Archive for the ‘Atlanta’ Category

Pastor Troy Talks Past Beef With Master P & Lil Jon on Channel Live [With Video]

Thursday, July 29th, 2010

Pastor Troy was in the XXL office yesterday (July 28) for our weekly real-time Ustream interview series, Channel Live.

The good Pastor spoke with the staff and took questions from fans with his trademark championship belt draped over his shoulder. After talking about his new album King of All Kings, due out this Tuesday, August 3, the Augusta rapper addressed past beefs with Master P, Lil Jon, and Lil Scrappy and gave Memphis, Tennessee its props as the true origin of crunk music. Watch below to see Troy explain why he’d rather be Independent than on a major label and claim that his crunk classic “We Ready” is to blame for more busted heads than any other song in history.

Be sure to check back to XXLmag.com later on in the week for more info on future guests. —Calvin Stovall

WATCH NOW: Pastor Troy Gives Live Interview on XXLMag.com

Wednesday, July 28th, 2010

Today’s the day. Pastor Troy will be the next guest on Channel Live, XXL’s weekly interview series on Ustream at 4 p.m. EST this afternoon.

The show will be broadcast in real-time on both our Ustream page and on XXLMag.com. As always, during the Q&A, artists will be accepting questions from viewers. Fans can also hit @XXLStaff on Twitter with all of their inquiries for Troy.

The ATLien will be following Tony Yayo, who visited the XXL offices last Wednesday. During the hour long convo, the G-Unit member spoke on touring in Brazil, his thoughts on Rick Ross and Game, why Nicki Minaj and Keyshia Cole aren’t G-Unit affiliates, his relationship with 50 Cent, what he’s been working on recently and much more. [Watch here]

Be sure to tune in to Pastor Troy’s episode of Channel Live in one hour now! —XXL Staff

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101 Things Young Jeezy Taught Us – Words of Wisdom From the Trap

Monday, July 26th, 2010

Five years ago today, the world was properly introduced to Jay “Young Jeezy” Jenkins. Though he had created a unprecedented buzz on the streets thanks to his mixtapes Trap or Die and Can’t Ban the Snowman, on July 26, 2005, the trap rapper dropped his debut album, Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101. On it Jeezy schooled listeners on the code of the streets and motivated the thugs to better themselves. Now after five years and three albums, Young has dropped numerous jewels on hip-hop. In honor of TM101’s anniversary, XXL recalls 101 lessons that rap’s Thug Motivator has taught us over the years. Pay attention.

1. Marble Floors > Cockroaches
“I use to hit the kitchen lights, cockroaches everywhere/Hit the kitchen lights, now it’s marble floors everywhere” — “Thug Motivation 101” from Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101

2. In some situations, schizophrenia can be a good thing
“Psychopathic wordplay, schizophrenic flow/I guess it’s safe to say I got schizophrenic dough.” - “Standing Ovation” from Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101

3. If you sell coke, you probably drink Coke, too
“Fuck wit real niggas that’ll cut ya throat/And they don’t drink Pepsi, they just sell coke.” – “Gangsta Music” from Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101

4. Holes are not just circular; they can vary in size and shape
“Niggas poppin’ off, hope they bullet proof/Leave holes in ya the size of a sunroof.” – “Gangsta Music from Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101

5. Believe in yourself
“You can do anything you put your mind to, put your grind to.” – “Let’s Get
It/Sky’s the Limit” from Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101

6. Jeezy is a generous tipper
“I give ‘em the squares he give me the bag/I give ‘em the squares he give me the cash/And that’s what the fuck a call an even exchange/And if there’s anything extra you can keep the change.” – “Let’s Get It/Sky’s the Limit” from Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101

7. Luck is when opportunity meets preparedness
“Def Jam, seven figures we can finish the deal/Some say I lucked up I call it perfect timing.” – “And Then What” from Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101

8. Try to familiarize your pallet with varied types of alcohol
“We pop Cris’ my niggas and still drink beer.” – “And Then What” from Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101

9. Real thugs don’t cry
“I guess we got the same dreams, or is it the same nightmares/We let the doves do it for us— we don’t cry tears” — “Soul Survivor” from Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101

10. Obey traffic laws when moving work
“Gotta watch your every move ‘cuz them eyes be on you/Gotta drive real cool when them pies be on you” — “Soul Survivor” from Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101

11. Snitching is not tolerated
“Real talk, Look, I’m tellin’ you, mayne/If you get jammed up don’t mention my name.” — ‘Soul Survivor” from Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101

12. Counting money > Spending money
“A hundred grand on my wrist, yeah life sucks/Fuck the club, dawg, I rather count a million bucks” — “Soul Survivor” from Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101

13. Packing heat gets heavy
“The .45 make my pants sag/Catch me bouncing through the club wit my black flag.” — “Bang” from Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101

14. Disrespect isn’t taken lightly
“Disrespect we gon’ take it there/We 30 deep lil nigga we ain’t fighting fair.” — “Bang” from Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101

15. Outsiders are not welcome
“Peace up, A-town down/If you ain’t from round here dog don’t even come around.” – “Bang” from Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101

16. When at war, don’t hesitate
“Shoot first and ask questions lata’/The answer is it was all about the paper.” — “Last of a Dying Breed” from Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101

17. Thugs don’t make love
“I’m young and thuggin, I don’t give a fuck/He can make love to you, I’ma beat it up” — “Tear It Up” from Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101

18. Gangstas have to pay utility bills too
“It’s kinda hard to be drug-free/When Georgia Power won’t give a nigga lights free.” — “Go Crazy” from Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101

19. Jeezy likes referring to Jeezy as Jeezy in the third person
“When they play that new Jeezy all the dope boys go crazy.” – “Go Crazy” from Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101

20. Gunplay isn’t fun
“Now who the fuck wanna play wit guns?/A lot of holes, a lot of blood dawg, the shit ain’t fun.” — “Go Crazy” from Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101

Young Jeezy, Same Ol’ G [Cover Story Excerpt]

Monday, July 26th, 2010

Images Kenneth Cappello

It’s an all-white affair at the Metropolitan Business and Arts District in southwest Atlanta. The industrial loft complex is the locale for XXL’s 13th-anniversary cover shoot with ATL’s own Young Jeezy, and it’s his third anniversary cover in a row. On this sweltering mid-June afternoon, Da Snowman is playing it extra-cool between takes, making sure not to ruffle his all-white attire while chopping it up with old friend and master boardsman Shawty Redd. With Jeezy’s aptly titled Shawty Redd–produced hit single “All White Everything” blaring (on repeat) throughout the large loft space turned photo studio, the moment might seem a little premeditated. But Jeez is hardly putting it on for the cameras today.

With his long-delayed fourth album, Thug Motivation 103, set for release at the end of this summer, 32-year-old Jay Jenkins is focused on a project he considers well worth its long wait. He’s not paying any attention to negative chatter about the LP’s late arrival, yearlong pushback or the tepid response to the Trap or Die Pt. 2 mixtape, which he released this past May. He’s ignoring the whispers that he’s no longer one of the brightest stars in Atlanta’s rap constellation. And he’s on a vegetarian diet—no beef, or talk of beef, with anyone, including his longtime rival and fellow A-Town rap star Gucci Mane (who just happens to be doing his own photo shoot at the same time, about 200 yards away, in the same row of warehouses).

Today, nothing is as important to Jeezy as the great expectations he has for TM103. Where his previous LP, 2008’s The Recession, offered biting social commentary,TM103 has Da Snowman going back to his roots, back to the trap, back to the feel of his first album, 2005’s Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101.

As day turns to night, the scene moves to ATL’s legendary Stankonia Studios, where OutKast have recorded some of the their most revered work. Jeezy wants to celebrate the five-year anniversary of TM101 and the revival feel on the TM103. He’s confident that his brand of trap music has permanently impacted hip-hop and made him one of the last authentic street dudes in rap. While more and more artists are achieving success with fabricated street lives, Jeezy makes his case for why much of it is not believable and explains why he’s not much of a fan of rap these days. More importantly, he’s adamant that TM103, which was reshaped during months of one-on-one sessions at Shawty Redd’s home studio, will quiet all the talk of Jeezy’s demise. Let’s get it.

Thug Motivation 103 has been long delayed. It’s evident that people are becoming very cynical about its release. How do you calm the skeptics and respond to those who say you’ve lost it and you’re not in a good space right now?

You think it wasn’t like that for B.I.G.? You think it wasn’t like that for Jay? ’Pac? Shit, that’s all Jay talks about. Like, “Nigga, y’all gon’ count me out? Okay, watch this. Boom. I do this better.” That’s what it’s about. But, at the end of the day, that’s what keeps me goin’… Nobody’s not gon’ sit here and tell me, “We done with you, ’cause we’re done.” Nigga, that’s y’all. I’m not done with shit. And they gon’ sit up here and tell me, “Aw, well, you ain’t…” I’m doin’ what any nigga would do on his fourth album. I’m gettin’ it together. I’m not just gon’ give you anything, to be hot and relevant. That don’t make sense. That’s like telling a muthafucka anything just to get it done. I’ma be straight up with you, so when you walk away, even if you ain’t satisfied, I kept it real. I kept it 100. And that’s the way I feel. I wouldn’t even call it the top of my game. I’m just really figuring out the music shit. Once I put that old-school blueprint outline together that I used, with this shit that I’ve done now, it’s a wrap on ’em, homie. C’mon, I’m on my fourth album. Think about niggas’ 10-year plans. I done did more in four albums than a lot of niggas gon’ do for the rest of they life.

Is this going to be the album that separates you from the pack? That authenticates your brand even further and stops the comparisons to the other rappers that do what you do?

I don’t think nobody should compare me to anyone, ’cause, at the end of the day, you’ve got a ’Pac, you’ve got Snoop, you got Tip, you got Wayne—there’s only one Jeezy, man. Ain’t nobody walked in these shoes but me. My level of intelligence and know-how, and being able to adapt, and being able to live, and being able to walk, and still be the same person that I was from day one— that shit ain’t somethin’ that’s just given to you, man. So, at the end of the day, I’m not worried by far, because I wouldn’t even be here right now if it wasn’t for me being and thinking the way that I am. So with that being said, you can’t compare nothing to that. ’Cause I’ll say it again:
I done been ’round the world, ’round the block. Two things a nigga can’t tell ya is that I ran off on ’em or I owe ’em anything. It’s been me the whole time, bruh. Fuck the music—let’s take that out of the equation. It’s nothing. Let’s talk about life for a minute. Look where I came from. Look where I’m at. What do you compare to that? You let me know, and then I guess we’ll have a comparison.

Let’s compare Let’s Get It: Thug Motivation 101 to Thug Motivation 103. Do you think, five years later, that 103 can make as significant an impact in today’s musical climate as 101 did?

Yeah, well, they just waiting on me to come back and change the game, that’s all. [Laughs] But, you know, OutKast made great music. I listened to 8Ball & MJG album the other day—it was good music. It was good music, man. That was us! Nowadays, everybody makes beats, everybody’s a rapper. But then those were the ghetto poets that we listened to, because they were the ones that saw the struggle, and they come out and they tell the world about it, and people feel it like that. I guess now music is so saturated and so microwaved. It’s, like, 15 minutes in the microwave and boom, you’ve got something. Nobody’s putting passion or any thought behind it anymore. Or even going in, like, really going in and making shit that’s going to matter in two months. ’Cause, you know, everything sounds good when you’re [in the studio]. And I’m not hating at all—I’m just being real. —Rondell Conway

To read the rest of this cover story, be sure to pick up the 13th anniversary issue of XXL, September 2010, when it hits national newsstands August 10. Let’s get it!

We Don’t Need No Water… Let it Burn

Tuesday, July 20th, 2010

When I was about 12, my aunt told me there is no problem that cannot be fixed with $5 worth of gas and a book of matches. My aunt was a former Panther-affiliate in Atlanta. She was red, beautiful and strong beyond measure.

She was my Afeni.

Without getting too deep, I want you out there to understand there’s a storm coming. This country is quickly becoming one where there is only rich and poor. The citizens feel abandoned, abused and scared. I know hip-hop says we OK… We ballin’… We doin’ it better than those other niggas, but, sigh, we are not.

As Americans we are now poorer, angrier and more violent than ever. It is only a matter of time before the people call institutions to task: schools, prisons, churches and politicians. When this has happened in the past—French and American revolutions, Cuban uprising, Haiti—fire and blood have followed.

For the first time in my life, conservatives (Tea Party) and the oppressed (nearly everyone else) are all shouting that something’s wrong at the same time. I fear if our country does not fix its relationship with citizens, fire is soon coming.

Here’s some video of “Burn,” a new track I’m working on for “Pledge 3.” Please know it’s super rough. SweatBox Music did the track, and we’re crafting more heat. Maurice Garland is responsible for the footage, and unlike most artists, I want yo opinion on what else I should talk about in the final album version of this record! Salute and gone! Fin.

MAURICEGARLAND.com Previews Killer Mike aka Mike Bigga’s “Burn” from www.mauricegarland.com on Vimeo.

GA’s Most Wanted, Rd. 5 – Executives Take Charge of the Game

Friday, July 16th, 2010

The brain behind the brawn, the men (and women) behind the stars; it’s easy to argue that for any MC to truly be great he (or she) needs a great executive to guide them. As XXL’s weeklong GA’s Most Wanted series comes to a close, we assemble 10 of the state’s best bosses in the game right now. Whether they started out as interns or rappers/singers turned mangers, these are the cream of the hip-hop crop. —Manny Maduakolam

JERMAINE DUPRI
As the architect of the mega label, So So Def, and one of the original kings of the South, Jermaine Dupri is an icon in the hip-hop world. The Atlanta-born executive is a gem finder to say the least, unearthing platinum success for artists like Kris Kross, Da Brat, Jagged Edge and Bow Wow. Getting his start as a producer at 7, he was already a budding exec on the come-up by his teenage years, so it’s easy to see why JD truly is So So Def.

CHAKA ZULU
Move, trick, get out the way, Disturbing Tha Peace Records CEO, Chaka Zulu, is here and judging by his rap sheet, he’s here to stay. As the manager for multi-platinum rap star Ludacris, Chaka built one of hip-hop’s strongest camps in DTP. The former BMG “mailroom guy” and Jive Records intern is now throwing bows to the competition and is a mainstay in the industry. With his partner in rhyme Luda continually rising up the hip-hop, Hollywood and corporate ladders, the sky’s the limit for Chaka’s growing profit margin.

GA’s Most Wanted – Rd. 3, The DJS That Run The Town

Wednesday, July 14th, 2010

No matter how hot the rapper on the mic or how dope of a beat the producer laid out, it wouldn’t mean a thing if there wasn’t someone to actually play the record. That’s where hip-hop’s original element comes in with the art of DJing. In day three of XXL’s weeklong GA’s Most Wanted series, we reveal our top 10 list of Georgia jocks that keep the party rockin’ and the streets satisfied with bangin’ mixtapes. —Adam Fleischer

DJ DRAMA
The architect behind the successful Gangsta Grillz mansion is still at it. From the start of June alone DJ Drama has worked on projects with the likes of dead prez (Revolutionary But Gangsta Grillz), Gucci Mane (Mr. Zone 6), and Pill (1140: The Overdose), proving he’s still the hottest name in the mixtape game—regardless of city. Not to mention his recent work with Lil Wayne, T.I., Young Jeezy, Ludacris, Soulja Boy, and… Well, you get the picture. That’s one lengthy and enviable resume. Oh, and did we mention he has two successful full-length albums? If the feds are takin’ pictures, they’re bound to catch Drama smiling.

DON CANNON
Don Cannon is one of the handful of DJs that doesn’t have that two-letter acronym at the front of his name. Maybe it’s because he wants to make sure people realize he does a lot more than spin records. As one of the founders of the Aphilliates, Cannon has also become on the most respected names on the boards, boasting production credits for Young Jeezy (“Go Crazy,” “Mr. 17.5”), Fabolous (“Joke’s On You”), 50 Cent (“Don’t Mess With 50”), Ludacris (“Undisputed,” “Everybody Hates Chris”) and many more. Plus, since 2009, he’s been at the helm for Curren$y’s Smokee Robinson, The Cool Kids’ Gone Fishing, and most recently Young Jeezy’s Trap or Die 2.

GA’s Most Wanted – Rd. 2, Producers Bring the Noise

Tuesday, July 13th, 2010

It isn’t just the rappers that make Georgia hot. Much of the state’s musical dominance is due to the producers who craft the sound. Thick syrupy bass lines, 808 drum knocks and deep, southern soul samples are what keeps GA artists at the top of the charts and hot in the streets. In day two of XXL’s weeklong GA’s Most Wanted series, we breakdown some of the Peach State’s most sought after hit-makers. —Rob Markman

ORGANIZED NOIZE
The production trio consisting of Rico Wade, Ray Murray and Sleepy Brown made a name for themselves as the chief orchestrators behind the Atlanta’s Dungeon Family (OutKast, Goodie Mob, Cool Breeze, etc.). Outside of that, they’ve made hits for Bubba Sparxxx, Lil Jon and Ludacris. Now their credits on Big Boi’s funky solo debut Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty prove that even after 16 years in the game, Organized still have the magic touch in and around the studio.

ZAYTOVEN
Xavier “Zaytoven” Dotson may hail from the Bay Area, but he has helped craft Atlanta’s distinct sound in recent years. After relocating to the A, Zay made a name for himself producing Gucci Mane and Young Jeezy’s 2005 hit “Icy.” In 2009, he had a breakout year, crafting singles for Gorilla Zoe (“What It Is” feat. Rick Ross), OJ Da Juiceman (“Make Tha Trap Say Aye”) and Usher (“Papers). Since then Zaytoven’s gotten in the lab with Plies, Young Jeezy and is said to be getting back in with Gucci for his upcoming album, The Appeal: Georgia’s Most Wanted.

Field Mob – We Byke

Monday, July 12th, 2010

Thought this was going to be about riding on motorcycles. Its not. They’re back (Byke). Classic country field mob.


Field Mob is back together!

Download: Field Mob – We Byke

Jacked from DGB

Pill “Gin & Dreams Freestyle” [VIDEO]

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

Gucci Mane feat. Swizz Beatz “It’s Gucci Time”

Wednesday, July 7th, 2010

Young Jeezy “I’m Just Sayin’” [VIDEO]

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

T.I. Album Pushback “Not Confirmed,” Rep Says

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

Over the weekend amazon.com changed the release date of T.I.’s upcoming album, King Uncaged, from August 17 to September 28. Yet it looks like the popular online superstore has updated their files a little too soon.

When contacted by XXLMag.com, a rep for Atlantic Records said that no new dates have been confirmed at this time. Tip is currently finishing up his seventh studio effort, recently hitting the studio with Kid Rock, Lady Gaga and Eminem.

In related news, Tip will appear on cable network Fuse tonight (July 6) at 8 p.m. EST for an interview with renowned hip-hop journalist Toure. During the 30-minute sit-down, titled, T.I.: On the Record With Fuse, the King of the South will discuss how he was treated in jail, his rights as an American citizen and his definition of keeping it real.

Also XXL’s July issue, featuring T.I. on the cover, hits newsstands nationwide today. In our in-depth story, we investigate the rumors that the ATL giant snitched in order to receive a better sentence. Be sure to pick up a copy now. —Elan Mancini

T.I., Going Through Changes [Cover Story Excerpt]

Tuesday, July 6th, 2010

Images by F. Scott Schafer

Echo Recording Studios is not an easy place to find. The unmarked building is lodged in a cluster of industrial structures on a ragged stretch of Southwest Atlanta lined with vacant houses, hair salons and meandering junkies. Before entering, guests wait in front of a surveillance camera, until a chain-link fence wound with razor wire slides open. The yellow Ferrari, silver Porsche and stretch limousine parked in the protected courtyard are early clues that this is not an ordinary warehouse. The entrance to the actual studio is via another secure doorway, this one protected by a large cage of thick metal bars. And deep within this prisonlike tangle of steel and wire is Clifford “T.I.” Harris, a free man.

Seated on a swivel chair, beneath a collection of closed-circuit monitors, on a warm evening, T.I. is under observation too. The small mixing room is packed with a camera crew, a VJ with wholesome R&B-singer looks, an engineer and assorted label personnel. Dressed casually but crisply—in dark denim jeans, an army-style button-up, a Red Sox fitted and Air Jordan sneakers—the 29-year-old rapper is illuminated by a halo of camera lights that glint off the chunky watch wrapped around his wrist. With recently recorded songs blaring from the speakers, T.I. mouths the lyrics, his fingers dancing in midair, his wrist flicking to punctuate snare hits. There’s a Jersey Shore–bound anthem plucked from the same peapod as 2008’s Rihanna-led “Live Your Life” single (complete with boisterous “ayes!” and all). There’s a poppy love song that the VJ breathlessly proclaims to be his favorite. And then there’s another track, a mean one, that T.I. penned while incarcerated in federal prison last year. Here, he growls about grabbing a knife to “leave a nigga drippin’ like a sippy cup.” The smile plastered on the VJ’s face turns waxen. “That one’s more aggressive,” T.I. says of the song. “Prison kind of shook my mind up a bit. It woke something up in my mind that was gone.”

After completing the last three months of his yearlong jail sentence at an Atlanta halfway house—a punishment stemming from federal weapons charges—T.I. has come home. Things are different, and not just because he no longer shares a room with five cell mates. The terrain upon which he built his empire—six albums, a closet stuffed with RIAA-certified gold and platinum plaques, his Grand Hustle Records label, big endorsement deals, millions of dollars in the bank—has shifted. T.I.’s vacated position as ATL’s most-celebrated dope boy is crowded with candidates like Gucci Mane, Jeezy, hell, even Waka Flocka Flame. The Billboard pop charts T.I. dominated with smash singles from his last album, 2008’s double-platinum Paper Trail, have become a playpen for babies such as Drake and B.o.B (an artist on T.I.’s Grand Hustle Records no less). Still, with his seventh album, King Uncaged, due late this summer, Tip’s not ready to cede his crown. “The term ‘King of the South’ did not exist before me,” says T.I. between sips from a Heineken bottle. “The term cannot be passed along unless I choose to pass it along.”

With a small frame, a head slightly too large for his body, and intense features, T.I. doesn’t look like a grizzled rap veteran who’s spent the last decade battling for primacy beneath the Mason-Dixon Line. But he has aged. While the youthful version of T.I. charged out of Cobb County jail in 2004 with sneering defiance, after serving time for violating probation, the contemporary model is far more subdued. To be sure, a mature, civic-minded T.I. can still sell records. Paper Trail, his sixth effort that included several singles with inspirational and reflective themes, was responsible for his most-notable moments of commercial success to date. But the LP was also cleansed of the gunplay, drug dealing and bristling menace that characterized so much of his earlier music. The duality expressed on T.I.’s 2007 split-personality album, T.I. Vs T.I.P., seemed questionable to some critics then, but he contains multitudes. There’s the public facade (entertainer, executive, faithful fiancé on the straight and narrow), and then there’s the other T.I. (a reckless thug who bought a stack of machine guns on the day of the 2007 BET Hip-Hop Awards). Only he knows where one ends and the other begins—or if they both still exist.

Gucci Mane “Poltergeist” [Prod By Zaytoven]

Sunday, July 4th, 2010

Big Boi “General Patton” [VIDEO]

Sunday, July 4th, 2010

T.I. Goes “On The Record With Fuse” Next Week

Friday, July 2nd, 2010

T.I. is scheduled to sit down with renowned hip-hop journalist Toure next Tuesday, July 6, for a candid interview on cable network Fuse, where the King of the South will discuss how he was treated in jail, his rights as an American citizen and his definition of keeping it real.

During the 30-minute show, titled T.I.: On The Record with Fuse, Tip says, “Anyone who equates keeping it real to doing time or buying guns, I think that they are sadly mistaken on what keeping it real entails.”

Yet at the same time, the Atlanta-native shares that he wishes he was still able to carry a weapon, if it was allowed by law. “As long as there are other criminals out there who have them, then I definitely wish that I had my second amendment right,” he says during the Q & A. “But you know I understand that I live in America and the law in America states that if you’re a felon, that you lose that second amendment right to bear arms.”

As far as his experience behind bars, the rap superstar says he wasn’t treated differently than anyone else, despite his celebrity status. “I just went in there prepared to do what I had to do to get on back on up out of there,” he tells Toure.

In addition to the show on Tuesday, fans can also catch outtakes from the interview T.I.: On the Record with Fuse: The Lost Tapes on August 16, just two days before his new album, King Uncaged, is released.

In related new T.I. graces the cover of XXL’s July issue. In the in-depth story, XXL investigates the rumors that ATL giant snitched in order to receive a better sentence. Be sure to pick up a copy of the magazine, hitting stands nationwide on July 6. —Aleia Woods

Lil Scrappy “I’m Thinking”

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

T.I. “Ya Hear Me”

Thursday, July 1st, 2010

Big Boi “Follow Us” (Prod. By Salaam Remi) [VIDEO]

Thursday, July 1st, 2010