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SiLent Knight



Last Updated: 11/17/2009

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Status: Single
State: New Jersey
Country: US
Signup Date: 1/10/2005

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Thursday, August 20, 2009 

Peace all,

As some of you may know I am currently in the process of working on my group album with my long-time collaborator/producer/engineer/MC/best bud/ex-hype man and group member KON, and also working on my solo album....

However, I have been performing with a live band called FUSE for the past year or year and a half, and I've done shows with them for even longer(about 6 years). Well we are putting the finishing touches on a CD...thats pretty much all FUSE with the music and a few different artists singing and rhyming. I have been pretty involved in this project and am featured on a hand full of songs.


I am very excited about it, and I tried new things on here....I hope you all enjoy when it drops! (And stay tuned for me and KON's album and my new solo album!)

And if you are in the New Brunswick, NJ Tri-State area please come through on Sat. Sept 5th for the CD RELEASE PARTY!!!

Details are all on my page.

Thanks for reading.

peace and respect as always.

-SK
Thursday, July 02, 2009 

Alright yall.....I started a blog. Got some other stuff in the works, thanks for all the support and inspiration. There's not too much on it right now....but Ima try to keep at it. Here is the link: http://silentknightofficial.blogspot.com../

Friday, March 13, 2009 

Peace yall,

This is my first show at Court Tavern in a while, and it will be the last show in the area for a while as I'm focusing on my self and working on my album and an album with K.O.N.
Come through and rock with us!
Photobucket

Peace and Balance


Wednesday, March 04, 2009 
Peace yall,
This is a blog/bulletin I put up exactly 2 years ago. I thought I'd repeat the theme once again so I dug this out of the vault. Check it out:


To some people, it's ludicrous that Black History and/or Womens History are only celebrated in an alotted month, when obviously they should be acknowledged all year round. And to some (ignorant) people......it's ludicrous that we even allow a month to celebrate specific cultures or genders, when we "should" have "equality"....and "fair treatment". Those people twist the words of Martin Luther King Jr. and other great people, and use them to argue with Affirmitive Action and many other things.
Well.....we don't have equality. Not yet. So I/we take these months to acknowledge and celebrate the triumphs and achievments in Black History and Womens History. And more-so to encourage others to acknowledge it. All year round.

In honor of "Womens History Month" I've changed my "top friends" to recognize alot of women who are doing good things in hiphop, on stage or behind the scenes. AND some who are doing good things with activism social issues. (As well as just some of my peoples. lol) So check em out! And I'll be switchin them up from time to time. There's too many of yall!



Lastly....Ive reposted an interesting article below from Davey D that was posted by Wize Intelligent, regarding Women in Hiphop, and making positive changes.

Peace and equality
-Silent Knight




Repost:
------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
There's definitely a revolution of sorts going on as Hip Hop purges itself from the negativity and the all too often, over the top minstrel-like stereotypes that have plagued it for the past few years. Leading the charge are women. Last week during a Hip Hop panel discussion at UCLA in Los Angeles, the panel which included everyone from West Coast pioneers like Alonzo of the World Class Wrecking Crew and Arabian Prince of NWA on down to new comers like Brother Los of Company of Prophets to academics like Professor Sam Aleen to B-girls like Zulu Queen LA Nivens, the question was asked about women in Hip Hop.

Everyone on the panel noted that what will save Hip Hop if it needs to be saved, are strong women who are committed to making sure their voices are heard and that respect is given. Brother Los noted that he had noticed that more and more women have been stepping up and taking charge in the reshaping of Hip Hop. Alonzo said that female energy would be a welcome change and that tyhere was too much male testaterone. Everyone else chimed in with similar sentiments with the underlying theme being change is needed and women can make it happen in a big way.

These words ring true as you look around the country and see all sorts of women making moves. In the words of the late great freedom fighter Fannie Lou Hammer sistas have just grown tired of being tired with putting up with the bullshit the industry is offering and as a result they are making moves.

It could be in the form of woman like Pittsburgh native Kellee Maize releasing her incredible album 'Age of Feminine' which has an anthem type song called Marchin' (for the Revolution)featuring fellow Pittsburgh, PA spitter Emprez or Portland's Queen Nasimwho puts the fun and old school back into Hip Hop with her new album FRESH. In the Bay Area we have women like Jennifer Johns blowing up the spot while down in LA women like Medusa and B-Girl Asia One still reign supreme. In New York we have emcees like Rha Goddess and J-Love who just released a book focusing on women empowerment called 'We Got Issues'. (www. wegotissues. org)

We haven't even begun to scratch the surface as we can also focus on all the women who have been in the forefront of the media justice/ reform movements, Shout out to women like Rosa Clemente, April Silver, Christie Z Pabon and J-Love to name a few in the REACH Coalition in NY that took on Hot 97, or women like Lisa Fager of Industryears. com or women promoters and B-girls like DJ Earth One and DJ Soyo who hold it down in Washington DC. In a recent conversation with DJ Soyo, she noted that she was recently named a commissioner on the Sojouner Truth Project where they are organizing and fighting to have the statue of this pioneering woman of the Sufferage and Abolitionist movements returned to the Capitol. Years ago her statue was removed from the halls of the Capitol because she was Black and offended white folks running things at the time. For more info contact soyodj@aol.com This is in addition to the pair constantly fighting to create more space and find homes for conscious Hip Hop.

Of course we gotta show love to the local homegirls like spoken word artist Malkia Cyril and Jen Serrianno over at Youth Media Council in Oakland which took on Clear Channel and continue to fight for Media Justice. I could go on and on dropping names, but there's just way too many women making great moves and its starting to have impact.

What makes this current wave of energy so inspiring is that many of these women are doing more then just rapping. They are organizing and attaching their work and collective efforts to community groups. That includes women doing their own artist show cases, starting their own production and management companies, setting up their own record labels and as is the case in Boston with Girls Radio or in Seattle with producer B-Girl Chillz 'B-Girl Radio' setting up their own online radio stations. They personify the dead prez adage 'It's Bigger than Hip Hop'. By connecting to community they ensure that there will be a fundamental shift in the way things are done.

Last week in Seattle, during the 206 Zulu Anniversary an all women's Hip Hop panel with local artists and activists was held. The panel included radio hosts E Mandisa and Sacha Star, Emcee and Spoken word artists like Laura 'Piece' Kelly and Onion and Ms Kitty Wu of Cool Out TV. It was moderated by Professor Mako Fitts.All these women in addition to being practioners of Hip Hop are well heeled organizers. Instead of entertaining the usual banter about men in Hip Hop calling women bitches, these sisters who are doing big things up north, focused on the topics like the importance of creating spaces for women to nurture and heal, holding down multiple roles, overcoming obstacles and most important motherhood within Hip Hop. The discussion was enlightening and is included at the end of this article.

This weekend (Friday Night march 2) Seattle will host its third all female Hip Hop showcase at University of Washing in the Basement Hub. The last one I went to was superpacked with woman after woman getting up on stage and simply killing it. This week many of the women who rocked the first two return to the fold, including Canarysing, Julie C, GiGi, Pinay Sa Seattle and Melissa Noel Green to name a few. If that's not enough Seattle follows up with another women's showcase the next night with poet Ursula Rucker at the Langston Hughes Performing Arts Center. Big shout out to sisters like Heidi Jackson for producing this event.

Meanwhile closer to home in the Bay Area, the sisterhood vibe is alive and well with the upcoming release of the Queendom Compilation album. Peep the article below by Eric Arnold. Local activist and TV talk show host Maleena Lawrence who is pictured on the Women Hold Up More Than Half the Sky flier has just launched a new Hip Hop series on Comcast Channel 26 called Ladies First which spotlights women in Hip Hop. Lawrence said she had grown frustrated with asking the question 'where are my sisters at?'. As a result she decided to flip her popular weekly talk show and give it new direction to create space for Women Hip Hop artists up and down the west coast. If anyone is interested in getting down get at her by dropping her an email at themlshow@gmail.com or hit up her myspace. com/maleena8

Like I said I could go on and on talking about all the people doing things. The bottom line is this. Like it or not change is in the wind with women leading the charge. This is a good thing for Hip Hop and society in general. Enjoy the panel discussion included below...

http://odeo. com/audio/9897643/view


Davey D

--------------------------------------------------

Compilation spotlights women rocking hip-hop mikes, battling 'vixen' stereotypes
by Eric K. Arnold, Special to The Chronicle

http://www. sfgate. com/cgi-bin/article. cgi?file=/c/a/2007/02/
15/DDGLRO46AU1.DTL&type=printable

When Pam the Funkstress started out as a member of East Oakland's all-female hip-hop group 3 Deep in the early '90s, she was one of the only woman DJs in the local scene. Today, that's not the case -- she points to numerous women who spin regularly in Bay Area clubs, such as Backside, Neta and Daniela, to name a few.

In the past couple of years, all-female DJ nights have become much more common locally, but the phenomenon isn't limited to the Bay Area. "I didn't realize how many women DJs were really, really out there until I hit MySpace," Pam confides with a chuckle.

Typically, women in hip-hop have been portrayed as video vixens (i.e. Karrine "Superhead" Stephens), oversexed divas (think Lil' Kim and Trina), or asexual tomboys (a la Lady Sovereign). Occasionally, they get to be girlfriends of a thugged-out Big Willie type, but only if they're "bootylicious" (like Beyoncé). However, those limited stereotypes are but a small representation of the role women have actually played in the culture.

This week, S.F.-based independent label Outta Nowhere Entertainment hopes to alter the public perception of women in hip-hop with the release of "Queendom, Vol. 1," the first in a projected series spotlighting female emcees and DJs from across the country and the world.

This long-overdue tribute to women in rap is the brainchild of S.F. rapper and entrepreneur Oposit, who became inspired after throwing a series of successful female-themed showcases with local hip-hop collective Sisterz of the Underground between 2002 and 2005. After seeing the diverse array of female talent -- not just rappers, but b-girls, graffiti writers and DJs -- at these events, he remembers thinking, "Yo, this is crazy. We got a movement!"

Yet, while researching the idea of an all-female rap album, he discovered there weren't many on the market. In fact, he was aware of only one such collection: Rhino's three-volume 1998 set, "Fat Beats and Bra-straps." "To me, this was a void in the marketplace," he says.

Oposit knew of the wealth of female talent in the Bay Area's underground scene, yet, "I wasn't really seeing that as far as how women (rappers) were being portrayed in the mainstream." He spent six months doing market research, and he found that the "Queendom" concept had an even larger appeal than he initially thought. "People who said, 'I want to like rap but I can't because of its attitudes toward women' were all for it. ... I got a 90 percent positive response across the board."

Oposit reached out to female rappers, both known and unknown, to license tracks for the album. "All the artists were feeling (it)," he says. Yet because the album was on a small indie label, he adds, "I don't think anybody really knew what to expect."

"Queendom's" diverse lineup includes East Coast veterans MC Lyte, Bahamadia, Ladybug Mecca and Apani B. Fly, as well as NYC turntablist Kuttin' Kandy, L.A.'s Medusa, Sacramento's Tenashus, Portland's Siren's Echo, and Australia's Macromantics. Thankfully, "Queendom" doesn't overlook the Bay Area's feminine hip-hop royalty: Pioneering women such as the Conscious Daughters, spoken word/hip-hop theater maven Aya De Leon and Pam the Funkstress are along for the ride as well.

"As a female, I'm 120 percent behind this compilation," Pam says, adding, "It's inspiring to see a woman do anything a man can do."

During a recent interview with De Leon and the Conscious Daughters in Oakland, the three discussed what it means to be a woman in hip-hop, the prevalence of sexism and misogyny in the culture and how that relates to society as a whole.

According to De Leon, "There have always been a lot of fabulous and really strong women artists in every field," including hip-hop. However, she says, "a lot of times, hip-hop gets blamed for the problems of the larger society. And I think, when it comes to women, this is certainly no exception."

As she notes, "Sex sells in a society that sells sex." And while hip-hop videos have contributed to the sexual objectification of women, "The Lil' Kims and the Trinas aren't the gatekeepers. They're not the decision-makers." Even more problematic, De Leon says, is the fact that "you have porn directors directing (music) videos ... one of the things about super-sexualized imagery is the more you have, the more numb people are to how sexualized it is, how over the edge."

To CMG of the Conscious Daughters, sexual imagery and objectification "comes with the territory right now of what's mainstream. Showing what you have. You gotta have money and cars, and along with that comes a lot of T&A."

Her partner in rhyme, Special One, says, "It's come to a level with the exploitation of women where it's like, what more can you do? Take off your bikini?"

Even so, Special One -- who notes that the Conscious Daughters' first two albums, 1994's "Ear to the Street" and 1996's "Gamers," sold more than 700,000 units combined -- believes that "any female MC that's good will be heard. I don't think you gotta be so super-sexy with a long weave and be the baddest bitch."

Speaking of the b-word, De Leon and the Conscious Daughters have somewhat differing ideas regarding the controversial term. De Leon says she makes a point not to use it in her personal conversations, although she relates that in her one-woman hip-hop theater show "Thieves in the Temple," one of her characters "uses it intermittently as a term of empowerment for herself, or as a way of attacking other women."

"I think (these words) become signifiers of being urban or being down or being edgy, when that may or may not be people's reality," she says. "Overall, I think it reflects the casual way that sexism is in all fibers of our culture, certainly not just in hip-hop or the language people use in hip-hop."

For the Daughters, who "grew up in Oakland listening to Too ," "bitch" is "just a word," which could be either empowering or degrading, depending on the context. "A man could be a bitch," Special One says. "Don't limit that word to just a woman."

Part of the problem with hip-hop's attitudes toward women is the genre's inherent gender imbalance. As De Leon relates, "A lot of times, there's the compilation with just one woman." Often, she'll do a show and discover "I'll be the one woman on the bill." This perceived separation, she says, can lead to a sense of tokenism.

"It's hard being the only woman. You feel like you have to speak for all women everywhere. ... You've gotta be really tight, because you're the only one representing for your gender that whole night."

Asked why there haven't been more all-women rap compilations, Special One replies, "I'm sure there are a whole lotta women trying," adding, "I know a lot of young female MCs and a lot of female producers that are making beats." In addition to the "Queendom" project, the Daughters have a new album, entitled "The Nutcracker Suite," scheduled for summer 2007 on local indie label Guerilla Funk Recordings.

The album's title, which the Conscious Daughters say was given to them by their producer, Paris, is intended as a not-so-gentle rebuke of rap's patriarchy. "It's a male-dominated industry," Special One explains. Because of "the tits-and-ass thing, with the girls being exploited all the time, we're going for your balls." Ouch, indeed.

But if women ran hip-hop -- as De Leon's spoken word track on "Queendom" imagines -- would that also mean the end of sexism and misogyny in the genre? Not necessarily, all three admit. "It would depend on who the women were and what their agenda was," De Leon says.

"You know how male artists have their crews? There'd be more catfights," Special One says with a laugh. "But at the same time, I think it'd be more productive, more of substance." According to CMG, "the topics would change. We would talk about other things than sex." For instance, "domestic violence, adultery, teenage pregnancy, runaways," Special One says, finishing the thought.

She points out that on "The Nutcracker Suite," the Conscious Daughters address some of those thorny issues. On prior albums, the duo focused their efforts on being equally as hardcore as their male counterparts; this time, they also express a more mature perspective.

"We've been here for 10 years. We've realized that we have grown," Special One says. "Younger girls are looking up to us, so we don't wanna say, 'Oh, we ridin' and getting high all the time.' That's not what we're about. We wanna let 'em know it's more than sexism in hip-hop and in life, period."

These women may be among the most visible females in the Bay Area hip-hop scene, but they're far from the only ones.

Although Pam the Funkstress feels there's still a long way to go -- in particular, she cites the lack of women DJs on commercial radio as a major obstacle -- she's aware of the influence female hip-hoppers can have on young women. She's spun for girls aged 14-18 at the Huckleberry Youth Programs who were very inspired by "seeing a woman who can hang with the best of 'em."

To De Leon, the very notion of women in hip-hop is an empowering one.

"There's something about hip-hop, it forces you to step up and face all your fears and insecurities. There's nothing but you and the beats and your words," she says. "When I was coming up, hip-hop was something new. Nowadays, it's everywhere." For that reason, she says, "We need to keep putting out those positive images and those strong voices."

Echoing that sentiment, Special One adds, "we have to be recognized other than just standing next to the rapper guy. We have something to say too."


www. daveyd. com 

Monday, January 12, 2009 
 
Shout out to Adam B. for making me the artist of the week on his blog and doin this dope interview!
http://www.adambernard.blogspot.com/
 
Silent Knight is an artist I became aware of by virtue of being in the scene. We’d met at a few events and at the most recent one we were at he handed me a copy of his debut album, Hunger Strike. Hunger Strike, an album filled with powerful, message-based Hip-Hop, was originally released at the very end of 2006 and Silent Knight followed it up with a remix CD titled Restoration: One Step Back, Two Steps Forward. Staying busy, in 2008 he released a free album online at his website and co-founded an all-ages art and music event titled Hub City Revival. In addition to all that he’s also a finalist in Loud.com’s emcee competition, which happens to pit him against his friends Homeboy Sandman and Kaze. This week I caught up with Silent Knight to find out how he’s dealing with being in such a big competition against some of his good friends, what he hopes people get out of his music, and why he feels that despite his own style being highly message driven there’s still a time and place for a brainless rap artist or two.

Adam Bernard: Let’s start with your name. What about you is Silent and what about you is Knight?
Silent Knight: What's Silent about me... well, I'm a very private person in a lot of ways, and very much a thinker, so while Hip-Hop has helped me to be more sociable, I'm still a pretty quiet person a lot of times. Sometime after I wrote one of my first songs at age ten there was a gap where I would be writing every day, but not letting anyone hear anything I was working on. That actually contributed to the name Silent Knight. The part of me that's Knight is the fact that underneath the quiet, private, self-conscious exterior is a man with a lot to say. I try to use my music as a balance of entertainment and social commentary, or activism, even. A lot of people that know me, or have had at least one conversation with me, tell me I am a completely different person when I'm on stage performing and I think that's a perfect example of Silent vs. Knight.

Adam Bernard: Currently you are involved in a contest on Loud.com where you're up against two of your friends, Homeboy Sandman and Kaze. How do you deal with competing against people you both know and respect?
Silent Knight: The way I honestly see competing against people I know and respect is like this - if I don't win I sure as hell hope one of them wins, and I know they probably feel the same way. If you’re not gonna win it would feel good knowing someone whose music you like, and who you like and respect as a person, won. We all wanna win, but at the same time, the three of us, I can’t speak for anyone else, have been working hard for a while now and we will all continue to do so. When I got into the finals Boy Sand called me and congratulated me and I did the same when I heard Kaze was in.

Adam Bernard: The vast majority of your songs have a point to them. When was it that you started working messages into your music and why do you feel it's important to do so?
Silent Knight: I think I've been doing that since day zero. What I try to do is make music that sounds good while also having lyrics that mean something. I always had a pet peeve about cats who either had a lot of important stuff to say, but rhymed over a distorted weird sounding beat and were all off beat or mumbling, and cats whose music or beats sound really dope and really professional but weren't saying anything and they weren’t being creative about the nothing they were saying. So getting back to your actual question, when I first stared writing I guess I just naturally would write stuff that was raw and also had a point to it, whether that point was a story about a robbery, or about how we need to stop killing and robbing each other and learn about our ancestry. It comes naturally to me being a thinker. I try not to strain to think of the craziest most out there topic, but I think it's very important to have messages in the music, As much as Hip-Hop is a music for adults and contains "bad language" a lot of the time, it's also for the kids… more so even. I have done plenty of shows and festivals where little kids come up to me and tell me they liked my performance and I've had a lot of parents tell me how much they appreciate my music and its messages. With how unbalanced the airwaves and TV are, playing a lot of nonsense, I think positive messages are definitely needed. I'm not afraid to say that. Plus adults get bored with the same ol’ same ol’, too.

Adam Bernard: If only one of your messages could make it to the people which one would you want it to be and why?
Silent Knight: Aww man, I hate questions about my "favorites," or "what’s the best." I guess I'm an indecisive person. Most of the time it's about favorite emcees, albums, books or food, though… this is even more difficult. {laughs} Alright, the message would be, “we are priceless people. When will we realize this, people?! All walks of life, all shapes, colors and sizes, people!" That "we got more in common than we're led to believe, but hate mongers go around and spread the disease." Basically, that we can get more accomplished if we work together, that we should respect each other and love each other and respect our planet. Nothing else matters if we don't have a planet to love on and people living on it. That’s the foundation. Peace, Justice, Equality, Unity. Am I getting to deep or preachy? {laughs} Anyway, that would be the message. Either that or, “I'm mad nice at rhyming.” Take your pick!

Adam Bernard: Finally, as someone who infuses messages into his rhymes, do you feel there's still a time and place for artists who don't necessarily have anything to say?
Silent Knight: Absolutely. I really do. Some people take it so serious and think artists who don't really have anything to say should just give up or fall off a cliff. Sometimes I hear artists who I think should give it up, too, or at least switch it up, or work on their craft more, but I think it comes down to creativity. There are rappers who don't talk about anything but drugs and guns, or money and women, but they do it creatively. On the other hand someone could talk about a lot of powerful and important issues but have no creativity in their rhymes and song writing, or no energy and style, and I could hate it. Some singers could sing about nothing but love, have a whole album with nothing but love songs, which sounds boring and played out as hell on paper, but if he or she could sing their ass off and be creative with the love songs it could be one of my favorite albums. I think it's about balancing it out. The artists I appreciate and admire most have a wide variety of styles and walk that line of having something to say and making it sound good.


Friday, December 19, 2008 
..

..
Currently listening:
Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers)
By Wu-Tang Clan
Release date: 1993-11-09
Monday, December 15, 2008 

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


DECEMBER 15, 2008


ELEMENTALITY PRODUCTIONS SET TO RELEASE NEW SILENT KNIGHT ALBUM FOR FREE!!


(New Brunswick, NJ) – In the spirit of giving during the holiday season, Elementality Productions is proud to announce the release of a brand new album from Silent Knight on December 23 – FOR FREE.  The new album titled, Holla Burton (The UnMixed Cassette) will feature twelve brand new songs along with a few of the high profile guest appearances SK has made this year.

With SK in rare form on the mic and production from the likes of 9th Wonder, Illmind, Jake One, Analogic, Oddisee & M-Phazes to name a few, fans & critics alike can anticipate quite possibly his best release to date.

To give the world a taste of what's in store, Elementality Productions is leaking one of the tracks a week early titled "The Wager" (right click & save as).  The song is produced by New Jeruz's own Illmind and features AOK representatives 8thW1 and Fresh Daily.  There is no doubt this track will have you breakin your neck while leaving you deep in thought hitting the replay button over and over!!

Be sure to visit www.elementalityproductions.com on December 23 for the free download of SK's new album Holla Burton (The UnMixed Cassette)!!


For press inquiries, please contact:

Keenan Ormsby

ko@elementalityproductions.com

732.322.6888

Saturday, November 15, 2008 

Yes....​I NEED YOUR HELP!​!​!​!​


I enter​ed into the LOUD.​ COM conte​st for the chanc​e to win a digit​al singl​e deal with Loud/​SRC and a prett​y nice chunk​ of chang​e to go along​ with it.

I need you all to vote for me so that I make it into final​ 10. Votin​g ends this comin​g MONDA​Y,​ so it's crunc​h time.​ They have judge​s that will make the final​ call.​.​.​.​and I'm defin​itely​ confi​dent but I need them to pay atten​tion and notic​e me. That'​s where​ you all come in.​.​.​.
You will need to register and make a profile.


Those​ who know me know that I don'​t ask for much or post tons of bulle​tins to vote for me in thing​s,​ or even push peopl​e to buy my album​s etc.​.​.​

But I think​ I have a good chanc​e of winni​ng this.​ But not witho​ut your help.​

Here is the link:


http://www.loud.com/contest/vote/contest_rap/contestant_silentknight

I appre​ciate​ ALL of the enorm​ous suppo​rt you'​ve given​ me thus far. It is very much appre​ciate​d.​.​.​As a matte​r of fact I have a gift for each of you comin​g soon(​you'​ll see.​.​.​.​.​more detai​ls to come)​

Peace​ and prosp​erity​
-​Silen​t Knigh​t

Friday, October 10, 2008 
Here it is! My first music video ever!!!

It's for a song called "Here We Go" with my mellow my man East (Elementality fam!) and it's prodcued by 9th Wonder (formerly of Little Brother, did tracks for Jay-Z, Mary J Blige, Destinys Child, Sean Price, and so on, and so on)
 
It's the first video from the new compilation album from my manager DJ K.O. titled "Picture This".  The album features Talib Kweli, Royce 5'9, Elzhi of Slum Village, Phonte of Little Brother, Tiffany Paige, Skyzoo, Emilio Rojas, OC, Edo G, Kaze, Eternia, Diamond D, Finale, Sean Boog, Torae, John Robinson and MANY more.  With production from 9th Wonder, Illmind, Analogic, Black Milk, Khrysis, Ayatollah, M-Phazes, Marco Polo, and Buckwild!!!
 
The album is available on itunes, amazon.com, Fat Beats, some Best Buy locations, and most 'mom n pop' stores. So find it! : )

Let me know what yall think!

peace and creativity
 
 
PS-don't forget to register to vote if you're not! NJ deadline is Tuesday!
Check yours at www. rockthevote. com

PPS-If you like what u see and hear.....support and buy the album. ; )

PPPS-New Silent Knight "mixed tape" coming soon???
???
!
!
!
Holla Burton
Currently listening:
Picture This
By Various Artists
Release date: 2008-09-23
Monday, October 06, 2008 

"I hate the gooks. I will hate them as long as I live."
Yes, those were the words John McCain spoke back in 2000 when he was running for president back then. In eight years...I know it's a long time....but have we forget about all that? Or just not know? Don't care?

(For anyone who doesn't know, "gook" is a derogatory term for Asian people.)

There is NO way anyone can pull some "out of context" bullshit here. John McCain was held captive for years by the Vietcon during the Vietnamese war, and he says thats who he was reffering to as "gooks", and said he would continue to do so. he only stopped using the term in public because it would hurt his campaign.


Again...There is no way that can was taken out of context AND no way that sort of bigotry and hate can be justified.


Who knows what kind of racism is underneath the radar that goes on when the mics and cameras are off.

Who knows what other racial slurs are/were being spewed by this man.




I'm gonna leave this right here....This is just ONE reason why we can't have this man running our country. And ONE reason why I'm officially stating my support for Barack Obama.


PLEASE do yourself a favor and vote on Nov. 4th....
**Important**-If you're not registered to vote...Here is a list of deadlines for all states. For some states the deadline is today!!! So it's not too late but do it asap.
http://www.rockthevote.com/electioncenter/

If you have any trouble registering or have any questions....I will personally help you or direct you to someone who can.

Thanks for your time and like I said...I'll have more info and more to say soon.

Peace and justice
-SK

PS-If you're gonna send me a message....PLEASE think about what you're writing first. Don't come at me with some ignorant racist shit...not that me writing this will prevent that.

PPS-Please don't send me a long winded novel about how all politcians are reptilian warlords who worship the devil and no election matters, ect etc.

Beleive me, I'm not bashing anyone's beliefs and I'm far from naive to the "politricks" but there has to be a line somewhere.


Thanks
holla burton : )