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J. COLE TALKS FERGUSON, DIDDY, DRAKE, HIP HOP’S CULTURE SHIFT & MORE ON THE COMBAT JACK SHOW

J. Cole hits The Combat Jack Show and we get some enlightening conversation from the author of the remarkable 2014 Forest Hills Drive.

J. Cole details the inspiration behind ’2014 Forest Hills Drive’, his battle with expectations, wanting to sign Kendrick Lamar when they first met and his thoughts regarding the shots-ridden “Control” verse. Cole also talks the hip hop culture shift that inspired “Fire Squad”, consciously staying out of Drake’s lane while creating his own, what happened that eventful night with Diddy, visiting Ferguson, his new outlook on life and how he became a voice of his generation.

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DJ PREMIER FORMS LIVE BAND; SET TO DEBUT IN JAPAN

In an interview with XXL, DJ Premier revealed that he has put together a live band and is set to debut his new show in Tokyo and Osaka on January 28, 30 & 31. The band will play revamped versions of Premier produced classics.

“I put a live band together because I’ve always dreamed of being in one ever since I was a kid,” Premier said to XXL. “I have a funky group of players assembled to play my classics and perform new things”

The band consists of the following:

DJ Premier- (Turntables)
Brady Watt- (Bass)
Lenny “The Ox” Reece- (Drums)
Takuya Kuroda- (Horns and Keys)
Corey King- (Trombone and Keys)

“I can play a little drums, bass and guitar but not like these guys, so I will stay on the wheels,” Preemo continued. “In a short four-days of meeting and rehearsing we clicked as if we knew each other for years. This is a new adventure into expanding my brand. I will always DJ, produce and be an artist because that’s what artist’s do. We open new lanes, but never close the lanes that we already opened. Keeping the roots of your foundation in tact is what gives you longevity. Basically what I’m saying is: Let’s Ride!!”

Featured guest producer: DJ Premier

DJ PREMIER: 5 SONGS I WISHED I PRODUCED

DJ Premier has produced some of the most noteworthy songs in hip hop. But even when you are recognized as one of the greatest producers of all-time, there are still a few songs that you wish you had been responsible for. Preemo offers his list of five songs he wishes he produced to Red Bull

1. M.C. Shan – “The Bridge” (Prod. by Marley Marl, 1986)

“I’m from Texas, originally, and I went to Prairie View A&M University. It was my freshman year in college, and Run DMC came to perform at my school with Dana Dane and Clark Kent. They would put on music in between acts, and ‘The Bridge’ came on. I was like, ‘What the f-ck is that?’ It was just, ‘The Bridge,’ ‘The Bridge,’ ‘The Bridge’ and then the drum roll with the duh, duh, duh, duh.

“The way it sounded with the echo, it was just so hard. I thought it was saying, ‘The Breaks.’ I was like, ‘That shit is hard,’ because I had already liked ‘The Breaks’ by Kurtis Blow back in 1980, so to hear someone saying ‘The Breaks’ and it was ill way he was saying it. Then, to find out it was ‘The Bridge, from there on, I was a Marley Marl fiend — nobody is more of a Marley fiend than me. To this day, it’s so f-cking ghetto. That record’s so dope.”

2. Audio Two – “Top Billin’” (Prod. by Audio Two and Daddy-O, 1987)

“Who would take [The Honey Drippers’] ‘Impeach The President’ and just chop it like that? I remember King Of Chill showed me the little trigger machine they used. It was like the size of my BlackBerry. They used it to get it like that, the dun, dun, dun dun dun, because back then we weren’t on MPCs and all that stuff yet. The way Milk sounded on it and they just kept stopping, you can hear the next line echoing before he said it. I was like, ‘What the f-ck?’ It blew me the f-ck away, man.”

3. Eric B. & Rakim – “Eric B. Is President” (Prod. by Eric B. & Rakim, remixed by Marley Marl,1986)

“It’s ill because I used to love ‘Funky President’ by James Brown — I’m a James Brown fanatic. To hear those sounds in the beginning and every time he went into another line, you’d hear that little quick drum roll, I was like, ‘Yo, that shit is ill.’ That’s when we started doing the wop. To this day, you know when that comes on everybody does the wop.”

4. Jay-Z – “U Don’t Know” (Prod. by Just Blaze, 2001)

“I wish I had made this, and I told [Just Blaze] this the other day. First of all, I have the original sample, so Just Blaze just destroyed that. He showed his scientific side with that record and Jay just slaughtered it lyrically, even just the ‘Turn my music high’ part. I just can’t stop playing that part before you get to the lyrics — the lyrics are dangerously ill. Jay always goes in, but that’s definitely one of the most incredible records ever made in hip-hop.”

5. M.O.P. – “How About Some Hardcore” (Prod. by Darryl Dee, co-produced by Laz-E-Laz, 1993)

“I saw the video on Video Music Box and they were just grimy. And that sample, it’s dope when you just play the original anyway. But it’s emotional when you hear it and those horns go, ‘dananana.’ They just shitted on that. We used to see The Source magazine back when they were really a hip-hop magazine, and Select Records would always advertise and [the ‘How About Some Hardcore’ single] had that cover with the knife it in. I was like, ‘What kind of shit is that?’ ‘How About Some Hardcore’ and there’s a fucking knife on the cover? I thought it was kinda silly. Then the video has the same knife in the wall. I saw it and how they looked and they’re from Brooklyn and they just looked like they could hurt something, which they do. I’ve been in brawls with them. It’s a well-done record. Well done.”

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WATCH A CLIP OF THE HIP HOP FASHION DOCUMENTARY “FRESH DRESSED”

Fashion has always been a major aspect of the hip hop community and the new CNN Documentary from Sacha Jenkins titled “Fresh Dressed” takes a look at the evolution of hip hop over the years. Premiering at the Sundance Film Festival, “Fresh Dressed” is more than just a look at fashion, it’s a deep dive into race and economics that is here to educate those who may have forgotten just how urban fashion trends have changed over the years. Check out the trailer.