Thursday, 21 July 2011

  • Tyler, The Creator 'Cried' Over VMA Nominations

    Odd Future MC's 'Yonkers' video up for Video of the Year and Best New Artist.
    By Rob Markman


    Tyler, the Creator
    Photo: MTV News

    Who says Tyler, the Creator is a foul-mouthed malcontent?

    Well, the foul-mouth part is true, but when the Odd Future standout learned that his video for "Yonkers" received two MTV Video Music Awards nominations, he couldn't have been happier, as seen in his Wednesday night tweets.

    "Video Of The F---ing Year. What The F---," he wrote before tweeting that he was about to "Pass The F--- Out."

    Tyler's self-directed "Yonkers" clip was uploaded to Odd Future Wolf Gang Kill Them All's YouTube page back in February. Now five months and 15 million views later, the black-and-white vid earned the Goblin rapper VMA nominations in the Best New Artist and Video of the Year categories.

    Simple-yet-effective, "Yonkers" starts off with the rapper seated on a stool, performing the song's lyrics while playing with a large cockroach, which he later vomits. A visibly disturbed Tyler continues to rap the track's second verse, stripping off his shirt then putting his neck in a noose. In the video's shocking ending, the MC stands up on the chair and kicks the stool from under his feet as his legs dangle in a simulated suicide. "Damn, I'm Looking At The Video Treatment I wrote In This Blackberry Back In Jan. F---!" Tyler wrote beside a link to the clip.

    In all, the rapper/ producer/ video director fired off more than 40 reactionary tweets, even threatening to go on a killing spree if he lost Video of the Year to Bruno Mars. Still, through the profanity-laced celebration, Tyler is just overjoyed: "So F---ing Happy F---!!!" he tweeted. "I Cried Legit. F--- it."

    The 28th annual MTV Video Music Awards will air live on Sunday, August 28, from the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles at 9 p.m. ET/PT. See the list of nominees, revisit last year's highlights and vote for your favorites in the general categories by visiting VMA.MTV.com.

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    Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1667656/tyler-the-creator-vma-nomination-yonkers.jhtml

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  • R. Kelly Recovering from Emergency Throat Surgery

    R. Kelly Recovering from Emergency Throat Surgery

    Singer R. Kelly is currently recovering in a Chicago hospital, after undergoing emergency throat surgery. According to the "I Believe I Can Fly" singer's rep, doctors had to drain an abscess on one of Kelly's tonsils, leaving him "laid up indefinitely."

    "Kelly had visited a throat specialist earlier in the day complaining of severe throat pain," his rep said in a press release. "Following a preliminary exam, he was rushed to Northwestern Memorial for the procedure. It is not known when the multi-platinum recording star, who just completed the U.S. leg of his worldwide 'Love Letter' Tour, will be able to resume performing." 

    Kelly, 44, finished his North American tour on July 14 at Nashville's Bridgestone Arena. This upcoming weekend, he's scheduled to perform at Reggae Sumfest along with Nicki Minaj and Mya, but it seems unlikely that he will make it.

    On Wednesday, the singer twittered his gratitude for the outpouring of love he's received. "I'd like to thank everybody for their love, concern and support," he wrote. "I WILL BE BACK!" 

     

    Source: http://www.ivillage.com/r-kelly-recovering-emergency-throat-surgery/1-a-366195

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  • Soul Khan Just Wants Your Acknowledgement

    MC opens up about his EP, getting love in NYC and why a white rapper with a booming voice shouldn't shock you.
    By Steven Roberts


    New York MC Soul Khan
    Photo: Soul Khan

    Fire Starter: Soul Khan
    Every MC can rap. Certainly some better than others, but for the most part, anyone calling themselves a rapper can rhyme words to tell a tale in their own unique way. But every once in a while, an MC comes along who's blessed with a booming voice that commands attention. Soul Khan's voice is probably his most distinguishing feature, which is not to take anything away from the former battle rapper's skills, but his deep delivery catches your ear.

    "I wish I could say I had something to do with it, but that's all nature," Khan joked to Mixtape Daily. "I decided I wanted to make rap a career after I graduated college," Khan continued. "I mean, with a voice like mine, you could either go into politics, [be] a voice for 'Final Fantasy' characters or you could be a rapper," he laughed.

    A native of Los Angeles' West Valley, Khan said he was initially "kind of annoyed" that people were frequently surprised to discover that he was the one spitting after hearing his music. In 2011, a white rapper shouldn't shock people, he thought.

    "I've been rapping for, I guess now, 14 years," Khan said. "For a good amount of time, I wasn't very good at it — as I think most people [are not] when they start something. Eventually, [I] developed into a serviceable artist, and I just started rapping because it seemed like the most viable and vital means of communicating with listeners."

    Although his style may scream Brooklyn, the L.A. rapper came to New York because he needed a challenge, and the city has embraced him wholeheartedly.

    "It's tough to impress people, and if you're willing to go that extra mile, if you're willing to give credit to [New Yorkers'] cynicism and say, 'I'm willing to overpower that,' then when you do, you get love on a scale you couldn't imagine. If you win over a New York crowd, you're the best."

    Khan's ready now to take on the rest of the world with the release of his Acknowledgment EP, one of three that he hopes to release this summer in the lead-up to his album, Soul Like Khan. The Acknowledgement EP was produced by DJ Element (who is also Khan's stage DJ), and the rapper described Element's production style as far more lively and uptempo than what he's used to. And that contrast motivated Khan to try something different.

    "I made four songs that generally consider the subject of self-worth in some way, whether it was explicitly stated or just the mood, theme," Khan said. "I don't want to say motivation music, 'cause now the word 'motivation' is actually a hip-hop cliché, which is bizarre. But I get tweets and Facebook messages every day from people saying it does sort of give them that renewed purpose I was hoping to achieve."

    For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines.

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    Source: http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1667616/soul-khan-ep-acknowledgement.jhtml

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