Tag Archives: wayne

Lil Wayne Marvels At Nicki Minaj And Drake Joining I Am Music II Tour

Nicki will be on the road full-time, while Drizzy will stop by for a few dates. By Jayson Rodriguez, with reporting by Sway Calloway Lil Wayne on the set of “6 Foot 7 Foot” Photo: MTV News Lil Wayne sure is proud of prot

Adele Says VH1 ‘Unplugged’ Performance ‘Was A Complete Joy’

Chart-topping Brit’s set premieres Thursday at 7 p.m. ET on VH1.com. By James Montgomery Adele Photo: MTV News She’s already got an armload of Grammys , the #1 album in the country and a line of admirers that stretches from Los Angeles to London, but all Adele has ever really wanted is her own “Unplugged.” On Thursday (March 3), she’ll finally get hers, when “VH1 Unplugged: Adele” premieres on VH1.com at 7 p.m. ET, and then airs on the network proper the following night, at 11 p.m. ET. For a singer who’s already accomplished so much in 22 short years, you’d think that filming “Unplugged” would be just another stop along her road to success. But you’d be wrong. To hear Adele tell it, “Unplugged” is the culmination of a dream that started nearly a decade ago. “My favorite one is the Lauryn Hill one; I’ve got that one on CD as well,” she told MTV News. “I’ve never been so choked up by something, and it was so refreshing — I mean, I was still very young when she did her ‘Unplugged,’ and when Miseducation … came out, I was really young, but that is the most influential record of my life. It’s my favorite record of all time. But I never knew anything about her, she was so elusive … but just to see her [on ‘Unplugged’], and that broken look, just her and a guitar, her banter between the songs — I felt like how I feel when I hear Etta James. I was just like, ‘I totally get it. She’s in my head, she’s in my heart, she knows me.’ “It’s quite a special moment when you suddenly have that link and bond with an artist, and I finally got that with her, when I heard that,” she continued. “So yeah, it was a complete joy [to do my own episode].” Bits and pieces of Adele’s “Unplugged” set — including a soulful take on Aretha Franklin’s “(You Make Me Feel Like a) Natural Woman” — have already been rolling out on the VH1 blog , and the full performance includes songs from both her 19 and 21 albums. Adele definitely seemed to be channeling not only the spirit of the immortal Aretha during the Harlem taping of the show, but her icon Hill too. Trust us, you don’t want to miss a minute of it. She gets emotional on “Someone Like You” and fiery on “Rolling in the Deep.” In fact, the whole thing feels very much like a dream come true, probably because it was. Trust us, you don’t want to miss a minute of it. Related Artists Adele

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Adele Says VH1 ‘Unplugged’ Performance ‘Was A Complete Joy’

Lil Wayne Says He’s Become A Better Lyricist

‘Nowadays, for me, it’s about what I’m saying,’ Weezy tells MTV News about his writing. By Jayson Rodriguez, with reporting by Sway Calloway Lil Wayne Photo: MTV News While Lil Wayne was away in prison, the common perception was that he’d pull out his pen and put rhymes down on paper until his release. That process is much more formal than Weezy’s normal recording routine, of course, as the rapper is more apt to spit lyrics from memory — a practice also used by Jay-Z, Fabolous and T.I., among others. But during Wayne’s eight months behind bars, the Cash Money superstar says he barely put his thoughts down in writing. “Sit down and write something down, nah. I’m not writing at all,” Wayne told MTV News about his creative process while incarcerated. “There was just a lot of material that I wrote in there and I came home and transformed it into something better. A lot of it, when I came home I thought I would perform it the way I wrote it, but it wasn’t possible, so I took bits and pieces and rejuvenated it.” According to the “6 Foot 7 Foot” rapper explained that, like an athlete, he feels his skills declining, although he maintains that the loss is offset by a greater aptitude in his lyrics. “When I listen to the old stuff of mine, I be mad because I’m like, I can’t even do that no more, man. I feel like I’m getting old — how did I even think about that then?” he said. “But you know, the difference is, it’s not about what you were saying, it was about how you said it back then. What I mean by that is, if you had a flow and you’re just like, ‘Dun, dun, dun, dun,’ you know, you rhyming all these words — it was about how you said it. Even a person who doesn’t listen to rap can say, ‘I don’t know what he saying, but he saying it.’ But nowadays, for me, it’s about what I’m saying. So now, if you don’t listen to rap and you hear it, you’re like, ‘I don’t know if I like what he’s saying, but I damn sure understand what he saying and it was very clever what he said.’ ” The New Orleans rapper is putting the final touches on his next studio album — and his first project since his release from prison this past November — Tha Carter IV. But first, Wayne is set for the television which will take place on MTV on Thursday (March 3) at 7:54 p.m. ET. Related Artists Lil Wayne

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Lil Wayne Says He’s Become A Better Lyricist

Lil Wayne Responds To Alleged Jay-Z ‘H.A.M.’ Dis

Weezy’s ‘6 Foot 7 Foot’ video premieres Thursday at 7:54 p.m. ET on MTV. By Jayson Rodriguez, with reporting by Sway Calloway Lil Wayne and Sway Photo: MTV News Five years ago, Jay-Z and Lil Wayne were trading lyrical jabs like Lil’ Kim and Nicki Minaj do these days. Their war of words, however, seemed to subside when the iconic Brooklyn rapper invited the Cash Money superstar to join him on “Hello Brooklyn 2.0,” from 2007’s American Gangster. But things seemed to become chilly again when Birdman compared Hov and Weezy, saying his artist is a better rapper and has more money. In January, Jay-Z and Kanye West’s “H.A.M.” arrived via Facebook, and fans wondered whether Jay was taking shots at Wayne on the track. “N—as fantasize about the sh– that I do daily/ Like these rappers rap about all the sh– that I do daily,” Jay spits on the number. “I’m like really, half a billi, n—a, really you got Baby money/ Keep it real with n—as, n—as ain’t got my lady money.” According to Weezy, who heard the track personally through West, he isn’t looking to start another competition with Jay. Wayne told MTV News that he didn’t ask ‘Ye about the alleged dig: “I wouldn’t ask him about a Jay-Z line because he’s not Jay-Z.” That doesn’t mean Wayne wouldn’t respond to the line, even if he hasn’t returned fire just yet. “Me and my wit, given my wit, I would probably play off of it,” Wayne explained. “But I wouldn’t make it a competition, because actually, the subject that he’s talking about in that line, I can’t box with the card. I’d be the first one to tell you that, given my wit, and the type of person that I am, I’d capitalize and I’d play off of it. Yeah, I definitely would.” The New Orleans rapper is putting the final touches on his next studio album — and his first project since his release from prison — Tha Carter IV. But first, Wayne is set to premiere his video for “6 Foot 7 Foot” on MTV this Thursday at 7:54 p.m. Related Videos Lil Wayne Ready To Drop ‘6 Foot 7 Foot’ Related Artists Lil Wayne Jay-Z

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Lil Wayne Responds To Alleged Jay-Z ‘H.A.M.’ Dis

10-Yr Old Girl Goes Hard In “Open Letter” To Lil Wayne About His Degradation Of Black Women [Video]

Watoto From The Nile- Letter to Lil Wayne (Official Music Video)

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10-Yr Old Girl Goes Hard In “Open Letter” To Lil Wayne About His Degradation Of Black Women [Video]

Lil Wayne’s ‘6 Foot 7 Foot’ Video Premieres Thursday On MTV!

Hype Williams-directed clip, also featuring Cory Gunz, debuts at 7:54 p.m. ET on Thursday. By MTV News staff Lil Wayne on the set of “6 Foot 7 Foot” Photo: Rahman Dukes/MTV News Lil Wayne’s long-awaited “6 Foot 7 Foot” video will premiere this Thursday on MTV at 7:54 p.m. ET. The clip is for the lead single from Wayne’s forthcoming Tha Carter IV, his first collection of music since being released from prison last year . Hype Williams directed the video, and Lil Wayne’s latest prot

Lil Wayne Is ‘Entering Uncharted Territory’ In Hip-Hop, Lloyd Says

‘It’s like witnessing what rock and roll stars would experience,’ the ‘BedRock’ crooner tells Mixtape Daily of his longtime homey. By Jayson Rodriguez, with reporting by Rebecca Thomas Lloyd Photo: MTV News Celebrity Favorites: Lloyd R&B singer Lloyd has had a close up look at Lil Wayne’s career for some time now. The two collaborated on Lloyd’s “You” and “Girls Around the World” and later on Young Money’s breakout “BedRock,” which featured the former Murder Inc. star riding shotgun with Weezy, Drake, Nicki Minaj and company. Now, as the pair are working on their forthcoming projects — Lloyd’s King of Hearts and Wayne’s Tha Carter IV — the singer, who hopes to get the rapper on his new album, said the New Orleans MC is reaching rock-star status. “He’s entering uncharted territory, I think, for a lot of people in our generation in hip-hop history,” Lloyd told Mixtape Daily. “When Wayne walks into the building, it’s electric. It’s almost like witnessing, I would imagine, what rock and roll stars would experience earlier on in history. You don’t get to experience a lot of that in hip-hop, usually there’s a lot of hatred or a crabs-in-the-bucket mentality going on. But I think with Wayne, he’s overcome so much that the people are really embracing him across the board.” The “Lay It Down” singer has some good perspective in making that declaration: He attended Weezy’s first post-prison performance in Las Vegas and then rocked with him at the Bayou Classic, the annual football clash in Wayne’s hometown between Grambling State and Southern University. Next up, Wayne and director Hype Williams are putting the final touches on the rapper’s “6 Foot 7 Foot” video featuring Young Money member Cory Gunz. The clip was scheduled to debut on MTV last month, but was later postponed. The Bangladesh-produced standout is the first single from Tha Carter IV, Lil Wayne’s first release since completing an eight-month prison in New York for a 2007 gun bust. For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines .

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Lil Wayne Is ‘Entering Uncharted Territory’ In Hip-Hop, Lloyd Says

Does Bonnaroo Lineup Stray Too Far From Roots With Eminem, Lil Wayne?

Festival splits the difference between new acts and old, in a nod to its future and past. By James Montgomery Eminem Photo: Kevin Mazur/EM/WireImage On Tuesday (February 15), organizers announced the lineup for the 2011 Bonnaroo festival , a bill featuring plenty of nods to the fest’s past (mainstays Widespread Panic, My Morning Jacket and the String Cheese Incident, to name a few), but also — most notably — two of the biggest hip-hop acts on the planet, Eminem and Lil Wayne. Browse photos of the 2011 Bonnaroo performers . And, sure, mainstream hip-hop headliners aren’t exactly new for the ‘Roo — Kanye West topped the bill in 2008, and Jay-Z did it last year — but the tandem of Em and Wayne marks a definite departure for the 10-year-old fest, one that members of its die-hard fanbase may have a hard time digesting, if only for the fact that it’s such a departure from the days of old. When West took the stage at 4:30 a.m. in ’08 (a scheduling snafu he blamed, in part, on Pearl Jam running late with their set), those die-hards howled that Bonnaroo had moved too far from its roots. That deafening din was only amplified by the fact that the festival also featured Metallica as a headliner . And while we don’t expect the same kind of outrage this year, we have to wonder if, by tapping the likes of Eminem and Wayne, Bonnaroo had forever alienated the fans who made the festival what it is today. The answer, it seems, is no. “I first went in 2004, and even then the ‘traditional’ fans were already saying it’s too commercial, it’s BS, and that was when the jam-band scene was huge,” Caine O’Rear, editor of American Songwriter magazine, said. “I think you’ll have some purists who will complain, but overall, people will be psyched about the lineup. … Jay-Z was one the most well-received acts last year, which I think was a surprise to most people. [Widespread] Panic is a flagship Bonnaroo band, plus String Cheese Incident, My Morning Jacket … it appeals to this core demo. [Organizers] definitely consider the festival’s roots.” “I think, as a fan, I’m excited by this year’s lineup,” Josh Baron, editor of Relix magazine, added. “Once again, they’ve delivered a pretty unique lineup of programming. You’re not going to find these same acts together at any other festival in this country, if not the world, and that’s something [Bonnaroo organizers] always strive to do. And in this 10th year, they’re hyper-conscious of honoring their roots with a band like Widespread Panic, but also pushing the envelope with acts like Eminem and Wayne. … I don’t think this lineup is going to lose any more fans than they have past years; this isn’t the year that Bonnaroo jumped the shark. People who had that problem probably left the festival years ago.” And perhaps that’s always going to be the catch-22 as far as Bonnaroo is concerned: It is such a beloved institution — one that started in 2002 as a way of showcasing so-called jam bands and the flourishing community that surrounded them — that die-hards are always going to complain about the lineup. It’s sort of an annual tradition. And as organizers push the festival into its second decade, they’re always going to have to weigh the will of their original fans with the ever-evolving tastes of new audiences. “There’s no question [organizers] consider the festival’s history when they put together the lineups. You’re always going to see those core types of bands — Phish, Dave Matthews, Panic, the Dead. … They unequivocally know those are the fans that made the festival. They travel considerable distances to make the Bonnaroo experience what it is,” Baron said. “But part of what makes a festival is that it allows people to see music they normally wouldn’t. I wouldn’t buy a Lil Wayne ticket, but I’m excited to see him in concert, and Eminem is an undeniable performer. And as much as there’s a backlash to a band like Metallica, if you were there, it certainly wasn’t as if it was empty. There were tens of thousands of people watching Metallica.” “Clearly they’re hitting the big demos this year — hip hop, big indie, a lot of the big Americana acts — because I think a lot of people who go to these festivals have eclectic tastes,” O’Rear said. “And I think Bonnaroo is better for it.” What do you think of this year’s Bonnaroo lineup? Let us know in the comments! Related Photos Bonnaroo 2011 Lineup Related Artists Lil Wayne Eminem

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Does Bonnaroo Lineup Stray Too Far From Roots With Eminem, Lil Wayne?

Does Bonnaroo Lineup Stray Too Far From Roots With Eminem, Lil Wayne?

Festival splits the difference between new acts and old, in a nod to its future and past. By James Montgomery Eminem Photo: Kevin Mazur/EM/WireImage On Tuesday (February 15), organizers announced the lineup for the 2011 Bonnaroo festival , a bill featuring plenty of nods to the fest’s past (mainstays Widespread Panic, My Morning Jacket and the String Cheese Incident, to name a few), but also — most notably — two of the biggest hip-hop acts on the planet, Eminem and Lil Wayne. Browse photos of the 2011 Bonnaroo performers . And, sure, mainstream hip-hop headliners aren’t exactly new for the ‘Roo — Kanye West topped the bill in 2008, and Jay-Z did it last year — but the tandem of Em and Wayne marks a definite departure for the 10-year-old fest, one that members of its die-hard fanbase may have a hard time digesting, if only for the fact that it’s such a departure from the days of old. When West took the stage at 4:30 a.m. in ’08 (a scheduling snafu he blamed, in part, on Pearl Jam running late with their set), those die-hards howled that Bonnaroo had moved too far from its roots. That deafening din was only amplified by the fact that the festival also featured Metallica as a headliner . And while we don’t expect the same kind of outrage this year, we have to wonder if, by tapping the likes of Eminem and Wayne, Bonnaroo had forever alienated the fans who made the festival what it is today. The answer, it seems, is no. “I first went in 2004, and even then the ‘traditional’ fans were already saying it’s too commercial, it’s BS, and that was when the jam-band scene was huge,” Caine O’Rear, editor of American Songwriter magazine, said. “I think you’ll have some purists who will complain, but overall, people will be psyched about the lineup. … Jay-Z was one the most well-received acts last year, which I think was a surprise to most people. [Widespread] Panic is a flagship Bonnaroo band, plus String Cheese Incident, My Morning Jacket … it appeals to this core demo. [Organizers] definitely consider the festival’s roots.” “I think, as a fan, I’m excited by this year’s lineup,” Josh Baron, editor of Relix magazine, added. “Once again, they’ve delivered a pretty unique lineup of programming. You’re not going to find these same acts together at any other festival in this country, if not the world, and that’s something [Bonnaroo organizers] always strive to do. And in this 10th year, they’re hyper-conscious of honoring their roots with a band like Widespread Panic, but also pushing the envelope with acts like Eminem and Wayne. … I don’t think this lineup is going to lose any more fans than they have past years; this isn’t the year that Bonnaroo jumped the shark. People who had that problem probably left the festival years ago.” And perhaps that’s always going to be the catch-22 as far as Bonnaroo is concerned: It is such a beloved institution — one that started in 2002 as a way of showcasing so-called jam bands and the flourishing community that surrounded them — that die-hards are always going to complain about the lineup. It’s sort of an annual tradition. And as organizers push the festival into its second decade, they’re always going to have to weigh the will of their original fans with the ever-evolving tastes of new audiences. “There’s no question [organizers] consider the festival’s history when they put together the lineups. You’re always going to see those core types of bands — Phish, Dave Matthews, Panic, the Dead. … They unequivocally know those are the fans that made the festival. They travel considerable distances to make the Bonnaroo experience what it is,” Baron said. “But part of what makes a festival is that it allows people to see music they normally wouldn’t. I wouldn’t buy a Lil Wayne ticket, but I’m excited to see him in concert, and Eminem is an undeniable performer. And as much as there’s a backlash to a band like Metallica, if you were there, it certainly wasn’t as if it was empty. There were tens of thousands of people watching Metallica.” “Clearly they’re hitting the big demos this year — hip hop, big indie, a lot of the big Americana acts — because I think a lot of people who go to these festivals have eclectic tastes,” O’Rear said. “And I think Bonnaroo is better for it.” What do you think of this year’s Bonnaroo lineup? Let us know in the comments! Related Photos Bonnaroo 2011 Lineup Related Artists Lil Wayne Eminem

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Does Bonnaroo Lineup Stray Too Far From Roots With Eminem, Lil Wayne?

Eminem, Arcade Fire, Lil Wayne, The Strokes & more announced in Bonnaroo’s 2011 lineup

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Bonnaroo X has as announced its lineup with a little help from Conan O’Brien. Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : PopWreckoning Discovery Date : 15/02/2011 18:00 Number of articles : 2

Eminem, Arcade Fire, Lil Wayne, The Strokes & more announced in Bonnaroo’s 2011 lineup