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Mac Miller Ignored Label Offers On Road To #1 Debut

‘We just really wanted to stick with our home team,’ Mac Miller tells ‘RapFix Live’ of Blue Slide Park. By Rob Markman, with reporting by Sway Calloway Mac Miller Photo: Getty Images What’s the first thing an artist does when he snags the #1 spot on the Billboard albums chart? Well, if he’s Mac Miller , he plays James Brown’s “I Feel Good” — and why wouldn’t he? On Wednesday (November 16), the 19-year-old Pittsburgh MC landed the #1 album with his independent debut, Blue Slide Park. It’s the first time an indie artist has obtained the top spot with a debut since Tha Dogg Pound did it in 1995. To mark the occasion, Mac — who is currently out on tour — appeared on “RapFix Live” via Skype. “It’s crazy. I’ve been trying to take it all in,” Miller told Sway. “I’ve just been in constant motion, so I haven’t gotten a chance to really stop and realize how crazy this is that we got the first #1 in 16 years. It’s nuts, man.” Mac broke out in 2010 when he signed to Rostrum Records and then dropped his K.I.D.S. mixtape. Rostrum, which is most noted for signing Wiz Khalifa, is an independent label. Even though Wiz is distributed through Atlantic Records, Mac has no major-label affiliation — not that the majors haven’t been interested. But Team Miller wanted to do things on their own. “I never really got far enough to see an offer for real,” Mac said. “I got no hatred towards major labels or anything. I never got a chance to hear what they had to say. We just really wanted to stick with our home team and keep it in the family.” Miller’s manager and Rostrum Records founder Benjy Grinberg has been fending off offers for Mac. “They called Benjy and wanted to talk, but Benjy was just on some ‘We’re not trying to talk right now, we’re doin’ this independently.’ And we just left it at that.” The move paid off. Since Blue Slide Park was released November 8, fans have been snatching up copies both digitally and physically. “The numbers are cool — 144,000, that’s crazy. But whatever it is, the fact that I got a #1 album on my first try independently is just something that no one could ever take away from me,” Mac said. “I had fans tweeting me with pictures of nine albums that they bought.” Did you snatch up Mac’s album? Let us know in the comments! Related Videos Rick Ross, Meek Mill, N.O.R.E. And More On ‘RapFix Live’ Related Artists Mac Miller

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Mac Miller Ignored Label Offers On Road To #1 Debut

Wiz Khalifa Recalls Inking His Name On ‘When I Was 17’

New episode with ‘Black and Yellow’ rapper airs Saturday at 11 a.m. By Alvin Blanco Wiz Khalifa on “When I Was 17” Photo: MTV News When Wiz Khalifa (born Cameron Thomaz) was 17 years old, hip-hop stardom was still only a pipe dream. But the kid was serious about his craft, and he displayed it by getting his rap moniker tattooed on his arm on his 17th birthday. “The story behind my name is: I would always hang out with older guys, and I was good at everything I do, so they would be like, ‘He’s a young wiz,’ so that’s where that came from,” the “Black and Yellow” rapper reveals on the next episode of MTV’s “When I Was 17,” airing Saturday at 11 a.m. “And ‘Khalifa’ is Arabic for ‘successor’ and ‘leader,’ and my granddad is Muslim, so he gave me that name; he felt like that’s what I was doing with my music.” Of the now-thoroughly inked-up Wiz’s early tattoo, Benjy Grinberg, CEO of Rostrum Records, said “That pretty much solidified his direction and was a symbol of his commitment to his craft.” It was Rostrum, the Pittsburgh-based label Wiz is still signed to, that released the hip-hop wunderkind’s first official project, Show and Prove . “It was my first street album,” Wiz says. “That album got me out there.” But Wiz didn’t settle for just saying he had a record in stores. “When he was 17, he knew that he couldn’t just make an album and that’s it,” Grinberg says. “You have to do more things, you have to help promote it, you have to help sell it, and he really took to it.” While Wiz currently hawks his music by appearing on the covers of magazines like Rolling Stone , XXL and Complex , and performances like his recent stop at the South by Southwest festival, as well as relentless airplay, back in high school, he was making his moves on a more grassroots level. “It became a little craze around school,” Wiz says of pushing Show and Prove . “I had flyers, and I had little T-shirts that I was wearing. The girls wanted T-shirts, and I used the girls to promote everything. I would bring, like, 25 to school, and I’d probably give five out to some girls.” The savvy marketing quickly paid off — literally. “I sold CDs in the hallways,” Wiz remembers. “I sold them for 10 bucks. I was making, like, a good grand a week. It wasn’t every week that I was making that, though. It was like, when it was hot, I made like a grand a week, for like, a week,” he said, laughing. With his major label debut, Rolling Papers , out Tuesday, Wiz is going to be laughing all the way to the bank. “When I Was 17” airs Saturday at 11 a.m. ET/PT on MTV. Related Videos Check Out A Sneak Preview Of ‘When I Was 17’

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Wiz Khalifa Recalls Inking His Name On ‘When I Was 17’