Today In Hip Hop History: Fat Joe’s Third LP ‘Don Cartagena’ Turns 25 Years Old!

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On this date in 1998, Terror Squad general Fat Joe released his third full length album Don Cartagena on the Atlantic/Big Beat/Terror Squad imprint.

On his first “official” release of Terror Squad as a crew and label, Fat Joe garnered the support from his then TS crew Armageddon, Triple Seis, Cuban Link and new recruit standout Big Punisher to pull together a superstar-laden album that would catapult TS to an equal level of success. With Pun’s almost overnight stardom from the smash single “Still Not A Player”, it gave Joe the leeway to bring in the rest of the crew sans Remy Ma, who was in Bedford Hill Correctional Facility. Singles such as “Bet Ya Man Can’t (Triz)” and “The Hidden Hand” left fans looking for that Terror Squad album with the original cast members, but internal strife only allowed those tracks to bring those thoughts into fruition. The real album feature was of course the Ski-produced “John Blaze”, which featured Nas, Jadakiss, Raekwon and Pun, is still considered one of the greatest joint tracks ever laid.

The album’s commercial success reflected the response from the fans, being Joe’s first top ten Billboard 200 release, grabbing a A- from EW and selling 100,000 in its first week was right in line of the thinking of The Don. Within a month, Don Cartagena was certified gold by the RIAA.

Salute to Joe, Pun(RIP), the entire original Terror Squad, Just Blaze, Dame Grease, Preemo and everyone else involved in the making of this Hip Hop classic!

The post Today In Hip Hop History: Fat Joe’s Third LP ‘Don Cartagena’ Turns 25 Years Old! first appeared on The Source.

The post Today In Hip Hop History: Fat Joe’s Third LP ‘Don Cartagena’ Turns 25 Years Old! appeared first on The Source.

Lil Wayne’s ‘Kat Food’ Single Isn’t An Anthem For The Humane Society, But Rather A Raunchy Dedication To His Favorite Meal

Just days ago, Lil Wayne stepped back into the booth to re-imagine Undisputed’s theme song. Now, the rapper has turned his attention to righting a wrong from 2008. On his certified diamond song, “Lollipop,” he proudly proclaimed that the man’s nether regions were sweet like candy. But in his new single, “Kat Food,” he is returning that crown to the lady’s delicate part.

The record, co-produced by Charlie Handsome, FNZ, and Rogét Chahayed, is a raunchy dedication to one of Lil Wayne’s favorite meals, or so fans learned during his 2011 Nardwuar interview. Pulling in a sample of Missy Elliott’s 20o2 single “Work It,” Lil Wayne takes his time as he professes his love for cunnilingus.

By the titling of the track, the messaging may not be as clear, but when he raps, “I’m daydreamin’, I’m Codeinin’ / I’m slow walkin’, I’m floatin’, Houdini / My ho, she screamin’, for more, she fiendin’ / I just turned her daydreams to wet dreams, no bikini / Ooh, no bikini, ooh, no demeanor / I just put it all up in her face, woah, Noxzema / Bad b*tches all up on my case, no subpoena / Cat hangin’ out that catsuit, ooh, Serena / Ooh, Serena, ooh, Serena / Cat hanging out that catsuit, ooh, Serena / Woah, I eat her, like, hyena / Come here, girl, I got that cat food, ooh, Purina / Ooh, Purina, it’s wet, Katrina / Cat hangin’ out that catsuit, ooh, that cheetah,” there’s no grey area.

Listen to “Kat Food” above.

All The New Albums Coming Out In September 2023

Keeping track of all the new albums coming out in a given month is a big job, but we’re up for it: Below is a comprehensive list of the major releases you can look forward to in September. If you’re not trying to potentially miss out on anything, it might be a good idea to keep reading.

Friday, September 1

  • Bakar — Halo (Black Butter)
  • Blxst & Bino Rideaux — Sixtape 3 (EVGLE/Out The Blue/Def Jam/Red Bull Records)
  • Dope Lemon — Kimosabè (BMG)
  • Enola Gay — Casement EP (Modern Sky)
  • Field Medic — light is gone 2 (Run for Cover)
  • Firewind — Still Raging (AFM Records)
  • Frankie and the Witch Fingers — Data Doom (The Reverberation Appreciation Society)
  • Grandaddy — Sumday Twunny (Dangerbird Records)
  • Hey Colossus — In Blood (Wrong Speed Records)
  • Jeff Rosenstock — Hellmode (Polyvinyl Record Co.)
  • Joel Stoker — The Undertow (Cooking Vinyl)
  • Icona Pop — Club Romantech (TEN Music Group)
  • Illa J — No Traffic (Compound Entertainment/Def Jam)
  • Larry Fleet — Earned It (Big Loud Records)
  • Lathe of Heaven — Bound By Naked Skies (Sacred Bones)
  • Laya — Bet That EP (Warner)
  • MAY-A — Analysis Paralysis EP (Dot Dash/Remote Control Records)
  • Mick Harvey & Amanda Acevedo — Phantasmagoria in Blue (Mute)
  • midwxst — E3 (Geffen Records)
  • Mike Doughty’s Ghost of Vroom — Ghost of Vroom 3 (Mod Y VII)
  • mssv — Human Reaction (BIG EGO Records)
  • The Paper Kites — At the Roadhouse (Frontiers)
  • Phil Campbell and the Bastard Sons — Kings of the Asylum (Nuclear Blast Records)
  • The Pretenders — Relentless (Parlophone)
  • Puma Blue — Holy Waters (Blue Flowers Music)
  • Rae Fitzgerald — Say I Look Happy (Keeled Scales)
  • Slowdive — everything is alive (Dead Oceans)
  • Soen — Memorial (Silver Lining Music)
  • Speedy Ortiz — Rabbit Rabbit (Wax Nine)
  • Spirit of the Beehive — i’m so lucky EP (Saddle Creek)
  • Taking Meds — Dial M For Meds (Smartpunk Records)

Friday, September 8

  • 38 Spesh & Conway The Machine — Speshal Machinery (TFC Music Group)
  • Alabaster DePlume — Come With Fierce Grace (International Anthem Recording Company)
  • Allison Russell — The Returner (Fantasy Records)
  • Andy Taylor — Man’s A Wolf To A Man (BMG)
  • Angel Du$t — Brand New Soul (Pop Wig Records)
  • Anjimile — The King (4AD)
  • Ásgeir — Time on My Hands (Lo-Fi Version) (One Little Independent Records)
  • Ashley McBryde — The Devil I Know (Warner Music Nashville)
  • Benjamin Gustafsson — The Nature Within (Decca)
  • Blackbird Angels — Solsorte (Frontiers)
  • Buju Banton — Born for Greatness (Roc Nation)
  • caro — wild at <3 (PC Music)
  • The Chemical Brothers — For That Beautiful Feeling (EMI)
  • Childe — Stoned & Supremely Confident (Lower Third)
  • Coach Party — KILLJOY (Chess Club)
  • The Coral — Sea of Mirrors (Virgin Music International)
  • Courtney Barnett — End of the Day (Milk! Records)
  • Daiistar — Good Time (Fuzz Club)
  • Deeper — Careful! (Sub Pop)
  • DJ Slink — Bricks to the 6 EP (Defiant Records/Warner Records)
  • Durry — Suburban Legend (Big Pip Records)
  • d4vd — The Lost Petals EP (Darkroom/Interscope)
  • Everclear — Live at The Whisky a Go Go (Sunset Blvd Records)
  • The Flower Kings — Look At You Now (InsideOutMusic)
  • Gaika — Drift (Big Dada Recordings)
  • Greed Culture — The Death of US EP (Gravitas Recordings)
  • The Handsome Family — Hollow (V2 Records)
  • Heavy Makeup — Heavy Makeup (Shuffle Records)
  • Jalen Ngonda — Come Around And Love Me (Daptone Records)
  • James Blake — Playing Robots Into Heaven (Republic/Polydor)
  • Jess Nolan — ’93 (Righteous Babe Records)
  • Joan Osborne — Nobody Owns You (Womanly Hips Records)
  • Jobi Riccio — Whiplash (Yep Roc Records)
  • John Came — Rhythmicon (Mute)
  • John Fahey — Proofs and Refutations (Drag City)
  • Jon Langston — Heart On Ice (32 Bridge Entertainment/EMI Records Nashville)
  • Jonathan Wilson — Eat the Worm (BMG)
  • Kah-Lo — pain/pleasure (Epic Records)
  • Karkwa — Dans La Seconde (Audiogram)
  • Kvelertak — Endling (Rise Records/Petroleum Records)
  • Laufey — Bewitched (Laufey)
  • Lauren Daigle — Lauren Daigle (Atlantic/Centricity)
  • Lillie Mae & Family — Festival Eyes (S || C Records)
  • Low Cut Connie — Art Dealers (Contender Records)
  • Monolord — It’s All the Same EP (Relapse Records)
  • Nanci Griffith — Working in Corners (MCA Records)
  • Noah Gundersen — If This Is the End (Noah Gundersen)
  • Noisy — Fast Fwd: To Friday [Vol. 1] (Concord Records)
  • Olivia Rodrigo — Guts (Geffen)
  • The Postal Service — Everything Will Change (Sub Pop)
  • Proper. — Part-Timer EP (Father/Daughter Records)
  • Puddle of Mudd — Ubiquitous (Pavement Entertainment)
  • Róisín Murphy — Hit Parade (Ninja Tune)
  • Romy — Mid Air (Young)
  • Royal Blood — Back to the Water Below (Warner Records)
  • Sparklehorse — Bird Machine (ANTI‐)
  • Steep Canyon Rangers — Morning Shift (Yep Roc Records)
  • The String Cheese Incident — Lend Me a Hand (SCI Fidelity Records)
  • Tan Cologne — Pescetrullo (soundscapes) (Labrador Records)
  • Teezo Touchdown — How Do You Sleep At Night? (RCA)
  • Temps — After Party EP (Bella Union)
  • Thom Southern — So Long My Friend (Mighty Good Leader)
  • Tone Stith — P.O.V. (RCA)
  • Tyler Childers — Rustin’ in the Rain (Hickman Holler Records/RCA Records)
  • V — Layover (Big Hit Music)
  • Walter Etc. — When the Band Breaks Up Again (SideOneDummy Records)
  • With Honor — Boundless (Pure Noise)
  • Zeus — Credo (Arts & Crafts)
  • ZZ Ward — Dirty Shine (Dirty Shine)

Friday, September 15

  • Alan Palomo — World of Hassle (Mom+Pop)
  • Amindi — Take What You Need (EQT Recordings)
  • Bahamas — Bootcut (Brushfire Records)
  • Barenaked Ladies — In Flight (Raisin’ Records)
  • Baroness — Stone (Abraxan Hymns)
  • The Beaches — Blame My Ex (Island Records)
  • Bombino — Sahel (Partisan Records)
  • Bring Me the Horizon — POST HUMAN: NeX GEn (Columbia Records)
  • Briscoe — West of It All (ATO Records)
  • Brothers Osborne — Brothers Osborne (EMI Nashville)
  • Buffalo Nichols — The Fatalist (Fat Possum)
  • Chick Corea — Sardinia (Candid)
  • Corey Taylor — CMF2 (Decibel Cooper Recordings)
  • Corinne Bailey Rae — Black Rainbows (Thirty Tigers)
  • Couch Prints — Waterfall: Rebirth (Music Website)
  • Dan + Shay — Bigger Houses (Warner Music Nashville)
  • Danko Jones — Electric Sounds (AFM Records)
  • Delmur Darion — Tall Vision-of-the-Voyage (Practise Music Ltd)
  • Demi Lovato — Revamped (Island Records)
  • Dengue Fever — Ting Mong (TUK TUK Records)
  • Diddy — The Love Album: Off the Grid (Virgin Records)
  • Dude Cervantes — Dreamers (Blind Owl Records)
  • Explosions in the Sky — End (Temporary Residence Ltd)
  • FIZZ — The Secret to Life (Decca Records)
  • George Sanders and the Parallels — Hope Hotel EP (Bread & Butter Records)
  • Gum — Saturnia (Spinning Top)
  • Haley Blais — Wisecrack (Arts & Crafts)
  • Jono Manson — Stars Enough the Guide Me (Blue Rose Music)
  • K.Flay — MONO (Giant Music)
  • Kid Cudi — Insano (Wicked Awesome Records/Republic Records)
  • Kurt Elling and Charlie Hunter — SuperBlue: The Iridescent Spree (Edition Records)
  • La Doña — Can’t Eat Clout EP (Text Me Records)
  • Lewsberg — Out and About (Lewsberg Records)
  • Lizdelise — I Swore I Heard You Laughing (Sheer Luck Records)
  • Luluc — Diamonds (Community Music)
  • Madison Beer — Silence Between Songs (Epic Records)
  • Mae Muller — Sorry I’m Late (Universal Music/Capitol Records)
  • Margo Cilker — Valley of Heart’s Delight (Fluff & Gravy)
  • Maura Weaver — I Was Due For a Heartbreak (Don Giovanni Records)
  • Matthew Shipp — The Intrinsic Nature of Shipp (Mahakala Music)
  • Mike Flannery — Goodtime Charlie (Omn Label Services)
  • Mike Mains & The Branches — Memory Unfixed (Tooth & Nail)
  • Mitski — The Land Is Inhospitable and So Are We (Dead Oceans)
  • Nation of Language — Strange Disciple ([PIAS] Recordings)
  • Neal Morse — The Dreamer — Joseph: Part One (Frontiers)
  • NEEDTOBREATHE — CAVES (Universal)
  • Octo Octa — Dreams of a Dancefloor EP (T4T LUV NRG)
  • Office Dog — Spiel (Flying Nun Records)
  • Polo G — Hood Poet (Columbia)
  • Princess Goes — Come of Age (SO In De Goot)
  • Public Speaking — An Apple Lodged in My Back (Whited Sepulchre)
  • Ralphie Choo — Supernova (Rusia IDK/Warner)
  • Rasheed Chappell — Sugar Bills (Perfect Timing Music)
  • The Record Company — The 4th Album (Round Hill Records)
  • RL Grime — PLAY (Virgin Music Australia)
  • Ronnie Romero — Too Many Lies, Too Many Masters (Frontiers)
  • S. Carey & John Raymond — Shadowlands (Libellule)
  • Salem Ilese — High Concept (TenThousand Projects)
  • Sarah Jane Scouten — Turned to Gold (Light Organ Records)
  • Sarah Mary Chadwick — Messages To God (Kill Rock Stars)
  • Sextile — Push (Sacred Bones)
  • Shakey Graves — Movie of the Week (Dualtone Records)
  • Sierra — A Story of Anger (Virgin Records France)
  • Small Crush — Penelope (Asian Man Records)
  • Staind — Confessions of the Fallen (Alchemy Recordings/BMG)
  • Static Dress — Rouge Carpet Disaster (Redux) (Roadrunner Records)
  • Stephen Marley — Old Soul (Tuff Gong Collective/UMe/Ghetto Youths International)
  • STRABE — How Our Love Grows ([PIAS])
  • Steve Miller — J50: The Evolution of The Joker (Universal)
  • The Strangers — The Stranglers (Flail Records)
  • Sydney Sprague — somebody in hell loves you (Rude Records)
  • Thirty Seconds to Mars — It’s The End Of The World But It’s A Beautiful Day (Concord)
  • Tony Jay — Perfect Worlds (Slumberland Records)
  • Trevor Hall — Trevor Hall and the Great In Between (3 Rivers)
  • Tyler Booth — Keep it Real EP (Sony Music Nashville)
  • Vagabon — Sorry I Haven’t Called (Nonesuch Records)
  • Vic Mensa — Victor (Roc Nation Records)
  • Wheeler Walker Jr. — Ram (Pepperhill Music LLC)
  • Will Johnson — No Ordinary Crown (Keeled Scales)
  • Willie Nelson — Bluegrass (Sony Musique)
  • Woods — Perennial (Woodsist)
  • Worriers — Trust Your Gut (Ernest Jenning Record Co.)
  • Yann Tiersen — Kerber Complete (Mute)

Friday, September 22

  • 2Rare — Rare Story Pt. 2 (Second Estate/Warner Records)
  • A Certain Ratio — 2023 EP (Mute)
  • Adam Melchor — Fruitland EP (Warner Records)
  • Al Menne — Freak Accident (Double Double Whammy)
  • Amindi — Take What You Need (EQT Recordings)
  • Another Michael — Wishes to Fulfill (Run For Cover)
  • Arny Margret — dinner alone EP (One Little Independent Records)
  • Babe Rainbow — Mushroom EP (Century Records)
  • Ben Goldsmith — The World Between My Ears (Sme Nashville)
  • Benét — Can I go again? (Bayonet Records)
  • Bibio — Sunbursting EP (Warp Records)
  • Big Wett — P*SSY EP (PIAS)
  • Bleach Lab — Lost in a Rush of Emptiness (Nettwerk)
  • Brent Cobb — Southern Star (Ol’ Buddy Records/Thirty Tigers)
  • Buddy Miller & Julie Miller — In The Throes (New West Records)
  • Cannibal Corpse — Chaos Horrific (Metal Blade Records)
  • Carriers — Blue EP (Apollonia)
  • Chappell Roan — The Rise and Fall of a Midwest Princess (Amusement/Island Records)
  • Colleen — Le jour et la nuit du réel (Thrill Jockey)
  • corook — serious person (part 2) EP (Atlantic)
  • Dead Feathers — Full Circle (Ripple Music)
  • Declan Welsh & The Decadent West — 2 (Frictionless Music)
  • Devendra Banhart — Flying Wig (Mexican Summer)
  • Doja Cat — Scarlet (RCA)
  • Dominique Fils-Aimé — Our Roots Run Deep (Ensoul Records)
  • Emily Kinney — Swimteam (Jullian Records)
  • Femke — Safe in the Suburbs (Enci Records)
  • Grails — Anches En Maat (Temporary Residence Ltd)
  • Grrrl Gang — Spunky! (Green Island Records)
  • heka — swan songs EP (Practise Music)
  • Helena Hauff — fabric presents Helena Hauff (Fabric)
  • The Holy Ghost — Ignore Alien Orders (Lövely Records)
  • Jenny Owen Youngs — Avalanche (Yep Roc Records)
  • JOHN — A Life Diagrammatic (Brace Yourself)
  • JP Saxe — A Grey Area (Arista Records)
  • Kid Francescoli — Sunset Blue (Alter K)
  • Kylie Minogue — Tension (BMG)
  • Laurel Halo — Atlas (Awe)
  • Mad Honey — Satellite Aphrodite (Deathwish Inc)
  • Le Couleur — Comme dans un penthouse (Lisbon Lux)
  • Loraine James — Gentle Confrontation (Hyperdub)
  • Lydia Loveless — Nothing’s Gonna Stand in My Way Again (Bloodshot)
  • Matteo Bocelli — Matteo (Capitol Records)
  • Mykki Blanco — Postcards from Italia EP (Transgressive)
  • NZCA Lines — Universal Heartbreak EP (Memphis Industries)
  • Parmalee — For You 2 (BBR Music Group)
  • Paul Rodgers — Midnight Rose (Sun Records)
  • Petey — USA (Capitol Records)
  • Pkew Pkew Pkew — Siiick Days (Stomp Records)
  • POSTDATA — Run Wild (Paper Bag Records)
  • Radian — Distorted Rooms (Thrill Jockey)
  • Roosevelt — Embrace (Counter Records)
  • Samantha Urbani — Showing Up (Lucky Number)
  • Shadwick Wilde — Easy Rider (SofaBurn Records)
  • Slaughter Beach, Dog — Crying, Laughing, Waving, Smiling (Lame-O Records)
  • Soccer Mommy — Karaoke Night EP (Loma Vista)
  • Stephen Sanchez — Angel Face (Republic)
  • Stu Brooks — 40HZ (Dine Alone Records)
  • Teenage Fanclub — Nothing Lasts Forever (Merge)
  • Teenage Sequence — Teenage Sequence (Dischord Records)
  • Will Butler + Sister Squares — Will Butler + Sister Squares (Merge)
  • Yeule — Softscars (Ninja Tune)
  • Yoke Lore — Toward a Never Ending New Beginning (Yell House Records)
  • zzzahara — Tender (Lex Records)

Friday, September 29

  • Addison Grace — Driving Lessons (AWAL)
  • Andrew Cushin — Waiting For the Rain (Strap Originals)
  • Animal Collective — Isn’t It Now? (Domino)
  • Armand Hammer — We Buy Diabetic Test Strips (Fat Possum Records)
  • Beverley Knight — The Fifth Chapter (Tag8/BMG)
  • Blanco White — Tarifa (Nettwerk)
  • Blonde Redhead — Sit Down for Dinner (Partisan Records)
  • Blue October — Spinning the Truth Around Part 2 (Frontiers)
  • Boy Named Banjo — Dusk (Mercury Records Nashville)
  • Career Woman — Grapevine EP (Lauren Records)
  • Charley Crockett — Live from The Ryman (Son of Davy/Thirty Tigers)
  • Charlie Vettuno — Lime Juice EP (Innovative Leisure)
  • Cherry Glazerr — I Don’t Want You Anymore (Secretly Canadian)
  • Code Orange — The Above (Blue Grape Music)
  • Datarock — Media Consumption Pyramid (YAP Records)
  • David Eugene Edwards — Hyacinth (Sargent House)
  • Diamond Dogs — About the Hardest Nut to Crack ( Wild Kingdom Records)
  • Ed Sheeran — Autumn Variations (Gingerbread Man Records)
  • Equipment — Alt. Account (Klepto Phase)
  • Eric Hilton — Corazón Kintsugi (Montserrat House)
  • Fast Romantics — Happiness + Euphoria (Postwar Records)
  • Feid — Mor No Le Temas A La Oscuridad (Universal Music Latino)
  • Gangar — Stubb (Laterna Records)
  • Girl Scout — Granny Music EP (Made Records)
  • Grove Street — The Path to Righteousness (UNFD)
  • Heavy Lungs — All Gas No Brakes (Alcopop! Records)
  • hemlocke springs — going…going…GONE! EP (AWAL)
  • Jeremiah Chiu — In Electric Time (International Anthem)
  • Jerry David Decicca — New Shadows (Bwatue Records)
  • Jlin — Perspective (Planet Mu)
  • Jorja Smith — Falling or Flying (FAMM)
  • Kamaal Williams — Stings (Black Focus Records)
  • Karen Harding — Take Me Somewhere (Ultra Records)
  • Kevin Krash — Harsh (Krashed)
  • Koyo — Would You Miss It? (Pure Noise Records)
  • La Force — XO SKELETON (Secret City)
  • Lindsay Lou — Queen of Time (Kill Rock Stars)
  • LP — Love Lines (Better Noise Music)
  • Lucia & The Best Boys — Burning Castles (Communion Records)
  • Lucy Gaffney — Daydream In Tokyo EP (Nettwerk)
  • Melenas — Ahora (Trouble in Mind Records)
  • Modern Nature — No Fixed Point in Space (Bella Union)
  • Molly Burch — Daydreamer (Captured Tracks)
  • No-No Boy — Empire Electric (Smithsonian Folkways)
  • Oh Land — Loop Soup (Tusk or Tooth)
  • Old Man Canyon — So Long Babylon EP (Nettwerk)
  • Oliver Tree — Alone in a Crowd (Atlantic)
  • Oneohtrix Point Never — Again (Warp)
  • The Orb and David Gilmour — Metallic Spheres in Colour (Sony)
  • Pachyman — Switched-On (Universal)
  • Ricky Montgomery — Rick (Warner Records)
  • Setting — Shone a Rainbow Light On (Paradise Of Bachelor)
  • Skam — No Name (Drag City)
  • Sleep Theory — Paper Hearts EP (Epitaph Records)
  • Slow Pulp — Yard (ANTI-)
  • Steven Wilson — THE HARMONY CODEX (Virgin/SW Records)
  • thanks for coming — What is My Capacity to Love? EP (Danger Collective Records)
  • Thomas Rhett — 20 Number Ones (The Valory Music Co.)
  • The Vaughns — Egg Everything (Equal Vision Records)
  • Viken Arman — Alone Together (Denature Records)
  • Wilco — Cousin (dBpm)

Some artists covered here are Warner Music artists. Uproxx is an independent subsidiary of Warner Music Group.

Chance The Rapper’s Tour Of Europe With Macklemore Was His ‘Toughest Challenge’ For Several Reasons

For new hip-hop fans, it may be hard to recall when Chance The Rapper was the genre’s golden child. But as the Chicago native continues to celebrate the 10th anniversary of his breakout mixtape Acid Rap, his impact on the culture and his fellow emcees is reentering mainstream consciousness. However, according to Chance, he didn’t always feel appreciated.

During a sit down with Apple Music’s Ebro Darden on The Ebro Show, the entertainer opened up about the more difficult points of his career.

“The toughest challenge I ever experienced was I went on tour with Macklemore,” said Chance.

He quickly clarified that the stain had nothing to do with his past collaborator, adding, “Macklemore is an amazing, amazing person and helped me out tremendously as well. But his shows were in Europe, and I think it was 38 dates, all 20,000 capacity rooms, all like off markets, too, like Poland and Dusseldorf. These people didn’t speak English at all. And not only did they not speak English, he sold out all these shows before I was announced on the ticket.”

Chance continued, “So it’s really bad when you go to a show, and there’s an opener that you don’t want to see. It’s way worse when it’s a surprise opener that you don’t want to see. That’s speaking a different language and Black, a lot of negatives on top of each other for the Swedish crowds. So I’m dealing with that.”

All in all, eventually, Chance used that experience to help improve his performance and as fuel for when it was his tour to headline. “When I came home, I got to finally feel at the end of that year when I went on my own solo tour, I got to feel having my own crowd, selling my own tickets and really built my whole off that tour,” he exclaimed.

Fast-forward to the present day, there aren’t many people who don’t know in some shape or form who Chance The Rapper is.

Charleston White Spotted Getting Into Yet Another Public Altercation

Another day, another video of Charleston White beefing with some in public. While he wasn’t macing or stabbing anyone this time, the self-proclaimed Holocaust denier was still looking to start shit. The video in question appears to come from a boxing event that White was attending. “Shut your bitch ass up, n*gga,” White is seen yelling at an unknown target in the crowd. “Shut your bitch ass up,” he repeats. Someone in the arena can be heard yelling back at White, who responds, “Shut up n*gga, I don’t even fucking know you.” The video has since been removed from TikTok.

This is tame in comparison to White’s other recent public outings. However, it just goes to show that the man can’t go anywhere without starting something with someone. The reposted clip from DJ Akademiks likens White to 2Pac which, okay. Weird comparison and kind of an insult to Pac but whatever. Nothing appears to have come of the verbal altercation. However, if anything does arise, we’ll keep you updated here at HotNewHipHop.

Read More: Charleston White’s Instagram deleted for a fourth time

Charleston White Goes Viral With Brittany Renner

Of course, jawing at someone at a boxing event isn’t the only reason people are talking about Charleston White. Earlier this week, footage of influencer Brittany Renner giving White a lap dance went viral on social media. The viral moment occurred during a podcast appearance on White’s show. Things came to an abrupt end when Renner poured water of the both of them and a producer had to step in to avoid the equipment getting damaged.

Things escalated when people unearthed an old clip of White discussing Renner. “We fucking like a motherfucker,” White said on a hypothetical in which Renner slid into his DMs. “Ima be doing what she doing. Ima show up with condoms with holes poked in ’em. Cause she playin’ dirty I’m playin’ dirty.” As always, White continues to be the most charming and eloquent personality who we have decided is worthy of our attention right now.

Read More: Charleston White cries while trying to walk back Nazi salute, Holocaust denial

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The post Charleston White Spotted Getting Into Yet Another Public Altercation appeared first on HotNewHipHop.

JID & Lil Yachty Offer Two-Track EP “Blakkboyz Present Half Doin Dope/Van Gogh”

JID and Lil Yachty are two artists who are known for operating within two different lanes. Firstly, the former is an incredible MC when it comes to rapping fast while also telling a story. Secondly, Yachty is mostly known for his ability to give you autotuned melodies and a mix of genres. However, he has proven himself to be quite the spitter when he wants to be. That said, it still felt pretty unlikely that these two would come through with a collaborative song or even a project.

However, they stunned fans this week when they revealed that they would drop two new tracks together. They are doing so under the duo name Blakkboyz, and fans are curious if this could lead to a new album. That said, they are testing the waters with these two songs. The first of these songs is called “Half Doin Dope” which features BabyTron. Moreover, they also came through with Van Gogh, which doesn’t have any other artists listed.

Read More: Rappers Like Baby Keem: JID, Smino, Denzel Curry & More

JID x Lil Yachty

Overall, both of these tracks are packed with energy. JID brings his usual speedy flow to the table, and interestingly enough, Yachty matches him. It makes for two dynamic songs that are bolstered by a BabyTron feature that has all of the personality you would expect. If you like these artists, you are going to have to give this a listen, immediately.

Let us know which of these two tracks from Lil Yachty and JID are your favorite, in the comments section below. Additionally, stay tuned to HNHH for more news and updates from around the music world. We will be sure to always bring you the biggest releases from all of the biggest artists.

Quotable Lyrics From Half Doin Dope:

I come from Atlanta, I’m Tony, I’m Tony Montana
I total my toe on my tag
And my brodie told me put my dope in a rap
While he rappin’, dope, he put his hope in the trap
In a total package, I don’t know if he baggin’

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Meek Mill Announces His New Album Is A Sequel To “Championships”

Meek Mill has been cooking up some new music recently. A couple of videos have emerged of the rapper hitting the studio in recent months. Among the most notable was a link-up with Rick Ross that hit the internet and left fans excited about a potential future collab. Subsequently, Meek may have just taken to his Instagram story to share some details on what he’s got coming next. He shared a picture to his Instagram story of a new album called CHAMPIONSHIPS 2: DON’T FOLLOW THE HEATHENS.

The project appears to be a sequel to his 2018 album Championships, a fan favorite. The project saw Meek Mill teaming up with an incredible roster of talent including Drake, Cardi B, Future, Young Thug, 21 Savage, Jay-Z, and many more. Additionally the album spawned a few massive hits like “Going Bad” with Drake, “Dangerous” with Jeremih and PnB Rock, and “24/7” with Ella Mai. Now, Meek appears to be following things up with a sequel to the album 5 years later. In the picture, he shared the album appears to be 31 tracks long with a 91-minute runtime. There aren’t many other details like a release date to be found though. Check out the Instagram story post below.

Read More: Meek Mill Credits Jadakiss For “Guiding” Him In His Youth

Meek Mill Teases “Championships” Sequel

Meek has also recently shifted his focus to social justice causes. Recently, he’s spoken publicly about the ways that the rap industry encourages dangerous behavior to increase profit. He claimed that record labels are profiting off of “black murder and poverty” while also claiming that they are operating “without consequences.”

In another statement he made he explained that rappers are often paid more to purposefully sound ignorant. Consequently he explained that the subject matter pushed by labels is directly harmful to the black community. “The things that fund us, don’t power me forward,” his statement concluded. What do you think of Meek Mill releasing a sequel to one of his most beloved albums? Let us know in the comment section below.

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Shaq Speaks On Massive Weight Loss

Shaq recently opened up about his recent efforts to lose weight. “I was getting chubby and couldn’t even walk up the stairs, I didn’t like the way I looked in the mirror, he told Entertainment Tonight. “I was like ‘I’m gonna lose 20’ and then I was trying to lose 20.” The weight loss journey began in December 2022, when a routine medical checkup revealed that it might do the NBA legend some good to lose some weight. “I got a couple people involved — it’s all about eating right. He continued. “A friend of mine called me and said, ‘You’re fat,’ and she gave me this guy’s name, and he did some blood work, and you know, ’cause I was the athlete — I wasn’t a salad eater.

Furthermore, Shaq confessed to his ignorance. “I won’t pay attention to any of that, I don’t care about none of that. I didn’t know what the difference between a carb and a protein, at 50 years old I never knew. So, he was saying you can’t do this, you can’t do that, more vegetables, my iron’s low,” he explained. However, Shaq went on to reveal that he has now dropped 55 lbs but is far from finished. “I’m probably gonna get between 315 and 330,” he added. 315 lbs was the weight Shaq was listed at during the 2006 season when he won a ring with the Heat. During his Lakers days with Kobe, Shaq had weighed as much as 395 lbs.

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Shaq Drops 55 lbs

As mentioned, Shaq’s end goal is to get back to his peak weight from his playing days. That 2006 title run represented the final year before Shaq’s career dropped off. The 2006/07 season, in which the Heat became the first defending champs since 1957 to be swept in the first round, was the first time Shaq didn’t up at least 20 ppg. Granted, he was limited to just 40 games, but it really was the beginning on the end of the NBA great.

Aside from pursuing his weight loss goals, Shaq is also preparing for his “The Event”. It’s an annual fundraiser thrown by Shaq to support the Boys & Girls Club of America. The charitable act dates back to philanthropy performed by Shaq in his rookie season. Meanwhile, Shaq was also seen helping out families earlier this year. The NBA great was spotted at Home Depot buying a family in need a washer and dryer. Furthermore, he was also spotted buying bikes and laptops and Walmart and the Apple Store.

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