Feb 032011
 

There’s a rivalry kicking off between two hip-hop stars just in time for this weekend’s Super Bowl. Lil Wayne has released a pro-Green Bay Packers song, “Green and Yellow,” in response to Wiz Khalifa’s pro-Pittsburgh Steelers tune, “Black and Yellow.”

In the newly released freestyle song, Weezy sings, “Pitt goin’ down, say hello to the devil/Just beat the Bears, now we got the Steelers on the schedule.”

The 28-year-old rapper states he is “representin’ ” for the Wisconsin team, even though he hails from New Orleans, home of the Saints.

Lil Wayne isn’t the first rapper to remake Wiz Khalifa’s song from last year. Several versions of the song touting different colors have been released, most recently the university tune “White and Purple” by Tom Hanks’ son Chet.

Jan 242011
 

Fans who missed Lil Wayne during his yearlong stint behind bars will get a chance to show their love for the multiplatinum rapper in person: He’s kicking off a 25-city tour in March with an all-star supporting cast.

Nicki Minaj, Rick Ross, Travis Barker and Mixmaster Mike will accompany Lil Wayne on his “I Am Music II” tour, which will start in Buffalo, N.Y., on March 18 and hit cities such as Atlanta, Miami, Washington and his hometown of New Orleans.

Although Lil Wayne released the album “I Am Not a Human Being” while in a New York jail for a weapons charge last year, he’s gearing up for a big return to the scene in 2011. He’s got a hit “6 Foot 7 Foot” and is due to release “Tha Carter IV” this spring.

Dec 192010
 

Eminem and Lil Wayne sent “Saturday Night Live” viewers into the holiday season with a double dose of hip-hop over the weekend.

The rap luminaries first rocked Em’s steely Haddaway-sampling joint “No Love,” backed by a live band on a set decked out with festive holiday decorations. Both MCs kept their style casually cool: Wayne rocked a white T-shirt and black plants while Em sported a brown jacket and gray beanie. Weezy spit the first verse with his signature unhinged energy, asserting his return to the live-television circuit. Em helmed the rest of the song, nimbly dropping his lyrics with abandon.

The MCs split up for the final performance, with Eminem kicking things off with the Pink-assisted cut “Won’t Back Down.” Outfitted in a black jacket and cap, Em rocked the joint with the help of a hype man, spitting bars like, “How you douche bags feel?/ Knowing you’re disposable, Summer’s Eve, Massengill.” When Em wrapped up, the Detroit MC ceded the mic to Weezy, who hopped up onstage solo for the recently released “6’7″.” The live electric guitar-laced version was a super-charged departure from the Bangladesh-crafted banger, with Wayne knocking out the lyrics with his high-powered flow and vibing with a slew of similarly amped musicians.

The “SNL” appearance is the latest team-up in a long list collaborations between the Shady boss and the Young Money captain. Em guested on Weezy’s “Drop the World” from the New Orleans vet’s rock-centric album “Rebirth.” Wayne returned the favor for Em’s Recovery cut “No Love.”

Other hitmakers also popped up on Saturday night’s broadcast, which was hosted by “Tron Legacy” star Jeff Bridges. Akon helped Lonely Planet bust out an ode to gettin’ it on, belting “I just had sex!” Blake Lively and Jessica Alba made cameos as comely conquests as the crew gamely sang, “I’ll never go back to the not-having-sex ways of the past.”

On “The Miley Cyrus Show” skit, featured player Vanessa Bayer played a giggly, hyper version of the teen starlet, and poked fun at the “Can’t Be Tamed” singer’s much-publicized salvia bong hit. Bayer’s Cyrus explained her “five-minute drug problem,” saying, “so, what happened was, I got really high — like really high.”

Veteran actor Bridges also showed off his acting chops in several skits, playing an effeminate cowboy who doles out gussied-up Christmas presents, and starring in his own prank show “Jeff’d,” in which he messes with celebrity pals like Billy Bob Thornton and Maggie Gyllenhaal.

Wayne associate DJ Scoob Doo described the vibe of the night MTV News.

“The energy in the building is historical and it’s extra special to see everybody fight for position backstage to see Lil Wayne take over SNL,” he said.

Check out the video below:

Nov 022010
 

The ‘I Am Not A Human Being’ rapper is expected to be released from a jail term in New York for firearms offences on Thursday, and the team at his label Cash Money records are reportedly looking for a plane with studio equipment so he can lay down new rhymes as he flies, likely to either his native New Orleans or Miami.

Bryan Williams, a.k.a. Birdman, co-founder of Cash Money, said: “You can’t keep him out of the studio.”

He added that Wayne – who famously freestyles his raps in the studio without writing anything down – has taken to recording his lyrics for the first time since starring in one of his earliest groups while in jail.

Bryan added: “He hasn’t written out rhymes since the Hot Boys. There’s a different swagger coming from Wayne, different things to talk about.”

Wayne’s manager, Cortez Bryant, added: “He’s had time to take everything in from the early years to his going in. We’ve been at such a fast pace, moving, moving, moving, that he’s finally been able to put some things in perspective.”

Wayne has had plenty of time to reflect in the latter part of his sentence, which he started in March, after he was moved to a solitary confinement cell earlier this month after he was caught with a contraband MP3 player and charger in his cell.

Meanwhile fellow rapper Eminem has said he’s looking forward to Lil Wayne’s release, telling US radio station Shade 45: “I’m definitely looking forward to Wayne getting out. I can’t wait to hear what he comes up with next.”

The material Wayne has been working on is expected to be recorded for his forthcoming ‘Tha Carter IV’ album.

Nov 012010
 

He had the top-selling album in the country earlier this month. He’s on the president’s iPod. He’s on the charts with two singles and a collaboration on a third. He’s on Facebook with updates for the more than 14 million people following them. He is, in every respect, on.

By the way, Lil Wayne’s in jail. But his public persona is anything but locked away.

The rapper, who’s on track to be released Thursday after serving eight months in a gun case, is the first artist in 15 years to release a No. 1 album on the Billboard 200 chart while serving a sentence. His “I Am Not a Human Being” spent a week in the top slot and has sold more than 323,000 copies since its Sept. 27 release, according to Nielsen SoundScan.

It’s hardly a coveted distinction. But it is both a reflection of Lil Wayne’s popularity – he went to jail a multiplatinum-selling Grammy Award winner – and a result of astute maneuvering in the multimedia landscape that now envelops pop stardom. Staying relevant? Try omnipresent.

“The challenge was to make sure you feel like he never left,” says Bryan “Birdman” Williams, the Cash Money Records co-founder who has fostered Lil Wayne’s career since the rapper’s teens. “We came with a good strategy, and it worked.”

Members of the rapper’s management team carefully scheduled releases of music and saw to it that his responses to the deluge of fan mail that has descended on the city’s Rikers Island jail complex were typed up and posted online. They have become regulars at Rikers’ visiting hours and have played, and recorded, music over a jail phone.

The Lil Wayne campaign even comes with its own insider-y slogan – “free Weezy,” one of his nicknames – circulated through channels ranging from T-shirts to a Twitter hashtag.

For the rapper, his jail term has been a difficult exile from the recording studio where he generally likes to spend time every night, his associates say. “When you take somebody’s passion away, it’s gotta be frustrating,” Williams said in an interview.

But for his fans, it has provided not only a steady stream of new music, but an unusually direct connection to one of music’s megastars. On a blog he set up for fans, he’s offered insights into his day-to-day doings and responses to some of the listener letters that, he says, anchor his day.

“I never imagined that I could have such an impact on people’s lives,” he wrote in July on the site, Weezythanxyou.com.

Known for his workaholic output of witty, manifold and sometimes weird wordplay, Lil Wayne had the best-selling album of 2008 and won a best rap album Grammy with “Tha Carter III.” Time magazine weighed him for its most-influential-people list last year; President Barack Obama recently told Rolling Stone he has some Lil Wayne music on his iPod.

The rapper, born Dwayne Carter Jr., pleaded guilty in October 2009 to having a loaded gun on his tour bus after a Manhattan concert in 2007. He began serving his one-year sentence in March.

He’s expected to get out early because of time off for good behavior, despite the electronic contraband that landed him in solitary confinement for the last month of his term: a charger and headphones for a digital music player were found in his cell, jail officials said. (He acknowledged the misstep on his blog.)

While at Rikers, he also pleaded guilty to an Arizona drug possession charge and was sentenced to three years’ probation.

Lil Wayne joined a roster of successful rappers who have spent time behind bars, a list that has muddied the line between art and life in a genre that arose from inner-city streets and often chronicles crime and violence. Big names including Tupac Shakur, Lil’ Kim, Foxy Brown, Shyne, Mystikal, Gucci Mane and T.I. have been incarcerated for periods ranging from months to years.

Several rappers have put out albums while locked up; the late Shakur became the first to hit number one with 1995′s “Me Against the World,” released while he was imprisoned on a sexual assault conviction. Some have recorded songs behind bars.

Lil Wayne made a slew of recordings and videos in his final weeks of freedom. The recording blitz provided enough material for “I Am Not a Human Being” and appearances on songs by artists ranging from his protege Drake to Eminem, their releases timed to keep him fresh in fans’ minds, his managers said.

The rapper initially played it cool when told about the album’s success, said Derrick “E.I.” Lawrence, a member of his management team. But as Lawrence was heading out after a visit, “He said, ‘Number one?’ … That lit him up.”

Lil Wayne, too, kept an ear out for opportunities. After hearing the Drake/Jay-Z collaboration “Light Up” on the radio, he told longtime manager Cortez Bryant, “I gotta get on that,” Bryant recalled. The rapper recorded a verse over the phone for a “Rikers Remix” that made the rounds online.

But perhaps the most telling way Lil Wayne has made himself heard from jail hasn’t been on records, but in writing.

His managers say the rapper proposed the Weezythanxyou blog, which has become a public-yet-personal conversation between the star and his fans. They have sent so much mail that members of his management team routinely take home garbage bags full for safekeeping after the rapper has read it.

“He’s using it as therapy to get by, to get through his long days,” Bryant said in an interview.

Writing in longhand with implements and notepads bought from the jail commissary, Lil Wayne issued chatty, upbeat updates, touching on such topics as his daily activities (“I’m still playing UNO”), pro basketball and Mother’s Day.

But mostly, he thanked fans, by the dozens and by name, with individual, brotherly notes: “So happy you found your iPod,” “You’re already where you need to be, school!”

He even brokered a marriage proposal after getting a letter from a woman who had appeared in one of his label’s videos, popping her question to her boyfriend on the site at her request, said Mack Maine, the president of Young Money Entertainment, Lil Wayne’s imprint within Cash Money.

So-called “Wayniacs” have been impressed with the updates, said Lilwaynehq.com fan site founder Daniel Mousdell. So have rap veterans.

“It was great that they had that communication with fans,” said Death Row Records founder Marion “Suge” Knight, who worked with Shakur and spent five years in jail himself in the 1990s on an assault conviction. With the more limited communication options of the time, “the world stopped” for an artist in prison, he said.

Lil Wayne’s world, meanwhile, is already moving on. The rapper has written new lyrics in jail (describing them as “amazing would be too typical and perfect would be unfair,” he said on his blog) and envisions releasing a much-anticipated “Tha Carter IV” next year, Williams said.

He also has kept a journal in jail, Maine said, and might release it as a book.

Oct 072010
 

The ‘I’m Single’ rapper has recently been moved to solitary confinement in New York’s Rikers Island prison after he was caught with a banned MP3 player and headphones in his cell, and has called for fans to stop contacting him, because he will not be able to write back.

A message posted on Wayne’s twitter page, on his behalf, read: “I can no longer write my fans, as difficult as this maybe to say please stop sending me mail, I luv u and will see you soon. (sic)”

28-year-old Wayne – who was jailed in March on weapons charges, after a gun was found on his tour bus – has previously said he gets over 100 pieces of fan mail a day in prison, and in his infrequent blog posts has written personal lines in reply to specific letters he’s received. He estimates in total that he has had over one million letters of support from fans around the world.

He has also previously said how well wishes from fans keep him going, telling MTV: “When I read those letters, that fan mail, and see what they say about what my music does for them, and how it helped them through situations; to read that, that makes me take my words and my whole outlook on what I’m doing a lot more seriously.”

Wayne is scheduled for release on November 4.

Oct 052010
 

Lil Wayne is facing the music after being accused of breaking jail rules by having gear for listening to tunes: He can expect to go solo for the rest of his time behind bars in a gun case.

The Grammy Award-winning rapper was moved Monday into what city jail officials call “punitive segregation” for a month, until his expected November release date, Correction Department spokesman Stephen Morello said. It’s his punishment for stashing a charger and headphones for a digital music player in his cell earlier this year, officials said.

Lil Wayne generally will now be confined to his new cell 23 hours a day, with such exceptions as visits and showers, instead of being allowed to mingle with other inmates most of the day. He’ll eat in his cell and won’t get to socialize even during his hour a day of recreation, Morello said.

Lil Wayne also will have to forego TV, and he’ll be limited to one phone call a week instead of a chat a day or more, except for calls to his lawyer, Morello said.

The lawyer, Stacey Richman, had no immediate comment.

The 28-year-old rapper, one of the genre’s biggest stars, has been held since March in the Rikers Island jail complex. He pleaded guilty in October 2009 to attempted criminal possession of a weapon, admitting he had a loaded semiautomatic gun on his bus in 2007.

He got a one-year sentence but is expected to serve eight months because of time off for good behavior, despite the music-player gear episode.

Officials said the headphones and charger were found in May, tucked in a potato chip bag in a garbage can in the rapper’s cell.

The items are considered contraband, as inmates can listen to music only on radios and headphones sold at the jail commissary. Officers said the music player itself turned up in another inmate’s nearby cell.

Both men were charged with infractions that weren’t crimes and were subject to a jail disciplinary process, not a court. Information on the other inmate’s punishment wasn’t immediately available Monday.

Lil Wayne’s penalty was within norms for his infraction, Morello said.

“Possession of contraband is serious,” he said, though not as grave as violent offenses or being caught with a weapon, for example.

Born Dwayne Carter, Lil Wayne had the best-selling album of 2008 with “Tha Carter III,” which won a best rap album Grammy.

As he faced incarceration, he told Rolling Stone he planned to keep up the beat behind bars.

“I’ll have an iPod, and I’ll make sure they keep sending me beats,” he told the magazine for a February story.

Aug 052010
 

The rap star said in a radio interview that he’s done a lot of reflecting since being tossed into Rikers in March on a gun charge.

“Everybody says that you’re here for a reason,” he told Hot 97 from jail on Tuesday. “I search for that reason every day.”

The multiplatinum “Lollipop” singer said he has learned from the crime that landed him behind bars.

“I’m gonna move more carefully and be aware of my situation and status,” he said.

Lil Wayne, whose real name is Dwayne Carter, was arrested in 2007 after Manhattan cops spotted him smoking marijuana and found he was carrying a .40-caliber weapon.

He pleaded guilty to attempted criminal possession of a weapon in October 2009 and was sentenced to a year in Rikers in March.

The Grammy winner is scheduled to be released in November.

The rapper said he spends his days reading and responding to fan mail, calling his family and other rappers, including Drake and Nicki Minaj.

“I could read all the fan mail I get all day, every day,” he said.

The New Orleans native said conditions in Rikers were worse than he expected, but he is trying to make the best of the situation.

“[The food here] is not what I want,” he said. “But it is what it is.”