Monday, December 16, 2013

ARE YOU WITH THE RIGHT PARTNER?




During a seminar, a woman asked,” How do I know if I am with the right person?”

The author then noticed that there was a large man sitting next to her so he said, “It depends. Is that your partner?” 
In all seriousness, she answered “How did you know?”
 “Let me answer this question because the chances are good that it’s weighing on your mind.” replied the author.

Here’s the answer:

Every relationship has a cycle… In the beginning; you fall in love with your partner. You anticipate their calls, want their touch, and like their idiosyncrasies. Falling in love wasn’t hard. In fact, it was a completely natural and spontaneous experience. You didn’t have to DO anything. That’s why it’s called “falling” in love.



People in love sometimes say, I was swept of my feet. Picture the expression. It implies that you were just standing there; doing nothing, and then something happened TO YOU.



Falling in love is a passive and spontaneous experience. But after a few months or years of being together, the euphoria of love fades. It’s a natural cycle of EVERY relationship.

Slowly but surely, phone calls become a bother (if they come at all), touch is not always welcome (when it happens), and your spouse’s idiosyncrasies, instead of being cute, drive you nuts. The symptoms of this stage vary with every relationship; you will notice a dramatic difference between the initial stage when you were in love and a much duller or even angry subsequent stage. 



At this point, you and/or your partner might start asking, “Am I with the right person?” And as you reflect on the euphoria of the love you once had, you may begin to desire that experience with someone
else. This is when relationships breakdown.

The key to succeeding in a relationship is not finding the right person; it’s learning to love the person you found.



People blame their partners for their unhappiness and look outside for fulfillment. Extramarital fulfillment comes in all shapes and sizes.

Infidelity is the most common. But sometimes people turn to work, a hobby, friendship, excessive TV, or abusive substances. But the answer to this dilemma does NOT lie outside your relationship. It lies within it.

I’m not saying that you couldn’t fall in love with someone else. You could. And TEMPORARILY you’d feel better. But you’d be in the same situation a few years later.



Because (listen carefully to this)

The key to succeeding in a relationship is not finding the right person; it’s learning to love the Person you found.



SUSTAINING love is not a passive or spontaneous experience. You have to work on it day in and day out. It takes time, effort, and energy. And most importantly, it demands WISDOM. You have to know 
WHAT TO DO to make it work. Make no mistake about it.

Love is NOT a mystery. There are specific things you can do (with or without your partner), just as there are physical laws of the universe (such as gravity), there are also laws for relationships. If you know how to apply these laws, the results are predictable.



Love is therefore a “decision”. Not just a feeling.

Remember this always: the universe determines who walks into your life. It is up to you to decide who you let walk away, who you let stay, and who you refuse to let go!


This is so serious. If you care about someone, fucking care about them. Remember it every day. Remember it on bad days especially. Remember it in fights. Remember it when you’re happy. Appreciate it. Love it. Be it. Live it. Feel it. Cause you have no idea when it will be gone. There are only so many chances. And if you do forget and you do something stupid. You’d better fucking fight for it, fucking fight as hard as you can. As hard as you can doesn’t mean until it is a detriment to you, but until you’re sure it won’t be. True love will always be true love and if you lose it, you’re going to regret it.

Wednesday, November 27, 2013

Sunday, November 24, 2013

Cycle of Men

A 'hoe' makes a nigga cum.
A 'bad bitch' makes a nigga come out of his pockets. 
& a 'real women' makes a nigga come home. 

Sunday, November 10, 2013

Got some good news & you were the first person I wanted to tell... for a moment there .... I forgot you weren't here.

Friday, October 25, 2013

Sunday, October 6, 2013

First Game

Got surprise tickets to see my Eagles beat the Giants & make them 0-5. Actually my first time at a professional football, appreciated so much. 

Monday, September 30, 2013

Pusha T - Describing S.N.I.T.C.H. At LA Leakers

You don't need no nigga, keep focusing on school. We'll meet again.

Wednesday, September 25, 2013

Kanye West Interview With Zane Lowe (Part 2)

Drake Compares Himself to LeBron James

Word of Wisdom

"Never ignore a person who loves you, cares for you and misses you. Because one day, you might wake up from your sleep and realise that you lost the moon while counting the stars.”

Tuesday, September 24, 2013

Kanye West Interview with Zane Lowe (Part 1)

Drake On ESPN First Take

Forbes' Highest Paid Hip-Hop Artists List

1. Diddy ($50 million)
2. Jay Z ($43 million)
3. Dr. Dre ($40 million)
4. Nicki Minaj ($29 million)
5. Birdman ($21 million)
6. Kanye West ($20 million)
7. Lil Wayne ($16 million)
8. Wiz Khalifa ($14 million)
9. Ludacris ($12 million)
10. Pitbull ($11 million)
11. Drake ($10.5 million)
12. Snoop Lion ($10 million- tie)
12. Eminem ($10 million- tie)
13. Kendrick Lamar ($9 million -tie)
14. Pharrell Williams ($9 million -tie)
15. Macklemore & Ryan Lewis ($9 million -tie)
16. Swizz Beatz ($8.5 million)
17. Tech N9ne ($7.5 million)
18. 50 Cent ($7 million)
19. Lil Jon ($6 million -tie)
20. Rick Ross ($6 million -tie)
21. Mac Miller ($6 million -tie)
22. Young Jeezy ($6 million -tie)
23. Questlove ($6 million -tie)

Drake - Hold On, We're Going Home (Official Video)

Lyrics Of The Day

Just me & my old man getting back to basics.
We've been talking about the future & time that we wasted.
When he put that bottle down, girl that nigga's amazing.
Well, fuck it we had a couple Coronas.
We might have rolled a white paper, just something to hold us.
We even talked about you & our couple of moments.
He said we should hash it out like a couple of grown ups.
Now she engaged to be married, what's the rush on commitment?
I know we were going through some shit, name a couple that isn’t....
Remember our talk in the parking lot of your building.
Girl I felt like we had it all planned out, I guess I fucked up the vision.
Learning the true consequences of my selfish decisions.
When you find out how I’m living I just hope I’m forgiven.
You don't even know what you want from love anymore.
I’m acting out in the open, it’s hard for you to ignore.
But girl, what qualities was I looking for before?
Who you settling for, who better for you than the boy, huh?

Monday, September 16, 2013

Monday, August 26, 2013

Lyrics of the day

I got a life in my grip, she holding tight to my wrist.
She screaming, "Don't let me slip".
She see the tears in my eyes, I see the fear on her lips.
True when I told you, you the only reason why I don't flip and go insane.
My roof in the pouring rain.
You knew me before the fame, don't lose me the more I change, no.
Just grow with me, go broke you go broke with me.
I smoke you gon' smoke with me.
Woman's curse since birth, man lead her to the hearse.
I go Bobby you go with me damn.
Listen here, I'll tell you my biggest fears.
You the only one who knows them.
Don't you ever go expose them.
This life is harder than you'll probably ever know.
Emotions I hardly ever show, more for you than for me.
Don't you worry yourself, I gotta do this for me.
They tell me life is a test but where's a tutor for me.
Pops came late I'm already stuck in my ways.
Ducking calls from my mother for days.
Sometimes she hate the way she raised me but she love what she raised.
Can't wait to hand her these house keys with nothing to say..... Except!

- J. Cole

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

Smart Guy

I catch on to things really fast. 
I connect my dots in the right spots when I'm trying to put two & two together.
I'm an intelligent young man. 

Saturday, August 10, 2013

If it's true, I got some soul searching to do. Sike, I am in no rush for that type of connection. 

Thursday, August 8, 2013

Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Monday, August 5, 2013

Date

Today is August 5th......

READ THAT TOO

I just can't deal with people that's so nosey or always trying to figure me out. I knew by writing that exaggerated thought I'll find out who really be on my shit. Ughh, that's a turn off! You must be self-conscious. It'll be so much easier if people just ask direct questions if they wanna know something. That's why I can't have a girl or anything significant in that matter because I don't have the patients for that no more. I can't seem to find what I'm looking for in the inside of a girl. I just need to be alone for awhile, I can't deal with that bs right now. She was right when she said it'll be tough trying to find someone like her, can't believe I just admitted that. But, she admitted it too so we even. I TRULY HATE GIRLS THAT TRY TO FIGURE ME OUT. Just sit back, mind your business & play your part. Stop always worrying about how Bo feels or if you good enough for him. That's that high school shit. & you keep reading this, I'm make sure every time I surprise you with words. 

Sunday, August 4, 2013

READ THAT

I heard there's a few girls that sit & actually be reading the stuff I post, that's nice to know. I hope it gave you a insight on where my head was at the time. I actually took your friend out to eat last night & she rewarded me with some sex. I wish it was you, but you to busy fighting for attention. We call them, attention seeking hoes. Yes, that's what me & the fellas call them. Back about your friend, she likes me.... I think to much! I'm psychical attracted to her, that's probably it. I got some dead weight I'm getting rid of right now. Remember that night you said I was undecided & I don't know what I want, well you're too. Why, because you don't know who to choose. & you know exactly what I mean by that, just remind yourself of that "night". I keep going, but then that'll be giving you to much attention. 

Tuesday, July 23, 2013

Timbaland - Talks On Posthumous Aaliyah Music (Preview)

Big Sean - 60 Seconds in St. Tropez

Words of The Wise

“I was told
, the average girl begins to plan her wedding at the age of 7
.
She picks the colors and the cake first
.
By the age of 10 
She knows time & location.

By 17
 she’s already chosen a gown
, 2 bridesmaids
 & a maid of honor.

By 23 
she’s waiting for a man who won't break out in hives when he hears the word “commitment”
.
Someone who doesn’t smell like a Band-Aid drenched in lonely.
Someone who isn’t a temporary solution to the empty side of the bed
. 
Someone
 who’ll hold her hand like it’s the only one they’ve ever seen
......


To be honest 
I don’t know what kind of tux I’ll be wearing.

I have no clue what want my wedding will look like.

But, I imagine
 the women who pins my last to hers
 will butterfly down the aisle
like a 5 foot promise
I imagine
.
Her smile
 will be so large that you’ll see it on google maps
 & know exactly where our wedding is being held.

The woman that I plan to marry
 will have champagne in her walk
 & I will get drunk on her footsteps
.
When the pastor asks 
if I take this woman to be my wife, 
I will say yes before he finishes the sentence
.
I’ll apologize later for being impolite
, but I will also explain him
 that our first kiss happened 6 years ago
.
& I’ve been practicing my “Yes”
 for past 2,165 days.

When people ask me about my wedding, 
I never really know what to say
.
But when they ask me about my future wife
I always tell them, 
her eyes are the only Christmas lights that deserve to be seen all year long.

I say
, she thinks too much.

Misses her father.

Loves to laugh
.
& she’s terrible at lying
, because her face never figured out how to do it correctly
.
I tell them
 if my alarm clock sounded like her voice
, my snooze button would collect dust 
I tell them.

If she came in a bottle, 
I would drink her until my vision is blurry & my friends take away my keys.

If she was a book
, I would memorize her table of contents.

I would read her cover-to-cover
, hoping to find typos
.
Just so we can both have a few things to work on
, because aren’t we all unfinished?

Don’t we all need a little editing?

Aren’t we all waiting to be proofread by someone?

Aren’t we all praying they will tell us that we make sense.
She don’t always make sense
, but her imperfections are the things I love about her the most
.
I don’t know when I will be married.

I don’t know where I will be married.

But I do know this, 
whenever I’m asked about my future wife
.
I always say
…She’s a lot like you”

Monday, July 22, 2013

Jay-Z - Picasso Baby (BTS Video)


Lyrics of the day

Girl this summer, you’ll be looking for
You’ll looking for me while I’m riding
That brand new whip you wanted
All I ever asked for was patience
(All I ever asked and you know it)
Patience & pussy but most the patience
Swear I used to keep you waiting in
Now you waiting on something better
Girl what’s better than this
We were suppose to do big things
Now you waiting for somebody
Girl, what’s better than this?








I'll wait............

Friday, July 12, 2013

Wednesday, July 10, 2013

Jay-Z - Picasso Baby (Behind The Scenes)

Jay-Z - Budweiser: Dreams Are Made

Jay-Z Interview with The Breakfast Club

On ranking MCHG 4th:
"Only fourth place...but fighting for that three you gotta fight Reasonable Doubt, The Blueprint, and The Black Album, that's just hard. Reasonable Doubt, that's the first album I made, because that's the joint that took my whole life to make it, then The Blueprint and The Black Album. Sometimes I switch The Blueprint and The Black Album, but don't tell nobody."

"It's very difficult to recreate those times, you can't bring those times back. But just for it to be so high says what I think about it, but it's new anyway I might not think that way in two weeks."

On artist he's proudest of on his label:

"Kanye West. The most successful at this stage in his career. And his growth and the progress that he's made is unbelievable. When he first came in he wasn't at the artist that he is today, but he always aspired to be, from the moment he walked through the door when he was a producer. When he was the producer, he was saying stuff like 'I am the savior of Chicago,' and I was like 'what are you even talking about, you don't even have a single.'"

On past Nas beef and if it's awkward today:

"It was a moment in time, a great moment for hip-hop. For us, we really have a good relationship, we laugh. That thing is so far passed...even today, I guess it's eleven years old maybe longer and people still fascinated with it, but it's so far removed so far in the background that nah, we're not awkward around eachother at all."

"Rap is competitive. Each time I went out I put my career on the line as well."

On Samsung app difficulties with MCHG:

"Any time that you try to do somethng different, there's gunna be problems. 'Cause it's never been done before, so you can't anticipate all the things that's gunna happen. The thing that happened with Samsung is a real thing, it was 20 million hits to the app, I'm not saying 20 million people hit the app, but we went over a million, say a million three. But a [million] people were tyring, and you couldn't get through, so you hit it twenty times. Thats twenty million hits to the app, and it broke. It's not even a number that you could fathom, it's twenty times the amount that we thought was gunna happen, so you can't even prepare service for that, it's very difficult."

"You want the fan to get that experience. The people that waited and downloaded, you want them to have that experience right away, it was like a little disheartening to me, 'cause imagine that."

On Dame Dash:

"Dame's a hustla. Dame'll figure it out...Nothing can erase that era and those times and those memories and those fights that we had to get Roc-A-Fella where it was. It just is what it is. Nothing's gunna change that. There'll be some minor things in the middle that get in the way, but those things go away and the relationship remains and those memories remain. We did something great, we built something that's gunna be here forever, that's gunna be talked about forever. So there will always be love there."

On artists he thinks will be here in ten years:

"J. Cole, Drake, Kendrick as well, just on sheer will and wanting it Wale is gunna be here as well."

On almost signing Lil Wayne:

"Truth is, and this is the first time I ever told this truth, the truth is after I had a meeting with Wayne... you know, I had a relationship with Baby, so I used to go to New Orleans I would hang out with him. So I felt it was only right to call him, so I called him outta respect, like, 'yo I was talking to Wayne, just letting you know, boom boom boom,' so after that I think we received a letter at our office for 'tortuous interference,' and after that I was like, 'woaaah,' and it just all went from there. I think I would rather lose that situation and do the right thing than the opposite, 'cause I think I coulda signed him and told him after but I did the right thing and I'm cool with that decision."

On working with Timbaland again:

"Me and Timb have always been great, but we've never been able to do more than one record together. We've been together since the year started basically. But we've only been able to create in small time frames, like we did "Big Pimpin'" and that was it. It was just like a personality thing, it wasn't really clickin'. But we always had genuine love for eachother, but it just wasn't right. Finally, when he came back this time, he was actually more mature, he was actually like a different person. His conversation and everything I was like, 'oh, Timb's ready.'"

On lack of Just Blaze on MCHG:

"The thing with Just Blaze and I is that we really have records that people really care about, so when we try and make music we tryna beat that, so it's not like a blank sheet when he walks in the room. These are records that are actually the foundation to my career, so we in there tryna beat those, and that's hard for us to do, that takes time. I'm not in one place and he's certainly not focused as well...we both need to focus if we gunna do something that's gunna stand up to those records."

The Dream - Unlocking The Holy Grail

Tuesday, July 2, 2013

LeBron James Will Surpass Michael Jordan?

LeBron James Statically Can Be Better Than Michael Jordan.

Sunday, June 30, 2013

Kanye West's Team - The Making of "Yeezus"

There’s no pedestrian fuckery on this album. People are working their asses off to make the best shit, and Kanye’s leading the pack.” — Justin Vernon

GETTING THE CALL

Justin Vernon: After Twisted Fantasy, I kind of assumed that I’d get the call again at some point. I get along with Kanye really well and I think his musical decisions are exquisite. He feels otherworldly– he talks about being a god and shit, and his confidence in himself is inspiring. But at the end of the day, he’s a musician working in the lab. We have fun. So when the call came for this album, I was like, “Shit yeah!”

Noah Goldstein: When I was 17, I saw Dr. Dre’s episode of “Behind the Music”, and he was sitting at the console, looking through the glass. I was like, “That’s the dude I want to be!” Then, a few years later, I was working on hip-hop mixtapes at this studio in West Philadelphia, and it was a terrible situation, a really bad neighborhood. I almost got in numerous altercations there. So I quit there after a year and a half, and said, “The only way I’m ever working in hip-hop again is if I work for Jay-Z and Kanye West.” It was super tongue-in-cheek. Then, almost exactly 10 years later, Kanye hired me to work on Dark Fantasy. And four months after that, we were working on Watch the Throne with Jay.

Travi$ Scott: My manager Anthony Kilhoffer has been Kanye’s engineer/producer from the beginning, and he showed him my “Lights (Love Sick)” video during the Cruel Summer sessions. I was pretty much homeless when Kanye first flew me to New York. Later on, I was in Miami with ‘Ye and Will Smith– I was playing Will my album, he fucks with it. He’s like my homey now. Then ‘Ye’s like, “You gotta come to Paris.” I got a passport and went. It was just me, ‘Ye, and Noah Goldstein at first. We weren’t even doing actual studio shit. We were just chilling, running around A.P.C.’s offices, making music on my laptop.

Evian Christ: When Kanye’s camp was working on Cruel Summer, they were apparently listening to my mixtape Kings and Them a lot. So when they decided to come out with this industrial, electronic, dark vision for Yeezus, they hit me up. In January, they told us, “Kanye’s in the studio on Sunday, it’d be good if we could have some stuff to play him.” That was on the Friday before, so I had two days to make some tracks that were specifically tailored to Kanye West. I don’t think I went to bed that night. I just made track after track after track– nine altogether– and sent them over. A couple of days later, they were like, “This is great, we’ve started working on one.” That track eventually became “I’m in It”.

“I’M IN IT”

Anthony Kilhoffer: “I’m in It” started out with a different sample and melody. Then Kanye removed the sample, and it lived as a six-minute arrangement for a while. Then Rick Rubin got ahold of it and structured it to flow as a three-minute piece. Oftentimes, songs start out at six minutes, then they get whittled down to the best parts over the course of months.

Mike Dean: We’re all trying to push things to be weirder. I sometimes push for stuff to be more musical, and then Kanye pulls it back to hip-hop. “I’m In It”, for instance, had these crazy guitar parts and all this stadium stuff, and then Rick, Noah, and Kanye pulled it back. I wasn’t very happy with that at first, but it came out really well.

Evian Christ: That track is obviously very overtly sexual, and the production mirrors that. When I first sent it, I had some breathy sex sounds laid on the snares, and by the time Kanye was rapping over it, it definitely went into overdrive as far as emphasizing the sexuality. The first time I heard it with Kanye’s vocals, I had to do a double-take on a couple of the lines. But if you’re gonna do a song like that, you may as well go all the way; if you’re gonna do a sex song, you may as well talk about fisting. To me, it was very definite– he absolutely knew what he wanted to do on that track.

Kanye’s talking about a bunch of really stunningly visual sex shit on ‘I’m in It’, but it’s not like he’s saying stuff like that to his friends 24 hours a day.” — Justin Vernon

Mike Dean: Justin Vernon is one of the collaborators Kanye will always go to. He doesn’t fit in with any genres– you never know if he’s gonna sing like the Bee Gees or some crazy distorted thing. And you don’t know what he’s saying half the time. He’s kind of like Michael McDonald, like he’s got marbles in his mouth. It’s about the emotion.

Justin Vernon: I don’t even know what I’m singing on “I’m in It”– I’d have to look at it. Kanye’s talking about a bunch of really violently and stunningly visual sex shit in there, but it’s not like he’s saying stuff like that to his friends 24 hours a day. I mean, sitting around the studio, we all have intelligent conversations about the state of women in the world– I wouldn’t say we had a conversation about feminism, necessarily, but we’re sensitive to it.

The imagery of the song is definitely intense, but so is American Psycho. I loved that little American Psycho clip he did– it puts things into context, because Kanye feels like a director, and I don’t think everything he’s saying in the songs is actually him saying it every time. It’s like a movie, or a concept. On “I’m in It”, it seems like I’m playing a character in the song, but I’m not necessarily guiding who that character is– Kanye’s editing creates the character. I definitely remember the “star fucker” section in the middle, though, just calling somebody out. That’s my favorite lyrical content that I’ve gotten to do on a Kanye record so far.

Evian Christ: I love Assassin’s part in that song, too, he absolutely killed it.

Justin Vernon: I have no idea what the Jamaican dude [Assassin] is saying. At all. But it’s fucking awesome as hell.

Noah Goldstein: Kanye figured out all those reggae voices on the album. Everything is him, to be real. Regardless of who additionally produced things, it’s his curation. And this idea that he’s not as hands-on in the studio now is bullshit. He is the consummate producer.

THE KANYE WAY

Anthony Kilhoffer: Everyone’s given a song and asked to go produce on it and bring it back the next day, then we’ll all sit around and critique it. It’s kind of like an art class [laughs]: “This is what we did this afternoon, what do you think?”

Evian Christ: The atmosphere in the studio is very focused. It’s a room full of people who are working towards the same idea, and you just know that when you hand something over to Kanye, it’s gonna come back even better. That makes for a very easy working experience.

Anthony Kilhoffer: We get to the studio at about two in the afternoon, and then work until maybe 11 p.m., go back to Kanye’s house, play what we worked on, then maybe go back to the studio around midnight and work until three in the morning. A lot of people think, “Oh, it’s a Kanye project– spend a couple of days in the studio and then go out and party in Paris.” But it’s serious work.

Evian Christ: Logic would seemingly state that an album with so many people working on it would sound disjointed, but what Kanye manages to do is get the best out of everyone working towards one sound. You can’t really overstate how difficult it is to do that.

Jay-Z - One to Many (Magna Carta Holy Grail)

Travi$ Scott - Talks Music & Reebok

Jay-Z - Oceans (Magna Carta Holy Grail)

Jay-Z - Holy Grail (Magna Carta Holy Grail)

Tuesday, June 25, 2013

Drake Lyrics be so Relevant

Yeah, looking back on it at least my pride is intact.
Cause we said no strings attached & I still got tied up in that.
Every thing that I write is either for her or about her. 
So I'm with her even when I'm here without her & she know it.
The girl that I want to save is like a danger to my health.
Try being with somebody that want to be somebody else.
I always thought she was perfect when she was being herself.
Don't even know how to help.
But, I guess that's just the motion.
She'll probably come around soon as I settle down, that's the motion. 

Monday, June 24, 2013

Nike & Celebrities Leave LeBron James Messages

Kanye West Interview with W Magazine

On his decision to record in Paris…

“In Paris, you’re as far as possible from the land of pleasant smiles,” West says. “You can just trip on inspiration—there are so many people here who dedicate their lives to excellence.”

On the Paris Fashion Week incident that inspired "I Am A God"…

West was informed that he’d be invited to a widely anticipated runway show only on the condition that he agree not to attend any other shows. “So the next day I went to the studio with Daft Punk, and I wrote ‘I Am a God,’?” West says. “Cause it’s like, Yo! Nobody can tell me where I can and can’t go. Man, I’m the No. 1 living and breathing rock star. I am Axl Rose; I am Jim Morrison; I am Jimi Hendrix.” West is not smiling as he says this, and his voice is getting louder with each sentence. “You can’t say that you love music and then say that Kanye West can’t come to your show! To even think they could tell me where I could and couldn’t go is just ludicrous. It’s blasphemous—to rock ’n’ roll, and to music.”

On the title of “I Am A God”…

“I made that song because I am a god,” he says finally. He laughs for a second, then stops. “I don’t think there’s much more explanation. I’m not going to sit here and defend shit. That shit is rock ’n’ roll, man. That shit is rap music. I am a god. Now what?”

On being nervous around other celebrities...

“Anyone who meets me for the first time and is not slightly nervous is completely full of shit. Because when I meet people I respect, I’m nervous. When I go have lunch with Tarantino at the Chateau Marmont, I’m nervous. It’s fucking Tarantino!”

On his narcissism…

“On one end, I try to scale it back,” he says. “Because I don’t want to close any of the doors needed to create the best product possible. But my ego is my drug. My drug is, ‘I’m better than all you other motherfuckers. Kiss my ass!’?” On being unconcerned with failure…

He’s planning his return to fashion and has set up an atelier in Milan, but right now, he says, his priority is “absorbing as much as possible” and finding the best people in every field to work with. The idea of failure seems to serve not as a deterrent but as a stimulus. Whenever he tries something new, West observes, “people say, ‘Why do you want to destroy your name?’ But I don’t care about my name as much as I care about my ideas. I could do something completely wrong, and people could hate it, but then someone else could see it and do it completely right. And it’s a push forward for civilization.”

On Watch The Throne...

“It was like Steve Jobs and Bill Gates talking at the same time. You know which one of us was Steve.”

On Yeezus...

“This music is made to spark the visionaries to stand up for themselves and help the world. Because the world is fucked.”

Big Sean - Talks Hall Of Fame

J. Cole- Dollar & Dream Tour NYC

Big Sean - Hall Of Fame Announcement

Jay-Z - Samsung Commercial "4More"

J. Cole & Drake - Buying Born Sinner

Wednesday, June 12, 2013

Kanye West Interview with NY Times

When your debut album, “The College Dropout” came out, the thing that people began to associate with you besides music was: Here’s someone who’s going to argue for his place in history; like, “Why am I not getting five stars?”

I think you got to make your case. Seventh grade, I wanted to be on the basketball team. I didn’t get on the team, so that summer I practiced. I was on the summer league. My team won the championship; I was the point guard. And then when I went for eighth grade, I practiced and I hit every free throw, every layup, and the next day I looked on this chart, and my name wasn’t on it. I asked the coach what’s up, and they were like, “You’re just not on it.” I was like, “But I hit every shot.” The next year — I was on the junior team when I was a freshman, that’s how good I was. But I wasn’t on my eighth-grade team, because some coach — some Grammy, some reviewer, some fashion person, some blah blah blah — they’re all the same as that coach. Where I didn’t feel that I had a position in eighth grade to scream and say, “Because I hit every one of my shots, I deserve to be on this team!” I’m letting it out on everybody who doesn’t want to give me my credit.

And you know you hit your shots.

Yeah — you put me on the team. So I’m going to use my platform to tell people that they’re not being fair. Anytime I’ve had a big thing that’s ever pierced and cut across the Internet, it was a fight for justice. Justice. And when you say justice, it doesn’t have to be war. Justice could just be clearing a path for people to dream properly. It could be clearing a path to make it fair within the arena that I play. You know, if Michael Jordan can scream at the refs, me as Kanye West, as the Michael Jordan of music, can go and say, “This is wrong.”


You’ve won a lot of Grammys.

“My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy” and “Watch the Throne”: neither was nominated for Album of the Year, and I made both of those in one year. I don’t know if this is statistically right, but I’m assuming I have the most Grammys of anyone my age, but I haven’t won one against a white person. But the thing is, I don’t care about the Grammys; I just would like for the statistics to be more accurate.

You want the historical record to be right.

Yeah, I don’t want them to rewrite history right in front of us. At least, not on my clock. I really appreciate the moments that I was able to win rap album of the year or whatever. But after a while, it’s like: “Wait a second; this isn’t fair. This is a setup.” I remember when both Gnarls Barkley and Justin [Timberlake] lost for Album of the Year, and I looked at Justin, and I was like: “Do you want me to go onstage for you? You know, do you want me to fight” 

For you.

For what’s right. I am so credible and so influential and so relevant that I will change things. So when the next little girl that wants to be, you know, a musician and give up her anonymity and her voice to express her talent and bring something special to the world, and it’s time for us to roll out and say, “Did this person have the biggest thing of the year?” — that thing is more fair because I was there.

But has that instinct led you astray? Like the Taylor Swift interruption at the MTV Video Music Awards, things like that.

It’s only led me to complete awesomeness at all times. It’s only led me to awesome truth and awesomeness. Beauty, truth, awesomeness. That’s all it is.

So no regrets?

I don’t have one regret.

Do you believe in the concept of regret?

If anyone’s reading this waiting for some type of full-on, flat apology for anything, they should just stop reading right now.

But that is something that you apologized for.

Yeah, I think that I have like, faltered, you know, as a human. My message isn’t perfectly defined. I have, as a human being, fallen to peer pressure.

So that was a situation in which you gave in to peer pressure to apologize?

Yeah.

So if you had a choice between taking back the original action or taking back the apology, you’d take back the apology?

You know what? I can answer that, but I’m — I’m just — not afraid, but I know that would be such a distraction. It’s such a strong thing, and people have such a strong feeling about it. “Dark Fantasy” was my long, backhanded apology. You know how people give a backhanded compliment? It was a backhanded apology. It was like, all these raps, all these sonic acrobatics. I was like: “Let me show you guys what I can do, and please accept me back. You want to have me on your shelves.”

That’s fascinating, to look at that record through that lens.

I don’t have some type of romantic relationship with the public. I’m like, the anti-celebrity, and my music comes from a place of being anti. That was the album where I gave people what they wanted. I don’t think that at that point, with my relationship with the public and with skeptical buyers, that I could’ve done “Black Skinhead” [from “Yeezus]

Does that make “Dark Fantasy” a dishonest album in some way?

It’s always going to be 80 percent, at least, what I want to give, and 20 percent fulfilling a perception. If you walk into an old man’s house, they’re not giving nothing. They’re at 100 percent exactly what they want to do. I would hear stories about Steve Jobs and feel like he was at 100 percent exactly what he wanted to do, but I’m sure even a Steve Jobs has compromised. Even a Rick Owens has compromised. You know, even a Kanye West has compromised. Sometimes you don’t even know when you’re being compromised till after the fact, and that’s what you regret. I don’t want to come off dissing “Dark Fantasy.” It’s me never being satisfied and then me coming and admitting and saying the truth. As much as I can air things out for other people, to air things out for myself, to say, “I feel like this could’ve been stronger.”

It’s interesting to think of that album as compromise, when it follows “808s & Heartbreak,” which seemed very clearly to be the moment where you’re like, “O.K., forget everything that’s been expected of me.”

Yeah, people asked me to change my name for that album.

Like, label people?

Yeah, different people. They said, “Do it under a different name.” And when it came out, people used to be like, “Man, I wish it had more rapping on it.” But I think the fact that I can’t sing that well is what makes “808s” so special.

A fully trained professional singer couldn’t have done that record. It just wouldn’t have ever come out that way.

Yeah. I love the fact that I’m bad at [things], you know what I’m saying? I’m forever the 35-year-old 5-year-old. I’m forever the 5-year-old of something.

A lot happened between “Graduation” and “808s,” obviously: a lot of struggle, a lot of tough things for you. [Mr. West’s mother died in 2007.]

Creative output, you know, is just pain. I’m going to be cliché for a minute and say that great art comes from pain. But also I’d say a bigger statement than that is: Great art comes from great artists. There’s a bunch of people that are hurt that still couldn’t have made the album that was super-polarizing and redefined the sound of radio.

Do you feel like “808s” is the album of yours that has had the most impact?

There are people who have figured out the exact, you know, Kanye West formula, the mix between “Graduation” and “808s,” and were able to become more successful at it. “Stronger” was the first, like, dance-rap song that resonated to that level, and then “808s” was the first album of that kind, you know? It was the first, like, black new wave album. I didn’t realize I was new wave until this project. Thus my connection with [the graphic designer] Peter Saville, with Raf Simons, with high-end fashion, with minor chords. I hadn’t heard new wave! But I am a black new wave artist.

Was singing always something you wanted to do?

I just dove more into rapping because I had a lot that I wanted to express, and I wasn’t a really, really good singer.

Even though you had always wanted to be out in front, was there ever a point where you valued your anonymity?

Yeah, I held on to the last moments of it. I knew when I wrote the line “light-skinned friend look like Michael Jackson” [from the song “Slow Jamz"] I was going to be a big star. At the time, they used to have the Virgin music [stores], and I would go there and just go up the escalator and say to myself, “I’m soaking in these last moments of anonymity.” I knew I was going to make it this far; I knew that this was going to happen.

But producing happened for you first, especially after Jay-Z used you so heavily on “The Blueprint.

I used to have tracks that sounded like Timbaland; I had tracks that sounded like [DJ Premier]. But Jay-Z was an amazing communicator that made the soul sound extremely popular. And because I could make the soul sound in my sleep, it finally gave me a platform to put the message that my parents put inside of me and that Dead Prez helped to get out of me and Mos Def and [Talib] Kweli, they helped to get out of me: I was able to put it, sloppily rap it, on top of the platform that Jay-Z had created for me.

Before, when I wanted to rap, my raps sounded like a bit like Cam’ron; they sounded a bit like Mase; they sounded a bit like Jay-Z or whoever. And it wasn’t until I hung out with Dead Prez and understood how to make, you know, raps with a message sound cool that I was able to just write “All Falls Down” in 15 minutes.

Is that true?

Yeah, that’s how I discovered my style. I was just hanging out with them all the time in New York. I would produce for them. You know, I was able to slip past everything with a pink polo, but I am Dead Prez. And now, because I was able to slip past, I have a responsibility at all times.

What were the things that you were trying to do on “Late Registration” that you either did not or could not yet do on “Dropout”?

I was trying to do different things with orchestras. It was just a vibe that I was trying to get at, a sound I was trying to mix with hip-hop to try to see how far I could expand it. I guess that was a Chicago thing, like Quincy Jones.

But you came here, you worked with Jon Brion [the Fiona Apple producer].

I really liked the sound of some projects that Jon Brion had worked on. I was always considered this crazy hothead kid, but I would always just go and just really break bread with someone who I respected. I will completely bow to anybody I respect.

That era also includes what I find probably the most moving thing that you’ve ever done, which is calling out President Bush at the Hurricane Katrina telethon. To me, that moment is actually the peak of putting a message in a pop format, even though it’s not a song.

Yeah. I guess it’s a very pop moment of a lifetime or generation. I mean, my dad’s generation is a generation of messaging, you know? But that’s just a piece of me being the opinionated individual that I am.


Were you conscious that that’s what you were doing, or was it totally just instinct?


Yeah, it was pretty bugged out. When you think about it, I was wearing like, a Juicy Couture men’s polo shirt. We weren’t there, like, ready for war.


I wonder if you see things in a more race-aware way now, later in your career, than you did then. The intensity of the feelings on “Watch the Throne” is much sharper.


No, it’s just being able to articulate yourself better. “All Falls Down” is the same [stuff]. I mean, I am my father’s son. I’m my mother’s child. That’s how I was raised. I am in the lineage of Gil Scott-Heron, great activist-type artists. But I’m also in the lineage of a Miles Davis — you know, that liked nice things also


On “Throne,” who’s in a darker mood on that record, you or Jay-Z?


I’m always the one that’s in a darker mood. And then also there was still a thing where I didn’t feel comfortable, you know, going out on tour, the this, the that — all that by myself, yet. Like, I needed


A buffer, kind of.

I needed to connect with Jay.

Part of it was you wanting to have someone standing next to you and say, “He’s cool. Ye’s cool.”

Yeah, even with the kilt on.

You look at Jay or Diddy, and I’d say like, 90 percent of the time, you think they’re having a good time. With you, I would say, I don’t know, 50-50 maybe? Or 30-70?

Maybe 90 percent of the time it looks like I’m not having a good time.

But you’re in a very public relationship, a seemingly long and satisfying relationship: you’re about to have a child.

Any woman that you’re in love with or that loves you is going to command a certain amount of, you know, energy. It’s actually easier to focus, in some ways.

When you’re uncertain about love, it can be such a distraction. It infects all the other areas.

Yeah, that’s what I mean when I say like, “Yo, I’m going to be super Zenned out like, five years from now.” I’m the type of rock star that likes to have a girlfriend, you know? I’m the type of soul that likes to be in love and likes to be able to focus. And that inspires me.

On “Keeping Up With the Kardashians,” there’s a really affectionate scene where you go and help Kim sort through her clothes.

That was from a place of love. It’s hard when people read things in a lot of different ways. You know, the amount of backlash I got from it is when I decided to not be on the show anymore. And it’s not that I have an issue with the show; I just have an issue with the amount of backlash that I get. Because I just see like, an amazing person that I’m in love with that I want to help.

Did you think differently about family after your mother passed?

Yeah, because my mother was — you know, I have family, but I was with my mother 80 percent of the time. My mom was basically — [pause]

Was your family.

Yeah, that’s all I have to say about that.

What thoughts do you have about parenthood?

That is a really interesting, powerful question. One of the things was just to be protective, that I would do anything to protect my child or my child’s mother. As simple as that.

Have you ever felt as fiercely protective over anything as you are feeling now about those things?

I don’t want to explain too much into what my thoughts on, you know, fatherhood are, because I’ve not fully developed those thoughts yet. I don’t have a kid yet.

You haven’t experienced it yet.

Yeah. Well, I just don’t want to talk to America about my family. Like, this is my baby. This isn’t America’s baby.

One of the things I thought when I heard the new record was, “This is the anti-'College Dropout.’ ” It feels like you’re shedding skin. Back then, you were like: “I want more sounds. I want more complicated raps. I want all the things.” At what point did that change?

Architecture — you know, this one Corbusier lamp was like, my greatest inspiration. I lived in Paris in this loft space and recorded in my living room, and it just had the worst acoustics possible, but also the songs had to be super simple, because if you turned up some complicated sound and a track with too much bass, it’s not going to work in that space. This is earlier this year. I would go to museums and just like, the Louvre would have a furniture exhibit, and I visited it like, five times, even privately. And I would go see actual Corbusier homes in real life and just talk about, you know, why did they design it? They did like, the biggest glass panes that had ever been done. Like I say, I’m a minimalist in a rapper’s body. It’s cool to bring all those vibes and then eventually come back to Rick [Rubin], because I would always think about Def Jam.

His records did used to say “reduced by Rick Rubin.”

For him, it’s really just inside of him. I’m still just a kid learning about minimalism, and he’s a master of it. It’s just really such a blessing, to be able to work with him. I want to say that after working with Rick, it humbled me to realize why I hadn’t — even though I produced “Watch the Throne”; even though I produced “Dark Fantasy” — why I hadn’t won Album of the Year yet. This album is moments that I haven’t done before, like just my voice and drums. What people call a rant — but put it next to just a drumbeat, and it cuts to the level of, like, Run-D.M.C. or KRS-One. The last record I can remember — and I’m going to name records that you’ll think are cheesy — but like, J-Kwon, “Tipsy.” People would think that’s like a lower-quality, less intellectual form of hip-hop, but that’s always my No. 1. There’s no opera sounds on this new album, you know what I mean? It’s just like, super low-bit. I’m still, like, slightly a snob, but I completely removed my snob heaven songs; I just removed them altogether.

On this album, the way that it emphasizes bass and texture, you’re privileging the body, and that’s not snobby.

Yeah, it’s like trap and drill and house. I knew that I wanted to have a deep Chicago influence on this album, and I would listen to like, old Chicago house. I think that even “Black Skinhead” could border on house, “On Sight” sounds like acid house, and then “I Am a God” obviously sounds, like, super house.

Visceral

Yeah, visceral, tribal. I’m just trying to cut away all the — you know, it’s even like what we talk about with clothing and fashion, that sometimes all that gets in the way. You even see the way I dress now is so super straight.

Does it take you less time to get dressed now than it did five years ago?

Hell, yeah.

You look at your outfits from five or seven years ago, and it’s like?

Yeah, kill self. That’s all I have to say. Kill self.

One of the things that you’ve thrived on over the years is sort of a self-conception as an outsider, that you’re fighting your way in. Do you still, in this moment, feel like that?

No, I don’t think I feel like that anymore. I feel like I don’t want to be inside anymore. Like, I uninvited myself.

What changed?

I think just more actual self-realization and self-belief. The longer your ‘gevity is, the more confidence you build. The idea of Kanye and vanity are like, synonymous. But I’ve put myself in a lot of places where a vain person wouldn’t put themselves in. Like what’s vanity about wearing a kilt?

But there’s vanity in fashion. You make clothes, but some people think it’s a vanity project, that you don’t take it seriously.

But the passion is for humanity. The passion is for people. The passion is for the 18-year-old version of myself. The passion is for the kids at my shows. I need to do more. I need to be able to give people more of what they want that currently is behind a glass. I don’t believe that it’s luxury to go into a store and not be able to afford something. I believe luxury is to be able to go into a store and be able to afford something.

I sat down with a clothing guy that I won’t mention, but hopefully if he reads this article, he knows it’s him and knows that out of respect, I didn’t mention his name: this guy, he questioned me before I left his office:, “If you’ve done this, this, and this, why haven’t you gone further in fashion?” And I say, “I’m learning.” But ultimately, this guy that was talking to me doesn’t make Christmas presents, meaning that nobody was asking for his [stuff] as a Christmas present. If you don’t make Christmas presents, meaning making something that’s so emotionally connected to people, don’t talk to me.

But at the same time, this feels like the Grammy conversation, because what I keep thinking is: the people whose hands you’re trying to shake, they may control certain corridors of power, but those aren’t even the relevant corridors of power anymore.

I’m a professional musician because I have the structure of Universal Records. I’m a professional creative. Since I did the Louis Vuitton sneaker, I’ve never been allowed to be in a continually creative structured place that makes product. I’ve had meetings where a guy actually told me, “What we’re trying to figure out is how we can control you.” In the meeting, to me! Why do you want to control me? Like, I want the world to be better! All I want is positive! All I want is dopeness! Why would you want to control that?

That’s why I said “I throw these Maybach keys” [in the new song “New Slaves"]. I would rather sit in a factory than sit in a Maybach.

I want to tell people, “I can create more for this world, and I’ve hit the glass ceiling.” If I don’t scream, if I don’t say something, then no one’s going to say anything, you know? So I come to them and say, “Dude, talk to me! Respect me!”

Respect my trendsetting.

Yeah, respect my trendsetting abilities. Once that happens, everyone wins. The world wins; fresh kids win; creatives win; the company wins.

I think what Kanye West is going to mean is something similar to what Steve Jobs means. I am undoubtedly, you know, Steve of Internet, downtown, fashion, culture. Period. By a long jump. I honestly feel that because Steve has passed, you know, it’s like when Biggie passed and Jay-Z was allowed to become Jay-Z.

I’ve been connected to the most culturally important albums of the past four years, the most influential artists of the past ten years. You have like, Steve Jobs, Walt Disney, Henry Ford, Howard Hughes, Nicolas Ghesquière, Anna Wintour, David Stern.

I think that’s a responsibility that I have, to push possibilities, to show people: “This is the level that things could be at.” So when you get something that has the name Kanye West on it, it’s supposed to be pushing the furthest possibilities. I will be the leader of a company that ends up being worth billions of dollars, because I got the answers. I understand culture. I am the nucleus.