Showing posts with label About A Fly Guy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label About A Fly Guy. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 20, 2010

•Music&Style&Charm•



•Music&Style&Charm•

Long time no blog…

I did an interview with this woman from the Miami Herald a few months ago, and the first thing she asked me was… “What do you do?”
And I paused for a minute before answering. In my head I started listing off all the things I do or have done or have had some sort of involvement in. And what I surmised was the following: •Music&Style&Charm•
Everything associated with A Fly Guy encompasses •Music&Style&Charm•



Originally launched in 2007, this blog was supposed to cover all areas of things I felt were interesting; but after a while, I became focused on only things that I had going on. Needless to say, from the outside looking in, I came across “bloggisly” self-centered. So in 2010 I’ve decided to regroup, reformat, and re-approach by blogstyle. So you can look forward to posts that will not only be about me and what I got going on, but there will be general topics associated with •Music&Style&Charm•


Thanks for reading.
Fly Guy

Thursday, March 20, 2008

The Outfit on Video Music Box

All my native true school New Yorkers know about Ralph McDaniels aka Uncle Ralph and his legendary show Video Music Box (if you've never heard of it, google it after you finish with this post and "do the knowledge"). Check out the show footage and interview with Uncle Ralph and my groupmates from The Outfit. My boy Phil Anastasia making it happen. Check him out here-------> Phil Anastasia.
THE OUTFIT on VIDEO MUSIC BOX

Shout out to The Last American B-Boy, Dyverse, Lounge-Lo, Dr. Ama, & King just. Sorry I missed the show that night ya'll.

Wednesday, March 19, 2008

Cop(e)acetic


I got an interesting message from one of my FACEBOOK friends last nite.  And it goes a lil' somethin' like theeeeeeeeisss



Hi Rahsaan! I know it's been forever since we have talked.

I called you tonight because I wanted to tell you how I went to my girl's blog only to find the pic of you from Time magazine as the main pic on her page. I sent her a message and told her that I knew you and asked if she knew you, or if she just liked the pic. She said she googled rope chains and your pic came up. She thought the pic was dope and liked how it didn't really show a face. So, just thought it was interesting and figured you might want to check out her page. I guess this all just comes with being famous :-)



That pic of me was brilliantly shot only showing me from the nose down. It was the headline pic in a Hip Hop article in TIME magazine last summer. To read the actual article, click -----> A Fly Guy in TIME

Shout out to homegirl over at Cop(e)acetic. Check out her blog jawnt right here.

Tuesday, March 4, 2008

A Fly Guy's MySpace Music



I'm feeling good about this here. Finally broke 50,000 total plays. I will be swithcing up the playlist soon with some new records. One in particular is kind of different for me creatively. I'll keep u posted on when I put it up here. Payyyyyce!

Friday, February 29, 2008

A Fly Guy's Magazine Interview


So....there's a new interview Rap Fanatic Magazine just did with me. Its in the issue with Birdman on the cover(page 34) to be exact. Check it out. But as an aspiring artist, let me put u on to some of the bullsh*t we face in the industry. The interview is about a half a page long, and I discuss some very personal family issues, as well as shouting out my crew, G4 Crew. (Fashion Monster Parties, coming back soon). Anyway, some of you who are already familiar with my music, know that one of my monikers is God's Favorite Rapper, so the title of the interview is "God's Favorite Rapper" but the magazine editor put up the wrong damn picture. They put a pic of another artist that looks nothing like me. Dammit man. So if you happen to come across this magazine article, keep in mind that yes those are my words, but that is not me in the picture, obviously.

Wednesday, February 27, 2008

A Fly Guy's Showcase

I haven't been on stage in a few weeks; since my award show actually.. This Friday I'm back in NY for the YUME show. Gonna feel good to grab the mic once again. I will be performing with some other dope artists like my homeboy Kapps, and Melo-X, and a few others. Then Kesh is gonna get her fine ass on the wheels of steel and spin for the rest of the party.

Thursday, February 14, 2008

Rahsaan - Howard Homecoming '07

Shout out to Crazy Al Cayne. It only took four months but I finally got the footage from the interview I did for his tv show during Howard's Homecoming this past October. Shout out to one half of the Thermal Soundwaves Radio Boys, Cee-Truth for the camera work. Make sure you check out CAC-TV.

Monday, February 11, 2008

Best Male Performer 2007


People will say, "Hey Rahsaan, why you be goin so hard when u performing and it only be like 8 people in the crowd?"
I say, "Look here duke, I don't care if there's one person or 1,000 people in the crowd, I treat every show like its Madison Square Garden, cause when I'm on tour doing stadiums, I will be so seasoned as a performer, my audiences will feel they have gotten above and beyond their money's worth. And it has begun with me winning the award for Best Male Solo Performer of 2007 at the Unsigned and Independent Awards in NYC last week. Shout out to Ace of Spades Entertainment and Music Notes Magazine for recognizing my caliber as an MC and an entertainer. It does feel great to have your hard work start to pay off. Check the pics below from the award show. Shout to my dude Fish-Lo for making my custom A FLY GUY track jacket and tshirt that I performed in. Thanks to Pharoae Monch for coming thru to support me also, hope u tearing shit up in Austrailia right now. Last American B-Boy, my brothers Sim & Selwyn, Jae-Alz, Shantelle, Tia, Supris, Phil Anastasia, Karen, Muriel, Jasmine, Scottie, Frantz, Jineea Butler, Kev Sakoda, Ayana, Nancy, Mileise, Guy, Al Doogie, thanks to all ya'll who came thru and supported me that night. My bad for rushing thru my acceptance speech just to get to my performance, but I got ya'll here. Love is Love.

Young Made & Paid

A Fly Guy

Me & My Brothers - Selwyn & Simeon

Me & The Last American B-Boy

Pharoae Monch, Me, Guy Routte

Saturday, February 9, 2008

A Fly Guy's Radio Interview



So last week, I submitted my record "Sneaker Store Terrorist" into this 'BEST OF THE WEEK' competition on Parle Radio.... I WON! So, I was invited up to the station to do a brief interview with the good folks up there. The vibe was cool, and I enjoyed myself. Take a few minutes and listen to the interview. FYI, you have to click on the loading bar and drag it to the right, up to about the 42 minute mark. That's when my interview actually starts. You will know because you will hear the end of "Sneaker Store Terrorist" playing, then I start to talk. Some say, I love to hear the sound of my own voice... You be the judge.
Thanks again to Parle Radio for having me. Be sure to check out their radio show every Thursday from 7pm-9pm on thecaribzone.com Look out for the magazine interview coming soon.

A Fly Guy's Other Radio Interview


Yeah, I'm really on the grind. Somebody mentioned to me the other night that it seems like I am my own publicist. I guess in a way they are correct. Below is the audio from another radio interview I had earlier this week at Thermal Soundwaves Radio. Shout out to Kev Lawrence and Cee Truth for showing me love once again. Video of the interview is coming soon.

Thursday, February 7, 2008

Mobb Deep/Sean Price/Rahsaan

Here's the scoop. My brother Selwyn is launching a new BET show called BOOM BAP this spring. It's a new conceptual video show with interviews and some other dope content. So last Friday I went to the taping of the launch with Prodigy(Mobb Deep), Sean Price, and my brother Sim & Justin(LTID). It was a pretty good day. The girls at BET made sure we were fed and taken care of. Check the behind the scenes footage below. Shout out to Prodigy. Hold ya head kid. Free P.

A Fly Guy's Movie Trailer

So I know its been a while since I've updated my blog. I've been kinda busy working on some new projects; one being the footage below. This is a sneak preview at the trailer for an independent film I am making with my dude The Last American B-Boy. It's called THE GENTLEMEN. The film also co-stars my other homie Jae-Alz from (LTID). The film is still in production but will be out later this year. Until then, enjoy the trailer.

Friday, January 18, 2008

A Fly Guy's Music Videos part 3 - The Outfit

Big shout out to my homey Phil Anastasia. He put together a dope crew of MC's and this our first video for the single called "THE OUTFIT." Check out his new mixtape, hosted by DJ LAZY K. On this joint right here you got Dyverse the First, Me(A Fly Guy), Lounge-Lo, Dr. Ama, Shyheim, The Last American B-Boy, Phil Anastasia, and King Just (Hay Yah Hay Yah Hay Yah Ho!)

Monstar Productions shoots another banging video.

Wednesday, January 16, 2008

Making History

So...prior to last week my daily average total of LISTENS on my myspace page never went passed 50. Thanks to the help of my crew (LTID), we set a new record for daily plays for my page. I hit 3,217 plays on my music player (as of 12:19am Thursday) just for today. And there is still more play counts coming in. My crew is the shit. Shout out to (LTID). We gets bizzy.



A special thank you goes out to the following:
Justin
Villain
Lance
Charles
Assata
Carrie
MissE
Kuddy Roc
Phillip Jennings
Amy
Mariah
Li Li Baby
Shelly
Ima
Tom - LOL
Gwiz
Peaches
Snakks
Bam Bam

Friday, January 11, 2008

BET - Rap It Up Campaign

I was looking through some files doing regular maintenance on my computer and I came cross a clip of one of my commericals I did for BET's Rap It Up Safe Sex campaign. Check it out.

Thursday, January 3, 2008

To Her - Live at SPUTNIK - Brooklyn, NY



They say the test of a true artist is the willingness to show their deepest vulnerabilities, subjecting themselves to possible ridicule, or judgments by outsiders. The footage above is of me performing at a spot in Brooklyn called SPUTNIK. The record I'm doing is another one from my debut album, GEORGETOWN. It's called "To Her" (You Don't Love Me). The concept of this record came from Chapter 4 in my brother's book Gunshots in my Cook-Up,
which bares the same name. In the chapter my brother touches on two very serious topics. One was about my mother's battle with breast cancer. I reserve sharing details or information on that topic as of now. The other topic he speaks about is how sometimes as a youg black male we allow ourselves to get consumed by anger and pain and do not always know the best methods of coping or dealing with issues at hand. In the case of my brother, his relationship pushed him to a breaking point one night. At the time, I never knew what was going on with the situation. I was in Miami back then, and I just remember my mother coming to me one night and saying she had to go to New York but never told me why. It wasn't until years later when I was reading this book that I realized what had happened to my brother. I was shocked reading his words. He had always been the epitome of "cool" to me; unfaseable. In hos book he mentions how we wished he had the power to reverse all that had happened in such a short instance; reform the glasses he smashed, send the vulgarities he cursed out back down his throat, his girl gliding backwards into the apartment as if in a slow motion rewind, to the point where they were back in the living room staring at each other. So to push the envelope of my own creativity, I took that situation and created this record from the perspective of me being Selwyn. I took it a step further and wrote the record in reverse. In two minutes and 37 seconds "To HER" takes you on a journey that begins in a hospital bed and ends in an apartment in Brooklyn Heights 24 hours prior. At the end of the footage I begin to break down and cry on stage because as I was performing the record, my mind journeyed to a place where I imagined what my life would have been like had the household liquids my brother consumed that night took him away from me and my family. I couldn't hold it in anymore.

Tuesday, December 18, 2007

Showtime!


I wanna say good lookin out to DJ KEV who came thru and DJ'd for my show last nite. We tore it down once again. And I appreciate all my supporters and fans who came to see me get busy. The reactions that i get from my audience is what keeps driving me forward to stay creating the kind of music that speaks true to my heart; and many of yours. In today's hip hop world, the biggest battle that we face, is the one that goes on within; the battle for artistic integrity. Music with a message... It's so easy to allow our creativity to be deferred down a path of apathy and with meaningless bodies of work that continue to perpetuate the de-evolution of our culture and the minds of our endangered youth. Once again, mad love to all those who support what I do.
Save The Music Ya'll

Friday, December 14, 2007

A Fly Guy's Music Videos part 2 - "COME ON"


Let me explain the concept of this video. Originally aimed for BET UnCUT, I was told that the only way I could get a video to air was to submit it for that particular show, being that I am relatively unknown as an artist, and the video had to contain the images that UnCut is known for displaying. At first glance it may seem like I have played a part in continuing to perpetuate the images of women of color; however; unlike most other Uncut videos where you saw four minutes of activity sometimes so graphic it had to be blurred out, I chose to show one half-second shot of an ass in the very beginning of the video, and after that, you don't see anything that you wouldn't see in a video during 106 & Park or Suckerfree time slots. But seeing as though I am in the music business, at this level you sometimes have to "give in" a bit and play by the rules of the "game." disclaimer: Apologies to any person offended by the images in this video.

Sincerely,
A Fly Guy

Thursday, December 6, 2007

A Fly Guy's Recording Session

Here is some footage of me recording a record for my cousin King Reign's album. This was filmed at Cutting Room Recording Studios, NYC.

"....gotta keep on baby..."

Hip-Hop's Down Beat




Shout out to Kenneth Dickerman for snapping my photograph to headline this Hip Hop story in TIME Magazine. But why only from the nose down? That's neither here nor there. Check the rest of the story below.

Hip-Hop's Down Beat
By TA-NEHISI COATES


When the political activist Al Sharpton pivoted from his war against bigmouth radio man Don Imus to a war on bad-mouth gangsta rap, the instinct among older music fans was to roll their eyes and yawn. Ten years ago, another activist, C. Delores Tucker, launched a very similar campaign to clean up rap music. She focused on Time Warner (parent of TIME), whose subsidiary Interscope was home to hard-core rappers Snoop Dogg and Tupac Shakur. In 1995 Tucker succeeded in forcing Time Warner to dump Interscope.
Her victory was Pyrrhic. Interscope flourished, launching artists like 50 Cent and Eminem and distributing the posthumous recordings of Shakur. And the genre exploded across the planet, with rappers emerging everywhere from Capetown to the banlieues of Paris. In the U.S. alone, sales reached $1.8 billion.

The lesson was Capitalism 101: rap music's market strength gave its artists permission to say what they pleased. And the rappers themselves exhibited an entrepreneurial bent unlike that of musicians before them. They understood the need to market and the benefits of line extensions. Theirs was capitalism with a beat.

Today that same market is telling rappers to please shut up. While music-industry sales have plummeted, no genre has fallen harder than rap. According to the music trade publication Billboard, rap sales have dropped 44% since 2000 and declined from 13% of all music sales to 10%. Artists who were once the tent poles at rap labels are posting disappointing numbers. Jay-Z's return album, Kingdom Come, for instance, sold a gaudy 680,000 units in its first week, according to Billboard. But by the second week, its sales had declined some 80%. This year rap sales are down 33% so far.

Longtime rap fans are doing the math and coming to the same conclusions as the music's voluminous critics. In February, the filmmaker Byron Hurt released Beyond Beats and Rhymes, a documentary notable not just for its hard critique but for the fact that most of the people doing the criticizing were not dowdy church ladies but members of the hip-hop generation who deplore rap's recent fixation on the sensational.

Both rappers and music execs are clamoring for solutions. Russell Simmons recently made a tepid call for rappers to self-censor the words nigger and bitch from their albums. But most insiders believe that a debate about profanity and misogyny obscures a much deeper problem: an artistic vacuum at major labels. "The music community has to get more creative," says Steve Rifkin, CEO of SRC Records. "We have to start betting on the new and the up-and-coming for us to grow as an industry. Right now, I don't think anyone is taking chances. It's a big-business culture."

It's the ultimate irony. Since the 1980s, when Run-DMC attracted sponsorship from Adidas, the rap community has aspired to be big business. By the '90s, those aspirations had become a reality. In a 1999 cover story, TIME reported that with 81 million CDs sold, rap was officially America's top-selling music genre. The boom produced enterprises like Roc-A-Fella, which straddled fashion, music and film and in 2001 was worth $300 million. It produced moguls like No Limit's Master P and Bad Boy's Puff Daddy, each of whom in 2001 made an appearance on FORTUNE's list of the richest 40 under 40. Along the way, the music influenced everything from advertising to fashion to sports.

The growth spurt was fueled by sensationalism. Tupac Shakur shot at police, was convicted of sexual abuse and ultimately was murdered in Las Vegas. But Shakur both alive and dead has also sold more than 20 million records. Death Row Records, which released much of Shakur's material, was run by ex-con Suge Knight and dogged by rumors of money laundering. But between 1992 and 1998, the label churned out 11 multiplatinum albums. Gangsta rappers reveled in their outlaw mystique, crafting ultra-violent tales of drive-bys and stick-ups designed to shock and enthrall their primary audience--white suburban teenagers. "Hip-hop seemed dangerous; it seemed angry," says Richard Nickels, who manages the hip-hop band the Roots. "Kurt Cobain killed himself, and rock seemed weak. But then you had these black guys who came out and had guns. It was exciting to white kids."

Hip-hop now faces a generation that takes gangsta rap as just another mundane marker in the cultural scenery. "It's collapsing because they can no longer fool the white kids," says Nickels. "There's only so much redundancy anyone can take."

Artists who never jumped on the gangsta bandwagon point the finger at the boardroom. They accuse major labels of strip-mining the music, playing up its sensationalist aspects for easy sales. "In rock you have metal, alternative, emo, soft rock, pop-rock, you have all these different strains," says Q-Tip, front man for the defunct A Tribe Called Quest. "And there are different strains of hip-hop, but record companies aren't set up to sell these different strains. They aren't set up to do anything more of a mature sort of hip-hop."

Of course, gangsta rap isn't a record-company invention. Indeed, hip-hop's two most celebrated icons, Shakur and Notorious B.I.G., embraced the sort of lyrical content that today has opened hip-hop to criticism. And the music companies, under assault from file-sharing and other alternative distribution channels, are hardly in a position to do R&D. "When I first signed to Tommy Boy, [the A&R person] would take us to different shows and to art museums," says Q-Tip. "There was real mentorship. Today that's largely absent, and we see the results in the music and in the aesthetic." That result is a stale product, defined by cable channels like BET, now owned by Viacom, which seems to consist primarily of gun worship and underdressed women.

During the past decade, record labels have outsourced the business of kingmaking to other artists. Established stars Dr. Dre and Eminem brought 50 Cent to Interscope. Jay-Z founded his own label, cut a distribution deal and began developing his own roster. But most established artists do little development. That leaves the possibility that hip-hop is following the same path that soul and R&B traveled when they descended into disco, which died quickly.

No longer able to peddle sensation, rap's moguls are switching tactics. Simmons, while still something of a hip-hop ambassador, is hawking a new self-help book. Master P, whose estimated worth was once $661 million, watched his label, No Limit, sink into bankruptcy. He recently announced the formation of Take a Stand Records, a label catering to "clean" hip-hop music. "Personally, I have profited millions of dollars through explicit rap lyrics," Master P stated on his website. "I can honestly say that I was once part of the problem, and now it's time to be part of the solution."

Chris Lighty, CEO of Violator Entertainment, whose clients include 50 Cent and Busta Rhymes, is looking at ways that record companies can work with artists in one area where rappers have been innovative: endorsement and branding. Whether it's 50 Cent owning a stake in Vitamin Water or Jay-Z doing a commercial for HP, most of these deals have been brokered by the artists' own camp. But Lighty sees in hip-hop a chance for record labels to generate more sponsorship and endorsements. "Record companies are going to have to make even better records and participate in brand extension. It's the only way they can survive," says Lighty. "We need to change the format, and this is the only way. 50 Cent is a brand. Jay-Z is a brand."

But the current hubbub over indecency poses a direct challenge to that brand strength, as the artist Akon recently discovered. While performing in Trinidad, Akon was videotaped dancing suggestively with a fan who was later revealed to be only 14. The video attracted the ire of conservatives like Bill O'Reilly. In the wake of the controversy, Akon's tour sponsor, Verizon, removed all ringtones featuring his work and retracted its sponsorship. The message was clear: Hip-hop needs a new and improved product.