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Just in case you missed the cyphers last night, here are some of them. My personal opinion WEST COAST killed it last night. I wasn’t impressed by the others, but I will say that A$AP Rocky & JayBird killed it too.

 

Kendrick Lamar talks about recording with Dr. Dre, the Tupac hologram, and the possibility of a Top Dawg compilation album at the Fuse house during Coachella 2012. Subscribe to Fuse for all our music coverage: http://bit.ly/fuseSub

S/O to my boy Juice aka DJ Justin Credible @J_Credible

OFFICIAL VIDEO CLICK HERE

Directed By: Matt Alonzo, make sure to follow him on Twitter @MattAlonzo

We had the good fortune to sit down with Kendrick Lamar and he gave us an in-depth interview about the music that shaped him and led him to hip-hop. He discusses everything from the earliest influences on his musical tastes to the deep connection between him, DMX and Tupac. He is candid, introspective and insightful. Witness the story of where it all began in hip-hop for Kendrick Lamar.

Omen “The Look Of Lust” FT. Kendrick Lamar & Shalonda

Omen drops this collaboration with Kendrick Lamar & Shalonda from his upcoming mixtape. Now this is what I call HIP HOP


#GOESHARD

J. Cole Speaks On Kanye West, Feels He’s Helped Kendrick Lamar & Big K.R.I.T.

Hip Hop DX reports — Cole talks about Kanye West, a lack of radio play and why he was playing the game with “Work Out.”

Recently, J. Cole spoke about his admiration for Kanye West, his lack of radio play and why he felt the need to make a song like “Work Out.” In the interview with Karmaloop, Cole also said he feels he has helped the careers of Kendrick Lamar and Big K.R.I.T. by putting out his album this year.

When told that his career is reminiscent of Kanye West’s rise, Cole explained that he hopes it’s true.

“If it feels like that, then that’s great. I would love to be as successful as he has been, putting out hits and making hits consistently that still reprersent him. All his hits, you would never look at him like, ‘Aw, why you make that?’ It all felt like Kanye West, which is dope.” 

He also shed light on a lack of radio air play, saying some markets treat him like a star while others have ignored his songs.

“Those things just didn’t catch up nationally. Now, ‘Work Out’ is going. ‘Work Out’ will go because it’s doing its thing on radio every day. “Can’t Get Enough” is gonna go. “Nobody’s Perfect” is gonna go. But it’s just, the work that I put in on the ground level was faster than radio catching on. You got some stations like in Tampa, L.A., New York, some markets where I’m a superstar. They play my songs 35, 40 times a day or whatever. Then you have some markets that are barely playing it.”

He also acknowledged that he has felt pressure to succeed through radio, pressure that helped him make “Work Out.”

“At one point, yeah. That’s how you get a song like ‘Work Out.’ I went to radio stations and seen how radio stations work…I went and learned all these things. That’s how I made a record like ‘Work Out.’ I went, ‘Okay, I can play that game. I’ll give you a song full of hooks,’ the catchy shit that I knew would work on radio. That’s me playing the game.”

Cole also went on to note that he feels his album has changed the game.

“We created a new mold, a new formula. Kendrick Lamar, Big K.R.I.T. now, they don’t necessarily have to feel the pressure that I felt like, ‘Where’s the big single?’ I was the sacrificial lamb of that. That’s why my album wasn’t coming out, because of the label waiting on a huge single.”

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