Tupac Shakur

What does it take to own the assets of one of the most notorious gangsta-rap labels of all time? About $24 million, actually.

That may sound like a lot of coin for a label that hasn't had a hit record in more than a decade, but clearly Nashville, Tennessee-based Global Music Group President Susan Berg saw some potential dollar signs in the former rap powerhouse started by oft-imprisoned boss Suge Knight. The assets include hit records by Dr. Dre, Snoop Dogg, Nate Dogg and Tupac Shakur.

Berg won the rights to the label during an auction on Wednesday, with the proceeds going to help Knight pay off his considerable debts, which include a $107 million judgment awarded to a former partner in the label that forced Knight into bankruptcy. Oh, and even though you might think the bottom of the 'Pac barrel had been scraped, chiseled, gouged, ground up and rehydrated more times than anyone could imagine, did we mention that the sale comes with the rights to 20 unreleased Tupac tracks?

Read More...

Tags , , , , ,

By Danielle Beavers

Shaq, don't quit your multimillion-dollar day job.

Sunday night, the Phoenix Suns center took over the mic at a New York nightclub. He called what he did a "freestyle." Others called it a "verbal attack" on archrival Kobe Bryant. In case you missed it, Shaq bashed his ex-teammate — with whom he won three NBA titles — with lines like "Last week Kobe couldn't do it without me." For the chorus, he got the whole crowd to chant, "Kobe, tell me how my ass tastes." But the "big man" really made it personal with the line "I'm a horse/ Kobe ratted me out/ That's why I'm getting divorced," referring to the L.A. Lakers shooting guard's 2003 rape case, during which Kobe said he should've been like Shaq and paid his women not to say anything. And that's where the friendship ended and the rivalry began.

"I'm totally cool with Kobe. No issue at all," Shaq told ESPN.com Monday afternoon. "I was freestyling. That's all. It was all done in fun. Nothing serious whatsoever. ... That is what MCs do. They freestyle when called upon."

Given that Shaq is using the "freestyle" defense, we decided to call in the experts. We tapped some members of our Hip-Hop Brain Trust — the panel that gave us "The Hottest MCs in the Game," "The Greatest MCs of All Time" and your weekly dose of "Mixtape Monday" — to find out how Shaq measures up. Is this really "what MCs do"? It turns out his greatest sin might have been dissing Patrick Ewing. ...

Read More...

Tags ,

By Jordan Upmalis

Ever since Soulja Boy Tell'em entered the hip-hop realm, his place there has been questioned and his creativity scrutinized. But it looks like he's finally had enough. Soulja Boy is hitting back, in a vlog battle with Ice-T.

It all started last week, when DJ Cisco's Urban Legend mixtape was released and contained some pretty harsh words from Ice-T directed toward Soulja Boy, at one point telling him to "eat a di--" and blaming him for "singlehandedly killing hip-hop." Ouch.

Two days later, the gloves were officially off when Soulja Boy posted his own response video, in which he laughs throughout and constantly refers to Ice-T's age, repeatedly calling him an "old-ass n---a" (six times, we counted). Although he seems to be joking for most of the video's seven-and-a-half minutes, Soulja Boy does have some serious moments in which he acknowledges Ice-T's influence on hip-hop (calling him a legend), but also says that times have changed, and he's doing what he has to in order to support his family. Soulja Boy, tell him!

Another two days went by, and another response video surfaced. On June 22, Ice-T posted a video apologizing to Soulja Boy for telling him to "eat a di--," but still making it a point to say that his music is "garbage." Ice-T says this isn't an old-school vs. new-school or East Coast vs. West Coast war, though he warns that there will be ramifications for Soulja Boy from the West.

Not surprisingly, other artists have begun to add their two cents to the debate, and one of them is the most influential in the game right now. Mr. Kanye West himself decided to weigh in on the debate on his blog, siding with Soulja Boy. Soulja Boy hasn't killed hip-hop, Kanye says, but instead he represents the true meaning of what hip-hop should be. "He came from the 'hood, made his own beats, made up a new saying, new sound and a new dance with one song."

The debate comes as no surprise to us, since Soulja Boy was the most controversial name at the table when our Hip-Hop Brain Trust got together recently to name the Hottest MCs in the Game. Seriously, we thought the battle would never end. Check it out below.

Whose side are you on? Should Ice-T retire and quit whining like a cranky old man? Or are Soulja Boy and his fellow ringtone rappers the death of hip-hop?

Tags , , ,