Status: Single
City: ATLANTA
State: Georgia
Country: US
Signup Date: 6/16/2006
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Friday, August 21, 2009
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Wednesday, July 01, 2009
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Tuesday, July 08, 2008
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Tuesday, January 16, 2007
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GRIND TIME OFFICIAL BACKGROUNDS  GRIND TIME OFFICIAL made these backgrounds for all my myspace friends, feel free to copy and paste the HTML to your page...  GRIND TIME OFFICIAL made these backgrounds for all my myspace friends, feel free to copy and paste the HTML to your page...  GRIND TIME OFFICIAL made these backgrounds for all my myspace friends, feel free to copy and paste the HTML to your page...
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Thursday, October 26, 2006
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Killer Mike - I Pledge Allegiance To The GrindAlbum Review by: Jason Fleurant Mon, October 9th, 2006
You want to talk about label trouble? Yeah we all know about Joe Buddens issues with Def Jam. But lets talk about the Atlanta native lyrical beast that is Killer Mike. Michael Render who earned the name Killer Mike after slaughtering several fellow MC's in battles has seen his hard shares. After releasing his debut album "Monster" in 2003, having a hit track on Madden 04, as well as being signed by one of rap biggest groups (Outkast). You'd think things would be running smooth for the beast, it couldn't be further from the truth.
His long awaited follow up 'Ghetto Extraordinary' has been pushed back so much, it looks like Jerry Rice hair line (oooooooooh no he didn't!). Not only that, after signing with Big Boi's Purple Ribbon Records via Columbia he has dealt with issues with fellow member C-Bone. Determine to take his fate into his own hands, Mike founded his own label Grind Time Records and has dropped a blazing hot street album to take what is rightfully his, Respect.
From the intro called "The Pledge" Killer's double cd is displayed as more than just an average street joint but a battled cry for war- " the grind is you, the grind is truth, the grind is friend, the grind is crew". On a soul sped up sample driven "Comin' Home Atlanta", Killer shouts out his love for his hometown as he travels back home on a plane. Going into that killer instinct is the soon to be hood classic "The Juggernaut", where he brutally slaughters the beat with a ill flow thats on a mission. Letting it be known that he has no equal - "the era of the bullsh!t is over/ I will dismember and disfigure he, who figure he/ ever near to me, or dear to me/ lyrically, I will abolish he" letting foes and friends alike that play time is over.
The creativeness is display o...(continued below)
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n bangers like "The Next Bitch", where he details his relationship with three different women, all of which being metaphors for Coke, The Rap Game, and his new love Corporate America. Then Killer shows off his story telling skills on "Deuces Wild". Killer details from his point of view a story after a day of trapping getting rob by two men, and the dangers of not keeping your homies in check. The hits don't stop there, he introduces us to his artists on songs like "Sag's N Flags", "What's Da Bizness", and "H.N.I.C". On "H.N.I.C," Mike's new artist from Little Rock, Arkansas named S.L. Jones shines showing that he's next up saying "Jones, I got the spirit of a go getter/ no ni**a flow better/ flap jack, toe flipper/ phat back, hoe stripper/" with a silky smooth flow. The anger and frustrations are not escaped from this opus. On the track "That's Life", Mike in true killer fashion puts the recent detractors ( Oprah, Bill Cosby, Bush) of Hip-Hop and ghetto children in check. Becoming the voice of the voice he aim's at Oprah saying "Killer Mike can give a damn if it's me you ain't liking/ the last great debate I had was with Michael Eric Dyson/ call me a dumb rapper/ Girl stop, you'd be hard press to find a rapper smart as me/ Maybe Jay-Z, 2Pac, C.U.B.E/ but Oprah rather put Superhead on TV." He even goes as far as to elaborate a little on the Kanye West anti-Bush comments spitting "George Bush don't give a sh!t about blacks, no sh!t Sherlock!/ plus his daddy's CIA flooded the hood with rocks/ and his momma said the women should feel right at home/ getting raped in the bathroom of the superdome/ the comments Kanye made where damn near right/ but Bush hates poor people, be it black or white/". Speaking of retaliating towards comments, the now Infamous "I Will Not Loose" diss track is also here. After C-Bone made a reference to Mike's non appearance to a birthday bash in Atlanta saying "One Monkey Don't Stop No Show". 28 hrs and 35 minutes as Mike brags the venomous "I Will Not Loose" slaughter his one time label mate. "God in the building, kneel at the alter/ hating ass ni**as, heard you talking/ I can't fault ya/ see a line in my rhyme will blow and f*cking fame you/ I'd rather see you sitting on the sideline and shame you/". He goes on to say "If he really was your boy he'd a bought you a chain too/ ain't you from the same crew/ I know you his homie, you don't need 'em like them folk/ but the truth is ni**a you a sidekick hoe" mocking the relationship between Bone and Big Boi. You want to talk about having no lyricist, you want to scream out from the top of your lungs Hip-Hop is Dead. Go ahead, knock yourself out, but for real Hip-Hop heads Oct. 31st you got to cop this album. Killer Mike is here and he's problem. One of the few double albums that doesn't fall off but is hot all the way through and full of fire lyrics and great concepts. Killer Mike has accepted the challenge of taking his career into his own hands and is ready to let the world know he will not loose. "I decided to stop being like a f*cking rapper, and a M. C. E. O" he says "I'm a MC, and Executive Officer of a lot of dope songs". It's official Grind Time Rap Gang, Bang Bang!
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Friday, September 01, 2006
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 Killer Mike That's Life [2006] Crackers, backpackers, whatever-- relentless fire-breathing transcends such sub-genre squabbles. To wit, all else quickly becomes moot once this monster begins his head-boiling barrage-- but instead of going on about purple tops or double barreled bang-bangetry, Mike is chopping it up with Cornel West and Michael Eric Dyson and "servicing the motherfuckin' children." You can practically see the steam spouting from his brain. Channeling Ice Cube's vintage 1991 flow, Mike manages to chew out Bush (I, II, and Barb), Oprah, Cosby, doctors, Bill O'Reilly, preachers, Martha Stewart, and "rich motherfuckers black and white." He even clears up the brotherhood of the baggy pants myth in one of the track's searing between-verse screaming-word diatribes that contain as much-- if not more-- venom as its rhymes. So, yeah, he's angry. But, somehow, still optimistic; he's not about to roll himself up in a big ball and die. Instead, even after checking off his infinite shit list, he reverses the titular self-defeating shoulder shrug: "If you don't like what I'm sayin'that's life!" You're either with him or you're a greedy multi-millionaire pedophile crackhead slut with no regard for the human race, fuckface. Posted by Ryan Dombal in hip hop on Thu: 08-10-06: 04:00 AM CDT | Permalink http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/page/track_reviews/37815/Killer_Mike_Thats_Life
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Friday, September 01, 2006
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Weekly Blogs Coming Soon. Hit me up with some god topics and lets start talking. this page aint gonna be a come and worship me page. Grinding is a mindset and we gotta push each other to grow. GTRG...BBB
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Friday, August 25, 2006
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Friday, August 18th, 2006 Official Bootlegs Just when you thought he was heading into obscurity with OutKasts other former protégé Slimm Calhoun, Killer Kill From Adamsville is back with a batch of work thats harder than ever. His two-disc street album, I Pledge Allegiance, proves that, even though hes estranged from the Mighty O, beefing with a Purple Ribbon All-Star and sitting on a shelved sophomore album, Mike is still a monster on the mic. Whether its promoting his pimpin over the swinging horn riffs and bouncy percussion of H.N.I.C. or using the kazoo-sounding synths of Fuck U Pay Me to preach about paper, Mikes the king of outrageous quotables. On the latter he claims, I only paid for pussy once, and I felt like a lame/So I went back and stole the bitch TV and chain. He gets even fouler on Gat Totin (That A-K-K-K/In the back of the Chevrolet/Killed so many niggas it joined the KKK). The way he laces his d-boy bravado with socially conscious and controversial commentary really separates Mike from all the other Young and Lil snow flow-ers in A-Town. After rapping about the downsides of the dope game on You Dont Want This Life, he rips Oprah a new one on Thats Life (Youd be hard-pressed to find another rapper smartern me/Maybe Jay-Z, 2Pac or C-U-B-E/But Oprah rather put Superhead on TV/Now what your White audience gon think about we?). Because I Pledge is twice as long as your standard CD, Mike has the chance to introduce his Grind Time Rap GangS.L. Jones, Nario, Bigg Slim, Young Pill and Da Bill Collectorwho appear on nine out of 22 tracks. But with a whopping hour and 40 minutes of music, some redundancy does creep in. Do you really need Shoot Em Up when youve already got a track called Gat Totin? Still, Mikes effort is guaranteed to make folks respect his grind.TIMMHOTEP AKU http://xxlmag.com/online/?p=3936
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Friday, August 25, 2006
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Last summer we went down to Atlanta to talk with Big Boi, Killer Mike and Bubba Sparxxx about their (then) forthcoming projects on Big's Purple Ribbon label. In the year since, Big Boi smashed with "Kryptonite" and made a movie, Bubba Sparxxx revitalized his career with Mr Collipark and some asses, and Killer Mike remained pretty quiet, never getting the chance to release his finished (and phenomenal) Ghetto Extraordinary LP. A month or so ago, new Killer tracks started leaking out, and they went hard, skewering everyone from fellow Purple Ribbon artists to George Bush and Oprah. We talked with Mike this week about the new songs (which will all be contained on the new I Pledge Allegiance To The Grind, available direct from Mike's MySpace soon), his real status with Purple Ribbon, and what to expect next - you can read the full interview after the jump.
Whats up Mike? Today just wasnt a good traffic day - I was running around like crazy. I do my own distribution on the [Grind Time] mixtapes and stuff, I just had to get my retail done.
The new mixtape is out already in Atlanta? The one Im talking about is back orders for the old mixtape, and the sampler [for I Pledge Allegiance To The Grind]. The album sampler got so hot that they called me and we just started selling the sampler.
Have you been encouraged by the response to the sampler tracks and the leaked songs? I have, man. To be honest, I have. Extremely encouraged. You hope you got that love and support, and then when you see itin the beginning, I felt people felt like, "He didnt come through" or "He had flopped" - I was motivated by haters. Like, Im gonna show them. But now that Im getting all this [good feedback], Im making doper music, cause Im doing it from love. Its beautiful, dog.
For I Pledge Allegiance, is it all newly recorded songs? All brand new shit. Aint one of those songs over a month old.
So where does Ghetto Extraordinary standwhats going to happen to the songs you recorded for that? What happened with that record is a question better asked to Purple Ribbon and Sony. All I can tell you about that is that the great songs off of that record that I think are still relevant will be on the new record 16 In The Kitchen. Off of that Body Rock line, 16 in the kitchen, momma taught me how to cook, and you know what Im talking about in regards to that. But its not going to be "Hey I was serving" or anything, its just about drugs in America in a pure form. Most of us have been introduced to drugs by our parents in this country, whether they be social drinkers or weed tokers or full-fledged addicts. We have a drug culture in this country, which we do not acknowledge, and we wonder why our kids take refuge in ityou dont want your kids to smoke pot but you give them Ritalin.
Are you putting 16 In The Kitchen out through Grind Time? Grind Time is the official label. This will be the third album I put out on my own, the first one was That Crack, the next one was The Killer, which was awarded the best specialty mixtape of last year. Now I have The Grind, which is the pre-mixtape to the mixtape that comes out in a couple of weeks - and we only doing three thousand copies of The Grind too - and then we doing I Pledge Allegiance to the Grind. So thats four albums I put out by myself.
Are you still obligated to deliver any albums to Sony? No.
So that set up is totally a wrap? Yeah its a wrap. No bad feelings though. Everybody out there, go support my man Ray Cash.
What about as far as your situation with Purple Ribbon? What about it?
Are you still an artist on Purple Ribbon? Yeah! Of course. I mean if I was Purple Ribbon I wouldnt get rid of me. Shit, I was the only person that made money over there. Purple Ribbon would be foolish to let me go.
So is the plan after these Grind Time releases to do a proper album through Purple Ribon/Virgin? I dont know what the plan is for Purple Ribbon and Virginthe problem you talking about is already done, but Im not going to watch them fucking, Im not going to watch them squabble over this. Either they going to do it right or they not going to do it.
Are you still recording in the studio you had set up in the Purple Ribbon complex? No, I been recording at Big Ps studio. The studio at Purple Ribbon became more exclusive than I had envisioned when it was my idea to put [my own] studio in there. It got to the point where me and my guys didnt feel comfortable recording there, so we was like, We going to go and do like when we was kids and do our own stuff. While we was in the process of doing that my man Big P looked out for us and we recorded in his studio.
All the tracks that leaked off I Pledge Allegiance came with producer credits, you seem to be working with an interesting batch of unknown producers. Thats all I want to work with, to be honest. I got some producers that aint got their hits. I mean, I worked with DR Period, hes a great producer, Ive worked with Cool and Dre early in the game, they great producers. But I wanted my own producers, so Heatwave, Chaotic Beats and Drum Legend, thats what they offer me, I wanted to find my own sound, Im tired of chasing sounds, and I dont want to chase producers.
How did you link up with these new guys? I was the only one at Purple Ribbon willing to listen to demos.
What stood out on their beat tapeswas there a particular sound you wanted for yourself? I needed a sound that was a hybrid betweenyou know what, I dont know. They just did. They just did. All I know now is that Im making music now that dont sound like nobody else and it sounds like some of the best music of my life.
Theres definitely an epic quality to the new stuff which wasnt on too many of your past songs. It was there for me vocally and rhyming, but it just wasnt catching production wise, and it was just hard for Outkast to step into that realm. But these kids were already there, so they had what I needed and I had what they needed and we a team.
Honestly, the sort of futuristic, uptempo club stuff you played for us last summer [off Ghetto Extraordinary] was pretty great, too. Like My Chrome and Gonna Go To Ghana, the Sa-Ra track. The Sa-Ra stuff definitely. I never thought My Chrome should have been the first record [off Ghetto Extraordinary]. Niggas Down South should have been the first record. My Chrome should have been the second or thrd singlebut that Sa-Ra song is like my child. I am not letting that song out until I have the weight on the street thats going to make sure I get a half a million dollar video, Im going to shoot that motherfucker somewhere foreign with no mosquitos and lots of beautiful girls. So my audience has to help me blow up so we can do this.
Sa-Ra are gonna be looking crazy in that video too. Thats my boy, Taz! I love him, thats the homie man.
Do you see them a lot? No. I havent seen them in a while and you can print this tooits my fault and Ima call you. In the past we would call each other just to see how we was doing, how our kids are doing. I genuinely love that brother.
It was fresh to me when I heard that track, because it worked on a real out-there production kind of level, but you were saying some shit! And whats dope is I feel like I have my own Sa-Ra pocket now. I feel like between Chaotic Beats and Heatwave and Drum Legend that I got the few people that are creative and willing to push the niggas and Sa-Ra, they on the same shit that Im on, we dont dress alike, we dont walk alike, we dont talk alike, but a lot of the same shit we had the same passions for. Working with them was a lot easier than working with a nigga I was just trying to get a beat from.
In the year since the last interview [FADER 32] its been crazy for music from Atlanta. Franchise Boyz, D4L
Exactly, the weekend we were down there was the first weekend we heard DJs playing Laffy Taffy, just some mixshow spins when we were driving late at night. Was that scene anything you were involved with in any way, or watched people work in? We all the same age, shit. Well, we not all the same age, but we all in the same age groupa few people in their early thirties, but thats on my side of town so I understand it and I love it. Im a Pimp C, Bun B dogyou got a lot of different types of Southern rap but its all Southern rap. I look at the Laffy Taffys the D4Ls and I know they gangsters for real. Shawty Lo is gangster for real. We know each other from high school up, we great dudes and we used to fuck aroundthe guys who wrote Laffy Taffy come from the hardest project in Atlanta, you know what Im saying? All that street credibility shit means nothing, what matters to me is that some cats from my neighborhood can come out and make a track that changed their lives. Now in terms of my music, Ima wild rapping-ass cat, Im what Eightball and MJG is made out of, what UGK made out of, what Outkast and Goodie Mob is made out of, my music aint to make you snap, my music is to snap, I want a motherfucker to hear me and be, "How does this motherfucker rap so good?" And I can tell you.
It was crazy to see people who couldnt accept the snap stuff as something that was in a different lane, but still good on its own. Really man, its just a bunch of mad old motherfuckers that are full of shit. And the same niggas that be mad, they didnt put Big Daddy Kane on they first record, they didnt put Rakim on they first record, they didnt do nothing to [preserve] New Yorkman, fuck you. I dont mean you, you know what Im saying though. In the south we love New York, we love Rakim, we love Run DMC. We used to listen to the Wu Tang down South, we love them. And it kind of feel like the people you love, they shitting on you, and youre like, Why? All we did was buy your records for fifteen years, not say shit and stay on our grind.
The same people who would complain that someone from the South wasnt lyrical would never say that to Greg Nice or whomever. No. And let me say, Im a Dipset fan, you cannot name a Dipset album I do not have, but when the homie Juelz Santana said that down south cats dont get lyrical, Im thinking, Juelz has a Southern style, Juelz is not the most lyrical out there. He got style. Im lyrical, Pimp is lyrical, Bun B is lyrical. Like, what the fuck is he talking about? But that was just like the standard answer. Some of the other homies in new york would be like, Well, you know that Down South thing is big right now, but when it comes to lyrics, New York What the fuck is he talking about?! We are rapping down here now, dog. We raw rapping and we been raw rapping. And we not making this shit so esoteric people dont get it, we not only talking about Gotham, we live in the world and we talking about the world. But really I dont give a fuck. If you not from the South I dont give a fuck what you think of me, cause Im not telling your story anyways. I want you to buy my story cause youre curious about it, because you dont know. But Im telling the story of the people in the South, because Im they voice.
Yeah. And its an obvious thing to say, but the biggest thing to happen to the South last year was Hurricane Katrina. Yeah, have you heard my song Thats Life?
Yeah, thats what I was leading into. Where were you when you first heard about the hurricane? Shit, I was in Miami, the motherfucker hit us too. We didnt get hit by the hurricanes but the storms. When I heard where it was going to strike and when it was going to strike I prayed. I never felt more helpless in my life, to know that this storm was going to be hitting people and they had no idea how bad it was going to be, I felt helpless. And when help didnt come I got angry, and after I got angry I made a fucking song.
What was it like recording that song? Thats a freestyle. Most of the shit on there was a freestyle, I dont know, I know what I want to talk about when I go in the booth and I just kind of organize it when it comes out. What I decided to do was do the same organization as when I rap. Cause I had it on the first album, just nobody gave a fuck to listen to Rap Is Dead. Rappers dont talk about shit, all they do is bite Biggie and Pac, and rock is dead, rock aint doing shit, everbody just biting Jimi and Kurt trying to be original. Nobody hears me. Nobody cares to hear methey been good. They was doing OK. But now that gas is four dollars a fucking gallon everybodys like, "Oh sure, youre saying something." I been saying something for three years. Nigga, fuck you, dont tell me Im articulate, and thats a fucking comment. Fuck you. Dont give me that shit. You think I bring it, then you can say Wow, I never thought of that before. But dont tell me I can speak well. Im just waiting for you to say, for a nigger after that.
And thats the same thing you were talking about last summer! Its patronizing. Exactly. Exactly! You just said it, the same thing I was talking about last summer. I been saying this shit man, Im just glad people are finally broken up and have to stay home and listen.
What are your other favorites on I Pledge Allegiance? My favorites would be Fuck You Pay Me, Grind Time Rap Gang, definitely Thats Life, Juggernaut, and my fifth favorite its not even my song, its called Wave The Flag its a SL Jones song. SL Jones is from Little Rock, Arkansas, and his album is going to be called Bangin In Little Rock. Were hopefully going to make him the first Little Rock artist out. Theres a gang of Little Rock artists, I want to give him an opportunity by jumping on his record, hes about to tell a story of the South that people havent heard before. Part of my haste and rush to hurry up and make sure I solidify my position is to be able to give these other guys in Grind Time an open lane opportunity to tell the stories that you never heard before. I dont have a lyricist in my camp that is below par. When I say below par, I dont mean average for a Southern rapper, I mean if you looking for the new Wu-Tang, here you go. If youre wondering where the fuck NWA disappeared to, here you go. If youre wondering what the Dungeon Family could have been, what Cash Money should have been, here we go.
What kind of steps are you taking to make sure what happened within those crews doesnt happen to Grind Time? First of all we going to keep it small. Five MCs: Killer Mike aka Maserati, SL Jones, Young Pill, Nickel Plated Nario, and Big Slim. They the ones thats ready. They the ones thats killing everything when they touch it. And Im going to try and keep my role as small as possible dog. Im not trying to steal the spotlight cause Im trying to build an audience. Im trying to build a rap fan base where our fans know, Our favorite people are coming to town. We want to do a Warped Tour for rap man, we want to do an Anger Management tour where were all rappers. We want to corner the market dog. There aint no other way to put it. I didnt go out and get the best fucking rappers I could find for nothing.
As far as live rap shows, what was the last good show you got to check out? The last couple of performances I went to and was really feeling was when I was at the Ozone Awards in Orlando Florida. My man Trae peformed, UGK peformed, T-Pain, that shit was out of fucking control. All three artists that I love, and boy, T-Pain smashed it, he is an amazing artist and songwriter. UGK are legendary, and Trae, to me man, when I hear him speak its like hearinglike, I call Trae truth serum, he lacks the ability to bullshit.
How good is his new album?! Traes new album is great. The first one, Real Talk, he kills it. And of course number 9, number 12, I dont have the tray in front of me right now.
One thing thats cool to me about the Ozone Awards is that TJ [from TJs DJs] gets involved and its really about DJs and about breaking and supporting new music. Thats amazing to me that you even say that cause most people just act like they dont know. Rappers shows up looking for groupies and drugs and stuff, there was enough of that but there wasnt so much that it distracts from the real focuswhat this award show allows people to do is focus on young artists, and lets people come in and learn from some of the most elite people in the South for little or nothing. Like, whatever they charged was well below [what it was worth for] the advice. See, its easy to walk into a conference and be talked to by Lyor Cohen and Kevin Liles and these people. Some people it dont matter what they tell you, youre missing such a greater development in what it took to get them thereif you dont have the other pieces to the puzzle you cant put it together, you can never really be competition to them. Swisha House was there at Ozone, theyre just a year or two out of the underground, you can use some of those Swisha House secrets. Man, thats some shit you cant pay for man! That conference was possibly one of the best music conferences Ive been to. To have talent like Wendy Day of the Rap Coalition, Mike Watts, I think the Aphilliates were down there, David Banner. They had Warner, they had iPod down there, a lot of people that really could help you.
Artists got to realize, the only way youre going to be OK is if you make sure youre OK. And the only way you make sure youre OK is if you on top of your shit. As an artist if youre not tending to your market youre not working. Like, you know what I have to do all day, I have to go to retailers putting CDs in stores, putting shirts in storesI mean, I could sit back and wait on a check from Virgin and wait and pray that everythings going to be OK. Nigga, fuck that. My knees too tired to keep praying. Fuck that, I gotta work. And if you a young artist and youre not doing that, youre not trying to be successful. Youre just trying to be a sucker. Posted in Music | 08/11/2006
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