun B to find out the
real deal behind UGK & Jive and his impending solo release.
UGK was one of the first Southern groups to
score a major record deal. How did you get
signed to Jive?
Our record [The Southern Way] sold almost
50,000 copies independently. There wasn’t a
movement for that type of shit at the time.
We were selling gangsta music independently. The only people doing it at that time was
us and Top Authority. This was a few months
before 8Ball & MJG’s first project. The labels
had a little bidding war going on so we were
high-balling. We kept putting Peter against
Paul, and then one day neither Peter nor Paul
called. We thought maybe we’d fucked it up by
playing ball too hard. So we were like, “Fuck
it, the next people who call, we signing.” The
next people who called was Jive.
Why do you think the Jive situation didn’t
turn out to be as fruitful as it coulda been?
There just wasn’t a respect for the Southern
region at the time. They didn’t want to spend
a lot of money on us because they thought we
probably wouldn’t break through. It was all
based on assumptions. We’d say, “Why don’t
we do promo in New York? Why don’t we do
promo in L.A.?” And they’d say, “New York is
not gonna buy your stuff, and in L.A. they don’t
like your music.” They had all these excuses to
not do anything for us, and yet you had people
who weren’t selling half of what we were selling getting two or three videos. The system
wasn’t built to really reflect and promote
street-oriented music. Everything over there
before had been dance music: Whodini, Billy
Ocean, Samantha Fox, shit like that.
Do you think that’s changed? Do the labels
understand the South now?
Somewhat. I think when No Limit came
along, they started realizing that maybe
there was something to it. We were the
backbone behind all that, but when they
wanted to start coming into the Southern
market, we still had issues from the past
that we were trying to rectify. Record labels don’t want to talk about the past.
They don’t want to admit mistakes.
They’re like, Fuck it, just cut a check
and keep it moving.
Do you think y’all were a little too stubborn?
We were extremely stubborn. There was a lot of
shit we could’ve let slide, but think about the
people we represent. We couldn’t just let these
people keep stepping on our toes and not say
anything about it. In Texas, you’ll get called on
that shit. If you’re acting like you’ve got money,
somebody’s gonna ask you where your money at.
It don’t make sense for us to even front. We were
stubborn, but I don’t regret any of the moves we
made because it made us stronger as a group. It
gave us a stronger sense of solidarity with our
fans, because once we let them know business
wasn’t right, we had people calling in and faxing
Jive like, “PAY UGK.” You know what I’m sayin’?
When Pimp got locked up, is it fair to say that
you guys were at your highest point?
Absolutely. It was gonna be our first project since
“Big Pimpin’.” We had more eyes looking at us
than we’d ever had before. We had a Grammy
nomination, #1 on TRL, #1 on BET. There was a
million and one good looks in our corner.
Even now that Pimp is locked up, UGK is getting more promotion than ever before.
Ever! We never really had anybody interested
in us like this. It’s just the persistence of the
group and the fact that we worked together for
ten years as a team to keep the name alive. I’ve
worked three years myself to keep the name
alive. Pimp is doing his share, too. It’s hard for
him to be sitting in prison, being who he was,
where he came from. Anybody who knows Pimp
knows that he could be getting into trouble, doing stupid shit or whatever. But he’s doing his
time like a man’s supposed to. He’s been doing
his time 100% inside so I gotta do everything 100%
outside. When Pimp comes home, I feel like it’s
as good a look if not better than “Big Pimpin’.”
Two-thirds of the team isn’t even moving right
now. Pimp wasn’t only my rap partner, he was
the music behind UGK. I’m just trying to do everything I can. I have to be on all these songs to
make up for the rhymes that Pimp ain’t writing
and make up for all the beats that Pimp ain’t
making right now. I had a little trouble the first
couple months, because I wasn’t really sure. I’d
never done this by myself.
Will UGK release another album on Jive?
I have no problems with them personally, it’s
just a matter of unfair compensation. I think
honestly that our deal with Jive has been fulfilled. I don’t want to be ugly about the situation, but we’ve got a deal for five albums and
one greatest hits album. We’ve given them four
albums, and they put out a greatest hits album
and two other albums. They put out a chopped
& screwed album. There’s no clause in my contract for a chopped & screwed album. When
I signed my deal, Screw wasn’t making Screw
tapes. This was back in 1992. I would actually
like to stay in the Jive system. They’ve got an
incredible system now, an incredible machine
for putting music out and promoting it and marketing it. Why wouldn’t I want to be a part of
one of the largest music systems in the game?
But I wouldn’t want to do it just to say, “I’m on
Jive.” Fuck that. Those days are over. I’m not
doing it if I’m not making any money off it.
That seems like the story of your life.
A lot of younger cats are making more money
than me from the rap game. I’m not bitter, but
I still need to get my money. A lot of cats before me got discouraged and just gave up. You
can’t just do that. This shit makes too much
money. They try to get all your music and break
your spirit before you learn the game. That’s
their goal: to get as much music as they can before you educate yourself about the business.
They’re hoping that by the time you educate
yourself, you won’t be viable anymore. A record company would love for every artist to be
a one-hit wonder. But you’ve got the internet
now. People are communicating, so the walls
are being broken down and people are learning.
The labels can’t get away with a lot of shit they
used to. Now they’re trying to get younger and
younger. They want to sign 13 and 14-year-olds
who don’t know anything about the industry.
- Matt Sonzala (photo: Julia Beverly)
OZONE MAY 2005
23
“FREE PIMP C!”
For the past three years, it’s been
the rallying cry of many Southern
rappers and UGK fans.
But Chad Butler
has already learned
the secret to freedom:
It’s all in the mind.
Words & Photo:
Julia Beverly
You can write to Pimp C here
(do not send CDs):
Chad Butler #1136592
Terrell Unit
1300 FM 655
Rosharon, TX 77583
24
OZONE MAY 2005
B
ales of hay, fields of cows, and tractors
are not items that I normally see enroute
to a typical OZONE interview.
But this interview is anything but typical. I’m
riding down a rural road about 45 minutes
south of Houston, headed to the correctional
facility which currently serves as home for
½ of the legendary Texas rap duo UGK. The
scene looks like something out of a movie.
Shawshank Redemption, maybe, except for
the miles and miles of beautiful blue sky. Hundreds of inmates in white jumpsuits are off to
the left in the yard of one prison unit, while
guards lounge off to the right on picnic tables
during their lunch break.
Compared to the few correctional institutions
that I’ve had the pleasure of “visiting,” Terrell Unit feels relatively laid-back. The security guards are pleasant and talkative. After a
quick sign-in and ID check, I’m escorted past
the double-gated fence into a bland waiting
room which feels about as warm and enticing
as the DMV or any other generic government
facility. Concrete white walls, off-white floor
panels. Everything feels very blah. I fill out
some paperwork.
“Butler again, huh?” a guard asks dryly. Butler
– Chad Butler, a.k.a. Pimp C – has apparently
been getting a lot of visitors lately. Mostly reporters, thanks to Rap-A-Lot’s recent promotional push for the album of Pimp C’s old free-
of a community service violation. There was a
certain amount I was supposed to have done by
the end of the year, and I was two weeks late.
When I finally got sentenced, I got eight years.
How long have you been in prison?
I’ve got credit for about three years and four
months.
I heard that you’re scheduled for parole at the
end of the year.
There’s no tellin’ when they’re gonna look at
me, or when they’ll let me go. They don’t have
a specific time.
Do you feel like it was justified for them to
give you eight years on a probation violation?
I could look at it like that, or I could look at it as
being better than the twenty years they could’ve
given me. I’d rather look at it like that. At the
time of my sentencing, though, I felt very frustrated.
What’s the most challenging part of being in
prison? Is it the mental aspect?
Having children. That’s the most frustrating
part. I have two kids.
Are your children able to visit you here very
much?
Yes, I see them very often. I’ve been blessed to
be in a place where I’m very close [geographically] to my family. At one time I was farther
away, so I didn’t get to see them as much.
Actually, I’m more creative in here. I’ve got
quite a few ideas. But I’m a producer, too,
and it’s hard to put production ideas on paper. It’s not like writing. I have to write out
what instruments I wanna play at a certain
point in the song. It really looks like a ballgame game plan. I do what I can. If something pops in your head at two or three in
the morning, you don’t wanna lose it. I have
written a lil’ over 2,000 songs in here.
You were probably one of the first people
to use the word “pimp” in a hip-hop related context. Why did you decide to name
yourself Pimp C?
Originally, it had nothing to do with prostitution or pimpin’ women. To me, it was about
pimpin’ the pen. That’s why I started using
the word.
How much access do you have to pop culture?
I get to hear everyone’s singles when I listen
to the radio, and we can read magazines. I
get XXL, Rolling Stone, OZONE, and a few
other magazines. They don’t let The Source
in here anymore, though. I guess they got
too political. They won’t let anything come
in with too much politics. I know when albums are dropping, and get to listen to the
singles.
There have been situations in the past, like
with Tupac, where rappers were able to
“I feel like I got put on the shelf, preserved, so I could come
back later and do something positive. If ‘Pac hadn’t got out
[of prison], he might still be alive today. Maybe there was a
worse fate out there waiting for me.”
style material they released last month, Sweet
James Jones Stories.
A few minutes later, Chad Butler is escorted
into the visiting area. “I heard a joke that
you’ve been doing more interviews now than
you did when you were free,” I begin, speaking through the thick glass wall. “That’s not a
joke,” he responds. “That’s the truth.”
The general public has a perception of what
prison is like, based on what they’ve seen on
TV. How accurate do you think their perception is?
It might be 20-30% accurate. What they don’t
show on TV is the fact that you can be positive in
here. There’s school, and a lot of church activities. I got my G.E.D. in here. When you come to
prison you have the choice of how you want to
do that time. I’ve been blessed that I haven’t
gotten in much trouble. This place is not much
like what you’d see on TV.
What’s a typical day like for you?
Pretty laid-back. I get up around 11 or 12 and go
to work around 2. I work in the kitchen.
Do the other inmates or guards treat you differently because of who you are?
No, I wouldn’t say that. After the first two weeks
or so, I’m treated just like everybody else.
Why are you in prison?
I was on probation for aggravated assault in 2000.
After a year on probation, I was violated because
What are some of the positive aspects of being in prison? Has it made you reevaluate some
things in your life?
I’ve made some choices while I’ve been in here.
I don’t wanna start preaching, but basically, we
all have to take responsibility for our actions.
Has it changed your perspective on the rap
game? If you write lyrics today, is it different
than three years ago?
Well, you know, some rappers speak from the literal perspective, like Eminem. He raps about his
life, his own personal experiences. I’m more of
an entertainer than a realist, but yeah, I’m sure
it has affected my lyrics.
Are you happy with the quality of the material on the album Sweet James Jones Stories,
considering the circumstances?
Actually, I haven’t heard the album. I’ve only
heard about three songs. It’s all freestyle material I did between December of 2000 and January of 2002. It was all compiled from freestyle
tapes. It’s just something to hold the fans over
until I get back.
When you get out of prison, do you plan on
heading straight to the studio?
I don’t know. I’ll have to see what it looks like
when I get back. Once I get out there I’ll evaluate the scene and if it looks like I can prosper,
yeah, I’ll do it.
Do you think your creativity suffers behind
bars, or does it help you be more focused?
get out of prison early by putting out a lot
of money. It seems like you’re doing a lot
of time for a minor offense. Do you think if
you had a different lawyer or more money,
your situation could be better?
I had a whole bunch of money. I had the best
lawyer. There was nothing they could do. I
was real frustrated at that time, you know?
I was spending my own money to get out. It
isn’t a money thing. If it’s in your plan and
it’s supposed to happen, then it’s gonna happen. You can’t even try to stop it. I feel like
I got put on the shelf, preserved, so I could
come back and do something positive later.
Maybe I will be in a position where I can prosper when I get out. I’m not going to challenge it, I’m just gonna take it for what it’s
worth. If ‘Pac hadn’t got out, he might still
be alive today. Maybe there was a worse fate
out there waiting for me.
Are you signed to Rap-A-Lot?
No, but I still consider them family. They’ve
been treating me like a son for years, way
before anyone knew me. I trust J Prince, he’s
like a godfather to me. He’s a good man.
I heard he was here to visit you yesterday.
Who else has been real supportive since
you’ve been in prison?
David Banner. David Banner’s down for me,
he’s a good dude. A lot of people have shown
their support in different ways. There’s
people who got on [the Sweet James Jones
Stories] album to support me that I’ve never
OZONE MAY 2005
25
even met before. Mike Jones, he’s screamin’ my
name out every chance he get. T.I.’s shouting
me out. Bun B, it seems like that boy’s entire
wardrobe consists of shirts with my face on it.
Bun is in the position of being the mother and
the father. He’s carrying the weight of UGK on
his back. He ain’t have to do that. He could’ve
just as easily pushed me out of the way and
focused on just himself. He ain’t have to keep
focusing on me, he ain’t have to get out there
and wear them shirts and keep hollerin’ “Free
Pimp C.” He’s under a tremendous amount of
pressure, so I appreciate that.
Do you think your incarceration is somewhat
of a blessing in disguise for your career?
All the press I’m getting now is because of all
the people in my corner from Rap-A-Lot. It’s like
a family over there. I’ve never met the owner of
Jive, but the owner of Rap-A-Lot, I have dinner
with his family. It’s a big difference.
Is UGK still contractually signed to Jive?
We owe Jive one more album.
If UGK and Jive really don’t get along and they
don’t know how to market you, why won’t
they just let you go?
Because we sell 500,000 albums every time we
drop and they don’t have to spend any money
on videos or promotion or anything. Our album
went platinum with no video. If you were a businessperson, would you let that go? Or would you
try to hold onto it and capitalize off it? It’s not
In the past few years while you’ve been away,
the South has really become a dominant force
in music. Did you anticipate that happening?
Everybody gets they time to shine. It’s just like
in sports. Everybody gets their chance to hold
down the title for a lil’ while. It depends on the
players’ actions, if they can hold onto it and for
how long. The East had their time, the West had
their time, so it was just a matter of time before the South and Midwest had a turn. It was
gonna go down eventually. Right now, music
is stuck. All the records sound the same, and
eventually people are gonna get tired of hearing
that. They gonna want to hear something with
substance; things to live by. We need more substance. Everybody’s pretty much just screamin’
and hollerin’ over some 808 drums, and that’s
not gonna last too long.
Three 6 Mafia?
To tell you the truth, all the stuff they makin’
now and calling it “crunk” music was Three 6
Mafia’s recipe for making records. A lot of things
we’re hearing now is just recycled Three 6 mafia. They were very influential in the Southeast.
They deserve a lot of credit.
David Banner?
David Banner is a great producer, first of all.
He’s gritty and grimy, and he don’t mind sampling a record. Nowadays we’re losing that element. I know there’s a lot of legalities. People
don’t want you to use they records, and there’s
a whole lot of preaching that goes on in the record industry. But you can’t stop sampling records; that’s what this music game was based
on. We can’t stop using breakbeat records in our
songs, because if we do, we’ll lose the essence
Will your lyrics get more political now?
of what this music is about. I don’t even know
We gonna talk about a lil politics. When you if I’m qualified to speak on the essence of it,
don’t know any better, you have no excuse. But because we don’t make hip-hop records down
when you know, you have the opportunity to here. What we make is a hybrid. It’s different,
show. When I didn’t know no better, I had an ex- but we use the same methods. We’re still uscuse for making a shallow record, but now that ing breakbeats and sampling records and other
I know I have a responsibility to tell what I know things that we learned from the East coast, but
and live it. We gonna give them what they want we’re doing it our way.
and what they need.
Are there any East coast “hip-hop” artists
Are there any new artists you’re looking for- that you’d like to work with?
ward to working with when you get out?
I like a whole bunch of hip-hop artists. I like
The girl from Crime Mob, Diamond. David Ban- Fat Joe, Big Daddy Kane, I grew up on all them
ner, Mike Jones. I’d like to get T.I. and Boosie records. There’s a whole bunch of people on
and Webbie on a project together.
the East coast that I would love to work with.
“At one point, the East coast was very hostile towards us. After
buying all their records for so many years, it was like a slap
in the face. After trying to be accepted for so long, we turned
our backs. That’s the attitude that created Southern music.”
personal, it’s business. But, there have been
situations where people tried to buy us out of
our contract and Jive wouldn’t let us go, and I
never understood that.
What do you enjoy more – being an artist or
being a producer?
I don’t know if I enjoy being an artist, but I know
I like to rap. I like to make beats, too.
What’s your relationship with Trill Entertainment?
I’m co-owner.
Our last issue was called 25 Greatest Southern
Artists of All Time. Why do you think UGK belongs near the top of that list?
That’s not for me to say. Ask me about 8Ball &
MJG. When they came in the game, they was
grindin’. They had that attitude: Either you like
us, or you don’t like us, but we’re gonna keep
on making our records the way we want to make
them. To me, they’re one of the greatest groups
of the South. They’re one of my favorites; them
and the Geto Boys. The Geto Boys were actually the first group from Texas I ever heard on
a record. But you’ve gotta understand, there’s
been three or four different Geto Boy groups
throughout the years. Which Geto Boys are we
talkin’ about? The first Geto Boys, or when ‘Face
and Willie came into the group?
Were you actively involved in finding and developing Trill’s artists Boosie and Webbie?
Boosie was there before I left. Webbie came on
after I was incarcerated so I haven’t had the
chance to work with him.
What impressed you about Boosie?
The lil’ dude was on fire. He was rappin’ it and
living it, and at that time I was real wild so it
was attractive to me to see someone on that
same crazy vibe. I know he can take it to the
top. They both can. Webbie’s got a knack for
writing singles. I can see that already and it’s
still early in his career. Very talented guy.
How did UGK get on Jay-Z’s “Big Pimpin’”?
It was his idea. He contacted us, and he’d already planned it out. He called one evening and
said, “Hey, we need y’all to do this song.” We
were like, “Okay, when?” He said, “I need you
here today,” so that’s how it went down.
Were you surprised to get a call like that?
Not really. I mean, you’d be surprised. People
in the industry communicate quite a bit. He got
my number from Too Short, I think.
26
OZONE MAY 2005
I’m real good friends with Brand Nubian, but it
was never a public thing; it was behind closed
doors. We did a record with Keith Murray, too. I
respect his gangsta.
Do you consider Southern music to be “hiphop” or a totally separate genre?
It’s a hybrid. It’s kinda like reggae and dancehall. What you hear from Spragga Benz and Bob
Marley are two different types of records, but
they both fall under the reggae category. What
we do is a lot different from the East coast. We
have more West coast characteristics than East
coast. The West coast never judges or points
the finger or says, “Y’all ain’t makin’ real rap
records down South.” At one time, the East was
very hostile towards us. They were like, “That
ain’t real hip-hop that y’all are doing, so we
don’t wanna hear y’all. We don’t care how many
records you sell, it’s not real.” After buying all
their records for so many years, it was like a
slap in the face. If we ain’t from New York City,
we don’t got the right to rap? We don’t wear
backpacks so we can’t make records? So, after
Scarface, Willie D, and Bushwick Bill.
‘Face’s lyrical content speaks for itself. Willie trying to be accepted for so long, we turned
D’s got that attitude, too: Either you like me our backs. We don’t wanna be accepted now.
or you don’t. That’s the kind of attitude I like: We’ve got our own thing down here. We don’t
Either you like me or you don’t like me, and wanna listen to you, and we don’t care if you
I don’t care either way. I’m gonna keep doing don’t wanna listen to us. We’re gonna do our
it my way. The Geto Boys paved the way. They own records and sell our own records to our own
were going to New York and trying to be ac- people. That’s the attitude that created Southcepted before folks were accepting us, so they ern music. I call it country rap tunes. Nothing
took a lot of the critical beatdown for us and we do is hip-hop. The only similarity is that we
everyone else that’s comin’ up. I give them a lot all rap, and we all make our music on the same
of credit. They’re #1 down here to us.
type of equipment.
A lot of people may recognize you as the new
host of Rap City, but what’s your background
as a DJ?
I got started in radio back in 1994 at a radio
station in Tampa called WMMF. It’s a 7,000 watt
community station. I had a weekly show there
called The Underground Railroad. Back before
cats were able to download their favorite songs,
it was the only place you could get hip-hop music in Tampa on the regular. From there I went
to WTMP in 1997, and a few years later I went
to WLLD. I started doing mixtapes, and I was Angie Martinez’ tour DJ and EA Sports’ DJ. About a
year ago, I started doing guest hosting for Rap
City and BET as a whole. At the beginning of
this year, I was blessed with the opportunity to
become the new host of Rap City.
What was the audition process like?
It was God’s plan because I didn’t really have
an audition. I didn’t submit a tape or anything.
I got a call asking if I was available to host Rap
City.
What do you think appealed to them about
you?
I really can’t comment on what went into the
decision-making process. I never really got into
it with them. It was a great opportunity, so I
took it. I’m assuming that what I brought to the
table must have gone over well, because I’m
now the host of Rap City.
What’s the most difficult part of making that
transition from radio to TV?
I’ve gotta be aware that if I decide to go out
the night before a taping, that’s gonna affect
the way I look. When you do radio, it doesn’t
matter what you do the night before as long as
you get up in time for your show. You could be
completely trashed and wearing a pair of slippers and a t-shirt and nobody will know the difference. With TV, if you party hard the night
before, people will know when they see that
show.
Speaking of partying hard, I heard you were a
little tipsy after Justo’s Mixtape Awards.
A good time was had by all.
There was a comment Tigger made in our
BCR issue stating that you need to “step your
game up.” Do you have a response to that?
I’ve got nothing but respect and admiration for
Tigger as a host of Rap City and I think he’s done
a huge amount.
Is it hard to fill someone else’s shoes, coming into a show and replacing a host who was
well-liked?
I think people are resistant to change. Tigger
definitely had his challenges coming in after the
hosts before him who were also well-liked, so
it’s always going to be a transitional period.
What are you enjoying the most about this
new experience?
Again, I’m in a very fortunate set of circumstances. I’m thankful for it every day. It’s not
every day that somebody becomes a new host
of a show like Rap City. I’m proud to rep my
area in Florida; I’m happy to do anything that
keeps me involved with hip-hop and allows me
to contribute.
Do you feel a responsibility to rep Tampa?
I think that because of some people who’ve
come out of that area before, there might be
some expectations and people are worried that
I’m gonna forget about Tampa. Nah, every day
of my DJ career has been because of Tampa,
and there’s nothing else I could do right now
but hold it down.
There’s always the joke that Tampa
is the home of one-hit wonders. What
do you think it’s gonna take to put
Tampa on the map?
I think it’s still gonna take time, but
there’s a lot of talent in the area. I think
Tom G is gonna have a great career. I’ve
had a chance to sit and talk with the CEO
of his label, Neg, and I think he’s going in a
good direction. There’s my man Ski with 24-1 Records, I think that with Rated R’s new
project and his new group the Eve’nin Ridahz, they’re gonna be making a lot of noise.
My man Sonny Crack and Ovados have been
grinding for a long time. With the right set of
circumstances, they’ll be able to get out there.
Sonny’s a monster with the beats, so in the near
future you’ll be hearing his production on other
artists’ albums.
Have you been traveling a lot lately?
We on the road real steady, but Tampa’s my
home, man. Tampa’s the spot that I love. I love
Florida. It’s a lot bigger than South Beach, and
people need to come experience spots like
Tampa and Orlando and Jacksonville. Don’t underestimate the power of those cities when it
comes to breaking an artist or having a good
time. But yeah, I’m stayin’ on the road. As
quick as somebody comes up, they could go
down even quicker. But this has been 11 years
in the making, so it’s not to say that I came
up quick, but to say that I understand the importance of reaching out to the smaller markets. That’s my preference, actually, because
it means more when you get there. They don’t
get attention from some of their other favorite
artists, so when you go into a smaller market,
they really got love for you. I’m working on a
mixtape and got some other business ventures,
but I don’t wanna put it out there too early to
jinx the process. Mad Linx has always been a
grinder.
Why does BET treat OZONE so badly every
year at Spring Bling?
Mad Linx didn’t treat any media badly, so I can’t
speak for anybody but me.
Anything else you want to plug?
Rap City Monday through Friday 4-6 PM. Cats
can always check out what’s going on at www.
madlinx.com. Thanks to the Central Florida
area in particular, and shouts to OZONE Magazine for holdin’ it down.
- Julia Beverly
OZONE MAY 2005
27
10 WHITE BOY STEREOTYPES
TRUE OR FALSE? ASK PAULWALL,
THE DOPEST WHITE BOY IN TEXAS
01 White Boys Have No Rhythm
PaulWall agrees: Yeah, that’s pretty much true. The
average white guy doesn’t have rhythm unless they’re really
into music. It kinda depends on what type of music they listen to. But if you’re corny and square, you ain’t gonna have
no rhythm no matter what race you are.
02 White Boys Can’t Jump
PaulWall agrees: I actually used to play basketball,
but I ain’t gonna lie. I can’t jump. On average, that’s probably true, but there’s a lot of athletes out there that are
white that can jump so it just depends.
03 White Boys Are More Financially Secure
Boys Like Girls With Fake Boobs
04 White
and Flat Asses
PaulWall disagrees: I don’t think that’s true, cause I
know a bunch of broke-ass white muthafuckers.
PaulWall disagrees: Maybe five years ago that was true, but
not any more. Ass is “in” now for any race. Shit, the J Lo look
is hot, and Beyonce was rated #1 for hottest bodies on VH1
and she got an extended cab. Five years ago that whole Pamela Anderson look was in, but now even Playboy isn’t looking for girls with fake boobs. They want the natural look.
05 White Boys Eat Pussy
PaulWall agrees: I think everybody eats pussy. That’s
not a racial thing. It’s just like a girl giving head. All girls
give head. They ain’t gonna do it to everybody, but they did
it before and they gonna do it again.
Boys Are More Disrespectful to
06 White
Their Parents
PaulWall agrees: Yeah, I think that’s true, and I don’t know
why they are. It’s crazy. It’s not just white guys, but white
girls too. You always see spoiled little white kids talking
trash and cussin’ their mommas out and stuff.
07 White Boys Wanna Be Black
PaulWall disagrees: Nah. I think a lot of white guys
are just intrigued by the black culture and interested in it,
but I don’t think they want to be black. I grew up in this
community, so I don’t look at it as black culture. I look at
it as my culture. Do I wanna be black? Nope. I don’t give a
damn if I was Chinese, Mexican, white, black, or whatever.
My daddy was still a drug addict, I still had a single momma,
I’m still rappin’, and I’m still the people’s champ.
08 White Boys Have Small Dicks
09 White Boys Are More Experimental
PaulWall disagrees: I never seen nobody else’s package, but I know I don’t! I got a bulge.
PaulWall agrees: I think white guys are more openminded as far as trying different drugs and shit, whether it’s
cocaine, X, mushrooms, or whatever. They’re more willing
to get fucked up regardless of the consequences. I don’t
know, though. I can’t speak for nobody else. I drink syrup
and alcohol, that’s it, but I’ve always found that to be true.
My white homeboys will take a whole lot of different types
of drugs, but my black or Hispanic homeboys just smoke
weed or sip syrup or pop an X pill every now and then. I don’t
really know anybody that still pops X, though.
10 White Boys Are More Sensitive
PaulWall disagrees: That’s a hard one. There’s always been that stereotype that white guys are punks, getting beat on by their girlfriends, and they’re just sitting
around heartbroken and shit. But I don’t think so. I watch a
lot of MTV and shit, and on The Real World you always see
them doggin’ their girls out. I think everybody’s sensitive to
somebody. That ain’t a white thing.
28
OZONE MAY 2005
KNOWN FOR SPITTING OUT EXCLUSIVES AT LIGHTNING SPEED,
SOUTH CAROLINA’S
DJ CHUCK T
LEADS THE PACK IN THE SOUTH’S RAPIDLY EXPANDING
AND HIGHLY COMPETITIVE MIXTAPE MARKET.
But visitors to Chuck T’s website on April
19th, 2005, were greeted with a menacing FBI
logo (above) courtesy of Grayzone.com, an RIAA
affiliate responsible for digital “piracy and
bootleg investigation.”
Was DJ Chuck T’s mixtape stash raided? Did he
really get arrested? Or is it all just a publicity
stunt?
Here, the “most well-rounded DJ in the
South” clears up the rumors and breaks
down the mixtape game.
30
OZONE MAY 2005
G
Okay, what’s the real story? Your website was shut down with an FBI logo, and the rumors say that you’ve been arrested.
Well, here’s the story. There was this website that was bootlegging DJs mixtapes. Another website had hipped me to what was going on, but I really
didn’t believe them because the mixtape websites hate on each other all the time. I did a little investigation and found out it was true. I posted the
information on a few message boards as a favor to the DJ community, and the website’s owner was responding. So, the next day, all of a sudden I’m
getting all these weird emails like, “Yo, I need to cop 1,000 tapes.” They were all coming from anonymous Hotmail and Yahoo accounts, so it was like
a red flag to be getting all these emails at one time. Nobody was giving me any contact numbers, so it looked fake. I didn’t know it was a branch of
the RIAA; I figured it was dude trying to set me up. I started emailing back and playing with them. So I took a plane out to New York on Friday, and
early Saturday morning I got a phone call saying that the bootlegging website had been raided by the RIAA and hit with $20,000 in fines. The company
that hit him was called Grayzone.com, they’re a branch of the RIAA. They’re the ones who do the field work. When I started going back through the
emails, some of the addresses they’d hit me from had “grayzone” in them, which led me to believe I was under investigation also. But, I haven’t
been arrested despite what people are saying, and no charges have been pressed. It’s just been blown out of proportion. The RIAA contacted my
webmaster and let them know that I was under investigation because they got a tip that I was selling bootleg albums off my website. A detective
stopped by the crib and gave my mom his business card, saying I need to contact him. He said I wasn’t in trouble, he just needed to talk to me about
the allegations. So the first thing I did was call my lawyer.
You drop a couple mixtapes a month, but how do you profit from them? It’s illegal to sell mixtapes, right?
We all know that, first and foremost, it’s illegal to sell mixtapes. You can not sell mixtapes. When you sell a mixtape, you’re actually selling your DJ
capabilities or your turntable skills or your CD covers. There’s a whole lot of ways you can word it, but selling the actual music on the mixtapes is
illegal. Everybody gets around it because you can put “promotional use only.” Mixtapes are used to promote an artist, and DJs are not supposed to
make any money off them whatsoever. When you pay for a mixtape, you’re actually paying for materials itself, because that “promo use only” thing
is running out. We make no profit. We charge at cost. You’re not making anything from the music. You’ve got to have a disclaimer on there letting
everybody know that the music does not belong to you.
What separates a DJ like yourself from a “bootlegger”?
The thing that separates the two is the fact that, in some way, shape, or form, us DJs do have permission to put the music on the CD to promote the
artist. We get the music from A&Rs, artists themselves, record labels, record pools, stuff like that. If you call the mixshow contact for a lot of record
labels, you’ll hear on their answering machine: “If you’re calling to obtain music for mixshows, mixtapes, clubs, or radio,” he’s the dude you need to
contact. The industry is just slow trying to legalize it. When all this happened, I was actually in New York at the Power 105 music conference. They
had a panel where we submitted questions for Kevin Liles. They didn’t get around to my question, but what I was going to ask is: “What are you doing
to protect real DJs who actually get serviced from the label and talk to the A&Rs and mixshow promoters?” We have permission to put stuff on our
mixtapes. Bootleggers will just take your album, burn it, and sell it, no permission.
Isn’t there paperwork or a release form you could have the labels sign that would protect you from the RIAA?
Honestly, everybody has tried, but you’re not gonna get it. Nobody’s really gonna give you permission. I know it’s crossed a lot of DJ’s minds at
one point in time, but it’s just not gonna happen, especially when you consider how competitive the mixtape game is. If you sit around and wait
on paperwork, the song is gonna be old by the time you get it out. Since you’re not supposed to make any money off it, you really shouldn’t need
permission. There’s no need for paperwork.
So it’s kind of a catch-22 with the labels, because they want you to put their artists on your mixtape to promote them, but they don’t want
to give you written permission to do it.
Exactly. But the one thing they can’t deny is the importance of mixtapes and they influence mixtapes have on the industry itself. They’re very important when it comes to breaking new artists. But the labels couldn’t care less about the DJs. When the chips are down, they fall back. They’re
not gonna help you.
What’s going to happen now with you and the RIAA?
Legally, I’m clear. I talked to four or five mixshow coordinators for different labels, and they said they were gonna write me letters to vouch for me.
The group that was investigating was trying to check and see if I really am who I say I am. I really doubt I’ll have any charges pressed. They’re going
through and checking my contacts to make sure Chuck T really gets serviced from these labels. As far as jail time or whatever I’m not even worried
about that. Fines? Maybe. I’m more worried about the fact that the situation itself was brought on by a hater.
What’s your advice to other legitimate mixtape DJs? How should they protect themselves legally from the RIAA or Grayzone, to make sure they
aren’t investigated also?
Make sure you have all your contact info on hand at all times: A&Rs, managers, record reps, record pools, everything. Save all the packaging that you
receive your records in. I gave them packages from Universal Records that shows that I consistently get stuff from them and I’m on their mailing list.
Also, make sure you always ship copies of your mixtapes to the labels. A lot of the mixshow coordinators ask to see the mixtapes so they can present
them at the office for meetings and stuff like that. Save all your emails from the A&Rs.
Is your website www.DJChuckT.com back up?
My lawyer said to hold off. The RIAA said I could put it back up, but couldn’t do business right away.
Has the whole situation slowed you down at all?
Never that. I’ve actually had more people contacting me about putting their music on my mixtape than ever before. Honestly, even though it’s negative publicity, it’s still publicity. I don’t know anybody who’s shied away from me because of it. Everybody’s like, “Yo, Chuck, I’m ridin’ with you,
if them folks need paperwork or whatever I’ll write a letter.” Honestly, all this is gonna do is make me watch my back a little more carefully. Not
everybody is your friend, and just because they spend money with you doesn’t mean they won’t turn on you.
You hear a lot of stats thrown around saying that bootlegging causes the record industry to lose billions of dollars a year. Do you think mixtapes
help or hurt album sales?
In all honesty, mixtapes help good artists and they hurt bad artists. Mixtapes are a way of exposing the fraudulent artists; the one-hit wonders. Mixtapes actually let people get a preview of your real skills. If people don’t see you making moves on the mixtape circuit, then nine times out of then,
they aren’t gonna buy your album. But, if the music you’re taking to the DJs is quality stuff, you’re definitely gonna succeed both on the mixtape
circuit and with album sales.
Some people don’t believe that this whole situation actually happened. Some people are saying it’s a publicity stunt.
Honestly, the last thing they wanted to do is piss me off. Tomorrow I’m calling every record label I know to get some new music. I admit I was getting
sorta lazy, but all this is doing is motivating me. With all the talk going around and niggas saying its a publicity stunt, yeah, right. If this really was
a publicity stunt, everybody’s about to see how good I’m gonna milk it.
- Julia Beverly, [email protected]
OZONE MAY 2005
31
Who’s a part of M.O.E. Entertainment?
Victor: Myself and Lil Man, we’re the CEOs. There’s Lil V, Young Cash,
and the other members of the 904 Click: T-Smiley, Chicken Mann, and
SJ a.k.a. Dirt Diggler. M.O.E.’s the label. It stands for Money Over Everything. The group is called 904 Click.
How did the 904 Click get started?
Victor: Me and my brother Young Cash and another one of our brothers
started the 904 Click. When I met Lil Man me and him hooked up, and he
had T-Smiley and Chicken Mann on his side. Then we added Calico from
my side, and SJ was the last member. He came in like four years ago.
Most of us have been here since 1999.
T-Smiley: They was linked up as buddies on the street level, and they had
a lil club situation too. We all used to go to the club, turnin’ it out, whatever. Everything was just clickin’. We started making music. Young Cash
was always gonna do the music thing, so he shot off and got it pumpin’
like it was supposed to. We gonna follow him up with the 904 Click. It’s
always been a group, but everybody wanna do solo projects too.
Victor: All the artists are solo artists.
T-Smiley: We’re behind Cash as a solo artist, as far as jumpin’ out there
and makin’ it happen.
Why did you decide to push Cash as the first solo artist?
Victor: It was so hard to push the 904 Click, cause we did that for years
but it slowed up all the time. It’s hard to keep four members together.
Everybody got different projects. Some were going to school at the time.
At that time Joey [Cash] really felt like somebody had to step up. He was
already doing it. When I got shot, a lot of us had quit. Joey was the only
person that kept going to the studio and was still working. He was the
first one to be really ready.
So Cash kinda holds the whole 904 Click together.
Young Cash: When the general fell, I helped it back up.
Victor: Yeah, when the ship was sinking, he really held it together.
What albums are you getting ready to put out right now?
T-Smiley: Right now, it’s Cash’s album and mixtape. The 904 Click got two
albums done already.
Victor: It’s called G.R.I.T.S.: G’s Raised In The South.
Do you feel like Jacksonville needs representation?
Young Cash: Hell yeah.
Victor: Jacksonville is a gangsta city. I really think it’s a gangsta city because we don’t have nothing to do around here. It’s either go to work or
be in the streets. It ain’t a big city like Atlanta where people got money.
There’s no big singers or rappers or NFL players here. It’s either streets or
work. It ain’t no in-between. It ain’t a lot of people here that got money.
I feel like once M.O.E. puts more money into this city, it’ll be more opportunities for other black indie labels to make money.
What style does everyone bring to the group?
Victor: T-Smiley is more on the gutta side, for the streets. SJ is just a
white phenomenon. I feel like he’s gonna really wreck the game. He grew
up with all of us, so everything he’s speaking is real. Young Cash: Me and
SJ grew up together playing sports.
SJ, do you think you’ll get a lot of Eminem comparisons because
you’re white?
SJ: The only comparison between us is our skin color. I’m coming way
different. I’m coming through your door.
Young Cash: Eminem is more on the comedy, super-lyrical end. SJ is more
like a game-spitter.
SJ: I’m comin’ every time with shit flowin’. Paintin’ the streets. Good,
bad, everything.
What single are you putting out right now?
Victor: “Man” is the first single. It’s about what we’ve been doing for the
last ten years: ballin’ out of control. We blow money like powder. We’re
known for blowin’ money. Ask they streets, they’ll tell you.
T-Smiley: Money Over Everything.
Where do the other group members fit in?
Chicken Mann: I just fit in the best way I can. I rap about real life situations. The ups, the downs, and everything in between.
Victor: All our music is about real life situations. It’s about what we’ve
seen and done.
Young Cash: I can rap about stuff that’s super gangsta and speak it in a
way that everybody can understand. T-Smiley keeps it super gutta too,
but I put it into the limelight.
T-Smiley: Unfortunately, this ain’t no screenplay. We ‘bout to be actors
when they let us get this movie deal, but right now it’s dead serious. This
shit ain’t no acting.
Victor: Most people get in the game and try to be gangsta, but we’re
actually trying to get away from that shit. We’ve been in the streets
forever. We’re actually doing this shit. Most people go backwards; they
get in the game and then try to be gangstas. We tryin’ to go the other
direction. We been gettin’ money ever since we owned Club Choices on
the West side.
What separates the 904 Click from all the other groups tryin’ to come
up right now?
SJ: The thing that makes the 904 Click so unique is because we can come
in so many different ways. We’re straight hardcore. We can make people
relate, even if they don’t know nothing about what we do. I bet we can
get anybody to bump our shit.
Chicken Mann: We paint vivid, real life pictures of this shit.
Anything else you want to say?
T-Smiley: One time for Backdoor Productions, MG holdin’ it down like an
anchor on a cruise ship.
Young Cash: One time for Mike Jones and the Swishahouse clique.
Victor: Lil Webbie, Boosie, Bigga Rankin and the Cool Runnings crew.
Rest in peace to Ced Henry, the first and last M.O.E. soldier we lost off
the team.
T-Smiley: Q45, King Ron, all the radio stations. Much love to 92.7 The
Beat. Jacksonville, get on our back cause we finna ride out and take y’all
with us.
Do you want to give out any contact information for your studio?
Victor: Yeah, it’s Top Notch Studios, Jacksonville’s hottest new studio.
Holla at us: 904-777-9662 or 904-545-0385.
01: TC, Capone, Damon Dash, and Rachel Roy at the Apollo for the Death
of A Dynasty premiere (NYC)
02: Ant-Lava and friends reppin’
OZONE @ the Green Room for
Purple City’s release party (NYC)
03: Atlantic’s Dwight Willacy,
Erick Ford, Ronnie Johnson, and
James Lopez @ Madison Square
Garden (NYC)
04: Big Gee, Kydd Joe, and
DirtBag @ Club Tens (NYC)
05: Garfield and Yogi reppin’
OZONE (Daytona Beach, FL)
06: Jin and Kevin Cooper @
Club Cirque (London)
07: Grandaddy Souf and
friends at his video shoot
for “Run It” (Orlando, FL)
08: Trick Daddy and a
model reppin’ Crunk Juice
@ Club Fuel (Daytona
Beach, FL)
09: Harlem Spinnerz’
owner reppin’ OZONE
(NYC)
10: Ray Cash and Chris
Green @ Firestone (Orlando, FL)
11: Hip-Hop 411 TV
hosts Coco and Sharon
@ Club Fuel (Daytona
Beach, FL)
12: T Pain and Akon’s
brother Bu @ Firestone
(Orlando, FL)
13: Greg G and Christina Clark @ Club Fuel
(Daytona Beach, FL)
14: Melinda, Ray J, and
Anna (Daytona Beach,
FL)
15: Slim Thug and Mike
Jones @ Club Fuel (Daytona Beach, FL)
16: Master P and Silkk
the Shocker @ Kartouche (Jacksonville,
FL)
17: Three 6 Mafia and
Camron reppin’ Sizzurp
@ 102 Jamz (Orlando,
FL)
18: Pitbull, Tigger, and
Southstar reppin’ Grand
Lenare cognac @ Club
Fuel (Daytona Beach, FL)
19: Butch Hartfield, Bobby
Valentine, and Courtney
Stewart (New Orleans, LA)
20: Full Impact All-Stars
@ Jamlando Record Pool
Meeting (Orlando, FL)
21: Sky High, Van Dale, and
Mala-T @ Jamlando Record
Pool Meeting (Orlando, FL)
Photo Credits:
General: #02,09
Greg G: #13
Julia Beverly: #04,05,07,08,
10,11,12,17,18,21
Kevin Cooper: #06
Malik Abdul: #14,20
Marcus Jethro: #19
Ray Tamarra: #01,03
Sophia Jones: #16
Spiff: #15
8
OZONE MAY 2005
A lot of people are wondering why you aren’t
on Rap City anymore.
That’s just the nature of the business. I’ve
been on Rap City for six years and in The Basement for five years, and I can’t do the same
thing for the rest of my life. But now that I
have high visibility, I have to be able to show
people that I can do more than what I was doing. Now you see me in a suit or on some other
TV networks, it’s just a way to show people my
versatility. You have to keep your options open
and keep it on and poppin’.
Are you going to be doing more projects with
BET?
I’m already doing BET Style, that comes on every Tuesday and Thursday at 7:30. I have a lot
of things in development that I can’t put out
there yet cause they’re not done. I hate saying
stuff until I’m sure it’s gonna happen. I’ve got
my cognac poppin, it’s called Grand Lenare.
I have my signature line of automotive rims
dropping this May called BT’s.
Do you think your rims are gonna be as popular as Sprewells?
Well, we’re not spinning, so I don’t know if
they’re gonna be as popular as Sprewells
(laughing). Basically, I’m a car guy, so I know
what good rims look like. I got connected with
people who make quality stuff. They gotta be
quality if they got my name on ‘em.
What’s your car collection include?
Let’s see. I have an ‘05 downtown 645, an ‘04
E55, a 2003 Volkswagon GTI a.k.a. the Yellow
Bird, that’s my fast and furious car. I got the
1966 Lincoln Continental with suicide doors. I
got a 2000 Tahoe. I’ve got four motorcycles,
too, but I’m bout to sell one of ‘em. I got a
2004 Kawasaki GX10, a 2001 Suzuki GSXR1000,
and a 2000 Suzuki GSXR750.
What’s your opinion on the new host of Rap
City, Mad Linx?
I wish him luck. He’s gotta bring it because
Rap City is fifteen years old, and he’s holding the torch for a lot of people. Word on the
street is that he needs to step his game up and
bring it. I wish him luck in his new position.
When people see you on TV, it looks kinda
easy. Was hosting Rap City difficult for you?
Most of it’s natural. It’s just the way I am. I’ve
been blessed to be me in the eleven years of
my career on television, so I don’t foresee
myself ever falling off. It ain’t gon’ be no remix to Tigger, cause I’ve been just myself all
this time. There’s certain aspects of it I had
to work on. I didn’t go to school, but I had to
learn television the same way I had to learn
radio. I had a God-given talent. When people
talk to me, I guess they feel like they know
me. They feel comfortable talking to me.
One of my strongest qualities is my interview
game. My interview game is serious.
Did you ever watch tapes of yourself on Rap
City and critique yourself?
When I first started they made me watch
tapes. They wanted me to be the best I
could be. It was the longest running show
in the country, so I had a lot of pressure
from them to hold the shit down. I never
wanted to be known as the person who
killed Rap City, so that was motivation
enough for me. So yeah, I looked at the
tapes and had people give me feedback. The show, and myself, evolved
over the years.
Tell me about your cognac.
I’m an owner, not just a spokesperson. The name,
Lenare, is a derivative of my middle name. I’ve
never put out a liquor before, so it’s been a big
learning process for me.
And you’ve got Big Tigger weekend coming up
in June, right?
Yeah, the Street Corner Foundation. We have
two primary goals: the prevention of HIV/AIDS
through awareness and prevention, and the second is to increase literacy in urban areas. Our
fundraiser is coming up June 17th-19th in Washington, D.C. You can visit www.streetcornerfoundation.org or www.bigtigweekend.net for
more information. This is my fourth year doing
the fundraiser. Last year we had Allen Iverson,
B2K, R Kelly, Gabrielle Union, Michael Vick, Terrell Owens, Tank, Free from 106th & Park, and
Michael Ealy. It was hot, it was beautiful to have
all those people come down. We have a celeb
basketball game and a whole bunch of events. I
donate the profits to different organizations.
We heard you on the R Kelly “Snake” joint.
Are you planning on doing a Tigger album?
We’ll see. I’ve gone back and forth between
“yeah” and “no.” Part of the reason is because
of the nature of the music business. It’s really
only like five or six people making it right now.
Everything is 120% for me, so for me to really go
do an album I’d have to set aside some of the
other shit I’m doing. If the money ain’t gonna
be equal to or bigger than what I’m making now,
that’s like hustling backwards. So part of it is the
economics of it, and the second part is actually
sitting down and getting focused and having time
to work on it. Between BET, the rims, my cognac,
my syndicated radio show, and some of the other
shit I’m developing, it’d be hard for me to just
stop everything to do an album.
Did any labels approach you with offers?
We had a lot of great conversations, especially
when the R Kelly joint was out, but I didn’t re-
ally get the answers I was looking for. We had a
couple potential situations that fell apart at the
last minute, and that didn’t help motivate me.
It’s like, if I don’t do it, I ain’t gonna die, you
know? I already got my respect from what I did
in the booth and I had a good song with R Kelly,
so as long as the people respect me I’m cool.
How many stations is your syndicated radio
show on?
It’s on 56 stations in the U.S. and three countries. It’s definitely very cool. Radio is how I
got started, it’s been a great foundation for
me. It’s opened a lot of doors. I think I have
the number one rated urban syndicated show
in the country, aside from morning shows. It’s
beautiful. And I own my show, so if I decide I
don’t like the company I’m with I could take it
somewhere else.
Does syndication hurt local markets?
I think it does when you do it in shifts like the
morning show or afternoon show. My show is
only on the weekends, and I control 100% of
the playlist. I might not play a “local” artist
from that particular state, because my show is
the top 20 joints in the country and a couple
joints bubbling. We put it together in an exciting package. I think syndication does hurt some
markets, but most of the syndicated shows are
morning shows for an older audience. If the
night show was syndicated you’d be shutting
out a lot of young listeners.
Any new artists you’re checking out?
Mike Jones. Love Mike Jones. Shouts to Cassidy,
he’s gonna be big as time goes on. Game got a
real good start, too. I’m officially a Game fan.
Anything else you want to say?
I wanna thank everybody that supported me
over the past six years on BET. If you miss The
Basement, I apologize. It wasn’t my fault. It
meant a lot that every time I was talking to the
camera, millions of people were watching.
- Interview and photo by Julia Beverly
OZONE MAY 2005
9
01: Ladies reppin’ OZONE outside
Cleo’s for Uncle Luke’s party (Orlando, FL)
02: Bedo, DJ Prostyle, and Chino on
the set of “Go Head” (Orlando, FL)
03: DJ Drama, AK, and C-Rod @
Madison Square Garden (NYC)
04: Total Kaos, T Pain, and Tiki @
TJ’s DJ’s (Tallahassee, FL)
05: Melyssa Ford trying on
Tigger’s chain @ Club Fuel
(Daytona Beach, FL)
06: DJ Terrah, Young Mills,
and Bigga Rankins @ TJ’s DJ’s
(Tallahassee, FL)
07: Zina Phillips, Steve Gottlieb, and Vince Phillips @
Webster Hall (NYC)
08: Jae Millz and Jacki-O @
Webster Hall (NYC)
09: DJ Absolut reppin’
OZONE (NYC)
10: Lil Jon & the Eastside
Boyz, the Ying Yang Twins,
and DJ Will @ Webster
Hall for their AOL concert
(NYC)
11: The biggest hater in
Orlando finally got his
face in OZONE, so quit
talking shit
12: Malik and Nita @
Icon (Orlando, FL)
13: Big Cee Jay and
Grandaddy Souf @ his
video shoot for “Run It”
(Orlando, FL)
14: Marcus Jethro and
Carl Thomas reppin’
Crunk Juice (New
Orleans, LA)
15: Brooke Valentine
demonstrating her
girlfight techniques on
Lil Jon (NYC)
16: DJ Prostyle, Gloria
Velez, and Slim Thug @
Tabu (Orlando, FL)
17: Partners N Crime
and Juvenile @ Firestone for DJ Prostyle’s
birthday party (Orlando,
FL)
18: Q-Tip, DJ Prostyle,
DJ Enuff, DJ Nasty, and
Trakmasters’ Tone @ 102
Jamz (Orlando, FL)
19: Mouse and Lil Boosie
reppin’ OZONE @ Trill Studios (Baton Rouge, LA)
20: Juan, Ed, and Leaton @
Enyce fashion show (Miami,
FL)
21: Wild Bill and Rich Boy
reppin’ OZONE @ The Moon
for TJ’s DJ’s (Tallahassee, FL)
Photo Credits:
A Turner: #20
General: #09
Julia Beverly: #04,06,07,08,
10,13,15,17,18,21
King Yella: #19
Malik Abdul: #01,11,12
Marcus Jethro: #14
Ray Tamarra: #03
Spiff: #02,05,16
10
OZONE MAY 2005
Although his voice has been heard on all but
the very first of Lil Jon & the Eastside Boyz’
albums, most of us wouldn’t recognize Bohagon if we bumped into him on the street.
So, much to this photographer’s delight, no
antsy, picture-phone wielding, autographdemanding fans interrupted Bo’s photo
shoot in downtown Atlanta by the Underground mall.
In fact, the only person who did recognize him was a Hispanic teenager working
at Johnny Rockets who just happened to
glance at Bohagon’s mixtape Gatekeeper to
the Other World that was sitting next to his
turkey burger.
But with his flow catching attention on
mixtapes throughout the South, Bohagon is
about to be as recognizable as Jon’s pimp
cup.
It would be safe to assume that you are from
Atlanta, but we’re going to ask anyway.
Where are you from?
Naw, I’m from Talbotton, Georgia. It’s a small
town between Macon and Columbus, with
about 1500 people. I’m an only child and
I moved with mama a lot growing up. But I
chose to stay in the country for familiarity. I
came to Atlanta in 1997 to stay and hooked up
with Lil Jon.
How did you end up hooking up with Lil
Jon?
This guy named Gerald Hall let Jon hear my
stuff when Jon was A&R at So So Def at the
time and he put me on the So So Def Bass All
Stars Volume 2 compilation. The song that I
did (“Uh Uhh”) was horrible (laughing). What
they would do is record the vocals to a normal
beat and then they’d switch it and put a fast
beat to it. I hated the song, but that was my
introduction to the game. I was 16 or 17 years
old. I’m very thankful for it, though. Then Jon
put me on the So So Def Bass All Stars Volume
3 (“Drop Dem Bows”). He let me do me on that
one, I guess he felt bad from the song I did
before.
What’s it like working with Lil Jon?
It’s been great, man. Jon works hard. A lot of
people don’t get to see that because they just
see him with the pimp cup on TV. That man
had a vision and stuck to it. I remember the
days when he first started that crunk shit with
“Who You Wit’” and everybody, even me, was
like, “I don’t know about this, Jon, this might
not work.” But he kept doing it and now look
at him.
You’ve been in the game for a minute then,
so why are we just now hearing you on your
own?
Me being from the country, I had to learn certain things that other people may have known
already. I was a bright-eyed country boy at
first. Where I’m from there was no hip-hop
scene, so I had to create one. I had to learn
by being a fly on the wall. I’m a late bloomer, I’m 25 years old. Some people are early
bloomers, some people are late bloomers,
but the main thing is that I get to bloom.
Now that you are finally blooming, what
is your agenda in the rap game?
I ain’t no country bumpkin. A lot of people have this perception of the country
that I’m trying to erase. People see
videos of the country where niggas playing with
pigs. I’m just trying to show people that even
though I’m from the country, I know everything
that you know. In the country the whole town is
poor. You might have projects in the city, but the
niggas in the broke down houses are just as poor.
My town is the type where the white folks run
it but their kids to don’t live or go to school in
the town. I feel loyal to the country to the point
where I gotta shed some light on it and show the
people in my town how to come up and navigate
throughout the world.
Have you seen any differences in artist loyalty
in the county versus the city?
In small towns we’re more loyal to our favorite
rapper, in the city they’re loyal to the radio. We
don’t listen to the radio that much. Like, the
new 8ball & MJG album. It may have took three
years to come out, but we gonna get it because
the last one jammed so hard. In the city the radio make people go with the new flavor of the
month, the radio kinda dilutes the game a little
bit.
Are you prepared for when your songs become
“diluted” from getting played on the radio
24/7?
Yeah. It’s a double-edged sword. It can help you.
But being that I’m so deep rooted in the streets
and all that shit ain’t gonna affect me since I put
in my groundwork in the streets.
And you still are doing your groundwork in the
streets.
Yeah, I just got back from doing a show in Panama City with Lil Jon. I’ve been in Cancun, California for the Grammys, Denver for the All-Star
game, South Padre Island in Texas. I ain’t trying
to sleep right now, because once the phone stops
ringing, something is wrong. It’s not a whole lot
of time for me to kick it with my old lady but
she’ll have to understand.
Even though you haven’t released a solo album
yet, you’ve been around long enough to see a
lot of what goes on behind the scenes. What’s
one thing you don’t like about the game right
now?
One thing I hate about the game, is the labels
treat rappers like their on an assembly line. It’s
like they are saying, “We got the next rapper
coming down the line, we gonna put him with
this producer, we gonna get a guest appearance
from him, this and that.” I hate the assembly
line in rap. I think everybody should be an individual. People should do their own thing. If you
don’t mess with that producer, don’t mess with
them just to try to get some record sales. If you
don’t know that artist, why you gonna let them
on your album just to generate some record
sales? That’s actually the bad part of the game,
that it makes so much money. Sometimes niggas
are more concerned about the money than they
are about making good music.
You have your own label too, right?
Yeah, Georgia Durt is a label me and my boy
Playboy Tre came up with. People know Tre
from the Attic Crew. He’s a CEO and he’s also an
artist. We’ve got Mr. Ward and Loony T, who is
going to be the first solo artists off the label.
Anything else you want to say?
I’m just working on getting my album finished.
I done knocked out a couple more songs this
week, and Jon gave me a whole bunch of beats
so I’m tryin’ to decide which ones I’m gonna
fuck with.
If you’re still wondering where you’ve heard
Bohagon, check out his attention-grabbing
guest appearance on the intro to Lil Jon &
the Eastside Boyz’ recent album Crunk Juice:
“Get Crunk,” or the hilarious phone call skit.
Bohagon, who is currently working on his debut album, is still undecided when it comes to
the name of his project. He’s flirting with the
titles A Day Late, A Dollar Short or The Country Superhero. The album features 8Ball, Bun
B, and several members of the BME camp.
- Interview and photo by Maurice G. Garland
OZONE MAY 2005
11
01: Mashonda and Q-Tip @ 102 Jamz
(Orlando, FL)
02: O, Lil Jon, and Big Cap @ Webster Hall (NYC)
03: Adept, Dapa, and Chino @ Firestone for DJ Prostyle’s birthday
party (Orlando, FL)
04: DJ 007 and Greg G @ Club
Fuel (Daytona Beach, FL)
05: Young Capone and DJ Infinite @ Jamlando Record Pool
Meeting (Orlando, FL)
06: Slim Thug, Nicotene,
Jonny Bravo, and Traffic @
Tabu (Orlando, FL)
07: DirtBag and Tye Dash @
Club Tens (NYC)
08: Bobby Valentino reppin’
OZONE @ Hot 104.5 (New
Orleans, LA)
09: Juvenile and Chris
Turner reppin’ OZONE @
Firestone for DJ Prostyle’s
birthday party (Orlando,
FL)
10: DJ Danny D reppin’
OZONE @ The Coral
Room (NYC)
11: DJ Prostyle showing off his interview in
OZONE’s BCR edition
@ Club Fuel (Daytona
Beach, FL)
12: TQ and Dwana
Smith (New Orleans,
LA)
13: J-Deezy and Alexx
Dupri @ JJ Whisper’s
(Orlando, FL)
14: Tigger’s street team
reppin’ OZONE @ BCR
(Daytona Beach, FL)
15: Chingy and Tigger
@ Club Fuel (Daytona
Beach, FL)
16: Trillville and Brooke
Valentine @ Webster
Hall for Lil Jon’s AOL
concert (NYC)
17: Marcus. and David
Banner posted up by the
OZONE truck during BCR
(Daytona Beach, FL)
18: Polk County meets
Tampa: OHB, Tampa
Tony, and more @ TJ’s
DJ’s (Tallahassee, FL)
19: Partners N Crime
and UTP’s Skip reppin’
OZONE @ Firestone for DJ
Prostyle’s birthday party
(Orlando, FL)
20: Tigz, Lex, OT Joe, and
Frank Murphy reppin’ Crunk
Juice during BCR (Daytona
Beach, FL)
21: Ed the World Famous and
Lady T reppin’ OZONE @ The
Moon for TJ’s DJ’s (Tallahassee, FL)
Photo Credits:
General: #10
Greg G: #04
Julia Beverly: #01,02,03,05,
07,09,16,17,18,19,20,21
Malik Abdul: #13
Marcus Jethro: #08,12
Spiff: #06,11,14,15
12
OZONE MAY 2005
By now, we’ve all heard about the little incident that occured between Foxy Brown and Jacki-O at Miami
recording studio Circle House, resulting in over $5,000 worth of damage to their studio equipment. Onlookers
at the scene reported that there was a fistfight, corresponding Jacki-O’s version of the story, but according to
Foxy, it was just a verbal exchange. We’ll let you read both sides of the story and decide for yourself.
(The studio damage is a crushing financial blow for the notoriously cheap studio manager of Circle House, Abebe
Lewis, who is still apparently unable to pay for their May 2003 Inner Circle ad in OZONE.)
FOXY BROWN’S VERSION
(interview by Supa Cindy & Big
Lip on Miami’s 99 Jamz)
Tell us your version of what
happened with Jacki-O.
I’ve been so quiet for the past
week, girl. I’ve been working;
I’ve been focused. I’ve been out
every night in Miami, I’ll be out
again tonight. I’m moving here.
I love Miami. This story [Jacki-O
has been telling] has been the
most erroneous story I’ve ever heard in my life. I told
Russell and Jay-Z, I’m waiting on a check from that indie
label because I’ve given that girl the most promotion
she’s ever received. I can’t believe it. Had we been talking about a reputable artist, like Lauryn Hill or Lil Kim or
Trina, I could understand, but here we’re talking about
someone who’s never sold one record in her life. I’m almost ashamed to have to address it. The truth is, there
was absolutely no Foxy getting hit. No nails was broken,
no nothing. I was on my way to meet Trina – Trina is my
girl, shouts out to my girl the queen of Miami – I was
about to pick my homegirl up and I got a call to stop by
the studio to see some friends from Brooklyn. Keep in
mind, Foxy was never in the studio to record with this
girl. Her manager has been begging me to record with
her for three years, so I think that’s where the animosity started. That’s the whole bottom line of this story,
it’s jealousy. So, I walked in the studio, and you know,
jealousy took its course. That was that. There was words
exchanged. It was me being the bigger person and the
lady that I am. The only truth to her story is that I did
say she needs to have some respect. That is completely
true. When I’m introduced to Mary J Blige or [Queen]
Latifah, these people are my friends. Whoever has come
before me, I’m gonna show homage. I’m not gonna roll
my eyes and shake my head and be jealous about the
situation.
Did Jacki-O take your purse?
I was told from like, the entire city of Miami [afterwards] that this girl was a booster. I did not know this,
and I have a lot of valuable stuff in my purse. This is just
crazy to me. This is crazy, but you know what? I’m really happy that I can help someone’s career. I’ve helped
open her budget up. But, I will never respond to her.
So there were no blows thrown?
No, there were no blows thrown. And I had the $9,000
Fendi bag in my hand when I left that studio. Did she
attempt to steal it? Probably, but I walked out with it.
What I don’t understand is this: After speaking with my
girl Trina, we’re like, What is wrong with this girl? You’re
killing yourself in this business, baby. We’ve been in this
for ten years. We’re veterans. You’re going up against
people who are loved and adored. You can’t just come
up in the game and go against us.
Will your next album come with a Jacki-O vs. Foxy
Brown “Girlfight” DVD?
No, no more press for this girl. I’m done. No more press.
I’ll let Trina handle that. I’m good. Foxy Brown having
any discord with homegirl is like Jay-Z battling a nobody. You see my analogy? Lil Kim vs. Foxy Brown is a
battle. Eve vs. Foxy Brown is a battle. This is nothing.
Why would a boneafide celebrity rapper have any kind of
discord with an unknown artist?
JACKI-O’S VERSION
(interview by Julia Beverly)
Why were you and Foxy Brown at the studio at the same
time?
I was working on a record with [Brooklyn rapper] Gravy. Foxy
Brown was supposed to come through; I thought she was coming
to get on the record. She came in on some Hollywood shit and
wanted me to bow down to her. I didn’t greet her the way she
wanted me to, so she started ranting and raving. “You don’t
know who the fuck I am, I’m Fox Boogie, you gotta respect me,
I’ve been in the game longer than you, you ain’t no queen, who
the fuck do you think you are, I’m gonna get you thrown out of
Circle House,” going on and on. She’s just talkin’ all this shit about Brooklyn, on some
real ignorant shit. Since she’s been in the game so long, you would think she’d have
some type of respect for someone’s session, not to come in there causing negative energy. This bitch came in during [Gravy’s] session just being a total nut, reppin’ Brooklyn
like a fuckin’ clown, being real disrespectful. I really thought that since there’s only a
few females in the game, we should be able to get on a record with each other. Niggas
do it all the time. But she came in like, “You can’t never be me, you ain’t me,” on some
real Hollywood shit. She came in and heard this record I was on with a Brooklyn nigga
and caught feelings. She wanted me to bow down like, “Oh, Foxy Brown, I love your music.” She wanted that type of treatment and she got angry when I didn’t give it to her.
Who hit who first?
To avoid any lawsuits, let’s just say that I had to give her the business. She tried to
throw some water on me. I’m throwing blows and she’s throwing water and cell phones.
Now, I didn’t wanna fight this girl. Please make that clear. I was there to work. I didn’t
come there to have any altercations with anyone. There’s no affirmative action in hiphop, and people need to know how hard it is for women to claw and scratch their way
into the industry. So we need to respect that and be grateful and don’t come in with
that dumb shit. Be glad you’re here. She’s not respecting that there’s a lot of bitches
who would love to be in the music game that ain’t here. Instead of being glad she’s
here to open doors for other women, she’s on some territorial shit. She’s like, “Ain’t
nobody better than Fox Boogie.” Okay, put out some music then! She’s just crazy. That
girl is on fuckin’ drugs. It’s ridiculous how she’s reppin’ her city. If I was from Brooklyn,
I wouldn’t want her reppin’ me! The girl acts like she’s on fuckin’ medication. She’s
fuckin’ delusional. She needs therapy and a hug.
Why did she throw water at you?
She couldn’t get next to me so she threw a cup of water, and the water messed up the
console. That’s a million dollar fuckin’ board. She was mad because we were in there
recording some hot shit. I was in there writing [lyrics]. She ain’t no writer. She had niggas writing her shit. She seen me in there grindin’ it out on my own, and that shit fucks
with her. She got the word that niggas from Brooklyn and Harlem are fuckin’ with me,
and she mad. When [Lil] Kim comes down here and gets on a record with Trick, I don’t
get mad. I’m just glad she’s in the game. I’m glad we got females in the game. I love to
see two different regions come together. She was talkin’ about, “I’ll get you thrown out
of the studio!” Girl, I live here in Miami. You can’t get me thrown out of shit, especially
when I didn’t cause no fuckin’ trouble. Anyway, she was the one who got thrown out,
and she was very, very, very embarrassed.
Who else was in the room when this was happening?
Gravy, her security, and another nigga. Even her security needed security. Everybody
seen her actin’ a fuckin’ nut, but she was acting like she ain’t need anybody. She was
like, “I got this.” Everybody thought she was finna whoop my ass because I just sat there
while she was talking big shit for about five minutes. Girl, you woulda been so proud of
me for just sitting there and taking all that shit. But after she ran out of insults, it was
time for her to fight. She walked out getting her ass whooped.
I heard there was blood shed during the incident. Were you bleeding?
Come on now. Be for real. How would I look in my hometown if I was leakin’? It’s not
gonna happen.
Why didn’t her security intervene?
Wasn’t nobody fighting but me and her. They was pickin’ her up off the floor. And I
ain’t bragging. They’re claiming that I’m trying to gain or capitalize off this. No,
I’m not. In fact, I’m appalled that someone would even think like that. I’m sitting here in the studio, working, and this girl comes in starting fucking drama.
01: Infarel, Champ, and Mike Jones @
Club 112 (Tampa, FL)
02: Cubo, Pitbull, Bryan Leach, and
Cutty @ Webster Hall for Lil Jon’s
AOL concert (NYC)
03: David Banner performing @
Club Fuel (Daytona Beach, FL)
04: Antonio Tarver and Get Cool
reppin’ OZONE @ Grandaddy
Souf’s “Run It” video shoot
(Orlando, FL)
05: Jason Geter and Clay
Evans reppin’ Grand Hustle @
Madison Square Garden (NYC)
06: Lil Jon & the Eastside
Boyz get crunk with Brooke
Valentine @ Webster Hall
(NYC)
07: Team Invasions’ Amed
and Noodles reppin’ OZONE
(NYC)
08: Magic Mike @ Antigua
(Orlando, FL)
09: Piccalo reppin’ OZONE
@ Club Fuel (Daytona
Beach, FL)
10: DJ Prostyle and
Black Jesus @ Firestone
(Orlando, FL)
11: DMC 2002 winner
DJ Fade reppin’ OZONE
(NYC)
12: Pat and NIkki Nix
reppin’ OZONE @ JJ
Whisper’s (Orlando, FL)
13: Question, Clay D,
Disco, and JT Money
(Orlando, FL)
14: Acafool and JD
Hawg @ Club 112
(Tampa, FL)
15: Traffic, Bedo, and
Nicotene on the video
set of “Go Head” (Orlando, FL)
16: Heavy Hitters
Kast One, Rey Mo, DJ
Prostyle, Mashonda, DJ
Enuff, and L Boogs @
102 Jamz (Orlando, FL)
17: Fat Joe and Lorena
Cartegena @ Madison
Square Garden (NYC)
18: Trick Daddy and Tigger @ Club Fuel during
BCR weekend (Daytona
Beach, FL)
19: Grandaddy Souf, Roland Powell, and Christian
Strickland on the set of
“Run It” (Orlando, FL)
20: Stephen Hall, DirtBag,
Pat Pat, and Nero @ WBTT’s
Ludacris concert (Tampa,
FL)
21: Slim Goodye and Southstar @ Club Fuel during BCR
weekend (Daytona Beach, FL)
Photo Credits:
General: #07,11
Julia Beverly: #02,04,06,09,
10,16,18,19,21
KG Mosley: #01,14
Malik Abdul: #08,12
Pat Pat: #20
Ray Tamarra: #05,17
Question: #13
Spiff: #03,15
14
OZONE MAY 2005
(01) Mr. Easy pulls up to the club in his Range Rover with producer
Troyton Rami, where he meets his video “girlfriend.”
(02) The “girlfriend” at work before Mr. Easy arrives.
(03) She goes outside to meet her homegirls and encounters Mr. Easy.
(04) “Ladies, another take please. Turn slightly to the side so we can
see your faces when you hug!”
(05) Charli B, Luddy, and Troyton Rami play dominoes while awaiting
their turn. “RudeGal, when’s lunch, star?”
(06) “Wait - why are you in jeans? Damn, we gotta keep her in, she’s
the only one dancing like she’s got riddim. What is it with pretty
girls!?”
(07) “Ladies, why is the makeup taking so long?” asks a frustrated DP.
Meanwhile, Easy juggles two cell phones, because one is never enough.
(08) The cheating girlfriend hopes her man can’t read her Blackberry.
(09) Charli Brown studies the director, hoping to get a DP gig.
(01) FLX and Magic take a smoke break on the set.
(02) In the video, Magic and David Banner are roommates in this
“Ain’t Got Nothin’” house, until they get an eviction notice.
(03) After their eviction notice, they run outside to find their car
getting repossessed.
(04) Banner chases after the repo man.
(05) As usual, Banner injures himself in the process of shooting his
video and medics are called to the scene.
(06) Lil Boosie gets ready for his nationally televised debut.
(07) Roy Jones Jr.’s cameo reminds everyone that he’s still the
champ.
(08) Banner reps for Napoleon Dynamite while hanging out with Lil
Boosie on the set.
(09) It wouldn’t be a video set without video girls, right? The models
line up for a party scene.
Director: Paul Neil
Photos: RudeGal
Director: Gregory Dark & David Banner
Photos: TJ Chapman
OZONE MAY 2005
15
01: The Ying Yang Twins reppin’
OZONE @ BCR (Daytona Beach, FL)
02: Lil Scrappy practicing his stripper moves @ Club Fuel (Daytona
Beach, FL)
03: Q-Tip and DJ Enuff @ 102
Jamz (Orlando, FL)
04: Ray Cash reppin’ OZONE @
Firestone (Orlando, FL)
05: Hair models reppin’ OZONE
@ JJ Whisper’s (Orlando, FL)
06: Marco Mall’s OZONE wall
(Tallahassee, FL)
07: Russ Jones and Mashonda
reppin’ OZONE @ 102 Jamz
(Orlando, FL)
08: Stephen Hill and Garfield @ Club Fuel during
BCR (Daytona Beach, FL)
09: Edgerin James reppin’
OZONE @ JJ Whisper’s
(Orlando, FL)
10: The CD Guy and DJ
Sincere reppin’ OZONE @
Icon (Orlando, FL)
11: Tigger showing off
his OZONE cover @ BCR
(Daytona Beach, FL)
12: T Pain and his father
Shaheed @ Firestone for
DJ Prostyle’s birthday
party (Orlando, FL)
13: Latrell Sprewell and
Nicole Robinson @ Hot
104.5 (New Orleans,
LA)
14: Lil Wayne and Trelli
Trelle (New Orleans,
LA)
15: Atlantic’s Craig
Kallman with T.I. @
Madison Square Garden
for his Up Close and
Personal Concert (NYC)
16: J Records’ Russ
Jones, DJ Nasty, DJ
Enuff, Mashonda, and
DJ Prostyle @ 102 Jamz
(Orlando, FL)
17: Front-Line Promotions’ Willie Fischer and
Pat Nix @ JJ Whisper’s
(Orlando, FL)
18: Three 6 Mafia’s Juicy
J, DJ Nasty, DJ Paul, and
DJ Prostyle @ 102 Jamz
(Orlando, FL)
19: Eastside Boy Big Sam
and Bohagon @ Webster
Hall for their AOL concert
(NYC)
20: Lotto, Mr. C, and
Karate Mac @ Heroes for
Grandaddy Souf’s “Run It”
video shoot (Orlando, FL)
21: Jonny Bravo reppin’
OZONE and All Pro @ Firestone for DJ Prostyle’s birthday
party (Orlando, FL)
Photo Credits:
Julia Beverly: #01,03,04,07,
08,11,12,16,18,19,20,21
Malik Abdul: #05,09,10,17
Marco Mall: #06
Marcus Jethro: #13,14
Ray Tamarra: #15
Spiff: #02
16
OZONE MAY 2005
(01) Bedo poses in front of a Bentley for the obligatory car scene.
(02) Bedo faces a tough decision: pink polo or white iron-on?
(03) Apparently, the pink polo was a good call, cause Bedo gets some
ass in the next scene. He’s got “about three dollars, if you wanna
holla.”
(04) Jonny Bravo and DJ Prostyle join in for the poker scene.
(05) The lineup begins: video models auditioning for their spot in the
club scene.
(06) An assistant tests the lighting for the club scene while Bedo prepares for his close-up.
(07) Sporting a classy “Go Head and Do It” t-shirt, Bedo performs with
his backup dancers.
(08) All-Pro Records artists Traffic, Nicotene, and Jonny Bravo join
Bedo for this shot.
(09) All Pro Records’ Garfield and DJ Prostyle watch behind the scenes.
(01) It’s going to be a long day. Fortunately, we’ve got Crunk Juice.
(02) Pitbull gets a shave in the trailer before filming.
(03) Pitbull and Lil Jon cleaned up nicely; so fresh, so clean!
(04) Upstairs for the next shot, Pitbull and Lil Jon dress down and
perform for the cameras.
(05) During the “dry run” of the club scene, Lil Jon pops bottles and
enjoys the company of numerous video models.
(06) On the roof of Opium, an assistant uses a large hose to create
“rain,” effectively drencing the crowd below. The film crew and
cameras are wrapped in large ponchos to stay dry.
(07) Jon and Pit dry off while watching playback with director Jesse
Terrero.
(08) After dark, Cutty and Jon are placed in a Bentley outside Club
Opium for this scene. Traffic is shut down in both directions.
(09) Pitbull in the final cut of the night: the Scarface scene.
Director: Asshole Who Isn’t Getting Any Free Publicity in OZONE
Photos: Spiff
Director: Jesse Terrero
Photos: Julia Beverly
OZONE MAY 2005
17
The first time you hear T-Pain’s
hit-record-waiting-to-happen, “Spr
ung,” several things happen. One,
hit repeat. Two, you start singing
you
along. Three, you envision a clea
n-cut pretty boy. If T-Pain doesn’t
like your typical R&B singer, it’s
look
because he’s not your typical R&B
singer. Over the past few years,
developed his style as part of
T-Pain
Tallahassee’s too-many-members-to
-count rap group Nappy Headz,
for their regional favorites like
known
“Robbery” and “FLA.” Recently,
though, T-Pain started focusing
career, hoping to blow up and bring
on his solo
the group with him. Influenced
by the likes of Michael Jackson,
and Brian McKnight, T-Pain combine
Akon,
s the energy of the Ying Yang Twin
s with the voice of his alter-ego
Pendergrass (he pronounces it “Ted
Teddy
dy-pinned-her-ass-down”). He can’
t really explain his recent rapid
radio-friendly recording sessions.
-fire
“I’ve been holdin’ back for so long
, and when it came
out, it just exploded,” he laughs.
“I’m like a young Tallahassee JayZ.
I don’t write. I
just listen to the beat, go in the
booth, hit record, and see what
happens.” Along with
singing, rapping, and producing,
the multi-talented artist also direc
ted and edited his
own video for “Fucked Up” (an ente
rtaining rendition of Akon’s “Loc
ked Up”). With the
backing of his Nappy Headz fami
ly and TJ’s DJ’s CEO TJ Chapman
, “Sprung” has been
exploding at radio stations natio
nwide and T-Pain already has majo
r label offers on the
table. In true FLA fashion, T-Pain’s
debut album is spelled just how
it sounds: Rappa
Ternt Sanga. - Words and photo
by Julia Beverly
Big Floaty, about his clique’s former
“We used to take the club by storm,” says Attic Crew founding member
a CD and some ass-whupping. We’d
with
through
fall
method of getting their music heard. “We used to just
that shit is old now.” This September
But
it.
play
you
while
ass
whup
gonna
we
and
CD
the
play
to
DJ
tell the
The Muscle, a time-transcending Atlanta
Floaty is bringing the new with his decade-in-the-making solo debut
an grittiness of the Dungeon Family.
grown-m
the
with
Ludacris
and
T.I.
album that blends the lyrical energy of
Point native who earned a football
East
lt
tank-bui
the
“I’m coming to muscle the streets back, baby,” says
The album is not gonna be a whole lot
here.
out
shit
flaw
this
all
got
“We
ty.
Universi
Auburn
to
hip
scholars
corner.’” He pauses with a devilish grin
of ‘we selling dope on this corner and we pimping bitches on this
Enemy, X-Clan record. It ain’t some
Public
a
is
this
that
think
don’t
that resembles his cousin Cee-Lo, “Now,
but that ain’t what I’m focused
there,
on
ping
Goodie Mob shit. I got some dope-selling and some bitch-pim
steady burn. After catching the ear of
but
slow
a
been
has
rise
fiery
Floaty’s
Phoenix,
as
known
on.” Formerly
(“Dope Boi Fresh”), he has appeared on
Sony via his standout performances on the Attic Crew’s Finally album
buzz his latest mixtape The Beginning
the
with
that
Match
Ari.
Ben
Miri
albums all the way from Pastor Troy to
legacy that the Youngbloodz and Jim
le-T-I-C”
“A-doub
of the End is creating, Floaty is poised to revive the
who often records 12 songs a day. “Even
Floathy,
says
shawty,”
plan,
a
with
man
a
respect
“God
birthed.
Crow
know what he doing, he trying to see how
when shit look bad, don’t step outside the plan cause God already
and photo by Maurice G. Garland
Words
mine.”
it’s
now
and
ng,
devoted you are. It’s a time for everythi
Four-member Central Florida group Treal (Elisio, Cheeze, T-Sick,
and Poetic) formed in 2000 at Jones High
School in Orlando, Florida. Trombone players Elisio and Cheeze
combined their musical abilities and linked
up with another rapper, Sick, who’s uncle began managing the group.
They formed a DJ clique, the 917 DJ’s,
and began spinning at local clubs. Trying to find ways to “make
the club jump,” they recorded their first
single, “Orange County,” which grew legs on underground radio and
became a street anthem for the region.
“At that time it was a hobby,” says Elisio. “We got some radio play,
but we didn’t know who to push it to. It
just blew up off the strength.” They continued recording and dropped
the follow-up, “Swang On Everybody,”
a rowdy club single reminiscent of another “Treal”: Atlanta’s Trillville
. In fact, a recent Orlando club show
featuring both Trillville and Treal nearly reached an ugly confront
ation. “I hope I ain’t startin’ nothin’, but
there’s a little history behind that,” laughs Elisio. “We went up
to Atlanta a few years ago and met up with
Big Oomp camp and gave them ‘Swang on Everybody.’ At that
time, Trillville was signed, but they hadn’t
come out yet. The first lyric to [our song] ‘Swang on Everybody’
is ‘I don’t think they ready for me, I’m on
another level / Diggin’ haters like an undertaker with a shovel.’ A
year later, they come out with “Get On My
Level,” with lyrics almost the same.” Despite their similar names
and similar musical style, Treal is confident
that there’s room in the game for some “trill” Central Floridians.
“I know Orlando’s got some crunk in they
system too,” laughs Elisio. “They just waiting on somebody to
bring it out.” – Words and photo by Julia
Beverly, [email protected]
WORDS & PHOTO:
JULIA BEVERLY
20
OZONE MAY 2005
S
o you’re working on a new album?
Yeah, it’s called Fast Money, Cash Money. I
got about 17 songs. It’s really the first time
we got a chance to record at home since we’ve
been with Universal the last eight or nine years.
We’ve been touring, travelin’, all kinds of shit.
A lot of shit that me and Fresh did. Fresh is like
my soulmate and shit, so anything that we did
has my blessing. Just watching what he did, or
what I did by myself, or what Wayne ‘bout to
do. It’s like, being given back to me for all these
years I put down for all these niggas. I’m left
with two out of six. I made six so I’m cool with
that. Wayne’s future is to dominate; guaranteed. He’s one of the best rappers to ever fuck
with this shit. Mannie Fresh is what he is, too.
Since you’ve had the chance to step up from
being not just the CEO but also one of the
main artists, which do you enjoy more?
As far as performing, I like being in a group with
me and Fresh or me and Wayne. As far as being a CEO, it ain’t really that complicated. It
becomes complicated with some of the types
of people you deal with. Now that I really know
this shit, it’s cool. It’s all about being able to
make money and enjoy the shit with ya family,
not being in court and all the other bullshit.
There’s so many record labels out there, and
there’s very few that actually make it. What
do you think set you apart from the others?
I’ve been doing this shit for 17 years. Just grindin’ and really raising the bar, we felt like it
was our turn. We had been putting it down for a
minute and we came with that raw street shit.
We talking from what we know, the projects.
A lot of big names in Southern music came
from your camp. Who do you see today with
that same potential?
Shit, Flip, T.I., there’s a lot of muthafuckers.
Trick, all them dudes doin’ they thing. Slim
Thug. Lil Wayne got some hot-ass acts comin’
from his company, Young Money.
A lot of people come in the game, have their
time to shine, and then fall off. But you’ve
been putting out records for so long, how do
you stay current?
Just stayin’ new, stayin’ fresh, stayin’ fly, really. Just being the trendsetters that we are.
Muthafuckers is following what we do. You’ve
got people who get one or two years in the
game and that’s that rollercoaster. Once that
rollercoaster ride is over, you gotta really show
what you’re made of and then that’s how you
can tell.
When you look at a label like No Limit, for example, it seems like when they lost in-house
producers Beats By the Pound, they fell off.
How important is Mannie Fresh to the Cash
Money camp?
Shit, Mannie definitely holds the walls up. He’s
the piece to the puzzle. It’s his talent that has
gotten us this far, so I wouldn’t have done it
any other way. I wouldn’t fuck with this without
Fresh.
You’ve got the book the 48 Laws of Power on
your desk. What’s the most important law?
That book is one of my favorites. I read through
all of them: your enemies, your friends, envy,
jealousy, foolishness. They’re all important.
What was your reaction? Was it a surprise or
something you had already discussed?
Basically, I think muthafuckers took it out of
context. It was Wayne’s label Young Money that
was supposed to be doing a deal with Def Jam.
I think muthafuckers just took it out of context
so we was just like, Fuck it, we ain’t gonna fuck
wit’ it. We’ll just keep it in house. So Lil Wayne
and his company is signed to Cash Money.
Recently in Tampa there was a show where Lil
Wayne and B.G. performed together. If Wayne
wanted to reunite with the Hot Boys, would
you allow him to do that?
Yeah, I mean, it would have to be done here
anyway. It can’t be done nowhere else. It’s a
hustle, it’s a business. Personally, I don’t give a
fuck, but if it’s about some money then it’s cool
with me. I ain’t trippin’.
So a Hot Boys reunion album on Cash Money
is a possibility?
I mean, all of them are doing they own lil’ thing.
Juvenile got a new CD. Wayne’s career is on the
uprise, so I’d never ask him to stop if he’s got
something he tryin’ to do. That’s not in our
plans right now, though. We’ve got some things
we’ve been masterminding since last year, and
that’s what we’re working on now.
You recorded Best of Both Worlds 2 with R
Kelly, and then he did the album and tour
with Jay-Z instead.
I mean, I kinda looked at R Kelly’s situation and
thought that might be the way to go to try to
help his situation. But that was some fuck shit
to me. I don’t even like discussin’ that shit.
With all the things you’ve been through internally, do you find it hard to trust people as far
as bringing them into your camp?
I started this shit on family and trust, but right
now this shit is straight business. That family
and trust and love shit will have you in court all
fucked up, so now it’s just strictly business.
Kids see you with all the jewelry and cars, but
what about long-term investments?
I’m into real estate. My name alone makes a
lot of money. I’ve got Birdman shoes, a frangrance, a watch deal with Jacob. I got a lot of
shit outside of this record shit. That’s what I do,
though, real estate and deals with my name. I
own like 50 condos that I rent out, and I got 10
homes for my muthafuckin’ self. Real estate is
my thing. I wish I had been got into it. I’ve been
in it for like maybe four or five years. I think a
lot of other niggas need to be turning this fast
money into cash money, ya heard? The cars and
all that shit, I love that shit, but they do depreciate, ya heard me? I’ll always fuck with that,
but I got to fuck with both.
Lil Wayne made headlines recently when he
said he was thinking of signing with Def Jam.
What’s the most meaningful accomplishment
in your career so far?
Are there any features on your album?
We’ve got Bun B, Lil Wayne, Lil Mo, Six Shot,
Fresh, and some of the Young Money cats.
What other albums do you have coming from
the Cash Money camp?
Lil Mo’s album is coming out in June, then Teena
Marie and a new Big Tymers album.
You’ve got a plaque here for an annual turkey
giveaway?
Yeah, we’ve been doing that shit for a while.
This is the ninth year. We was doin’ it independently with toys and shit, and then we decided
to try this turkey shit. We was doin’ it in the
hood, then muthafuckers started coming from
different projects so we moved it to Shakespeare
Park. Now we do like 15,000-20,000 turkeys every year. We do a lot of community events. We
do school giveaways. I buy equipment for shit
like basketball and baseball teams, and we give
away school supplies.
Does it ever scare you to realize that you’re a
role model to kids?
Nah, cause I like the fact that they know where
I come from and they see that it can be done. I
did it, and just for a muthafucker to see that it
can be done, that gives them faith. Before us,
we was just wishin’ on a star.
How did you learn the business aspects of the
music game?
Experience. Trial and error. That’s how it go. I
was young. I was only 15 or 16, raisin’ muthafuckers who was in the same situation as me. My
daddy died when I was young and my momma
died when I was young, so all I had was brothers. I was a young nigga raisin’ young niggas.
That shit was crazy.
After the situations with Juvenile, Turk, and
B.G. leaving, do you think it’s better to keep
business and family separated?
With what I had to do in that situation, if I had
to do it again, I probably would do it again.
But with today’s business I don’t think I would.
I wouldn’t just bring a muthafucker into my
house like that unless he was blood.
When you were on 106th & Park, a lot of
people saw you kiss Lil Wayne. What’s that all
about?
We kiss each other on the cheek, it’s like an
Italian thing. We all got each other’s tattoos.
Every scar he got, I got. The same script on his
body, I got on my body. I had the script and then
he went and got it.
Like a father/son thing?
Wayne is my son. He’s my oldest. Everything in
this bitch is Wayne. Wayne is my sole project,
he’s my future. I can sit back like the godfather
and Wayne gonna hold this bitch down.
Was there ever a time when you looked at
B.G., Juvenile, or Turk in the same way?
Well, not to hold the fort down. It’s like, we
all got older, and I saw them change from boys
to men. When they became men, I guess they
forgot who they were down for.
OZONE MAY 2005
21
A hard-working, laid-back DJ who’s dedicated to his craft,
Michael “5000” Watts
of the Swisha House
carries Houston’s torch for Screw music to reach the nation
WORDS: JULIA BEVERLY
PHOTO: MIKE FRESH
22
OZONE MAY 2005
How did you originally become interested in music?
Music was something I was always into. As a kid, I wanted to be in the band. I never did get to play in the band, but I always wanted to be a DJ and
I eventually started DJing when I was about 14 years old.
How did you get your first set of turntables?
(laughing) Actually, I had a best friend that wanted to get into music too, so they ended up breaking into a record shop and stealing a whole bunch
of shit. We was practicing on all that equipment.
Your friend did it, huh?
That was my friend, it wasn’t me. Honest truth.
You’re primarily known for your screwed & chopped mixtapes. How old were you when DJ Screw began making screw tapes?
I was about 23 or 24. I’m 33 now.
So you started off as a regular DJ, just doing blends and stuff like that?
Yeah, I started off just DJing parties, making regular speed mixtapes, and mixing on the radio. I got my first radio gig when I was 21 years old.
What did you see happening with screwed music? How did it become such a dominant force in Texas?
It became a dominant force on its own. It went from being a local thing to being an art form of its own, just like jazz, rock, and pop music. DJ
Screw didn’t just create a hit record; he created a whole art form. It’s just like the person that created country music or jazz music. Screw music
is a whole art form.
Slowing down a record might sound simple, but for you as a DJ, how much work does it take to create a screwed & chopped tape?
If you listen to any of our Swisha House stuff, you can tell that it’s more than just slowing down a record. It’s an art behind it, just like house music.
It’s more than just a drum beat behind it. Jazz is more than putting a saxophone behind it. It’s a whole art form. It makes the lyrics stand out more
and the beats stand out more. I really can’t put it into words.
Do you think DJing is just a gift that you were born with, or something that you had to develop over time?
DJing was just something I was born with. That’s what I was put on this world for.
When you made the transition from regular DJing to Screw tapes, was it a difficult transition?
No, it really wasn’t that hard of a transition, cause I’ve been listening to DJ Screw for years. I’m a fan of DJ Screw. I’d been listening to him for a
while, before I even started doing [Screw tapes]. I would just listen to it and enjoy it. I was still making regular mixtapes and I was just enjoying it
as a fan. It came to a point where people were like, “Man, we want you to do this for us.” DJ Screw was from the South side of Houston. I’m from
the North side of Houston. Everyone on the North side enjoyed this style, but they wanted to represent the North. When they came to me [for Screw
music] I started doin’ it to satisfy them.
Are there any artists you think come off better on Screw tapes than regular speed?
One of my favorite artists to hear slowed down is Keke. I first heard him screwed, so when I heard the record at regular speed it was a shock to me
cause I was so used to hearing him slowed down.
Why do you think Screw music fits the Houston vibe so well?
I mean, it was created right here in Houston, Texas. On the South side. Houston’s more laid-back, just like Atlanta is crunk. In Houston we’re more
laid-back. We sip syrup and shit, we just chill.
Do you think someone who’s sober can appreciate Screw music as much as someone who’s sippin’ syrup?
I think so, because there’s a wide variety of people that buy Swisha House mix CDs. It ain’t just people that sip syrup and smoke weed. If you appreciate the art, you can learn to enjoy it without being high.
A lot of major labels are starting to put out screwed & chopped versions of their CDs now. Do you think the art form is becoming too commercial, or do you think it’s a good thing for the culture?
I think it’s a great thing for the culture, because it exposes the art form to a lot of people that weren’t exposed to it before. I did David Banner’s
screwed & chopped CD [for SRC/Universal], 8Ball & MJG’s screwed & chopped CD [for Bad Boy], and Three 6 Mafia’s screwed & chopped CD [for
Sony].
What upcoming projects are you working on?
We’ve got Who Is Mike Jones? and PaulWall’s The People’s Champ. We’re doing [a screwed & chopped version of] Lil Jon’s album, T.I.’s album, the
TRU album, and one of The Game’s first CDs.
What made Swisha House decide to go ahead and sign with Asylum?
We wanted to be a little more independent [than signing with a major]. We needed a bigger machine, and I felt like Asylum was the place for us to
expand. We’ve got a bigger and more experienced team to help us get further than where we’ve been. They’ve helped us get into some of the retail
spots we need to be in. Asylum has the networking connections to help us get into some of these chains.
What makes Asylum different from a “major” label?
They’re more like a distributor. They gave us a distribution deal, and that’s the difference. Rather than just signing an artist, we have more to offer
as a label. We have people that are constantly comin’ up under our umbrella.
There’s artists like Slim Thug who have branched off from Swisha House to do their own thing. Are you proud of them?
Man, I’m very proud of Slim Thug. I’m very glad to see him doing things. He kept a level head and took the ball and ran with it.
What was your opinion on the Chamillionaire vs. Mike Jones beef?
I don’t have any opinion. I just think the whole thing is stupid. I don’t know what that shit is about. The only people who know what that shit is about
is Mike Jones and Chamillionaire.
Why did you decide to sign Mike Jones to Swisha House?
Mike Jones is a hard-working artist. He’s not gonna sit on his ass and wait for someone to come up there and give something to him. He’s not a lazy
muthafucker, and he came with more than just being a rapper. He also came with business and marketing tools. Mike Jones is gonna do it really big
for us on a national level. His album Who Is Mike Jones? is in stores, so make sure you go pick it up.
OZONE MAY 2005
23
What’s your job title?
I’m a mix engineer. I was at Circle House Studios for
about five years. I was their main go-to guy, I mixed
all the Cash Money stuff, everybody that came
through the studio. After a while I decided it was
time to get my own spot. I opened The Vault Recording Studios about a year ago, in North Miami.
try to take Sundays off, but everybody ‘s
on a deadline.
Financially, does engineering pay well?
It’s a good living if you stick it out. But when
you first start, you make nothing. Pennies.
Do you get royalty checks like a producer?
Nah, I’ve been trying to fight for points, though.
If I end up reorganizing or redoing stuff I might
get a co-production credit with points on the back
end. I get paid by the song, so even if it takes two
hours or two days I get paid the same flat fee.
What exactly does a mix engineer do?
Basically, I take what the producer has made and
make it sound radio-ready, consumer-ready. All the
vocals, the bass, I blend everything together to
make it sound good.
How did you develop an ear for music?
I think I kinda developed my ear from listening to
my dad’s old records. Growing up, my dad had all
the collections: Isley Brothers, Earth, Wind & Fire,
Gladys Knight, Aretha Franklin, all of them. I used
to listen to those records as a kid. In high school I
started DJing and doing local house parties. When I
was a junior in high school I went to a concert, and
I saw this dude sitting in the middle of the room at
a big console. I asked him what his job title was,
and he said sound engineer. I decided I wanted to
be a sound engineer. I can’t rap and I don’t sing, but
I just like music. I played the saxophone in junior
high, so I had some musical training. My father is
an electrical engineer, so he taught me some of the
technical stuff about speaker polarity and stuff like
that. I like music and electronics, so I just put the
two together.
Did you go to college?
I went to a technical school called Full Sail in Orlando. It was an eight month technical program, I got a
specialized Associates degree in sound engineering.
After that I came back to Miami and did an internship at studio center.
Full Sail is pretty expensive. Is it worth it?
That’s a good question. It is really expensive. It’s
really up to the person as far as what they can get
out of it. It’s just like college. You could go to Miami-Dade and apply yourself and come out and get a
big job, or you could go to Yale and mess around and
not take advantage of the situation. So in answer to
your question, yes, it’s expensive, but if it’s really
something you want you’ve gotta spend the money.
What skills do you need to become an engineer?
You’ve just gotta have an ear for it. It goes back to
my experience with DJing. I also did sound systems
for cars back when they started gutting out the
backseats and putting in 15” speakers. From that
experience, I started going into clubs to see what
people were dancing to and see what people are
playing in their cars. From there, you try to take
that song the producer has created and make it fit
the mold. If it sounds like a club song, you gotta
mix it for the club. The beat’s gotta be bangin’, the
snare’s gotta be in-your-face. If it’s more of a radio
song, you’ve gotta bring out the melodic lines. It
might sound easy, but when you really start getting
in-depth it’s really hard. It’s a lot like production.
When you’re listening to music outside of work,
can you enjoy it or do you overanalyze it?
All the time. It’s been so long since I could really listen to a song normally, cause I’m always
critiquing. I’m like, Man, the vocals are too low.
They shoulda did this, they shoulda did
that. The snare’s too low. I hear different
things, even with my own stuff. If I mix a
song, I have to not listen to it for like a
month and then come back and listen to
it objectively with an open mind.
Name a few songs you’ve mixed.
Ray Seay
Mix Engineer
I did a lot of the old Cash Money hits,
like “Get Your Roll On.” I’ve mixed a
lot of Lil Jon songs, like “Get Low” and
“Saltshaker.” I mixed Ciara’s “Goodies,” T.I.’s “Motivation” and “A.S.A.P.”
Mike Caren [at Atlantic Records] has
started using me for a lot of the big
mixes, like Juvenile. Juve didn’t like
the way the records had been mixed
so he sent them to me to fix.
When you’re mixing a song like “Get
Low” or “Goodies,” do you know it’s
gonna be a hit?
It’s funny because the songs that I
don’t really like always seem to blow
up, and the songs I really do like don’t
do nothing. It’s a joke among the producers. If I mix a song, they ask me if
I like it. If I say, “It’s okay,” they’re
happy because they know it’s gonna
be a hit. For example, when Trick did
“Take it to The House,” I did not like
that song, period. I hated that song,
and it blew up. I even asked [Slip-NSlide CEO] Ted Lucas, “Man, are y’all
serious?” He was like, “Hey, this is
what the people want,” and that’s
one of their biggest hits to date. Same
thing with [Lil Jon’s] “Saltshaker” and
“Get Low.” DJ Smurf came down when
I was mixing that song and I was telling him I really didn’t like the song.
But just to clarify, when I say I don’t
like the song, I mean I don’t like it
from a technical aspect. Sometimes
when I get a song, some things are not
recorded right and I’ve gotta go in and
change a kick or redo the vocals.
What’s your work schedule like?
It’s like a twelve-hour day. I come in
around noon and leave at midnight. I
If you get paid the same whether it takes two
hours or two days, are you ever tempted to rush?
No. I’m a perfectionist, and my name’s gotta go on
it. That’s what keeps me working. People see these
songs that are playing forever on the radio or in the
clubs and hear that I mixed them, so that’s how I get
more work. If I rush it and don’t do the song right
then I’ll start getting a bad name, so it wouldn’t really pay to do it like that.
Are there any artists that are particularly enjoyable to work with or difficult to work with?
A lot of times the artist doesn’t even come to the
mix sessions. It’s really the producers and the record company I deal with, so I don’t get too much
drama. I don’t do a lot of recording anymore just
straight mixing. I don’t even see the artists. I prefer
it that way. I like being alone because it gives me
time to be more personal with the song. I can sit for
a couple hours, let it play over and over again, and
start getting ideas and visuals about where I want to
take the song. Lil Jon is also a perfectionist, but he
lets me do my thing and then comes in and makes
the final judgements and arrangements. Some artists just send me stuff and trust my ear. Sometimes
I’ll do a mix and mp3 it to the artist or producer,
then they’ll hit me back with changes.
Since leaving Circle House to open The Vault, is
there any bad blood?
No, I wouldn’t say that. We’ve had words, but in
the long run, they gave me an opportunity to really
grow over there. They allowed me to mature. When
I first started working there I was the recording engineer and the mix engineer, so I was kinda doing two
jobs. Over time, they started getting so big where
I couldn’t even get my clients in there. They’d call
me to work and I couldn’t even get a session there
cause they’d be so booked up. It just got to the
point where it was time to get my own spot. I don’t
have to tear down my equipment, I can come and go
as I please, and I don’t have to worry about being on
the clock. Since I opened The Vault, my mixes have
gotten five times better, quality-wise.
What artists come through The Vault?
All my usual clients, like Trick Daddy, Trina, Lil Jon.
I mixed [Trick Daddy’s] “Let’s Go,” in here. That
was the first big hit from The Vault. I mixed Pitbull’s
stuff here, and T.I’s “Motivation” was mixed here
too. They’ll usually send me a Pro Tools session to
mix and I do my thing. That’s one of the benefits
of having my own studio. I’m not in the business
of selling studio time, I’m in the business of selling
Ray Seay’s sound. There’s not a clock running over
here.
“I like being alone [in
the studio] because it
gives me time to be more
personal with the song.”
Do you have special rates for indie labels?
We try to work out stuff for indies, especially if
they’re local and I’ve got some downtime. But
if a major calls me, they gotta understand that
I gotta go get that money to pay the bills.
Would you like to give out any contact info?
The Vault studio number is 305-556-9435.
OZONE MAY 2005
25
MIKE JONES
WHO IS MIKE JONES?
Swishahouse/Asylum
NIVEA
COMPLICATED
J Records
Mike Jones and 50 Cent both have a clear
understanding of the power of effective
branding. From the “GGG-G-Unit” to the
“Mike Jones, who? Mike Jones,” they’ve
both been able to create a huge buzz for
themselves. That in and of itself can be
an Achilles heel for an artist, because
you’re fearlessly walking the tightrope of
over-saturation. I can’t remember how
many times over the last year I’ve heard
the decree, “My album, “Who Is Mike
Jones”, comin soon!!!” Well, it’s finally
here.
While some are citing Ciara as the
princess of Crunk & B, there are
some who consider Nivea as the
queen of this sub-genre. While Nivea
has steadily been putting in work
since 1999, few have been able to
really recognize her exceptional
writing ability and talent. Hopefully,
with her newest effort Complicated,
Nivea will be able to open the eyes
of the blind public. While the lead
single “Okay,” a Lil Jon banger
featuring the YoungBloodz, has been
tearing up the radio waves for the
past few months, I’m not sure that
consumers will be ready for the left
hook they’ll receive when they listen
to this album.
If you weren’t familiar with Mike Jones
before the “Still Tippin’” video was all
over your screen, it’s a safe bet that you
probably can’t stand him for the sheer
monotony of his rhymes. If you were
familiar with him already, you might
be pleasantly surprised that Mike Jones
came with some joints. The song that
grabbed my attention immediately was
the remix of his Mike Jones underground
classic “Got It Sewed Up,” produced by
Three 6 Mafia’s DJ Paul & Juicy J.
The production value of this disc is
superb. It’s the repetitive lyrics that are
hard to stomach. I appreciate the promotional value, but you’re gonna have to
start saying something else besides your
name and your phone number. Anyway,
that’s not to say that Mike Jones didn’t
try to accomplish the things I mentioned
above. He just didn’t do a very good job.
I’ll give Mike Jones an A for effort on
songs like “Scandalous Hoes,” and “Five
Years From Now” is a good concept. I’m
happy that Mike Jones has a five-year
plan, but even though his introspection
sounds sincere, the song is whack.
I like Mike Jones when’s he’s being Mike
Jones, yelling out his name, phone
number, and talking shit. That’s the
Mike Jones that made me a fan. But like
anything in life, too much of anything is
never good. That’s why I can only take
Mike Jones in brief intervals. I can’t
figure out why I like Mike Jones and don’t
like some his music. I think it’s a respect
factor. Anyone who’s life’s mantra is “If
you don’t grind, you don’t shine, if you
don’t work you don’t eat” is cool with
me. At least no one will have to ask who
Mike Jones is anymore.
- Wally Sparks, [email protected]
26
OZONE MAY 2005
I expected this album to be a carbon
copy of radio playlists, but I’m happy
to say that I was wrong. This is that
gritty, from-the-gut mid-90’s R&B
music that helped me learn how
to talk to girls while I was in high
school. Think Xscape. I’m not sure if
Nivea’s recent blessing of motherhood brought out this newfound
emotion, but either way, I’m thankful for it.
On the title track “Complicated,”
Nivea sings soulfully of a love that’s
tough, but still well worth it. It’s a
beautiful song. Even though there’s
a maturity resonating throughout
the album, there’s still some songs
designed to get shit crunk. For
instance, the song “Parking Lot,”
which is a tale of a woman’s infidelity. She sets up a secret rendezvous
at a Mickey D’s parking lot to get her
swerve on. This one is sure to become a monster hit with the ladies,
and maybe some of us cheating-ass
dudes too.
Other bangers include the second
ballad, “Breathe (Let It Go)”, and
the R Kelly-produced “Gangsta Girl,”
where Nivea sings for all the thug
misses out there in the world. This
album was pure satisfaction, and an
unexpected surprise. Nivea, excellent job, homegirl. Didn’t know you
had it in you.
- Wally Sparks,
[email protected]
C-MURDER
THE TRUEST SHIT I
EVER SAID
TRU/Koch
On this release, we
definitely get a better understanding of C. Miller.
We do hear from the CMurder of the late 90s on
tracks like “Y’all Heard
of Me” and “Camoflauge
& Murder,” but I believe
the title C has given
this project is referring
to more real-talk songs
like “Hustlas Wife,” “Did
You Hold It Down,” and
“Won’t Let Me Out.” The
latter of these songs is
a remix of Akon’s single
“Locked Up,” with a few
real-life C-Murder verses.
The album opens with a
montage of new clips,
most stating empirical evidence of C’s innocence.
“My Life” and “Stressin”
are average. His vocals
are pretty good throughout the album, considering the conditions of his
recording sessions.
MS CHERRY
RHYTHM & STREETS
Streetwize Records
As Ms Cherry instructs, I just
let the CD play from beginning
to end. The album is slightly
above average Southern
hip-hop with glimmers of
mainstream. “Like Me” could
have been shortened to an
interlude, though. This song
falls apart halfway through.
We see a little bit of sarcasm on “Sponsor,” where Ms
Cherry refers to all her haters
as just that: “sponsors”!
Although Ms Cherry claims
she’s not a smoker, what
would a rap album be without
a weed anthem? She gives it
to us anyway, although the
lame hook kills the song. The
track is rather awkward, but
it works with her tight wordplay. “Dead Crunk” is a filler
track where Jazzebell outdoes
Ms Cherry’s vocals, which
sound forced.
“Hustlas Wife” is a
real thought-provoking
track for any hustler or
hustler’s wife. He really
spits the truth, both the
positive and negative.
The almost-radio friendly
“Did You Hold It Down”
goes one step further,
discussing the realities of
a relationship surviving
a baid. C-Murder and
B.G. both drop some
exceptional lyrics on the
lead single “Y’all Heard
of Me.”
The lowest point on the album
is the horrid singing on “Love
Is Real,” but Ms Cherry redeems herself with the ferocious lyrics on the bass-heavy
“Deception.” “She Hat’n” is a
nice catchy song with quality
lyrics. The lead single “It’s
Whatever” has the same feel
as “Knuck If You Buck” or
“Neva Eva.” It’s destined to
break into mainstream radio,
and can and will be the match
to light someone’s short fuse
(“Don’t grab that bitch /
Don’t hold that hoe / If the
trick wanna buck / Let her
go, let her go”). “Mind Over
Matter” features the unique
vocals of Nutt Skywalker.
Several other guests show
up to lend a hand to the
incarcerated, including
memorable contributions
from Mac, Currensy, and
Slim. Surprisingly, P and
Silkk the Shocker are
nowhere to be found on
this project.
Overall, production is pretty
good and lyrics are average, sometimes better. One
problem with this project is
the sequencing and the silly
skits. You can’t ride out to
this album from beginning
to end without hitting the
skip button a few times.
- ADG, [email protected]
- ADG, [email protected]
JODY BREEZE
A DAY IN THE LIFE
ShoNuff/Warner Bros.
Live and direct from the streets of Griffin,
Georgia, comes the protégé of Southern
producer extraordinaire, Jazze Pha. Jody
Breeze is the name, and spittin’ that raw
is the game. Jody’s debut solo album A
Day In The Life is packed with gangstafied
rhymes, a Southern fried soundscape, and
plenty of big name guest appearances.
Trick Daddy, Lil Jon, Slim Thug, 8Ball,
Juvenile, Pastor Troy, Mannie Fresh, and
Jazze Pha all drop in to lend a hand on
Jody’s album. For many new artists, too
many features on their debut can overshadow their talents. But fortunately for
Jody, this strategy works. On the opener
“Ballin’ My Life Away,” Jody trades verses
with the Orange Mound OG 8Ball over a
cookin’ Jazze Pha track. Jody Breeze’s
fluid flow is a perfect match for some of
the syrupy beats found on this album.
While Jody is definitely nice on the mic,
he still makes some youthful mistakes. He
makes insanely bold statements that will
make most people turn a deaf ear and
make the “what the fuck?” face. For example, on “I’m a hustler,” Jody proclaims,
“Since Jigga gone, I guess I’m gon’ take
the throne.” No, you’re not, Jody. But it’s
cool, because on the hook of the same
song he raps, “I done turned a couple of
Christians into customers, homie.” There
we go Jody, that’s more like it. Give me
some more of those slick-ass lines that
made me dig you in the first place.
As for the rest of the album, anytime you
have a hitmaker like Jazze Pha giving
creative direction, there’s sure to be a
great balance. The gangsta shit is there in
the form of “AKs & Chevrolets” featuring
Trick Daddy and Sean Paul of the YoungBloodz and “Take It Outside” featuring
Lil Jon & Pastor Troy. The ready-for-radio
records “Stay Fresh” and “Weekend Girl”
are there.
B.G.
LIVE FROM CHOPPER
CITY MIXTAPE
CORY GUNZ
APPRENTICE
MIXTAPE
What we have here is
basically a collection
of raw-ass freestyles
coupled with some
remixes of popular radio songs and
new recordings. The
mixtape is designed to
do two things: set up
the release of B.G.’s
upcoming album The
Heart of The Streets
and introduce the
world to his group,
the Chopper City
Boyz. While this mixtape has no real cohesiveness, it has some
dope rhyme spittin’
from the original Hot
Boy and his collective
of young guns.
After getting the
approval of everyone
from Swizz Beatz to
Camron on the intro,
Cory Gunz gives
us a couple dozen
reasons why this
young gun is a force
to be reckoned with.
Over popular tracks
like “Lean Back”
and “Hood Hop,”
the youngin’ displays
talent beyond his age
with lyrics like, “The
only time you ever
did was like an hour
when you turned on
Oz.”
One of the best songs
on this mixtape is
B.G.’s remake of his
classic “Get Your
Shine On” from his
early years with Cash
Money, which is much
better than Baby’s
remix. “Get your shine
on, you know that
Gizzle made that!”
Preach on, brother!
“Where They At,”
originally a Homebwoi
song featuring B.G.,
has since become the
first single from B.G.’s
album with a new
verse over DJ Smurf’s
heart-pounding production. Other jewels
on this disc are solo
shots from the Chopper City Boyz, Hakim,
and Snipe. They all
get their solo shine on
quite well, breaking
up the monotony.
As one-fourth of the group P Diddy calls
the “NWA of the South,” Boyz N Da Hood,
Jody Breeze is probably the strongest
lyrically and proves it throughout his solo
album. The best thing about this album is
that you won’t get bored listening to it.
Jody is an exceptional talent who appears
to be receiving the right grooming from
all the right places. Although the T.I. vocal
comparisons are inevitable, it’s fair to say
that Jody Breeze can become one of the
nicest out of the South in his own right.
B.G.’s remixes of
popular R&B songs like
Amerie’s “1 Thing”
and Destiny’s Child’s
“Soldier” are perfect
for mixtape DJs. Even
though this may seem
like a bunch of songs
just thrown together,
it serves its purpose as
good promo.
- Wally Sparks, [email protected]
- Wally Sparks,
[email protected]
We get some original
production in the
form of a track from
Othello, which is a
bit too similar to 50’s
“In Da Club.” Cory is
forced to pick up his
tempo a bit over the
beat from Tupac and
Bone Thugs’ classic
“Thug Love.” The
result is nothing special, but proves that
this teenager is able
to switch up his style
effectively.
WREKONIZE
OVERDUE MIXTAPE
You would think that after winning
a nationally-televised MC battle
on MTV, an artist would take any
advantageous move they could.
But here we have Wrekonize, the
underground MC who supposedly
turned down a recording contract
from Roc-A-Fella. Wrekonize has
proven himself as a competent MC,
but even after the accolades Wrek
seems to be content with being an
underground MC.
With similes like “Your sound is as
hard as a male sex change” and
metaphors like “I kill rappers daily,
I’m the self-esteem sniper,” Wrek
spits ferociously on “Breathe.”
The interludes are hilarious, and
firm testaments that Wrek is an
MC first and an artist next; all the
way from the “hater” interludes to
“sellout radio.”
The Game makes a
guest appearance,
giving Cory a run for
his money, but he still
maintains to hold his
own.
“Freestyle” is a nice laid-back
track where Wrek seems to be
going at the Roc with a style reminiscent of Nas’ notorious freestyle
dissin’ Jay-Z. “Improper Opening”
is more proof that Wrek the MC is
live! Wrek picks up the tempo of
his flow and rides the lackadaisical
track to perfection. The “Boardroom Interlude” is similar to an
interlude from The Alchemist’s
LP; not so fresh. Poking more fun
at the industry, Wrekonize spits
the “Same Ol’ Story,” insisting, “If
they don’t hear about you losing
they don’t care if you win / We got
all our own problems, I don’t need
to pretend.” The best track on this
mixtape only contains one verse:
“Child’s 1st Words.”
- ADG
- ADG, [email protected]
OZONE MAY 2005
27
JOE PRO
THE SHAKE OFF, WHERE
DEM DOLLARS AT, & BOOTY
FEST 2
www.tapemaninc.com
It’s all in the name. Joe Pro
seems to have the right formula for making bachelor party DVDs. A good DVD contains
the following ingredients:
beautiful strippers, porn clips,
private strippers, and clips of
dancers from America’s hottest strip clubs (Atlanta, D.C.,
Miami, New York, Virginia,
Philly, and South Carolina). All
of Joe Pro’s DVDs contain clips
from all the yearly events
which draw scantily clad
women, like Daytona’s Black
College Reunion and Myrtle
Beach’s Bike Week.
Shake Off is loaded with lots
of big round asses, and a lot
of booty-shaking and ass-clapping. This DVD is a must-have
for any aspiring stripper. It
could definitely be an instructional DVD on how to make
your ass clap. The only thing
missing on this DVD is Sean
Paul and Busta Rhymes’ singing “Make It Clap.”
This DVD is not Hoes
Gone Wild, it is ‘Porn
Clips’ Gone Wild,
with lots of lackluster replays of the
same scenes over and
over again. Twenty
minutes into this
two-hour feature,
the overlays and replays make you want
to turn it off and
play a video game
instead.
The entire DVD is
basically clips from
other movies, and
the clips aren’t that
great. The only thing
that saves this DVD is
the music. It’s a good
listen, suited for
bachelor parties.
DYNAMIC AUDIO & VIDEO
DYNAMIC BOOTY VOL. 4
NEW ORLEANS EXPOSED
www.noexposed.com
How would you like to
have your favorite music
and porn playing at the
same time? Dynamic
Audio & Video have combined the best of both
worlds: You can listen to
sexy music while watching porn. If you like big
round asses, you’ll love
the eight featured scenes
on this DVD. Jada, a new
black porn star, looks like
she stepped right out of
an Uncut video. Jada is
teamed with porn star
Justin Slayer. If this was
the only scene on the
whole DVD, you wouldn’t
be disappointed. Jada
gives Justin the ride of
his life. This scene is so
steamy that they’re both
left wiping the sweat off
their bodies.
When people travel, they choose their destination for different purposes. Some travel for
the beauty of the city, the architecture of ancient buildings, or the history of the city. Most
people know the histories of the cities they
visit, but some don’t. I recently visited New
Orleans in all its splendor. I visited the famous
Bourbon Street and stayed in an aging hotel.
The only thing I really knew about New Orleans
was that it was one of the first places in America where slaves were dropped off straight
from Africa. New Orleans is the home of exotic
foods, Mardi Gras, the Essence Festival, Cash
Money Millionaires, and Master P and the No
Limit Soldiers. I also knew that back in 1994,
it was the murder capital of America. I didn’t
know that New Orleans is listed in the top 10
of the worst school systems in the country. I
didn’t know that New Orleans has a convention every single day of the year. We all have a
perception of New Orleans, but this DVD paints
a totally different picture.
Featuring in-depth interviews with Juvenile,
the late Soulja Slim, 5th Ward Weeby, B.G.,
and many others, this DVD takes you on an educational journey through life in the projects
by people who grew up (and still live in) New
Orleans. There’s a lot of information packed
into this DVD, so I watched it several times to
give an accurate review..
Finally, after rewinding and
rewinding the previous DVDs, I
got a chance to look at Booty
Fest 2. The only problem with
this DVD is that I didn’t get
the chance to see Volume 1.
If it has as much booty as Volume 2, I need to check it out.
Booty Fest 2 is loaded with
clear scenes and great images. The clarity on Joe Pro’s
DVDs is worth the purchase.
Some of the hot
songs on this DVD
include Gucci Mane &
Young Jeezy’s “Icy,”
Bobby Valentino’s
“Slow Down,” some
R&B from Usher & R
Kelly, and plenty of
crunk songs from the
Ying Yang Twins, Lil
Jon & the Eastside
Boyz, and Pastor
Troy. The hottest
tune on the DVD is
by the host, Mykel
Myers, who hails
from Jacksonville.
His collabo with
Young Jeezy is a club
and radio-friendly
joint. Mykel has a
distinctive voice
that can’t really be
compared to anyone
else. He takes you
on a thugged-out,
gangsta ride through
the hardcore realities
of life and hustling.
The music on this DVD is
mostly R&B, ranging from
slow to uptempo. You
don’t have to be watching this DVD to enjoy it; it
can be played simply for
the music. In the scenes
with Latin actresses,
reggaetone is added to
spice up the mix. It’s
amazing how the music
matches the sex. Everything is right on time. For
instance, in one scene,
while “Saltshaker” is
playing, the video is sped
up to match the strokes
and the beat.
The unique thing about
this porn DVD is that you
don’t hear the moaning
and grunting, all you hear
is the music provided by
Dynamic Audio. The music
also sets the mood for
when you and your partner start experimenting
with what you just saw.
This documentary shows what it’s like to grow
up in New Orleans. Their school system is
ranked nearly last place in the nation, just
in front of Mississippi. New Orleans has one
of the highest unemployment rates in the
country. The DVD also shows New Orleans’
untapped talent and contains touching
footage celebrating fallen hero Soulja
Slim. This DVD shows the harsh realities
of life in New Orleans; it would be a
good candidate for CNN, HBO, or BET.
- Malik Abdul
- Malik Abdul
- Malik Abdul
- Malik Abdul, [email protected]
Where Dem Dollars At is
mostly taped at different strip
clubs, with lots of nudity and
pole-dancing. Any strip club
connoisseur understands that
pole-dancing is an art form,
which takes lots of energy and
stamina when done right. On
this DVD, it is done right.
28
MYKEL MYERS
HOES GONE WILD
mykelmyers.com
OZONE MAY 2005
Before viewing this DVD, I had mixed feelings
about New Orleans. Whenever I visit again,
I’ll have a better understanding and greater
respect for their culture. I was born on an
island, and through this DVD I’ve realized that
New Orleans natives and West Indians have
much in common (a laid-back lifestyle, a love
for music, and nature’s wrath: hurricanes,
floodings, rainstorms, mosquitoes, and unbearable heat).
01: Voice of Da Streetz “Rap Phenomenon III” 407-256-8487 www.Voic
eofDaStreetz.com Orlando, FL
02: DJ B-Lord (hosted by Trick Daddy & Frank Luv) “Still Thuggin’” www.DJBlord.com Charleston, SC
03: DJ Giovanny & DJ Mr. King “Southern Smothered & Covered”
330-701-8327 or 614-323-5212
04: Wiz Hoffa & Money Mike (hosted by Brandi Garcia & Linda Love) “Black Madonna” BrandiGarcia.com AL
05: DJ Ryno & DJ Chill “Tha Mix Vol. 2” www.DJRyno.com or www.mix
2cold.com Houston, TX
06: DJ Kool Kid “The Diesel 3.0” 212-545-3781 NYC
07: DJ Smallz (hosted by Bun B) “The Texas Mixtape Massacre” www.DJSm
allz.com Ft. Myers, FL
08: DJ Obscene (hosted by Chamillionaire) “Houston We Have a Problem” 305-778-4390 Miami, FL
09: DJ Jelly & MC Assault & the Southern Style DJs “World Famous”
Atlanta, GA
10: DJ Barry Bee “Mixtape Serial Killer” 252-561-6145 or Affi[email protected] NC
11: Klarc Shepard “Riding High In the Dirty South” Gainesville,
FL
Evil Empire
“Be South Pt. 2”
Hot tracks:
#01 - Mike Jones “Back Then”
#05 - Chamillionaire f/ David Banner
“Talkin’ That Talk”
#11 - Young Jeezy “We Jook”
#12 - Lil Boosie
“Goin’ Thru Some Thangs”
12: DJ Rob-Lo “The Undisputed Pt. 2” www.Rob-Lo.com NYC
13: Rapid Ric (hosted by Bun B & Killa Kyleon) “Whut It Dew 2”
Houston, TX
14: DJ Frogie “Pure M.E.M.P.H.I.S. Vol. 8” www.FrogieStyle.com Memphis, TN
15: DJ Jesse Jazz & DJ Slique “Street Certified” www.Orlando-HipH
op.com Orlando, FL
16: ADG “This Is What I Do Pt. 5” 386-627-3427 www.NeverAFlawProductions.com Orlando, FL
16: DJ Bijal & D’Luscious “Sirius Hitz Vol. 2” www.DJBijal.com or
www.D-Luscious.com
18: Bash Bros. “Mean Muggin’ Vol. 1” www.BashBros.net
19: Pimp G “Crunk City Kings Spring Break Edition” 904-536-6122
Jacksonville, FL
20: Hurricane Foss (hosted by Stat Quo) [email protected] or 407-729-2805 Kissimmee, FL
OZONE MAY 2005
29
by David Banner,
Mississippi’s
rapper/producer
extraordinaire
and aspiring actor
Disclaimer: I really hate giving movies a rating, because sometimes I start liking them more or less later. I may come back next
month and recant something after I see a movie again. I’m the same way about music. Usually, the songs or the albums that I don’t
like become the ones that I like for the rest of my life. Sometimes you don’t get it the first time.
COACH CARTER
I liked Coach Carter
a lot because of the
struggle that man
went through as a
black man who stood
for what he believed
in. I liked his personal
story. Coach Carter
is about an inner-city
school in Richmond
that had been losing
in academics and in
sports. Coach Carter
came in and made the
team into winners, not
only in basketball but
he stressed their education and their lives
more than basketball.
Even though the parents went against his
methods, he cared more about the lives of
those kids than he did about them excelling in basketball. That’s how we should all
be about music and sports; it’s more about
knowledge than our physical attributes
because those go away with time. Knowledge
stays with you forever.
The problem that I had with the movie was
the dialect. The kids were supposed to be
from the West coast, but the whole movie
you heard “yo” and “son” and “chill, B.”
They had all these New York actors playing
West coast roles. You wouldn’t hear somebody in Brooklyn saying “shawty,” you know?
I think that Hollywood needs to respect our
culture more. They wouldn’t have a Russian
character speaking Spanish in a movie, and
that’s how important the dialect of these
different regions is to us.
I thought most of the casting was wrong in
the movie as far as the young people. These
kids didn’t talk like their characters should,
and I think that’s one of the most important
things. When you’re acting, you’re supposed
to give people the feeling of how it is to
stay where your character is from. People
walk differently in New Orleans than they
do in New York. People talk differently in
Los Angeles than they do in Atlanta. That’s
part of getting into character. That’s what
I’ve been learning in acting classes. People
walk and talk differently; that’s part of their
character. I think Coach Carter did the city
of Richmond an injustice in that way. As a
matter of fact, I heard that from people in
California before I even saw the movie and
that’s what made me notice it more.
But, once you get past the heavy New York
drawls, the story is pretty good. Coach
Carter is definitely a good DVD movie to
watch at home.
NAPOLEON DYNAMITE
HITCH
Napoleon Dynamite is
basically a kid who’s
a nerd. The movie is
about his day-to-day
movements in the small
town he’s from. What
I liked most about this
movie is that it was so
funny and they didn’t
curse one time. That’s
sort of hard, especially
in today’s culture, to
have a movie that’s
funny without cursing.
Hitch is about a love doctor
played by Will Smith. His
job is to hook you up and
give you the confidence to
get the lady of your dreams.
When I walked into the movie theater, I thought it was
gonna be the whackest film
of all time. The only reason
I went to see it is because
I heard somebody from the
hood say it was good and I
heard a rich old person say it
was good. That’s two people
from totally different walks
of life talking good about
the movie, so I decided to give it a chance.
The first time you
watch this movie, you probably won’t like
it. I didn’t like it when I first saw it. It’s dry
humor; it’s not a hits-you-over-the-head comedy. It’s really so stupid that it’s amazingly
funny. It’s like a cult classic. It’s actually my
favorite movie now. I’ve watched it 42 times.
I think the casting in this movie is great,
especially Napoleon’s girlfriend. She has the
same acting coach as I do, and my acting
coach was telling me that they had to play
down. When I say “play down,” I mean, they
had to act two steps slower than people
actually are.
Napoleon gets picked on and bullied, but he
ends up being the hero at the end by helping
his friend become president of the school.
The funniest things in the movie are just the
way they talk and the things they talk about.
I mean, the stuff is so stupid. Me repeating
it ain’t gonna be funny. Like, somebody asks
Napoleon, “What are you gonna do today?”
and he says, “Anything I want to, gosh!” That
isn’t funny in writing, you just have to see
him do it and it’s funny.
Another thing that’s funny is that he does
stuff we did as children. Like, tying he-man
to a piece of string and throwing it out the
window to watch it fly. I mean, it’s little bitty
stuff like that. Working on your dance moves
by watching videos, stuff we did as children. To see a high school kid who’s almost
a grown-up do the same stuff that we did as
kids, that’s comedy. It’s actually hilarious.
After the 30th time I watched the movie,
I realized the message: There’s something
special about everybody. They picked on
Napoleon in school, they laughed at him, but
he was actually a caring person who really
just wanted to be himself. Napoleon was in
his own world and he wanted to be left alone
in his own world. A lot of times, kids don’t
want to be popular. They just want to be left
alone, and the so-called “popular” kids pick
on them when it’s not even warranted.
(91
13
Hitch shows that people judge each other every
day, even when they shouldn’t. Hitch also showed
that the key to winning over the person you really
love is having confidence in yourself. If you’re
goofy, don’t run away from being goofy. That may
be your key to getting the woman of your dreams.
Key in on what your strengths are. If you’re going
bald, cut all your hair off and rock a bald head
and be proud of it.
My favorite moment in the movie was when Will
Smith was teaching the dude how to dance. To
see Will teach an older white guy how to do some
really cool moves, that was funny. The little stuff
we do every day was funny, like being nervous
around a girl. Maybe y’all sleep together without
having sex, but you stay up all night cause you’re
so nervous. Will Smith teaches the guy what he’s
supposed to do when he first approaches a lady.
It’s some of the stuff that goes unspoken when you
meet a woman for the first time. I can honestly
say that Hitch is one of my favorite movies of the
year, and I really thought it was gonna be whack.
Hitch teaches you to be confident with what God
has blessed you with. If that’s not enough, that
person is probably not worthy of your love anyway.
If I meet a girl, I don’t walk up to her as David
Banner. I’m Lavell Crump. If she happens to know
who David Banner is, that’s cool, but I don’t want
to meet a woman under that guise. It helps – but I
wouldn’t want to be judged as a rapper. I’d want
to be judged as myself, because when David
Banner ain’t hot no more, that person might not
wanna be with me no more. You should always
want a person to be with you on the basis of
your personality cause that will never falter
or change.
w
N
new
As an actor, I’m really proud of what Will
Smith is doing. He’s one of the people
that’s paving the way for us to be successful in movies. But I’ve also got to say this:
I don’t ever want to see Will Smith kiss a
man in a movie again, ever. Ever, ever,
ever, ever. Put that four times.
w
30
OZONE MAY 2005
Check out
other indie
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online at
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Sacramento, CA
www.the916.com
916-452-2482
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New York, NY
1369 Madison Ave #406
NY, NY 10128
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Miami, FL
frostysflava.com
Holla Magazine
Atlanta, GA
www.hollamag.com
770-438-0112
HooD Magazine
Daytona Beach, FL
386-235-6846
everythinghood.com
Block 2 Block Magazine
Grand Prairie, TX
214-597-0883
block2blockonline.com
Strip Joint Magazine
Miami, FL
954-447-7246
Don Diva Magazine
New York, NY
877-366-3482
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Chicago, IL
847-366-8915
exposuremagazines.com
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Houston, TX
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getemmagazine.com
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305-804-4188
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Iceberg Magazine
Jacksonville, FL
icebergmag.com
904-472-5711
New Power Magazine
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Owners Illustrated Mag
Columbus, MS
New York, NY
Washington, DC
662-251-0075
thenextlevelmagazine.com
202-607-3629
newpowermagazine.com
ownersillustrated.com
Streetz Magazine
Virginia
800-770-1078
www.streetzmag.com
Da Seen Magazine
Miami, FL
786-263-2724
daseen.com
That’s What’s Up
Miami, FL
954-733-3613
Industri Magazine
Houston, TX
www.theindustri.com
866-309-9997
The Juice Magazine
Atlanta, GA
866-34-JUICE
thejuicemagazine.net
OZONE Magazine
Orlando, FL
407-447-6063
www.ozonemag.com
Rude Magazine
New Orleans, LA
504-246-1491
Urban Living Magazine Urban Pages Magazine
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615-497-5036
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urbanlivingmag.com
843-747-5131
Tha Hole Magazine
Huntsville, AL
256-652-0804
www.thahole.com
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707-553-1850
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404-806-1480
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206-320-SPOT
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