Showing posts with label southern Rap. Show all posts
Showing posts with label southern Rap. Show all posts

Monday, July 26, 2010

Huey 'Redemption' Album Info And Tracklist



via the press release

Huey Redemption on EMI/OMG/Que Records set to arrive September 14th.

Huey is a talented young St. Louis-born artist best known for his debut chart-topping hit “Pop Lock and Drop It,” which was a top 3 single on the Billboard charts and for being featured on “MTV Jams”, appearances on MTV’s “Cribs” a performance on the finale of “America’s Best Dance Crew” and for becoming a staple on BET’s “106 & Park” countdown for almost two straight months. The subsequent remix with T-Pain & Bow Wow only solidified “Pop Lock and Drop It” status as a bonafide smash. Huey’s debut LP, Notebook Paper, (2007 Jive Records) featured production from T-Pain, Mannie Fresh, Jazzy Pha and Stargate and it was a Top 5 Hip-Hop debut on the Billboard charts.

Grounded on the same streets that produced successes among the likes of Nelly, Chingy and the St. Lunatics, Huey’s approach is a refreshing one. "I'm versatile," he offers matter of factly. "It's like whatever the beat tells me to do – it could be relaxed on a cool level to where I'm explaining my feelings for a female. It could be me explaining my feelings for money. It could be dancing in the club, crunk in the club. It's a bunch of everything that's going to be on this album."

After experiencing some delays in securing his release from Jive Records, Huey’s sophomore LP, Redemption (release date 9-14-2010), is finally ready for release and the LP’s lead-single, “Smile and Wave,” feat. Dorrough is currently available at iTunes and the track was featured on the AOL Music homepage with 30 million plus uniques. The LP’s follow-up single, “I Go Crazy,” feat. Colby O’Donis will also impact in the immediate future. Huey’s “Hello To All My Haterz” video premiered on Worldstarhiphop.com in the top slot and has already received millions of views.

Only five years in, Huey has already climbed the rap totem-pole and already speaks like a seasoned veteran. And while outside opinions may sway, he's clearly been placed in a situation to carry on the musical following of St. Louis – by any means necessary. "Right now, we're viewed as commercial flat out," Huey says. "Right now we're just looked at as a commercial place and it's not that. We're not just commercial. It's gutter in St. Louis and me as a young person, it probably would be hard to believe. That's why you gotta straight give it to ‘em. It's a new St. Louis and that's what I'm about to show err'body."

Huey’s ‘Redemption’ is party-feel-good, make-you-want-to-dance music and it’s being released just in time to make the summer hit lists,” said Que Records’ CEO Quayshaun. “I am very excited about this joint venture between my label and OMG Media and our distribution deal with EMI. Huey is next in line to impact the music industry.

Tracklisting and credits for Huey’s Redemption LP:

01. Redemption
02. Hello 2 All My Haters
03. Smile & Wave ft. Dorrough
04. I Go Crazy ft. Colby O’ Donis
05. Rain
06. High f/JR
07. Famous f/Mack
08. U
09. Section
10. So Good (Get It Girl)
11. Why So Serious
12. Retarded

Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Yelawolf L.A. Times Interview



L.A. Times: Being a white rapper is always going to engender Eminem comparisons even if you are half Native American. Have those grown tedious yet or have you just tried to take them in stride?

Yelawolf: I can't be mad at the comparisons because I'm still just getting my feet wet. I've got years to go before I establish a full concrete Yelawolf sound. Right now, I'm focused on saying what I have to say. I have to do Yelawolf right now and not worry about anything else. That said, I think it's a fair comparison. There haven't been many white artists in hip-hop, and there's only a handful that the average person knows about, so it is what it is.

L.A. Times: Your mixtape "Stereo" had a lot of recognizable classic-rock samples, which ostensibly would've brought you a lot of fans from people who were sucked in by the original source material. Yet it was "Trunk Muzik" that really got you traction. Why do you think "Stereo" didn't have that sort of success?

Yelawolf: Two things: The first is that not everybody in hip-hop [messes] with classic rock. The second is that there was no real element of surprise. I'm from Alabama, I'm into classic rock -- it was obvious and there was no shock-value to it.That said, I was really focused on making sure that people understood that I respected the craft and hip-hop. "Trunk Muzik" was dedicated to the trunk riders, with 808s and hard ass [stuff]. It had a dirty Southern sound, and it opened things up.

With "Stereo," we spent a lot of time digging around and trying to be really tasteful with the samples. I know a lot of people who [mess] with "Trunk Muzik" aren't into "Stereo," but I still love it -- it contains some of the favorite records I've ever done.

L.A. Times: Growing up in Gadsden and all over the South has obviously influenced your sound. Specifically, how do you think it affects your conception of the world and your music?

Yelawolf: My homies in Gadsden aren't as exposed as I am culturally, which is awesome -- that's why I love going home. I'm in the kitchen with people who don't know anything but the simple life, what's important to them, and what's dope. That's why like I'm so drawn to the culture of Alabama -- of rednecks and all that hardcore dirty South culture because I understand it. It's so simple -- it's really black and white. That's the way that life should be. We really complicate our situation.

L.A. Times: The South isn't known for its cipher culture, but you use a double-time speed rap flow that could be Midwestern were it not for your drawl. What were your experiences like learning to rap?

Yelawolf: It was always rapping in the car -- me and my boys -- freestyling and being horrible. The only time it ever became serious to me was when I would write and then flow to instrumentals in the car, and my friends would be like, "Whoa man, you got verses." It spawned from there, it eventually got more and more serious and I developed my own style.

L.A. Times: How frustrating was it when Rick Rubin came aboard at Columbia and dropped you? You'd think that the guy who produced the Beastie Boys and "Raising Hell" would have wanted to work with you.

Yelawolf: I was like, "You don’t get it, cool? Then I guess I must be extra special." I had to be arrogant because I could've been messed up thinking that if he didn't want me, I must have nothing to offer. But that's not like me. I refuse to be like that. I've always been stubborn. I have to learn things myself, but it worked out OK -- I ended up at Interscope only a few years later.

L.A. Times: Do you worry that Interscope will force you to write pop rap songs or else you'll be unable to get your album released?

Yelawolf: If you look at my discography of music, you'll know that I can go any direction – whether it's arena rap or bluegrass hip-hop. I would never assign myself one style. If I make a record that becomes a pop hit -- who [cares]. I'm always gonna have the darker edgy music in my pocket because it comes so natural to me. You’ll never stop getting records like "Pop the Trunk" and "Good to Go." The crunk South [stuff] will always be a part of what I do in some way. But I plan on evolving -- you have to.

The integrity of my music is always in mind. I'm out to make lifelong lasting records. I know what the underground is. I’ve been there for a long time. You never really know what will break or what won't. If "Pop the Trunk" had had huge marketing behind it to put it on radio and video channels, it might've become a hit.

L.A. Times: If you could collaborate with anyone, who would it be?

Yelawolf: Willie Nelson. I really want to work with all the legends before it's too late.
(source)

Thursday, June 3, 2010

VH1 Hip Hop Honors The Dirty South: First Glimpse Photo Links & Show Coverage


2010 VH1 Hip Hop Honors: The Dirty South premieres Monday, June 7 at 9PM ET/PT

via the press release

NEW YORK, June 3 /PRNewswire/ -- The 7th annual "2010 VH1 Hip Hop Honors: The Dirty South" took New York City by storm as some of the biggest names in the hip hop industry commemorated the music, the influence and artists from The South. "2010 VH1 Hip Hop Honors: The Dirty South" will premiere Monday, June 7 at 9:00 PM ET/PT*. Visit HipHop.VH1.com for additional show details, artist interviews and performance sneak peeks.

Taped at the New York City's Hammerstein Ballroom on Thursday, June 3 and hosted by Craig Robinson ("The Office" and "Last Comic Standing"), this years 2010 VH1 Hip Hop Honors: The Dirty South" is the first time the show has honored a particular geographic region for its hip hop celebration. VH1 Hip Hop Honors celebrated the highly influential geographic region and paid tribute to southern artists Jermaine Dupri, J Prince of Rap-A-Lot Records, Luther "Luke" Campbell, The 2 Live Crew, Master P, Organized Noize and Timbaland.

The show opened with host Craig Robinson's hilarious monologue paying tribute to all that is great in the "Dirty South" and his rendition of Mike Jones' "Back Then," Lil' Wayne's "Lollipop," and Juvenile's "Back That Thang Up" with his band Craig Robinson and Nasty Delicious.

The first of the honorees, Luther "Luke" Campbell, was introduced by notorious bad boy Kid Rock and celebrated with special performances by the icon Luke himself performing "I Wanna Rock (Doo Doo Brown)," "It's Your Birthday" and "Scarred" with Trick Daddy and Pitbull.

With a hyped crowd, comedian and actor Eddie Griffin introduced honoree J Prince of Rap-A-Lot Records. Performances by Geto Boys' "Mind Playing Tricks On Me," A.K.'s "Po Pimp," Juvenile's "Nolia Clap," and "Get Throwed" by Drake and Bun B paid respect to one of the most successful southern hip-hop artists who shaped today's Houston rap scene.

Atlanta phenomenon and honoree Jermaine Dupri was introduced by actor Jonah Hill ("Superbad" and "Get to the Greek") and honored with a performance by Dem Franchize Boyz, Buddie, Jizzal Man, Parlae, and Pimpin' singing "Oh I Think They Like Me." The honoree himself took to the stage performing classic hits "Jump" with Bow Wow and Lil Jon and the hard hitting "Welcome To Atlanta" with Diddy and Lil Jon.

New Orleans native Master P was introduced by son Romeo and Academy Award-nominated Taraji P. Henson. The crowd went wild as staple Master P songs were performed. Gucci Mane took to the stage singing "Miss My Homies" while Romeo, Lil D, Black Don and Little Valentino performed "Im Bout It, Bout It." The tribute concluded with a performance by Silkk The Shocker and Trina performing "That's Cool" and a collaborative act of "Make Em' Say Uhh!" with Mystikal.

The tribute to one of the birthplaces of southern hip hop, Atlanta, continued with performances including; "Wasted" by Gucci Mane, "Never Scared" by Bone Crusher and "Get Low" by Lil Jon, Ying Yang Twinz, Kaine and D-Roc.

Visionary musician and rapper, Timbaland was honored for his contributions to the music industry and hip hop with unforgettable performances by Bun B rapping "Big Pimpin," "Make Me Better" by Fabolous, "The Way I Are" with Keri Hilson, DOE and Sebastian and "Get Your Freak On" and "Work It" by the iconic Missy Elliot with Hype Man.

Paying homage the lone star state, Kelly Rowland and Nelly introduced a melody mash-up dedicated to Texas with performances from Slim Thug rapping "Like A Boss," "Sittin' Sidewayz" by Paul Wall and "Ridin" by Chamillionaire.

As the show continued, legends The 2 Live Crew took to the stage to celebrate their achievements in the world of hip hop with hits "Me So Horny" and "Hoochie Mama." Fellow honoree, Luther "Luke" Campbell" joined The 2 Live Crew on the stage performing "Banned In The USA."

Introduced by Chilli and Laura London ("ATL"), Atlanta honoree Organized Noize was shown love with sizzling performances by Rico Wade singing "Players Ball," "Southernplayalisticadillacmusic" by Nelly and Murphy Lee and "Dirty South" by Khujo Goodie and Cool Breeze. Rounding out the tribute to the iconic Organized Noize, Sleepy Brown and Cool Breeze took to the stage and performed "So Fresh So Clean" followed by "Saturdays" by Asher Roth.

Closing out the show with an electric tribute to Miami, performances by Trina singing "Million Dollar Girl," "Low" by Flo Rida and "I'm So Hood" by Hype Man made this year's VH1 Hip Hop Honors something the crowd or honorees will never forget. The legend Rick Ross graced the stage to perform "Super High" and the evening concluded with the chart topping hit, "I Know You Want Me" by Pitbull.

2010's "VH1 Hip Hop Honors" demonstrated how The Southern style of music and its artists have been significant on the NYC-born genre and helped to expand its appeal worldwide.

Photo Links.
Arrivals
Getty Images 1
Getty Images 2
Getty Images 3
Wire Image 1
Wire Image 2
Film Magic 1
Film Magic 2
Rex Features
Corbis Images
Patrick McMullan
WENN Photo
Show
Getty Images 1
Getty Images 2
Getty Images 3
Wire Image
Film Magic
Backstage
Getty Images 1
Getty Images 2
Wire Image
Film Magic
After Party
Film Magic

Related:
VH1 Hip Hop Honors The Dirty South: Show Arrivals With MyFox News NY

VH1 Hip Hop Honors The Dirty South: Show Arrivals With MyFox News NY



In this case, "dirty" is a good thing. The 2010 VH1 Hip Hop Honors celebrated the achievements of hip hop with a southern twist. This year's show honored music and influence of hip hop artists from the South.

"In order to continue our efforts to honor the best in hip hop, it is so important that we recognize the South and the tremendous impact that it has had on hip hop music," said VH1 executive Lee Rolontz. "The southern experience is one that is unique to America and while filled with its own testimony of trials and triumphs, hip hop has served as a universal medium where the journey is shared."

The special event and show -- which took place Thursday and will be broadcast on VH1 on Monday, June 7, at 9 p.m. -- paid tribute to Jermaine Dupri, J Prince of Rap-A-Lot Records, Luther "Luke" Campbell and The 2 Live Crew, Master P, and Organized Noize. (source)

Friday, April 30, 2010

Nappy Roots 'The Pursuit Of Nappyness' Album Cover And Tracklist



Nappy Roots The Pursuit Of Nappyness on Nappy Roots Entertainment Group/Fontana arrives June 15.

01. Welcome To The Show
02. Do It Big
03. Be Alright
04. Fishbowl
05. Infield
06. How I Do
07. The People
08. Ride
09. Live & Die
10. Back Home
11. Know Bout Me
12. Right Place, Right Time
13. Winner Takes All
14. Paint A Picture
15. P.O.N.
16. All For You

Monday, April 19, 2010

Yelawolf: Maurice Garland In Depth Interview



Newly signed to Interscope, Yelawolf tells his story of how Yelawolf came to be with Maurice Garland.

Friday, March 5, 2010

Yo Gotti - 'Women Lie, Men Lie' ft. Lil Wayne (video)



Yo Gotti - Live From The Kitchen on Inevitable/Polo Grounds/J-Records coming soon!

Thursday, January 14, 2010

Yelawolf Interview With Word of South



WordofSouth.com: You have a love for old school rock and roll. How does that influence the type of hip-hop you make?

Yelawolf: I’m influenced by all music. As far as classic rock goes, my mom got pregnant for me when she was 15. She was a country girl from Alabama who was really into classic rock. I was raised on that sound. She was dating a boyfriend for years who was on tour with Aerosmith on the “Walk this Way” tour. He brought some of the road crew out to Alabama to stay with them. They brought me t-shirts and some Beastie Boys and Run DMC music. That’s actually how I got my first listen of hip-hop. To fast forward a few years, I was in Nashville just head first into hip-hop. My roots are definitely classic rock. It really is the melody that I get from classic rock. I love the concepts and story telling.

WordofSouth.com: Moving forward to what’s going on now, how did you hook up with Juelz Santana for “Mixing up the Medicine?”

Yelawolf: I have a band and my violin player Ashanti had been working with this producer named Kane [Beatz]. Ashanti introduced me to Kane [Beatz] and he’s the producer who came up with that record. He needed a voice for that Bob Dylan cover and I fit the bill. I had just recently put out my “Studio” mixtape which was a tribute to classic rock with DJ Ideal. You should check that out if you haven’t. People heard that I can pull off that sound so Kane as a producer, he just picked me out to come do it. I lucked out but there was really nobody else that could do it anyway.

WordofSouth.com: Speaking of knowing you could do it, it wasn’t the first time you were tapped to cover a predominant sample. How did the “I Run” record with Slim Thug & Jim Jonsin come about?

Yelawolf: I and Jim Jonsin became friends a few years ago when I was signed to Columbia briefly. During that time when I was there, we recorded an album and K.P. [Kawan Prather] introduced me to Jim Jonsin and he flew me to Jim Jonsin in New York to work on the album we were gonna’ put out with Columbia. We just became tight and kept in touch over the years. Fast forward a few years after working with Jim Jonsin and going out to Miami and just kicking it, being around, “Stereo” got nominated for mixtape of the year at the Ozone awards. We got 5/5 in the magazine. I was nominated for that award and I went out there for the Ozone awards with Jim Jonsin. It started getting crazy inside, people were whiling out so we went to the studio – me and Jim Jonsin. I didn’t even know what we were doing; we were just going to the studio. On the way to the studio, he was telling me had a record and was trying to work the sample in. I just put my twist on it. We went to the studio and laid it. Slim Thug came through and he loved it. That’s just how it happened.

Read the full YelaWolf interview here:
WordofSouth - Yelawolf

Thursday, January 7, 2010

Lil Wayne, Young Money & Lil Flip On Stage Backstage In Beaumont, TX With C. Stone



At Ford Park Arena in Beaumont, TX - Tuesday, January 5 Young Money crewsters Mack Maine, Short Dawg, Gudda Gudda, T.Streets, Lil Twist & the wandering Birdman also in the building, but no Nicki Minaj.

Lil Wayne 'Before I Go' Tour Dates:

Jan. 7 (Thursday) – Allen Events Center - Allen, TX
Jan. 8 (Friday) – Cajun Dome - Lafayette, LA
Jan. 9 (Saturday) – Alltell Arena - Little Rock, AR
Jan. 10 (Sunday) – Desoto Civic Center - Southaven, MS

Catch Lil Wayne, while you can...

Friday, January 1, 2010

Shawty Redd Turns Himself Into Authorities After Homicide



via Hip Hop Wired & Z107.9 Hip Hop Cleveland

Hip-Hop producer Shawty Redd has turned himself into authorities after killing a man on New Years day in Henry County, Georgia.

According to reports, Shawty Redd got into an argument with another man at his residence and feared for his life when the victim was shot and killed.

Currently no bond has been issued for Shawty Redd, whose real name is Demetrius Stewart, as he awaits for arraignment.

Shawty Redd has produced numerous hits for Young Jeezy, Gucci Mane, 8 Ball & MJG and was responsible for Snoop Dogg’s hit “Sexual Eruption/ Sensual Seduction.”

Monday, December 21, 2009

Lil Flip 'Kim Kardashian' (Video)



The first single off of Lil Flip's upcoming 2010 release 'Ahead of My Time.'

Friday, December 18, 2009

Lil Flip Guest On Lil Wayne Texas Concert Date + New Song Hits The Net



Jan. 5 (Tuesday) – Ford Park Arena - Beaumont, TX

Along with Lil Wayne and the Young Money Crew are guests Sean Garrett and Lil’ Flip.

Ticket info here:
Ford Park Arena - Beaumont, TX



Download here:
Lil Flip - Heartbreaker

Lil Flip - 'Ahead of My Time' on Clover G/Asylum coming in 2010

Thursday, December 17, 2009

Texas Rapper Chalie Boy Fills Us In On His Latest Activites



via the September 2009 press release

BATTERY RECORDS SIGNS TEXAS BREAKOUT ARTIST CHALIE BOY

NEW YORK, NY - Battery Records has signed rising hip-hop artist, Chalie Boy. The hotly sought-after artist’s first single, “I Look Good”

Neil Levine, GM and Senior Vice President of Battery Records, states “Chalie is a gifted artist who has already demonstrated his potential to breakthrough. We are now ready to nurture his talent and capitalize on a promising single that we believe can be a breakout hit.”

Chalie adds, “It feels great, I'm excited about the possibilities that lie ahead. My Dirty 3rd Records family and I look forward to Battery/Jive Records helping us take this thing to another level!” Raised in Calvert, Texas, Chalie’s musical tastes were shaped by various influences. Exposed at an early age to blues artists like Bobby Bland, B.B. King, and Johnny Taylor, he also gravitated toward the sounds of Run-DMC, Sugar Hill Gang, Grandmaster Flash and fellow Texas legends UGK. “I’m a big fan of Bun B and his whole style and how he brought words out. He’s an incredibly smart southern rapper.” Says Chalie.

Signed to local label, Dirty 3rd Records, Chalie Boy recorded the feel good song “I Look Good” in March and the video recently wrapped shooting in Houston, TX. The single is available on iTunes and all major digital providers.



Pick up Chalie Boy's - 'Greatest Hits 4' and more here:
dirty3rdstore.com

for more info click here:
Battery / Chalie Boy

Wednesday, December 9, 2009

Hurricane Chris 'Unleashed' Tracklist Posted Online



01. I’m Back (prod. by Shawty Red)
02. Beat It Out The Frame (prod. by Phunk Dawg)
03. Halle Berry (She’s Fine) ft. Superstarr
(prod. by Play N Skillz, Q Smith & Superstarr)
04. Coke Bottle ft. Mouse (prod. by Mouse)
05. Headboard ft. Mario & Plies (prod. by The Inkredibles)
06. Last Call ft. Bobby V (prod. by Rodnae)
07. I Want It ft. Fiend 4 Da Money
(prod. by Fiend Crack Alley Music)
08. Secret Lover ft. Cherish (prod. by Don Vito)
09. No Worries ft. Beenie Man (prod. by Don Vito)
10. Hot Like Lava (prod. by Raphael RJ2)
*iTunes pre-order bonus track:
Touch Bases ft. Bobby V

Hurricane Chris - 'Unleashed' on Polo Grounds/J-Records in-stores December 21

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Juvenile Announces 'Cocky And Confident' New Release



Juvenile - Cocky And Cofindent on Atlantic/UTP in stores November 17.

( October 13, 2009, New York , NY ) --UTP/Atlantic recording artist Juvenile has unveiled early details of his eagerly awaited new album – the New Orleans-based rapper's first in over three years. "COCKY AND CONFIDENT" is scheduled for a November 17th, 2009 release at all physical and online retailers.

The album is heralded by two singles: the sizzling album track, "Gotta Get It," currently #47 and growing at urban radio, and "Hands On You (Feat. Pleasure P)," impacting now at Rhythmic radio outlets nationwide, having already been the #1 most added new track at Crossover.

"COCKY AND CONFIDENT" follows Juvenile's "REALITY CHECK," which debuted at #1 on the Billboard 200 upon its March 2006 release. This new album sees the acclaimed MC collaborating with a stellar line-up of guest performers, including Pleasure P, Kango Slim, Bobby V, Rico Love, B.G., Dorrough, and Q Corvette. Among the producers are such studio superstars as S-8ighty, Mouse, Precise, Lu Balz, C. Smith and of course, Juvenile.

"Cocky and Confident" is Juvenile's second Atlantic album, and E1 Records is adding its hip hop marketing muscle to the release, confident in the continuation of the extraordinary success of this great artist from New Orleans' Magnolia Projects.

Saturday, October 3, 2009

Chamillionaire: By Overwhelming Demand Keeps Original Album Title 'Venom'



via press release

Few artists have embraced the monster that is the internet and its abundance of social networking tools quite as comprehensively as Platinum, Grammy-winning rap artist, Chamillionaire; using it to engage with fans for everything from Twitter takeovers to live broadcasts from his own highly trafficked site, Chamillionaire.com. Last week saw him go out to his legions of fans visiting the site daily and asking for their input in renaming his upcoming Chamillitary/Universal Republic third album release, which had originally been titled "Venom"; a name Chamillionaire felt he should change as the growth and direction of the album's intended tracks, to him, no longer fit the moniker. Thousands submitted title suggestions and after narrowing it down, Chamillionaire put his top ten picks up for a vote on his site. To his surprise, his original album title "Venom" won by an overwhelming margin and, a man of his word, the newly-entitled, highly anticipated "Venom" is set to hit stores nationwide December 8, 2009.

"I wanna show all of my haters love. This song's for you…," Chamillionaire sings melodically on the intro to Venom's lead single, "Good Morning". Produced by DJ Frank E., with a track inspired by Tom Petty's 1989 smash, "Free Fallin' ", this ode to killing your naysayers with kindness feels as comfortable as an old friend and fits seamlessly into any Top 40 radio playlist. In fact, the single has already found a home on many Top 40 stations since being serviced earlier this month.

As far as other possible singles or artist features on "Venom" go, Chamillionaire is keeping that information pretty close to the vest, saying cryptically on his site's blog, "Venom stands for 'visually entertaining negatives of money'. I plan to shoot visuals to accompany the leakage of multiple records. I won't be talking too much about features and producers. Well, at least I will try not to. The visuals should do the talking."

Chamillionaire 'Venom' on Chamillitary/Universal Republic in stores December 8.

Friday, October 2, 2009

Pill Performs at the AC3 Music Festival in Atlanta, GA

Fan shot video, images good and audio fair.



Pill performed at the Five Spot Thursday October 1 as part of the AC3 Music Festival.

(video courtesy of Famous89DeVille)

Monday, September 28, 2009

B.G. 'Too Hood 2 Be Hollywood' Track List & Street Date Revealed


B.G. - 'Too Hood 2 Be Hollywood' track list.

01. Intro
02. I Swear ft. Gar
03. Ni**A Owe Me Some Money
ft. Lil Boosie, C-Murder, Soulja Slim & Young Buck
04. Is U Wet Yet ft. Level
05. My Hood ft. Gar & Mannie Fresh
06. Hit Da Block & Roll ft. Yo Gotti
07. Like Yeah
08. Cut Thang/F**k Thang ft. Matravious Cooks
09. Back To The Money ft. Magnolia Chop
10. Ya Heard Me
ft. Lil Wayne, Juvenile & Trey Songz
11. Rather Die ft. Maino
12. Watch Me Do Magic
13. Gutta Gutta ft. Gar
14. Keep It 100 ft. Magnolia Chop
15. Under Surveillance

Bonus Tracks

16. For A Minute ft. T.I.
17. I Hustle ft. Young Jeezy

B.G. 'Too Hood 2 Be Hollywood' on E1 tentatively scheduled for November 24th.