Archive for April, 2009

True 2 Life Music LOVES College (Music Video)

Thursday, April 30th, 2009

So we definitely had to put the True 2 Life Music spin on Asher’s “I Love College” (as we mentioned here), since we truly do love college and we’re good at this rap shit. But instead of just doing the remix we decided to compliment the track with a remix music video, inspired by our collective and unique college experiences at the ‘Nell (speaking of which, slope is around the corner…what’s good Cornellians?). So peep the music video…we went in with a collection of your favorite and familiar college scenes.

- ‘cisington chatsworth

slope

Correction: True 2 Life’s “Poppin’ On TV” is #2 Song on College Radio.

Thursday, April 23rd, 2009

poppin on tv cover art

That is, #2 Hip-Hop College spins chart. Last week we were at #3. So we are climbing up there.

Peep video for “Poppin’ On TV” here and cop off the iTunes.

Instead of doing all the screen shots like last time (lazy) you can peep the 2 most esteemed charts for hip hop on college radio.
Here is this week on Rap Attack Lives: http://rapattacklives.com/charts_373.htm
Here is this week on Record Breaker Charts: http://www.myspace.com/recordbreakercharts

-cise

Bonus: here is a snippet of the “I Love College” True 2 Life Music Remix we mentioned earlier.

listen here: http://www.zshare.net/audio/59079014f2632101/

or download here: http://www.zshare.net/download/59079014f2632101/

full record with music video coming soon…

True 2 Life Legos & New Mascot

Friday, April 17th, 2009

True 2 Life in concert

true 2 life legos

Slang announces new mascot backstage at Trinity College Concert

True 2 Life Interview w/ The Daily Sun

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

Here is our interview we did after the panel and before we performed at the Phenom step show which was before we hit the telly.

true 2 life at phenom show

Ivy Emcees: True 2 Life Revisit Cornell
April 13, 2009 - 12:00am
By Brendan Doyle

Cornell may not always seem like the hottest place for up-and-coming rappers, but it has plenty of hip-hop history to boast of — not the least of which is True2Life, the trio composed of k. Words ’05, Concise ’05 and Slangston Hughes ’05. The Sun sat down with the crew — who make their own beats — and talked about hawking LPs at RPU, plans for the future and The Pussycat Dolls.

The Sun: How did hip-hop and music play a role in your lives as undergraduates here at Cornell?

k. Words: We could go on for days with this one. I had a townhouse my freshman year, and it started off with people coming through and just freestyling before parties, just regular stuff like that. Concise had taught me to make beats, and we would be doing that at all times also. March of our freshman year, we dropped a project, and it was us with a few other people from campus who rapped. And from there, it just took off, it’s like, it’s what we wanted to do, just make music, and present the music out to people. Our sophomore year album was called The Renaissance, and you know we were selling it for like $5 a CD, we got it professionally pressed up and everything, it was something we really put a lot into and were proud of. So on campus, that’s what we did, we were deejaying parties early on, play our music there. I guess that’s why we were there, we were known as the guys who rapped and made beats. Some people took that for what it was, like “Wow, they’re really out there, they’re really making music, like it’s official.” Some people kind of hated, ’cause I don’t think they really understood.

Sun: They didn’t appreciate Cornell students rapping?

k.W.: Right.

Concise: And we were doing little shows too, it started off with us just making beats, and rapping over the beats, started recording over the music. We put out a collection of songs, it was pretty long, because we didn’t know anything about track size or track length, we just recorded our music and put it out, and sold it out by hand, actually right here, RPU.

k.W.: We debuted the CD at midnight.

Slangston Hughes: I think the word of mouth was good, you know, because Cornell as big as it is, it’s still small. The word of mouth was that, okay, here are these guys, and they’re making I would say unbiased great hip-hop music, they go here to Cornell, they’re cool guys, they know a lot of people, obviously they’re very friendly. We started, we just did it, we sold it, pressed it, gave it out for free, by any means. And once we got the awareness up, that’s when we started getting attraction, and started opening up for artists that came, like we opened for Nas, Joe Budden, stuff like that, we started putting ourselves in positions of power to network with who we needed to network with.

Sun: When I look at you guys as a group, your style reminds me of Kid Cudi, Wale and this whole new wave of hip-hop. Where do you guys think you fit in with this new wave?

C.: Our style and what we were doing was around before I knew of Kid Cudi’s existence. I think the music is pretty significantly different than like a Kid Cudi or a Wale, but I can understand those comparisons. But there’s kind of a part of hip-hop that’s waiting for new blood, and those guys are kind of first ones blazing that trail right now. You see the Kid Cudi’s, the Charles Hamilton’s, and you see this new act you just heard of, you know they make dope music, but what are they like? They want to compare it to someone, they have to.

k.W.: Style wise, we may wear some of the same brands. I think where those comparisons come in, I believe, it’s not that they think our music is like theirs, its just maybe where we come from might be the same place, we were influenced and came up at the same time, we were influenced by the different movements of hip-hop, and that influence may create a certain type of feel. But I think our music is a lot more aggressive, and a lot more taking it to the rapping. Never let people forget, I feel that we are super skilled at rapping.

C.: Having practiced and being prolific throughout Cornell, if you went back and heard “What You Want No One to Do,” the first recording that debuted here in 2002, to now, it’s this huge difference, because of how much work we put into it. I would say there’s a significant difference between us and some of these newer breeds of MC’s that are coming in the scene. We’re self-produced, we make our own beats, and I just think the potency, the lyricism, the creativeness, what we bring to the table is a lot different.

S.H.: We’re unafraid to be ourselves, because we’re artists, and we’re true artists, and we make our music, but we’re also businessmen, and we know that we have colorful personalities. We exude that, we understand image. We know marketing, we know image, we know no one wants to look at a blank canvas. Our whole thing is not selling you the music, but it’s our lifestyle, it’s our culture, which includes our fashion, which includes the music, jokes that we have, movies that we watch. Everything is all presentation, but it’s natural presentation. We figure we don’t have to wear the generic hip-hop uniform, you know, we were never like that, so why would we impose those guidelines on us now just because we rap? [...] Stand out, but be true to yourself, so you’re never wearing a costume.

Sun: Two weeks ago I was walking in New York City and saw Timbo King, a Wu-Tang Clan affiliate, and he was pushing his tapes on a corner. After ten minutes of talking to him, he offers to do a track with me for $500. So he’s hustling himself in the streets, connecting to fans that way. How does your hustle compare?

C.: That’s the type of hustle we were built on, that hand to hand, street grassroots, get whatever you can take, take whatever you can get thing. We’re not at that point right now ’cause we don’t think it’s efficient to be pushing mixtapes in the street.

k.W.: If you think about this, when it comes to a CD, it’s a waste of money if people just take it and fling it out their Mercedes. You have to balance it, we have to have physical content but we have to take advantage of the digital media. But it is us out there doing it. You catch us in Miami on vacation with a stack of flyers, walking through the streets, handing out our flyers to people, talking to people.

S.H.: I like to describe our approach as the D.I.Y., the do-it-yourself approach to hip-hop. It’s more of a punk rock approach to hip-hop. People down in punk rock groups, they were the early adopters of Myspace, because they realized, this is how we’re gonna connect with our fans, we’re gonna be approachable. The common hip-hop mold is you’re a superstar who’s beyond reach of the average person, but you look at the average successful, mildly successful rock group, they’re gonna be in touch with their fan base. You can touch them after the show. We took the DIY approach in punk rock, and brought into hip-hop and what we do, we just look different, but it’s the same approach. I like my music, you like my music too, that doesn’t make me better than you. I like other people’s music too, you’re a fan, a supporter, however you want to put it, but you’re gonna be a part of the movement, I’m not just gonna take your money and run. We’re in this together, we want people to be a part of our movement.

Sun: What do you guys think of this year’s Slope Day picks, Asher Roth and the Pussycat Dolls?

C.: Yeah, we were tryin’ to get on that.

S.H.: We have [a] “I love College” remix that we did, we actually serviced it to a lot of the DJ’s up here at Cornell … which is dope, which is better than the original if I say so myself.

k.W.: Shots fired. [Laughs]

S.H.: I mean someone hit me up, they said Pussycat Dolls, I thought it was a joke, I didn’t know it was serious, but hey. I mean, [k. Words], you’re not here anymore to bring Snoop Dogg, to bring Kanye.

C.: You know what it is, it’s one of the weaker years, I was telling my brother “Damn, if we were gonna get Slope Day, if it would be any time up until now, this would’ve been the year,” just because it’s wide open right now.

k.W.: I would say we would really want to do a Slope Day because we know what we could do with it.

C.: There will come a time though, you know, this year we weren’t voted, I don’t know how it worked, I think maybe it was just politics. But like, it’s going to come soon, we’ll come back here and rock out. Nothing’s going to stop us getting what we need to get. There’ll be a time when we’ll be the biggest thing and they’ll have to book us.

k.W.: And maybe I’ll crowd surf when we get a Slope Day.

Sun: Five years from now, where’s True2Life going to be?

k.W.: Getting’ money. [Laughs] Hopefully just continuing to do what we love with a much bigger name, a wider fan base, more exposure, you know, bigger things. But still, five years from now, I don’t wanna be disconnected from our mission and disconnected from our people, you know the people that helped us grow.

S.H.: Affecting more people’s lives five years from now.

C.: Hopefully doing it on a bigger scale, to get there obviously building our name via expanding our fan base, getting onto these more popular media hubs, just to get bigger masses to preach to.

True 2 Life Climbing up the College Radio Charts

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

So we just got updated today that, in under 4 weeks, our record “Poppin’ On TV” (iTunes link) moved to #3 on the Top 30 charts tracking hip-hop college radio spins. Request “Poppin’ On TV” at your college radio station! and let us know if they don’t have the song at the station…

Record Breaker Charts
college-charts

RapAttacklive’s chart wasn’t updated yet this week…but here is last week, we jumped from 7 to 3 this week.

t2l-chart-ral

- Uncle Words

Alumni Visit ‘Hottest Hip Hop Ivy’

Tuesday, April 14th, 2009

t2l-phenom-2

So the True 2 Life boys were back at the ‘nell this past weekend. And it was dope, a very positive overall experience. We were panelist on the a panel discussion featuring Cornell Alum in Hip Hop / Entertainment Industry. It was an honor to be peers with such accomplished and esteemed Cornell Alum, we’re talking some serious serious power players in the hip hop industry. So not only was it dope to tell our story to the audience as panelist, but also just to be attendees at event.

So instead of my play-by-play here is the write up in the Daily Sun.

Alumni Visit ‘Hottest Hip Hop Ivy’
April 13, 2009 - 12:00am
By Brendan Doyle

The University’s appreciation and deep-seat in hip-hop culture has been steadily gaining tread this past year. And it “don’t stop,” as Black Students United and several other clubs sponsored The Hottest Hip Hop Ivy Weekend. In the same spirit of Afrika Bambaata and Pete Rock, who made their marks on campus last semester, the weekend centered around a panel featuring the University’s most illustrious alumni involved in the hip-hop industry.

The brain child of Fritz Celestin ’86, the focus of Saturday’s panel was for the alumni to impart valuable wisdom on how to enter the recording industry. Celestin is a music video director who has worked with prominent names such as Jay-Z and Mary J. Blige, as well as on keynote urban films such as Do the Right Thing and Malcolm X. As moderator of the panel, Celestin joined an elite retinue of hip-hop movers and shakers. L. Londell McMillan ’87, the new executive publisher of The Source magazine, was present along with Linda Berk ’74, general manager of AJM records and talent consultant responsible for big names like Ashanti, and Reggie Osse ’86, an attorney and co-author of *Bling*, a coffee table ode to all things garish and diamond studded in hip-hop.

Also gracing the panel were recent grads Kevin Edwards ’05, Kenan Goggins ’05 and Chukuma M. Ogude ’05, also known as K. Words, Concise and Slangston Hughes respectively, who comprise the group True2Life. Having rocked the stage with T-Pain, Nas and Joe Budden while at the University, the trio have since been breaking new ground in the game and recently debuted their major music video, “Poppin’ On TV,” earning them a seat at the table of Cornell hip hop royalty.

In the modern landscape of music downloading and illegal MP3s, the panelists emphasized the most important facet to success as taking advantage of all media of trade.Hip-hop Ivies: Alumni speakers share their experience in the hip-hop industry on Friday. See page 12 for an interview with True2Life.Hip-hop Ivies: Alumni speakers share their experience in the hip-hop industry on Friday. See page 12 for an interview with True2Life.

“It’s truly about entrepreneurship now,” Berk said. “There’s money out there to be made. It’s just being made differently than it was 10 years ago.”

Berk continued to emphasize that in an industry with roots in the hustle and flow of urban life, innovation is important now more than ever.

Though the genre may be evolving, the concepts of grit and determination remain crucial.

“Hip-hop is just a term used to describe a group of people who love a certain energy,” McMillan

said. “It’s pretty much any and everything you want to do. Whether it’s hip-hop, or anything, you just got to be really good at what you do.”

alumni panel

Like many other panelists, McMillan is at the apex of his game. A lauded attorney who has represented numerous hip-hop acts and was cited by Osse as “the reason Prince changed his name for a couple years,” his new ownership of The Source puts him in a pivotal position to lead a fresh direction in the industry. This direction manifests itself not only in the music, but also in how business is done. McMillan emphasized that he intends to use his positional clout to put the youth movement in overdrive.

“My goal for The Source is to create an global media brand, that connects people and inspires them to go hard and be great.”

McMillan said: “Hip-hop to me is like sports. It’s intergenerational. Each generation has its own heroes. Revolutionary culture is just part of the youth experience, and we should embrace that.”

Panelists also emphasized that the Internet is what separates the college generation and its musical sensibilities, and also what will continue to change the sound of hip-hop.

“The more the Internet becomes accessible to the disenfranchised youths, the more creativity you will see,” Celestin said.

The men of True2Life noted their own experiences in the new digital age of music. The trio manage themselves, in addition to doing their own production, and explained the networking and business skills they honed on East Hill were as crucial to the success of their sharpened wordplay.

“We are self-sufficient out of necessity,” Ogude said. “This is our business and our life, and if we want to see it blossom, we have to put in the footwork.”

The group noted the importance of their blog and Myspace for striking deals and communicating with other artists, as well as for consolidating and expanding their swelling fan base.

The panel finished up with a question-and-answer session, in which McMillan stressed the importance of the Ujamaa residential community for keeping alive the urban spirit that many students bring to campus. This youthful energy was evident in the audience, as listeners ranged from aspiring rap icons to doe-eyed acolytes of the business moguls on the panel.

“I wanted to understand the business behind hip-hop,” said Michael Brown ’10 of his reasons for coming. “I think it’s important for students to get that context.”

Brown noted his admiration for the speakers, as well as his appreciation for the knowledge gleaned from the discussion.

As inspired students approached the speakers for autographs and chats, McMillan’s encouragement to “go hard” lingered.

“Whether it’s positive or negative, if it’s hot, people are going to find you,” McMillan said.

Word up. So after the panel we had to dip to another interview and then to a performance at the Phenom Step show. The show was tight, because we got to see how these events that we were apart at college were continued and thriving years after being removed from campus. Even though we barely knew anyone there anymore it was like we never left.

In the college spirit after the weekend, we recorded a remix to Asher’s single “I Love College”. Soon as we get a finalized mix we’ll share it with ya’ll.

- ‘cise boogie

Chill, Yo Chill Man, Chill! (Live Performance Video)

Thursday, April 9th, 2009

at Trinity College

Shouts to Joey Franchize on the 1’s and 2’s and the Band (Cam, Bruce and Tyrone)

Chill, Yo Chill Man, Chill” is off our “Larger Than Lifeproject…holler.

-cise

bonus: words of wisdom from Eli

bonus part 2: “I Love College” True 2 Music Remix coming soon…with special shouts to CU

Back on campus like we left something…

Tuesday, April 7th, 2009

What’s good True 2 Lifers?

We’re heading back to the ‘nell this weekend to be a part of an alumni discussion panel. Feels like we just left as students, now we’re back as alumni. The panel is called “Hottest Hip Hop Ivy” (not sure who titled it) but well we’ll be panelist amongst some very important hip-hop/entertainment industry heads who happen to be Cornell alum.

words-cise-slang-hotel

Panelist include Londell McMillan (prominent hip-hop lawyer, co-owner and executive publisher of The Source Magazine), Reggie Osse (music attorney, Co-author of “Bling” novel, Combat Jack to those in the blogosphere), Linda Berk (General Manager of AJM records, represents Ashanti), Randy McMillan (legal counsel at Island Def Jam Music Group), and last but not least…Kanye West (produced Common’s “The People”). Nah just playing…True 2 Life Music (Jackie Rob & Slangston Hughes) will be on the panel offering insight into what’s it like being artists in this industry trying to break through and advance our movement. Moderating the whole discussion will be Cornell alum Fritz Celestin, a talented video producer and director who worked with everyone Diddy to Madonna, Slick Rick to Mary J Blidge.

Here is the facebook event link: http://www.facebook.com/event.php?eid=67259331034

Details: Saturday, April 11th, 4:00pm-5:30pm, RPCC Auditorium, Cornell University, Ithaca, NY, Free

(click to view larger image)
hottesthiphop-ivy

We’re looking forward to being panelist, but also just attending the discussion. Should be a dope overall experience, all of the panel members have excelled to do remarkable things that we can learn from. After the panel we are booked to perform at The Phenom Step show on campus and will of course be in the streets after that partying…word up.

-’cisington

t2l-cornell-gear-performance

Dancing with Jackie Rob & Poppin’ Tags with Slangston Hughes

Monday, April 6th, 2009

Jackie Rob takes it back to 2001 after the performance at Trinity Show

I pop a tag before the show

-slang mob

True 2 Life Backstage w/ Mike Jones, Juelz Santana /Skull Gang and Fabolous /Paul Cain (VIDEO)

Friday, April 3rd, 2009

After rocking out on stage, we catch up with the performers at the March 27th Trinity College Concert

click the “HD” button view video in High Definition.

visit the youtube page to see the other videos…
also follow us on the twitter at twitter.com/true2lifemusic

more to come…

-cise