Dreezy Talks “No Hard Feelings” And Working With Gucci Mane [Video]

The 22-year-old Chicago rapper has a lot to be proud of on the new project and feels especially excited about her track with Gucci Mane. “I like how he don’t got no filter. He’s just in his own Gucci world,” Dreezy said about her collaborator. “Working with him is cool. It is what you think it is…It’s just motivating for him.” Of course, Dreezy touched on “Chiraq” and how the track’s video catapulted her career, landing her praise from the likes of Remy Ma. The conversation then shifted to the VH1’s Hip Hop Honors where Dreezy teamed up with Keke Palmer, Ashanti, and Eve for the Salt-n-Pepa tribute, which she only had a couple days to prepare for being taking the stage. The star-studded night definitely gave her an opportunity to link up with some of her music idols, including Missy Elliott, Eve, and Lil’ Kim, the latter of which she got to know better when they went out to eat and celebrate Kim’s birthday after the event.

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Chuck Inglish: “Anyone Who Says All Lives Matter Is A Dick” [Video]

Fresh off the news that The Cool Kids had reunited, we brought Chuck Inglish into Audiomack Studios to talk about his musical past, present and future, but also that terrible night in Dallas, Texas. He was in Dallas the night of the shootings for a show, and he doesn’t need any reminder of what it is to be black and in America. In a wide-ranging discussion that touched on issues ranging from economic class to school bullying to the Flint water crisis, Inglish’s most impassioned speech came while discussion police shootings and the All Lives Matter response to the Black Lives Matter movement. While Chuck’s certainly not looking at the world through rose-tinted glasses, ultimately his message is hopeful. “It can only be better, but it takes people saying things,” he went on to say. “Don’t be distant, don’t be separate of the collective human experience.”

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Redman On Mom Kicking Him Out For Selling Coke, EPMD Putting Him On & More [Video]

Jersey’s own, Redman sat down with DJ Vlad to talk about his upbringing in Newark, getting kicked out of his home for selling drugs, and how he got his start in music. Growing up in “Brick City,” Redman says there was so much testosterone in his neighborhood that he would find himself or even see other men fighting daily. Involved in the street life, Red became a drug dealer supplying cocaine and marijuana for local clients and even took part in some robberies, which would lead to his brother and friends serving 10-12 years in prison. Although his parents tried to steer him in the right direction, he was caught up in the street life, and inevitably thrown out of their home for the second time when his father found drugs in his room. Fortunately for Red, one night out changed the course of his destiny forever. The rapper says he attended a show headlining MC Lyte—who was later replaced with his favorite group, EMPD, and got the opportunity to rap alongside the rappers who shown interest in him. After exchanging information, Red waited many months in limbo because his friend said he would make the initial call. When Red grew impatient with the run-around, Red said he memorized the phone number from that night and decided to call Erick Sermon of EMPD, and take him up on his offer to meet. From then, the two talked about working together and in the process, the homeless rapper found a place

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