Kafani

Kafani is an Oakland born rapper with tons of potential.  He came up in grimy East Oakland and now resides in a two-story suburban condo in Concord. The walls of his bedroom studio are plastered with Saks Fifth Avenue advertisements and publicity posters for his new album, Money Is My Motivation. A pile of sparkly bling jewelry lies neatly on his desk, right between the giant mixing board and a vase of flowers. The inside of his CD jacket shows a pile of cash rubber-banded in tidy, individual stacks. Atop them sits a diamond-studded pendant carved to form the words “Ice King.” It’s shot in the same soft focus you’d expect in a Playboy centerfold. Kafani is the ice king.

Kafani

Kafani

On a recent Wednesday afternoon, Kafani sits at his dining room table answering phone calls. He’s dressed casually: red T-shirt, impeccable tennis shoes, princess-cut diamond studs (two per ear), and a rose-gold grill with diamonds. The three hieroglyphics tattooed on his neck — “money, power, respect” — serve as a motivational slogan. “Whatever class that I was in, as far as social class, I was always toward the top — the flossy one,” the rapper says. “If what was in was having a $50 ring, I had that, a $100 chain, or whatever it would be.

Kafani – Get That Dough

In high school he played basketball and baseball and developed a sports mentality that he eventually brought to the rap game. “I guess in sports you wanna win, you’re gonna try to win,” he says. “I’m an opportunist. If I get an opportunity to do something, I’ll do it.” Fittingly, his signature word is “fast” — a term he deploys in multiple contexts. In the MC’s lexicon, a fast person is aggressive, unsentimental, and purely pragmatic — someone with grit, a hustler’s mentality, and the ability to shift on a dime. Kafani thinks and talks fast — in phone conversations he demands to get things “fast, like, ASAP.” And he wants his money fast.

Kafani credits his cousin for extending his buzzword into “fast like a NASCAR,” a phrase that was the genesis of the rapper’s hit single. Last November, Kafani and his stepbrother, Kapacity — of Kafani’s former rap group Babyface Assassins — went into the studio and started messing with the phrase. They chopped and screwed the “fast” to make it sound slurry, and then tried whispering the “like a NASCAR” part. “It sounded good, you feel me?” Kafani says. He e-mailed the raw vocals to backpacker producer Amp Live, who produced the NASCAR beat — a giddy Afro-Cuban drum pattern that mixes snare and clave — while sitting in his tour van in Germany.

The combination of a hair-trigger beat and primordial, chant-like hook made “Fast” an instant club hit. After Bay Area DJs broke the song on their mix shows, local radio stations got an onslaught of listener requests. Within weeks the song was ubiquitous. In May he brokered a deal with popular indie label Koch, home of East Bay kingpin Keak da Sneak, who guest-stars on the NASCAR song. Kafani then recorded a fourteen-track bubblegum rap album in three months — roughly half the songs still get regular spins on KMEL.

Kafani loves brinksmanship so much that his album includes a ballad about squashing competition. Called “Hatin’ on Me,” it pairs a smooth, groove-driven beat — the kind that would normally be reserved for memorializing a fallen comrade or serenading a hot girl — with a gorgeous R&B hook by C. Holiday, over which Kafani raps, We stay with that big shit/Big chips, big clips, and I stay rich.

The song culminates with a spoken “breakdown,” in which Kafani replaces the come-ons of old-school soul artists with a sermon about making money: “This is Kafani the Ice King, man. I came from the streets, man. I came from that hood, man. You know what I’m talk about? I been in jail and the pen … And I did it, man and succeeded, man. You can do it too.” C. Holiday helps shore up the sentimentality with an American Idol-style cadenza. Though Money Is My Motivation does include one flirtatious R&B number (“Cutie Pie”), “Hatin’ on Me” is the album’s real love song.

It’s also Kafani’s confessional track. He was, indeed, in the pen, and he does view his prison stint as a test of character. Kafani served a two-year sentence from 2002 to 2004 for robbery, during which the “New Bay movement” started popping in Oakland and Richmond. “When I got out of jail, the Team was real big,” he says. “They was playing the ‘Hot In Herre’ song on the radio real tough. I was hearing Frontline. I don’t think Fab was on the radio at the time but he was grinding. I was like, one of the last of the Mohicans to actually make it to be on the radio.”

Kafani’s out to make club hits, and makes no bones about it: “First the beat, second the hook, and everything else is irrelevant.” He describes his artistic process in the same language an entrepreneur would use to describe a marketing strategy: “‘Fast Like a NASCAR’ is a household name, but Kafani’s not. So I have to find ways to brand myself,” he says matter-of-factly. Despite the bling and the fantasy of class ascent that inspired his album title, Kafani actually has a fairly realistic sense of his own importance. “I haven’t been in the game as long as, say, a Messy Marv,” the MC explains. “He really doesn’t need the radio. Me as an artist, I’m as good as my next single.”

Philthy Rich

Philthy Rich

Philthy Rich is an emerging artist from the Bay-Area.  Check out his new Hip-Hop video called, “Funk or Die.”

Fospassin aka The Golden Boy is Dirty Crunk

Fospassin aka Golden Boy has the Web 2.0 game on lock.  Originally from Nigeria, Foasspin is a big fan of Crunk and Dirty South music, so much so, he became a member of Streetball.com and uploaded his mixtape for the world of ballers to see.  Check out Foasspin’s Video called “Dirty Crunk” made with Streetball.com’s online video editor called the Mixtape Maker.

The Golden Boy

The Golden Boy

About Fospassin

Fospassin aka “Golden Boy” is a Hip-Hop artist who has been all over the world to present “The new way hiphop with alternative”.

Tight rythmes, great chorus and excellent productions brought his music at the top level of arts and entertainment.

Fantastic composer and energetic singer-dancer, he has been awarded more than 15 times in 2 years.

His music life has never been easy because most of radio stations and televisions here deal only with big artists names with no talent.

“I’m not a big artist with no talent like them. I have the talent… I`m a good singer, excellent dancer, sexy flat artist at the top level. I don`t care who they are and i don`t care what they do…They have big names with no talent. What are they singing about? And those radios and televisions want me to be like them? I`ll never… They need to be like me…” Golden Boy (Fospassin) said.

“Very nice treatment, appropriate attitude and believable sincerity, Golden Boy wants us to be fair by giving the chance to others to get heard because there are a lot of talented artists out there who don`t have the way to be listened to. We noticed that big things are made for big names. That`s not how the music entertainment world should be treated.”

Magazines, radio stations, televisions and gigs are no more fair because we need to be part of their partners to be discovered. The world is going on the wrong way.

Golden Boy (Fospassin) has published 8 albums “Ragtime,” “Dirty Crunk“, “Top Hip Hop”,”Golden Boy in the hood”,”La Pression”,”Action 6″,”Top Feeling”,”Hot Sexy” all of them available on Amazon.com, itunes, rhapsody, napster, emusic, connect and others.

Stay focused with the new way hiphop with Golden Boy (Fospassin) the sexy artist and the best dancer in the world. “Ragtime Golden Boy” is the last released on itunes. The internet is there to give power to talented artists like golden Boy (Fospassin) today. He does not need to appear on Mtv or BET to sell more than 500.000 downloads, but he is on Streetball.com. Golden boy Fospassin is the internet artist revolution.

Check out Fospassin’s Video “Dirty Crunk” at Streetball.

Ballgreezy

Throughout the ups and downs of the turbulent world of Hip-Hop, Iconz recording artist Kinta Cox professionally known as Ballgreezy or “Greezy” has managed to make his mark in the game. His melodic and captivating single entitled “Shone”, produced by Gorilla Tek, is hypnotizing the streets and setting off major label alarms everywhere!

Ballgreezy \"I\'m Da Shit\"

Ballgreezy comes from one of Miami’s fierce neighborhoods referred to as Little Haiti with his seven siblings. As a teenager, Greezy attended Miami Edison Senior High School, where he honed a natural talent for football and discovered his potential to succeed as an athlete. However, Greezy knew that his maximum potential was greater than sports. “The coaches wanted me to play on the team as the quarterback but I was into bringing quarters back”, Greezy says sarcastically. Subsequently, his life took a different stage. He turned to the life of the streets and was solely driven by the love for money; determined to do whatever it took to get it. Quickly discovering that the street life was not the answer, Ballgreezy then capitalized on the guidance of his older brother and discovered his genuine ability to rap. “If I wasn’t rappin’ I’d be trappin’”, he says in a swaggering manner. “When the block got hot I would jump in the studio with my brother. Then I got addicted to goin’ there and I promised him I would blow in this rap game”.

In 2001 Ballgreezy began transiting into a true master of the microphone and made several guest appearances on local rap artists’ music compilations. In 2003, Ballgreezy put out his debut mix CD entitled “Straight Drop” causing mass hysteria throughout his hood in Little Haiti. By 2005, Ballgreezy’s local popularity led to a recording contract with Iconz Music. He has since shared the stage with numerous A-list, platinum recording artists such as Lil’ Wayne, Trick Daddy, Scarface, Trina and G-Unit.

Presently, Ballgreezy’s hit single “Shone,” is hypnotizing the airways and has mapped him in the industry as a force to be reckoned with. The song has a very mainstream appeal as intended by Ballgreezy. “I’m on a grown and sexy vibe right now; making music for the ladies,” said Greezy. The word “Shone” is a widely used slang term for “action” when making reference to singles chasing a little ‘ak-shone’ after the club.

Ballgreezy’s innate lyrical abilities and melodic inclinations serve as platforms for greatness in the music industry. He is currently in the studio working with various producers and recording artists putting together what he calls “a classic Greezy album” for release in the Spring of 2009.