Before The Roots became known as the band we love today on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, they spent their time playing at a Philadelphia strip club, where they actually had their big break, according to Questlove. As Page Six reports, the drummer recently appeared on a new podcast – Til This Day with Radio Rahim – and opened up about the group’s humble beginnings.
Back in the day, The Roots’ rise to local success was thanks to the “Ivy League route, playing college frat parties,” Quest explained, also mentioning that another hot spot in Philly was “a talent night for rap groups at this strip club called the Princess Lounge at North Philly.”
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“We walk into the Princess Lounge and I’m hella esoteric. I’m wearing Birkenstocks,” the 51-year-old recalled. “And they’re just looking at us like, ‘You’re wearing Birkenstocks in North Philadelphia?'”
Thankfully, Questlove and company’s musical talent was able to win the audience over, and as fate would have it, a local legend saw their potential and decided to help them achieve greatness.
“One of the guys happened to be a local college radio DJ legend named AJ Shine,” the Oscar-winner told Rahim during their interview. “[He] told the band, ‘Yo, I want to record you all. Let’s do a 12-inch single.”
“That 12-inch single winds up being an EP, which then winds up being [a] 16-song record, which then winds up being kind of our demo. And within a year’s time, we finally get a record deal.”
The Roots would go on to share their first album, Organix, in 1993 and have achieved a total of three Grammy wins and 14 nominations over the years.
Check out Questlove’s full interview on Til This Day with Radio Rahim below.
Twitter has been a more interesting place since Elon Musk acquired it, although the 50-year-old revealed via the app on Sunday that he has a sneaking suspicion that the Russian government has their eyes on him. “If I die under mysterious circumstances, it’s been nice knowin ya,” he wrote on May 8th.
As TMZ notes, Musk’s ominous post came shortly after Russia’s Chief of Space Agency Dmitry Rogozin sent a message to the country’s media accusing the engineer of assisting Ukraine in their ongoing battle against the Kremlin. “Elon Musk, thus, is involved in supplying the fascist forces in Ukraine with military communication equipment,” Rogozin wrote.
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“And for this, Elon, you will be held accountable like an adult,” he continued, “No matter how much you’ll play the fool.”
As we previously reported, when the war was first breaking out, Musk did his part to aid Ukraine by sending over some of his Starlink terminals to ensure that the country maintained a strong internet connection (a critical link in fighting) while Russia attempts to disable it.
“From the testimony of the captured commander of the 35th Marine Brigade of the Armed Forces of Ukraine, Colonel Dmitry Kormyankov, it turns out that the internet terminals of Elon Musk’s Starlink satellite company were delivered to the militants of the Nazi Azov Battalion and the Ukrainian Marines in Mariupol by military helicopters,” Rogozin wrote in his message to the media.
While several users were amused by the CEO’s message, his mother, Maye Musk, expressed her disapproval – check it out below, and tap back in with HNHH later for more pop culture news updates.
Denzel Curry has declared himself to be the “best rapper alive” following the release of his latest album, Melt My Eyez See Your Future. The Florida rapper discussed where he ranks in the rap game during an interview with XXL published on Monday.
“Just look out for me,” Curry told the outlet. “Look out for any of the next projects that’s ’bout to come out. I’m ’bout to shake the whole game up. I don’t care what anybody got to say, bro. I’m the best rapper alive. Point blank, period.”
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He also spoke about how hip hop has evolved over the years, and how he’s responded to it with his own music. Curry’s first studio album, Nostalgic 64, was released back in 2013.
“Then everybody wanted to be trap,” Curry said. “Then everybody wanted to be sad. I’m watching all that stuff evolve over time. The way that hip-hop is going right now, it feels like a hybrid. But you gotta remember, hip-hop is always gonna change. That’s something I even had to realize doing it.”
Melt My Eyez See Your Future was released on March 25, 2022. The project included features from T-Pain, 6lack, Rico Nasty, JID, Jasiah, 454, Slowthai, and more.
While Curry was quite confident in his abilities during the interview, on Sunday night he had a different tone in response to Kendrick Lamar releasing “The Heart Part 5.” He took to Twitter to write that he has to step his game up after hearing the track.
Chris Brown’s new album is finally nearing a release. The R&B singer took to Instagram to announce that the long-awaited Breezy is set to arrive sometime next month.
“BREEZY ALBUM JUNE,” he wrote in an Instagram Story, while reiterating the June date in a post.
It’s been over two years in the making. Back in July 2020, Chris announced his 10th studio album Breezy, which has spawned a pair of singles, “WE (Warm Embrace)” and “Iffy.”
Chris, who celebrated his 33rd birthday last week, previously revealed that the follow-up to 2019’s Indigo will contain 16 tracks, like his 2005 self-titled debut. “The amount of songs on this one will be the same amount of songs as my first album. KEEP IT CLASSIC… Chris Brown to BREEZY!” he told fans.
After the album drops, Chris will hit the road with Lil Baby on their “One of Them Ones” joint tour, starting July 15 in Raleigh, North Carolina. The 27-date North American trek includes stops in New York, Boston, Toronto, Chicago, Atlanta, Houston, and Los Angeles, wrapping Aug. 27 in Las Vegas.
Killer Mike, one half of Run The Jewels and recent Ozark star, has long been a vocal advocate of marijuana — both as a medicine and as a creative tool that has helped pull his mile-a-minute mind in focus. Which made him a natural fit to host Weedmaps’ excellent new docuseries, Tumbleweeds. The four-part docuseries follows Killer Mike as he explores the unique cannabis cultures of Las Vegas, San Francisco, New York, and Chicago and chops it up with comedians, cannabis advocates, and business owners in an effort to paint cannabis legalization in a more positive light by showing how weed can tie communities together.
Tumbleweeds is a fun watch that remains as entertaining as it is educational, much of that thanks to Killer Mike’s personality — which can turn from jovial to intensely thoughtful on a dime. We experienced this first hand when we linked up with the rapper and activist to discuss the series, weed policy, restitution for the Black, Indigenous, and People of Color (BIPOC) who helped popularize marijuana in the United States, and some radical (but necessary) efforts that states can — and should — make as we steadily march toward federal legalization.
Check out the full discussion below and be sure to catch the final episode of Tumbleweeds on May 8th or all four parts on May 15th on VICE TV and Vice TV Streaming apps.
Something I really like and appreciate about the new series is that it takes what has been a familiar and frankly racist framework — this idea that “pot destroys communities” — and kind of flips that on its head to show how cannabis can be an integral part of communities. Was that the intention going in? Or was it more about exploring the unique cultures of each respective city?
I think it was all of that at one time. I think the best entertainer in the circus is the juggler. I think that when you can show the interconnectivity between things, the better. Not only do we show that pot is a healer, but pot also helps with PTSD, we show pot from an artistic perspective in the museum. We got an opportunity, we got a chance to show that pot smokers are normal regular human beings leading normal regular lives who use this plant versus other medicines.
We got a chance to show that local businesses that grow around pot — whether it was pizza or candy or fine dining — we got an opportunity to really see the interconnectedness of it all. If you look at pot culture from a pot smoker’s perspective, like say the Rastafarians, pot has been used in a bunch of different things. Everything from using hemp to create tools and papers to smoking marijuana, using it in religious rituals and things, so I think that the stoner community already knew that pot exists or cannabis exists in a lot of different places for a lot of different reasons.
What to me was the curveball but I really thought was interesting was adding comedians. Comedians… they take our pain and make us laugh at it and that brings joy. But they’re very, very observational… and usually very smart in some capacity, and I really enjoyed the conversations that I had with comedians.
I enjoyed going to local businesses, and enjoyed meeting the advocates too, but getting the chance to meet people who make people smile for a living and who are users of pot really was an interesting curveball that got thrown in, so it didn’t get too serious. It didn’t get too heavy. It didn’t get too long or instructional. Really remained fun from start to finish.
Is there anything you would say that you learned in this process that you didn’t know of beforehand?
Damn near too much shit to list. What I really enjoyed was talking to — and I’m sorry, I can’t remember her name [Charissa Jackson], “pot does rob the memory,” Kris Kristofferson said that. This young lady was a veteran and an advocate for veterans’ rights around PTSD and pot. I have a sincere reverence for people who’ve served in our US military. It’s not like I want a war machine marching across the earth but any young person who signs up from 18 to 22 and gives part of their life, a very young, whimsical part of their life… They give that to the United States military. I believe they shouldn’t have to pay interest on a home loan. I believe they should be first in line for lower taxes. I really have a reverence for them.
So to see someone give a damn about veterans in a way that made her an advocate for marijuana usage. Someone that’s helping on the Hill, helping Washington come to their senses about medicine via the cannabis plant versus appeal with the VA meant a lot to me.
Fab Five Freddy and the brother that moved from, I think it was down in Louisiana, who had served 13 years I believe for two joints. You have to understand, Fab Five Freddy in my life has been an art teacher, and music director. He has introduced me to culture and this is just from a kid watching him prior to MTV and MTV. But to see him now as an advocate and an ally in terms of pushing legalization or decriminalization were two things I can really say I walked away from the interview much smarter from and much more determined to help normalize cannabis in this country.
Why were the cities of Las Vegas, San Francisco, New York, and Chicago the cities settled on in the series? As someone who was born and raised in and around Southern California’s cannabis culture, I actually appreciate how you skipped over Los Angeles, which I feel gets too much of the spotlight.
Los Angeles is a hell of a city but Northern California still has better weed. I just got to be frank about that. Shoutout to Satellite OG, shoutout to Berner and Cookies, shout out to Lemonade, shoutout to a few other brands that I’ve smoked great weed from but those hippies in Northern California sure know what the fuck they’re doing.
Illinois as a state is lightyears ahead of the state I’m in, Georgia, and I thought Illinois decriminalizing and making use for recreational use was brilliant. Chicago was dope in terms of the artwork that I got to see there. It was dope in terms of comedy and it was dope in terms of having some fire bud in that motherfucker, I gotta be frank,
Vegas… in my opinion, gambling doesn’t want anything to get too in a way of gambling, some of the restrictions were a little tighter for me, a little more uncomfortable until you got into shops. Once you got into the shops, the people were amazing, the way they educated you about the brands was amazing. But in terms of the laws, you can tell that Vegas is not going to let cannabis and prostitution compete with gambling.
When I was walking back into the casino, I remember one of the doormen, he was a young Black guy, he walked to me and said, “Mike, I’m not tripping on you but I’m gonna tell you sometimes they trip on guys who come in with the Cookies bags and whatnot so next time just put it into your bookbag” and I was like “oh, shit.”
The casinos really don’t want you so high that you can’t leave your room, they need you out there pulling that slot machine.
New York is much more conservative than I thought it would be. I can literally buy weed right on the corner in front of the store where we were eating CBD chocolates. But yet it hasn’t made it inside the store. But they don’t trip about you standing around smoking weed, so I’m not tripping on that, but I’d like for them to get a little more progressive.
SF is just the capital of marijuana in my mind. If you’re not talking Amsterdam, you’re talking Northern California. When I’m in Amsterdam, they ask you for Northern California seeds. So shouts out to Northern Cali because that’s just the best OG Kush in the world.
In the past, you’ve mentioned that BIPOC deserve a considerable share of the marijuana industry for helping to popularize it. Agreed, can you tell us how you envision that specifically?
I would envision it the same way politicians who envision bullshit laws that allow six licenses for a whole state would envision it. If Georgians are made up of 35% Black people, then 35% of the licenses should go to Black people. And those Black people should have to partner because you’ve got the Black bourgeoisie, being from Atlanta I’m gonna tell you, you got Black Republicans, you got Black bourgeoisie, Black circles that want to keep it in there. You should have to partner with someone convicted of a marijuana felony. Now that’s radical, and that’s some American shit because we were started by a group of motherfuckers who didn’t want to pay taxes.
What I would say is you would have to partner with say a group of Black money or capital investors, they would have to partner with a former Kingpin and then I would bring in business mediators and help those people build the industry from the ground up and I would allow those licenses to be free-flowing and not be so constricted that no one else could make it into the market.
Our first Black mayor was a man named Maynard Jackson and Maynard Jackson made it so that if you wanted a city contract with the city of Atlanta, at least 29% of your company had to be black or people of color. So all of a sudden you saw businesses opening up partnerships and opening up subcontractors and things of that nature and it grew a Black working class and middle class and it gave us 60 years of successful mayors, our economy has grown, even through this COVID thing, our economy is great.
I’m only speaking locally because I do my work locally — 35% of these motherfuckers Black? 35% of licenses should be Black! They should have to partner with people convicted of marijuana convictions, and in terms of dispensaries, there damn sure should be an unlimited amount you put out there. You should be able to open up a dispensary with the minimal amount of shelf, you shouldn’t have to have $150,000 liquid and no shit like that you should be able to open up a dispensary if you’re an old lady, you grow your plants and you sell it curbside like a lemonade stand in the summer.
…If you can’t tell I put a little thought into this.
You mentioned some states and they all approach cannabis differently. In your opinion, what state is really doing it right and how can others do it better? Aside from what you just laid out, of course.
I like what Illinois did going straight to recreational — I don’t think they did the hump of a strict medical thing first. I like how Colorado was putting money back into the school systems and improving the school system. I don’t think we have had the best version yet. Because we do not have the right people advising. We need people convicted of marijuana convictions at the table with lawmakers making the law, it should not just be conglomerates and lobbyists or corporations that want to get into medical now.
It should be Black farmers who have been for the last 80 and 100 years cut out of many industries in this country. It should be people who were victims, people you would call Kingpins of bullshit drug laws, many of which our current president helped to instate. It should be those people at the table and it should be common folk, recreational marijuana users helping to shape the laws that are going to go forward. We should not be restrictive like the prohibition was with liquor, we should not only allow four, five, or six licenses and we should not cut and carve regions so that only politicians and their friends, or companies get them, we should make it less restrictive.
We should have less licensing in terms of keeping a tight hold on the money that gets sucked into taxes. We should make it from day one, the time you open your dispensary, the time you get your first dollar for a marijuana sale, you should be able to bank in the United States. You should be able to put that money in a bank, it is a shame that people who run dispensaries have to worry about robbery, have to worry about seizures, have to worry about ATF, and the alphabet boys because they simply cannot bank. So all those I would bring to the table and I would put a particular interest in Black banks like my bank Greenwood, like Citizens Trust Bank, like Carver — I’d put a particular interest in Latino banks because who were the people used to villainize marijuana? Black people and Mexicans.
I’d try to make some restitution by providing opportunity. I’d allow the people to shape the laws on the ground to be everyone from everyday stoners and smokers that go to work to people that have served long, lengthy marijuana sentences for kingpin drug laws. I’d bring people who are already in the industry as outlaws the people who are growing and people going against the government now and choosing to do it in terms of helping the free, I’d make sure the people who’ve been involved in NORML for the last 40 years have a seat at the table and get an opportunity to talk.
It’s time for the people that use marijuana to make the rules for marijuana and not the other way around.
I know you’re a fan of indica strains, I’m just curious, what about indicas appeal to you particularly?
I’m naturally hyper — my mind naturally is moving on 100 different things at 100 miles per hour 100 times a day. And indicas allow me a very dense body high, and even cerebral, that allows me to focus in on one or two things that I need to get done. Even when I go for my walks in the morning or running around the gym, with a indica high by the time I realize I’m in pain the workout is almost over.
Although sativas are credited with being cerebral, I think if you’re a person whose mind moves a lot that indicas are great for you because they put you at calm. When I wake up in the morning and do breathing exercises or yoga or tai chi or whatever the fuck my wife has me doing, it’s cool to take a couple of puffs off one of these [gestures to the lit joint in his hand] and settle myself and not think about the other things that are going on.
And that the grandfather of it all, that OG Kush — I like to smoke it. Curren$y’s a big fan of it. There’s just nothing that’s as mellow and cool. Indicas fulfill the stereotype of marijuana being a thing that puts you in a very cool vibe, you know what I mean? It’s one of the reasons I love it.
And just as my last question, I’m curious– and you kind of alluded to it a little bit just now — if you could take us through your typical smoking ritual.
I get up and roll three of these a day. I wake and bake, I get up and do my walks, or I do the tai chi or yoga stuff. I smoke about a quarter of this and then when I’m done with that, I’ll finish the other three quarters over the process of the next two hours or so. I’ll grab food in the afternoon, I try to wait to eat till about 12 or 1 now. Usually, after I’m done with that one my wife starts moving around, we’ll share one, go have lunch, talk about the day, and do some business.
That will hold me until say about 5 or 6, just do whatever, kick it with the kids. If I have a late meeting or something I hold it and usually I smoke the last one right before I leave wherever I’m going or I’ll sit in the driveway, look at the stars on my truck bed and smoke the other half and that was my three grams for the day.
M Huncho is finally out of hiatus and coming through with some heat for the summer. The rapper’s unveiled a string of new singles since the beginning of the year in anticipation of his forthcoming project, Chasing Euphoria. On Friday, he gave fans a taste of what to expect with the Yung Bleu-assisted, “Who We Are.” It’s a breezy, upbeat record that has all of the potential to dominate the summer months. The light guitar riffs and 808s provide an excellent backdrop for Huncho and Bleu’s honeyed melodies that reflect on loss and trauma. However, there’s a glimmer of optimism in the overall message that better days are to come.
Check the latest from M Huncho and Yung Bleu below and sound off with your thoughts in the comment section below.
Quotable Lyrics Drive past the ends, I’m in a Audi with a twenty-two’s, baby Cornerboy Huncho, every day’s payday Across the border Started with nothing but just a quarter
Following Game 2 of the series between the Golden State Warriors and the Memphis Grizzlies, Steve Kerr made some interesting comments about Dillon Brooks. For those who may not remember, Brooks took out Gary Payton II leading to a fractured elbow. Brooks was suspended one game for this play, however, Kerr felt like Brooks was being dirty and that he broke the code.
“Well, I don’t know if it was intentional but it was dirty,” Kerr said. “Playoff basketball is gonna be… it’s supposed to be physical. Everybody’s gonna compete. Everybody’s gonna fight for everything but there’s a code in this league that players follow where you never put a guy’s season/career in jeopardy by taking somebody out in midair and clubbing them across the head and ultimately fracturing their elbow.”
Ahead of Game 4, Brooks spoke to the media where he was asked about Kerr’s comments. As you can see down below, Brooks feels as though Kerr is going a little overboard. In fact, Brooks doesn’t even know what code is being talked about here.
“I don’t even really know what that means. It’s the playoffs… every play counts. So I don’t know what that means,” Brooks said.
This series has been filled with vitriol, and it doesn’t seem like things are getting any better. With that said, Game 4 should be very interesting.
Big things are shaping up for Mozzy this year. After an incredible run since 2017, he’s remained just as hungry as ever, and it shows every time he touches the microphone. However, he’s elevating even further now that he’s inked a new deal with Yo Gotti’s CMG. Though he’s yet to release his first project on the label, the recent slew of singles indicate that it’s not too far away.
On Friday, the rapper brought some West Coast flavor with his new collab alongside Shordie Shordie titled, “Tell The Truth.” The two rappers delve into a shivering instrumental as they detail the importance of loyalty and standing on morals.
The latest from Mozzy arrives after he released, “Real Ones” with Roddy Ricch in February.
Check his latest single out.
Quotable Lyrics I was one of the ones you called for pay, more n***as dissin’ now Really one of the ones to place a call and have ’em sit you down You seen what happened to your partner, bitch, go dig him out And if they get my partner bail, I’m gonna go get him out
Summer Walker is still not Over It. For Mother’s Day, the 26-year-old revealed that she was given a gift from her baby daddy, London On Da Track, but she didn’t keep it in the house for long before it was thrown in the trash.
When photos of a floral bouquet that London gifted to a woman appeared on a blog, an Instagram user couldn’t help but wonder, “Did Summer get a flower too?”
It wasn’t long before they got an answer, directly from the source. “Same ones and left them shits by the dumpster where they belong,” she confirmed, admitting to having tossed the Mother’s Day present.
While she wasn’t feeling London’s surprise, that didn’t stop Walker from enjoying her special day. On her own feed, she shared some behind-the-scenes content of her own at-home birth, which was attended by Erykah Badu and other friends.
“The best day of my life / the most painful day of my life,” she captioned the photo dump. “My Bubblesss arrived, the sweetest bestest girl in my world. Thank you, Erykah, Mama, Sarahn, Shanika, Ashley, and all the beautiful strong Black women that were there to assist me in that loooooooongggggggg ass labour. Y’all amazing.”
Check it out above, and tap back in with HNHH later for more hip-hop news updates.