Tag: Jay-Z

  • Leonardo DiCaprio and Baz Luhrmann were in Jay-Z’s “No Church in the Wild” studio session

    Leonardo DiCaprio and Baz Luhrmann were in Jay-Z’s “No Church in the Wild” studio session

    While in the pre-production phase of The Great Gatsby, Leonardo DiCaprio and writer/producer/director Baz Luhrmann were present during a studio session with Jay-Z and Kanye West for their Grammy award-winning song “No Church In the Wild” featuring Frank Ocean and The-Dream.  

    Jay-Z executively produced and contributed music to The Great Gatsby Soundtrack which was released through Interscope. Baz Luhrmann and Jay-Z were introduced by Leonardo DiCaprio, and this led to a two-year collaborative effort.

    “Leonardo [DiCaprio] and I were lucky enough to be present in a recording session over two years ago as Jay-Z was recording ‘No Church in the Wild,’ and the collaboration grew from there.” – Baz Luhrmann explained in a press statement

    Jay Z, Leonardo Dicaprio & Baz Luhrmann
    Via Getty Images

    “As soon as I spoke with Baz and Leonardo, I knew this was the right project. The Great Gatsby is that classic American story of one’s introduction to extravagance, decadence and illusion.  It’s ripe for experimentation and ready to be interpreted with a modern twist.  The imagination Baz brought to ‘Moulin Rouge’ made it a masterpiece, and ‘Romeo + Juliet’s’ score wasn’t just in the background; the music became a character.  This film’s vision and direction has all the makings of an epic experience.” – Jay Z said

    Composer Craig Armstrong who worked alongside Jay-Z on the film, revealed interesting details about Jay-Z’s role as executive producer on The Great Gatsby Soundtrack, stating: 

    “Luhrmann and Jay-Z were introduced by Leonardo DiCaprio (Jay Gatsby), and this led to a two-year collaborative effort.

    “During this time, Jay-Z worked with Luhrmann and his team to capture, translate and contrast the feelings of Fitzgerald’s decadent era with that of our own, using hip-hop and jazz, music contemporary and period, to bring two distinct American moments to simultaneous life.”

    The soundtrack included music from Jay Z, Beyonce, Lana Del Rey and Florence Welch of Florence + The Machine. This wasn’t the first time Jay-Z executively produced, The Brooklyn rapper executive produced the soundtrack of the video game NBA 2k13. 

    The Dream who was also featured on “No Church In the Wild” annotated the song on genius and said this

    “I get to New York, and we’re at the Mercer Hotel, working. We had the whole floor. I get in, Frank Ocean’s sitting there, and they’re just starting on “No Church In The Wild.” So “Holy Grail” itself inspired them to change Watch the Throne. Because of that record, six other records got made at that point, including “Otis.” I go in the next room with my engineer, and just sing eight or twelve bars for “No Church.” Right after Ye’s verse, I sing that whole part. I got a Grammy for that.”

    “I end up doing the same kind of thing with “Umbrella” where I’m singing this part, and I think it’s awesome, to myself. I didn’t know what they were trying to do. Like, can I go back to my habitat on the golf course? Me and Jay went out, we went to eat, hung out with Leonardo Dicaprio that night—that’s what I remember. And the next day we worked more on a couple other things, I don’t remember. Later my friend called and said “Yeah, so there’s an album getting ready to drop and you’re on it, but you don’t know you’re on it, but I just wanted to let you know.” I didn’t even remember what I had written. I just recorded it and left it alone. So that’s what “Holy Grail” was, that little nudge. Jay finally admitted what went on around the record in an interview. He talked about playing the record and how there was a little fight about “Holy Grail.” Of course that’s flattering. Kanye is so great, he’s only most of the time just being challenged by himself. It’s a blessing when it happens to any of us, for a record to come out of left field and push you to a thing.”

    The Great Gatsby theatrical trailer featured “No Church In The Wild,”

  • Jay-Z recorded “Hard Knock Life (Ghetto Anthem)” in one take

    Jay-Z recorded “Hard Knock Life (Ghetto Anthem)” in one take

    Hard Knock Life (Ghetto Anthem)” the single from Jay-Z‘s third album Vol. 2… Hard Knock Life which turned him into a superstar was recorded in one take.

    The song, produced by The 45 King, at the time of its release in 1998 was the most commercially successful Jay-Z single. The nostalgic sample from the 1977 musical Annie signaled a new era for Jay-Z. It transformed Jay-Z’s career from respected New York MC to American popstar, making him reach a wider audience worldwide. The song only peaked at no. 15 on the Billboard Hot 100, but was everywhere on the radio.

    “From standin’ on the corners boppin’
    To drivin’ some of the hottest cars New York has ever seen
    For droppin’ some of the hottest verses rap has ever heard
    From the dope spot, with the smoke Glock
    Fleein’ the murder scene, you know me well”

    The producer of “Hard Knock Life (Ghetto Anthem)” revealed Jay-Z recorded the song in one take.

    “I was lucky enough to see Jay lay down the vocals, he didn’t have any papers, he did it in one take and.. thats Jay-Z” – The 45 King, producer of “Hard Knock Life (Ghetto Anthem)”

    “That’s one of the songs that, was almost like a conversation for me. It’s not anything to think about, the chorus already dictates where the song should go and what should be said , i probably did the song in maybe five minutes” Jay-Z adds

    Watch from 6:00

    In 2001, shortly after Jay-Z brought the King of Pop on stage at Hot 97’s “Summer Jam” festival, Jay-Z revealed to MTV that Michael Jackson told him he was a huge fan of “Hard Knock Life (Ghetto Anthem)”

    Jay-Z also told Blues and Soul the story of the song:

    “What happened was I was on tour and Kid Capri played me the track. Mark ’45’ King had produced it, and at the time it was just beats and the sampled hook. You know, Mark’s known for making famous hip hop beats like ‘900 Number’ with no rap on them. So, once I heard it, I was like ‘I gotta have that’ – and I tracked Mark down. At first he was like ‘Nah man, it’s for my compilation album,’ but he eventually let me have it. 

    Listen to “Hard Knock Life (Ghetto Anthem)”

    Purchase our 100 Hip-Hop Facts (1973-2000) Book

  • Jay-Z and Busta Rhymes went to high school together and they once battled in the cafeteria

    Jay-Z and Busta Rhymes went to high school together and they once battled in the cafeteria

    Jay Z and Busta Rhymes both attended Brooklyn’s George Westinghouse Career and Technical Education High School and they’ve battled each other in the cafeteria. DMX and Notorious B.I.G are also famous alumni and they all attended school around the same time, Busta Rhymes and Biggie were born a day apart and Jay Z was two and half years older. 

    Over the years, Jay and Busta Rhymes have often reminisced about their teenage rapping rivalry during interviews. In a 2015 appearance on Jimmy Kimmel, Jay Z mentioned that he once rap battled Busta in the lunch room. When Kimmel asked who won, Jay Z modestly shrugged and mouthed the word, “me.”

    Busta Rhymes has actually spoken on this a few years back on MTV, and gave a more in-depth recap than Jay of how it happened.

    “One day, somebody came up to me and was like, ’Yo, Hov is in the cafeteria.’ They weren’t calling him Hov at the time; they were calling him Jay. ’Do you want to step to him on some rhyme sh–?’ So I go. At the time, when we were rhyming, it was speed rap. That was the thing to do. I knew how to freak it, and he knew how to freak it. And at the time, he was so ill, ’cause of the people he was with at the time, Jaz-O and them, it was their thing [that style]. He kind of got the best of the situation. I got to give it up. He was so ill and his arsenal was so long that he had more than what I did. I spit my one rap, and my tank was empty real fast. He came with two or three after that, and I was like, ’Here we go.’ But I gave it my best.”

    “That was probably the fist time that I lost a battle that mattered. Jay-Z always exemplified greatness as an MC. He was a scientist with it.”

    In a different interview with Fuse

    “I didn’t know Biggie rhymed in school ’cause in school we was cuttin’ a lot of class and we was smokin’ a lot of weed and bullshittin’,”

    “I knew Jay Z was rhyming ’cause me and Jay Z battled in school, speed rapping. He had finessed the speed rapping phenomenally at that time and I was new with the speed rapping, but losing that battle to Jay in speed rapping is what made me one of the most dangerous speed rappers today … Jay know he can’t see me in no speed rapping today.”

    Watch Busta Rhymes explain how it went down.

    Purchase our 100 Hip-Hop Facts (1973-2000) Book

    https://youtu.be/qq4uJwjfIMk
  • Ten Projects Celebrating a 10 Year Anniversary in 2019

    Ten Projects Celebrating a 10 Year Anniversary in 2019

    Let’s take a look at some of 2009’s hip-hop projects that are celebrating a 10 year anniversary.

    Man on the Moon: The End of Day – Kid Cudi

    Man on the Moon: The End of Day - Kid Cudi cover art

    September 15, 2009

    Cudder’s debut album Man on the Moon: The End of Day proved to be an instant classic. Whether it is your favorite album from the Cleveland rapper or not, Man on the Moon birthed fans for years to come. From his introspection to galactic sound, Cudi released a project that set the hip-hop world on fire.

    Essential tracks: Soundtrack 2 My Life, Solo Dolo (Nightmare), Day N Nite, Cudi Zone

    The Blueprint 3 – Jay-Z

    The Blueprint 3 - Jay-Z cover art

    September 8, 2009

    Thirteen years into his illustrious career, HOV released The Blueprint 3. With star-studded features like Kanye West, Drake, Rihanna and more, this project is sonically much different than the original Blueprint but stays true to the New York native’s motif of success.

    Essential Tracks: D.O.A (Death of Autotune), Empire State of Mind, Hate, Young Forever

    The Warm Up – J. Cole

    The Warm Up - J. Cole cover art

    June 15, 2009

    J. Cole made his introduction into the music world with the emergence of The Warm Up in 2009. This 22-track mixtape highlights the arrival of one of hip-hop’s most consistent artists. Cole grapples with women, self-improvement, and striving to reach the upper-echelon of his craft.

    Essential Tracks: Lights Please, Dreams, I Get Up, Losing My Balance

    So Far Gone – Drake

    So Far Gone - Drake cover art

    February 13, 2009

    Drizzy has been incredibly successful – no pun intended – since the appearance of his third official mixtape So Far Gone. Despite Thank Me Later providing major hits and more insight to Drake, SFG prefaces the emotional and in-tune nature that October’s Very Own has made a career of. SFG found its way to major streaming platforms as of this year.

    Essential Tracks: Houstonlantavegas, Successful, Say What’s Real, Uptown

    Bastard – Tyler, the Creator

    Bastard - Tyler, the Creator cover art

    December 25, 2009

    A not-so-jolly Christmas day release in 2009 gave us Bastard. This project is a stark difference when compared to newer projects like Flower Boy or IGOR but gives listeners an inside look at Tyler’s polarizing mind. Heavy with Odd Future features, Bastard is as honest as it is dark.

    Essential Tracks: Bastard, Seven, VCR Wheels, Sarah

    Relapse – Eminem

    Relapse - Eminem cover art

    May 15, 2009

    Em’s sixth studio album Relapse was debuted 10 years ago following a five year layoff from Encore. Divisive as its content may be, this album further projects Eminem‘s ability to use wordplay and raw energy to rap. With perennial hip-hop legend, Dr. Dre, beside him for another album, Em gets another chance to showcase his irreverence and overall talent.

    Essential Tracks: 3 a.m., Bagpipes from Baghdad, We Made You, Crack a Bottle

    Flight School – Wiz Khalifa

    Flight School - Wiz Khalifa  cover art

    April 17, 2009

    A 22-year-old Wiz gave us Flight School in 2009 following his second mixtape Prince of the City 2. Wiz Khalifa keeps it simple on this project: stay fly. We see the development of the marijuana mogul as he realizes a high ceiling for himself through Flight School. When it comes to Wiz mixtapes, Kush & O.J. and Cabin Fever are highly favored but keep this one in mind, too.

    Essential Tracks: Boarding Pass, Teach You to Fly, Sky High, Hollywood Hoes

    Only Built 4 Cuban Linx Pt. II – Raekwon

    Only Built 4 Cuban Linx Pt. II - Raekwon cover art

    September 8, 2009

    Now, while this album doesn’t compare to its predecessor, OB4CL Pt. II still delivers with Raekwon at the helm. Anything to do with Wu-Tang should lead you to believe the lyricism will be sharp and the production clean. This 24-track project puffs its chest out as Raekwon shows he can thrive as the main emcee.

    Essential Tracks: House of Flying Daggers, Gihad, The New Wu, About Me

    The State vs. Radric Davis – Gucci Mane

    The State vs. Radric Davis - Gucci Mane cover art

    December 8, 2009

    Despite its unconventional rhyme schemes and cadence, Gucci Mane delivers a menacing yet catchy project. With help from artists like Waka Flocka, Soulja Boy, Lil Wayne and Rick Ross, The State vs. Radric Davis lets Gucci boast about his circumstances. This heavy trap album also happens to sneak in some feelings with Usher and Jason Caesar to complement R&B tracks.

    Essential Tracks: Lemonade, All About the Money, Im a Dog, The Movie

    Deeper Than Rap – Rick Ross

    Deeper Than Rap - Rick Ross cover art

    April 21, 2009

    Florida’s finest dropped Deeper Than Rap in 2009 with an emphasis on a smooth delivery, a life of luxury, and working through adversity. Ricky Rozay proved to his public doubters that he would not relent. Consistent low-key funk and lyrics show this is one of Ross’ most complete projects.

    Essential Tracks: Mafia Music, Usual Suspects, Rich Off Cocaine, Valley of Death

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