Today we celebrate arguably the greatest hip-hop album ever made. Without exaggeration, Nas’ Illmatic is that supreme. Released on April 19 1994, Illmatic is not just a magnum opus, calling it a ‘classic’ is almost a criminal underrating. Illmatic isn’t a just life changer, it didn’t just change the climate, The King from Queensbridge shifted culture and set a new standard for excellence. That standard and precedent the album set is so high, there are just a few albums since its release that deserve to be mentioned in the same sentence as Illmatic. 
 
Last night, Nas celebrated his silver anniversary a day early, with a Pop Up shop at Sony Square in New York. The shop served as a museum and shrine to not just the album Illmatic, but to the inspirations that birthed it. Enclosed in glass cases where such collectables as Ron G mixtape cassettes as well as VHS tapes of Sylvester Stallone’s “Cobra,” “Shining,” “Wild Style,” “Scarface,” “Cooley High” and “The Mack.”  Also on display were cement Jordan 3s, beat up Timberland boots, and bottles of E&J and Hennessy; both empty.  All serving as fuel for Nas’ iconic lyrics. Also on the walls, hung three mural paintings of the Illmatic cover as well as pictures from a photoshoot in Queensbridge.  
 
Nas walked in amazement, taking pictures of all the memorabilia.
 
“I’m happy. I’m happy. That’s it,” he told LiveXLive exclusively, standing in his own shrine, humbled by his milestone and the love he’s getting for it. “A quarter century is nothing to sneeze at. That’s all. I’m grateful.” 
 
With the DJ playing “New York State of Mind,” oh so appropriately, Nas called his friend and only other person to spit a rap verse on Illmatic, AZ.
 
“He’s the architect because I figure I was a piece of shit at the time. But he saw something in me that I didn’t hear in myself,” said AZ, who immediately cemented himself as one of the hottest MCs in the culture after people heard him on “Life’s A Bitch.” “He told me ‘hop on the joint.’ I said ‘man you playing.’ Because he’s critically acclaimed [at the time]. I’m like ‘no way.’ But I got on. He coached me through it and is what it what it is. 25 years later. That’s a good look man.”
 
‘94 was such a beautiful year in music. A plethora of new artists coming to the forefront. Nas, Snoop Dogg, Notorious B.I.G. and Method Man all were vying for the King of Rap crown with outstanding opuses. Just like Michael Jordan will never stake claim to being the GOAT of basketball, Nas is too humble to say he is rap’s Greatest of All Time.  However, AZ didn’t have any problem proclaiming it for his Firm teammate.
 
“He established the flow content to the game,” AZ asserted. “Switched the whole sonics of the game and had everybody following behind him. Dropping that pure poetry and reality, reality rap hit the game at that time and he was the King of it.” 

“I mean, you know what it is,” Nas added. “We’re here to raise up the consciousness trough hip-hop. That’s what we’re here to do. That’s all we can be grateful for. That someone out there might have heard something we said in the music that takes us to another level. I learned from music. I learned from everybody’s stuff. I’m having a good time. 25 years, I’m  grateful. Thanks to everybody out here who ever heard this record before. We thank you to AZ, thank you Jungle, Dave East, [King] Shooter, J Rosay. May you have a 25 year anniversary. That shit’s alright.” 
 
Nas and AZ also got up on stage, in the area was a replica of the front of the Queensbridge Housing projects replete with the “Welcome To The Queensbridge Sign,” a phone booth with a phone (when you picked up the phone you could hear excerpts of previous Nas interviews) photo booth that let you replicate the iconic Illmatic album cover  and an artist painting the Ilmatic album cover live and bar with Henny was on deck.
 
AZ said a toast.” To see this album grow into the colossal that it is, it’s crazy to me. You still look 25,” The Visualizer proclaimed on the mic. “You changed the course of hip-hop and the way MCs was flowing.  Your footprint is forever in the game. Thank you, I love  you from the bottom of my heart man. He’s the true GOAT of the game, Greatest of All Time. Make noise for Esco. My brother.”
 
“First of all, my brother AZ, my brother AZ is here,” Nas said on the mic in front of the crowd right after the toast. “This brother has the verbal, lyrical capability of everything inside of hip-hop wrapped into one; Grandmaster Caz to early [LL] Cool J, to Kool G. Rap, to Rakim. This is all embodied by the god AZ. He was the personification of MCing. Thank you my brother being here and I wouldn’t want anybody on this album but you. 
 
“This is amazing,” God’s Son added. “We have 25 years in hip-hop still, cause our forefathers, they put down more years than us. Some of them are not celebrated enough but this is for the love of hip-hop. This is bigger than me, bigger than my brother AZ. This is bigger than all of us. Unified with a voice from the inner city, to explain the truth to the world like no other. 25 years in an incredible experience because we’re still alive to be here. To the young rappers coming up, I wish you guys a happy 25 years too. I wish the new generation 25 years. The generation after them 25 years. We gotta keep this thing going because hip-hop equals the truth.” 
 
You will get to hear songs from Illmatic live soon. Nas and Mary J. Blige have both signed to go for the joint headlining “Royalty Tour” kicking off this Summer.

Click here for an exclusive playlist dedicated to Escobar on Slacker Radio.

It was a full house Tuesday night when Carrie Underwood officially inducted Kelsea Ballerini into the Grand Ole Opry. Not only is she the Opry’s newest member, at 25 she’s also the youngest member.

 

And while that was definitely a highlight in Kelsea’s life and career, this moment that happened backstage before the induction is gonna rank pretty high up there, too:

Congrats on an amazing night, Kelsea!

The full Beyoncé experience drops today, including a documentary about a historic set of concerts and the live album to accompany it. “Homecoming...” is everything a Queen Bey fan could want. And in true Beyoncé fashion, she over-delivers.
The movie "Homecoming: A Film By Beyoncé" documents the monumental two week journey of her headlining shows at Coachella last year. The doc takes us behind the scenes as she preps for the concerts with bands from HBCUs, as well as her main team. Anytime you can get these intimate glimpses of one of the all-time greats of any era in any genre, it’s captivating. The huge payoff, of course, is actually seeing the fruits of her labor come to life in front of 100,000 plus fans.

Meanwhile, "Homecoming: The Live Album” takes us there mentally and spiritually. Featuring 40 tracks of Beyoncé at her finest, you can truly appreciate just how vocally gifted she is. Take away the iconic dancing and the immaculate, one of a kind stage production, and you still have a singer whose voice is so pure and powerful she can make the toughest of us teary eyed.The movie is out now on Netflix, the album is available everywhere. By the end of the weekend, though, once all her fans get to digest all the divine content, “Homecoming" may be renaming to “Homegoing” because they all would have collectively and figuratively died and gone to Heaven.

If you’re going to be the youngest headliner ever at Coachella, you damn sure better bring it. Ariana Grande did just that last night trying to go down as the best to ever do it. Just look to the hashtags of #AriChella bubbling on social for proof.

Opening her set with “God Is A Woman,” Grande delivered a night of smash hits, featuring platinum-level guests throughout.

Nicki Minaj came out for a double dose, with “Side To Side” and “Bang Bang.” The two  dominated the stage, making an impact despite some audio issues.

Grande’s next trick was a big one, persuading the legendary *NSYNC to reunite… for the most part. Sure, Justin Timberlake was wrapping his “Man of the Woods” tour elsewhere, but Grande filled his spot admirably. She’s had plenty of prep time. “All her muthaf**kin life” to be exact.

JC Chasez, Joey Fatone, Chris Kirkpatrick, and Lance Bass sang “Tearin Up My Heart.” This came on the heels of Grande’s “Break Up With Your Girlfriend, I’m Bored,” which incorporates a sample of the boy band’s “It Makes Me Ill.”

*NSYC wasn’t the only legendary collective to join Grande. Diddy and Mase came to bring the house down with  “Mo Money, Mo Problems,” featuring Ariana crooning the chorus.

And if Ariana owned the pop event of the evening, Y.G. brought the hip hop fire.

He showed his own major guest-pull, too, parading out 2 Chainz and Big Sean for “Big Bank.” Elsewhere, Tyga came out for “Taste” as well as the posse track “Bitches Ain’t Shit,” which of course has verses from YG and Nipsey Hussle.

Mid-set, Y.G. honored his fallen friend, who graduated from hood-hero to worldwide-legend.

“I been trying to get to ‘BoaChella’ for muthaf**kin years,” Y.G. Said. “It took me years and years to get to this muthaf**kin stage. Me and my n***a Nipsey Hussle used to talk about doing ‘BoaChella’ my n***a. He [would] call it ‘Coachella.’ But I’mma call it ‘BoaChella.’ We would have conversations about doing this shit. And it’s 2019 and I’m finally doing this shit. Thank you BoaChella for having me up in this muthaf**ka ... We just lost one of our greats, one of our homies. One of our big brothers. A muthaf**kin legend. Black muthaf**kin Jesus. Yeah I said it, Black Muthaf**kin Jesus.”

Y.G. also announced that his new LP is dropping May 3rd. The project was delayed from early April in order to pay proper respect to Nipsey in the aftermath of his March 31 murder.

Other highlights from Day 3 included Bad Bunny bringing out J. Balvin for “I Liked It Like That.” And Zedd was not to be outdone, bringing Katy Perry on stage for “365.” Meanwhile, Khalid was vying to steal the night with help from Normani, Billie Eilish, Halsey, Benny Blanco and Marshmello during his Coachella debut.

Overall, it was another epic event from Coachella Valley. We can’t wait to see what Weekend 2 brings.

#TBT came early this week. Yesterday, Tiger Woods topped the golf world once again by winning the Masters, and today Jay-Z announced that he’s headlining a show at Webster Hall. We don’t know about you, but we welcome this type of throwback with open arms.

For those who don’t know, Webster Hall is a popular night spot that rose to hip hop prominence in the early 90s as a core NYC venue to see your favorite MCs. Nas, Black Moon, Rakim, Busta Rhymes and Meek Mill don’t even begin to scratch the surface of all the talent that has graced this stage over the past two decades plus. Despite such a storied history, the Hall was closed down in 2017 for renovations.

This morning, Roc Nation took to social media with a simple video zooming in on the iconic Webster Hall marquee, with the following message: “Jay-Z, Friday April 26, Opening Night.” The video ends with a cover graphic announcing “Jay-Z B-Sides 2.”

The accompanying captions reads: “#JAYZ is opening Webster Hall with ‘B-Sides 2’ on Friday, April 26 for Day 1 fans. AMEX Card Members can get tickets on 4/18 at 10am ET before the public on sale on 4/19 at 11am ET.”

BSE Global, the Bowery Presents and AEG Presents have taken over the reins of Webster Hall and are clearly thrilled to have Hov christening the revamped spot with this initial performance.

“The Bowery Presents formed in 2004 when we booked Sonic Youth at Webster Hall,” John Moore, founder and partner at The Bowery Presents, said in a statement today. “We are thrilled to return to our roots, New York City’s oldest music venue, to begin this storied new chapter for artists and fans alike."

“When we were thinking about who would be the right choice to open this legendary venue, we knew it had to be a world-famous New York City icon,” CEO of BSE Global Brett Yormark, also said in a statement. “No one fits that description better than Jay-Z, who will join an unparalleled list of celebrated performers who have played Webster Hall.”

Yormark has a long relationship with Jay-Z and Roc Nation. His company also operates NYCB Live’s Nassau Coliseum and Barclays Center.

After a historic run with his wife Beyoncé last summer, Jigga is back on his solo grind. Aside from this Webster Hall concert, he’s also been tapped to be a headliner at the upcoming “Woodstock 50.” Jay’s last solo run was in 2017 with his “4:44” tour. Among the other acts set to play Webster Hall after Jay reopens it back up include MGMT, Vampire Weekend, Patti Smith, Dillon Francis, Rosalia and Sharon Van Etten, Chromeo and Pink Sweat$.

Something about BTS feels so right in this moment. Like if I were able to travel back to 1999 and they asked me what music was like in the future, I’d be able to tell them that teenagers in 2019 are really into a K-pop boy band with rainbow colored hair and they’d be like “yes, ok, that makes sense.”

It might seem like BTS is everywhere right now and that’s because… they are. The South Korean 7 member boyband dropped their latest EP on Friday – Map of The Soul: Persona contains 7 songs, including big name collabs with Halsey and Ed Sheeran. The Halsey assisted “Boy With Luv” video broke a youtube record over the weekend, hitting 100 million views in under two days – an incredible flex. The guys also became the first K-pop musical guest on Saturday Night Live over the weekend… and didn’t even break a sweat.

Love for BTS has been building for a minute. You might recall that they picked up the Billboard Music Award for Top Social Artist – meaning they have a HUGE online fanbase – in 2017 and 2018. The BTS Army, as those fans are known, should get ready to tweet up a storm again this year - the group is once again nominated as Top Social Artist, plus they grab a nomination in the Top Duo/Group category. AGAIN, the first K-pop group to do so.

Check out the clip of RM, Jin, Suga, J-Hope, Jimin, V, and Jungkook showing off some sick choreography to go along with their new music on SNL, and listen to their new release, Map of The Soul: Persona on Slacker Radio!

Coachella is on full tilt now, baby! Two weeks of chaos that happens every year just started in Indio, CA with Yellow Days having the opportunity to hit lead off for the whole damn thing. Three stages of star power. Jaden Smith is one big name that hits the stage late evening on Friday. That same night, Ella Mai will bring her loving R&B vibes. Janelle Monáe — who is definitely catching eyes on Instagram thanks to posing in a see-through shirt and pasties on the cover of “them.” magazine — gets a heavy hitter position later in the night, along with Diplo. Night one headliners are Childish Gambino, Kayzo and DJ Snake.

On Saturday, Kid Cudi, Little Simz and Bassnectar close the nights on three separate stages, while Wiz Khalifa, Parcels and Juice WRLD bring fire power earlier in day. Undoubtedly, Billie Ellish is red hot as she hits the Coachella stage thanks to her single “Bad Guy” debuting on the Billboard charts top 100 at number 7. J. Balvin hits the main stage right as the sun goes down.

Sunday will be emotional, no doubt about that. Y.G. performs, and you know he’ll have some personal words about his friend, California born and bred legend Nipsey Hussle. Word is YG is planning a special show for the audience, so let’s see what happens there. Ariana Grande, NGHTMRE and CHVRCHES are the grand finale of the last night. Pusha T, Bad Bunny, Emily King and Blood Orange are some notable acts earlier in the day.

A late addition to the festivities was spearheaded are the heirs to the Bad Boy throne, Christian and Justin Combs. The darling sons and their mogul dad “Sean “Diddy” Combs have their special plans for a music extravaganza. The following week LivexLive will be on hand for Kanye West’s “Sunday Service” concert with exclusive access. Stay tuned.

The Marathon Continues. Forever. “Nipsey Hussle’s Celebration of Life” took place yesterday at a capacity-filled Staples Center in LA. It was one of the biggest send-offs for an artist since Michael Jackson had his home-going celebration in the very same arena a decade ago.

Beyond fans, the audience included almost as many stars as February’s Grammy Awards. Looking around the room, you could see a range of talent showing respect, including Jay-Z and Beyoncé, Kendrick Lamar and T.D.E., Meek Mill, G-Eazy, Diddy, Busta Rhymes, Smoke DZA, Goaepelle, Y.G., Usher, DJ Mustard, The Game, O.T. Genasis, Snoop Dogg, Too Short, Master P, Mars and the 1500 Or Nothin band. And it went further than just musicians, with NBA All-Stars and legends like Russell Westbrook, James Harden, Isaiah Thomas, John Salley, film directors Lena White and Ava Duvernay, and Power’s Omari Hardwick.

The event featured touching performances from Marsha Ambrosius, Jhene Aiko, Anthony Hamilton and Stevie Wonder.

With all of that star power, however, the stadium was mostly filled with fans from Nipsey’s LA hometown. Fitting, as he was a man of the people nicknamed “Neighborhood Nip.”

Stevie Wonder spoke of the need for stricter gun laws and sang “Rocket Love” with impassioned soul. A montage featuring personal and iconic pictures of Nipsey was displayed on a large monitor to the tune of Frank Sinatra’s “My Way.”

The Minister Louis Farrakhan spoke eloquently, painting the picture of Nipsey as a modern-day pharaoh. A king who gave unselfishly to his people, and while his music caused his stardom, his generous deeds in the community is what will make him an eternally loved legend.

Nipsey’s family had comforting words. His children, siblings and parents told tremendous stories and delivered messages of hope in spite of tremendous despair.

“At the count of three, I want everyone to said ‘Respect’” said Lauren London’s son.

His older brother Samiel Asghedom gave an emotional speech that recounted the arc of Nipseys career, from his early days to becoming a Grammy-nominated artist.

“I hope he knows I loved him and I was proud of him,” Asghedom said. “I know he loved me, man.”

His mother Angelique Smith, told everyone that Nipsey was at peace and so is she. “I have perfect peace. I am happy. I am complete. I am strong. And if I can feel this way, you can, too.”

Karen Civil and Nip’s management team read a letter from Barack Obama, where the former President praised the Grammy Award nominated rapper’s contributions to society.

“While most folks look at the Crenshaw neighborhood where he grew up and see only gangs, bullets and despair, Nipsey saw potential,” read the letter. “He saw hope. He saw a community that, even through its flaws, taught him to always keep going.”

“I’ve never felt this type of pain before,” Hussle’s longtime soul mate Lauren London said  from the stage, garbed in all white. The actress said her deepest grief comes from thinking about the two-year-old she and Nipsey created who may be too young to remember how much his dad loved him.

“Stay ten toes down. It’s not on you, it’s in you” said Lauren. “What’s in you can’t be taken away. He had all of us. To Ermias the love of my life... until we meet again the Marathon continues.”

After the memorial, a large motorcade procession took place from the Staples Center Crenshaw to various areas throughout the city, landing at Slauson where Nipsey’s Marathon Clothing store resides. The procession ended at the Angelus Funeral Home, which is handling Hussle’s final arrangements. Family members gathered inside, while outside the outpouring love from his fans was in full stride. Nipsey would have been proud. His race may be over, but the Marathon clearly continues.

Picture it: it’s game one of the NHL Playoffs. The Nashville Predators hosting the Dallas Stars. The announcer is using his excited voice to ramp up the crowd as he brings on national anthem singers Big & Rich. There’s just one teensy weensy snafu when he does.

You heard him right: he called them “gender-bending.” We’re pretty sure he meant “genre-bending,” which is a whole ‘nother thing. Because as far as we know, both Big Kenny and John Rich are pretty firm in their genders. The internet has had some fun at their expense, but so far neither has commented on the oops.

While many of us are still hurt, confused and angered about the death of Nipsey Hussle just over a week ago, his mother Angelique Smith recently provided the world with words of wisdom and comfort.

In a video posted to Facebook, she spoke calmly, looking into the camera and referencing her superstar son by his given name.

“Ermias is here with me right now. I feel him“ she reassured. “Ermias will never die. You have him in your heart. Every time you think or Ermias, he lives. His spirit is everywhere now. You can talk to him. And he will talk back to you in your mind. Your memory...”

She also spoke of seeing her son’s body upon his passing.

“I don’t want you to be traumatized. Ermias was more beautiful in death than he was in life. Ermias didn’t have any marks on him when I viewed him. His hair was perfect. There was not one strand of hair out of place... I looked at him and said ‘that’s my angel baby.’”

She also referred to him as being at peace and “a baby in the spirit world.”

“Death is something to not to be feared,” she affirmed. “Death is something to prepare yourself for. When you walk this earth and when you do good deeds. For people and you are living and kind, those are the things that will show on your face. You will look more beautiful. Ermias looked healthy, he looked clean, he had a glow. He was radiant. He was so perfect, that he had a sweet aroma. He even smelled good. So please do not fear death. Death is just the beginning of a wonderful world. And I tell myself Ermias likes thrilling things and now my son knows the secret to the mystery of life.”

Nipsey, born Ermias Joseph Asghedom, was killed on March 31. He was just 33 years old. The news of his work for the community both in LA and abroad and for children has inspired and affected people even deeper than his Grammy nominated music.

A memorial for Nipsey takes place Thursday morning at Los Angeles’s Staples Center from 10am to 12 noon called “Nipsey Hussle: A Celebration of Life.” BET will televise the ceremony. Free tickets were given out to Los Angeles residents on Tuesday and within 21 minutes over 20,000 people signed up to attend. After the celebration, a massive procession will take place in the streets of LA from the Staples Center to Crenshaw blvd, home of Nipsey’s Marathon Clothing store, and end at the nearby Angelus Funeral home, which is handling Nipsey’s remains. A private service for the community activist and motivator took place there Wednesday afternoon for close loved ones and friends.