#bomm sheltuh
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livefromfayettenam · 11 months ago
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dvllsrjx · 5 years ago
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I double dog dare ya to FRONT on this one yo.This,my friends,is the ARTchitect that gave A plethora of FayetNAM artists(yes,INCLUDING BOMM SHELTUH and J.Cole)their FIRST FayetNAM Venue to perform at&hone their talents.#JustThoughtI'dRemindYall@davilleskateshop !-CheckMOut! https://www.instagram.com/p/BJiHt-8hVRb/?igshid=450ogozefi3g
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yololablife · 5 years ago
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#JCole冷知識 #如果你是JCole鐵粉務必觀看 #JCole 的第一個藝名叫做什麼? Jermaine Lamarr Cole的第一個藝名叫做#Blaza,後改為 #Therapist,然後才是他最廣為人知的藝名 J. Cole。他曾在一段採訪中透露他改名的原因,他在幾年後意識到Therapist聽起來像一個摔跤明星的名字,就像別名一樣感覺不真實。而J. Cole感覺更像他的真名。 J. Cole從12歲時就開始Rap,在千禧年的時候J Cole的媽媽為其購買了ASR-X型號的音樂採樣器作為聖誕禮物時,他開始將說唱視作他理想的事業。在這期間,Cole高度重視對於製作技能的提升,之後他用「Therapist」的名字開始了早期的創作。隨後 J. Cole加入當地組合Bomm Sheltuh,以組合成員的身份開始說唱和製作,之後的故事大家應該都知道了。 #yolo科普 我們下次見 https://www.instagram.com/p/B9O5Vppp1Bo/?igshid=9u4j9g7sasy0
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dreamvilliansnation · 8 years ago
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J. Cole, the Platinum Rap Dissident, Steps Back From the Spotlight
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RALEIGH, N.C. — Ask J. Cole about when he realized that the traditional life of a platinum rap star didn’t suit him and he’ll tell the story of the 2013 BET Awards, when a stylist dressed him in a loud Versace sweater that two other people ended up wearing on the red carpet. He’ll talk about meetings with label executives and personal heroes who encouraged him to make musical decisions that, deep down, he never felt comfortable with. He’ll recall an awakening to the potency of the love of the woman he’d been with for years. And he’ll remember his trip in the wake of the killing of Michael Brown to Ferguson, Mo., where the most valuable thing he found he could do was just to listen.
And so, a couple of years ago, after he’d released two platinum albums, he began to make changes. A move back down to this part of the country, not far from where he grew up, in Fayetteville. Meditation every day, or as often as he could manage. Marriage. A commitment to asking about the needs of others rather than only his own. And a decision to make music that spoke to his own creative and emotional idiosyncrasies, no matter how far it strayed from that of his hip-hop superstar generational peers.
He retreated from the spotlight so thoroughly that one recent weekend found him at a Boys & Girls Club here, firing perimeter shots in a playoff game in a local recreational basketball league, largely left to his own devices apart from a handful of picture requests and a couple of mixtapes shoved into the hand of his security guard.
“The other side, it’s what we grow up believing that we need and want. It’s everybody’s dream,” he said, pulling away from the gym in his black Range Rover. “Who doesn’t want the pick of the litter on this, that and the third? Money, women, cars. And beyond all of that — which I really wasn’t into — praise.”
He continued, “It’s addictive. To recognize it, it was the first step.” And to change it required overcoming internal fear: “I had to recognize, well, where’s the fear coming from?”
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That internal struggle has led Mr. Cole, 32, a mainstream rap dissident who has gone platinum on each of his albums, to the most fruitful work of his career. In December, he released “4 Your Eyez Only,” his best, most provocative and yet most relaxed album, and on Saturday, HBO will air “J. Cole: 4 Your Eyez Only,” an hourlong special that combines documentary footage of Mr. Cole’s travels to various cities through the Midwest and the South that have personal or political resonance for him with in situ music videos that locate Mr. Cole’s songs as part of a larger conversation about black resilience and dignity under the conditions of white supremacy.
“4 Your Eyez Only” the album is told mostly through a character that’s a composite of two men Mr. Cole grew up with from Fayetteville, and with whom he’s still in touch. He’s a tough guy, a criminal stereotype, except inverted. “The people that I know that live that life and come from that life, or even used to live that life, there’s so much more than that,” Mr. Cole said. “They have multiple sides, and the side that is the strongest is love” — of mothers, of friends, of girlfriends, of children. The album ends in a heart-rending nine-minute apologia written from the character to his daughter, offering explanations for his bad choices and asking for forgiveness. The album’s goal, Mr. Cole said, was “to humanize the people that have been villainized in the media.”
By this point in the conversation, he’d settled into the basement of the Sheltuh, the home in a far-out suburb he and his associates have rented for the last couple of years that has served as a hang spot and the de facto center of operations for his label, Dreamville. On one wall were record shelves teeming with alphabetized 12” singles from hip-hop’s golden age. He bought the collection, a kind of spiritual decoration, from Nervous Reck of Bomm Sheltuh, one of his teenage hip-hop idols.
These are the records, and the era — the 1990s — that Mr. Cole harks back to, and a sound that is a far cry from where the genre has moved in recent years. Still, his commitment has been undimmed. “I understand that what I’m doing is what I don’t see, is what I would like to see being done but is not being done,” he said.
Even though he found conventional success early in his career, he found the life he’d willed himself into to be ungratifying. “Any reasonable person would be ecstatic,” he said. “I didn’t have that feeling.”
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And so began the choices that led to him becoming a conscientious objector to the dictates of rap stardom. Rather then continuing to attempt to analyze what might make a hit, a process Mr. Cole said he found unrewarding — “Trying to prove that I could do something that they don’t think I can, it was a very sad place when I look back” — he began making music at home, on his couch, only coming to the studio for the final stages of recording and polishing.
The decisions that emanated from that friction ended up setting the stage for a striking personal and aesthetic turnabout. He got married, and he and his wife, Melissa, recently had a baby. (He declined to reveal the sex or the name.) He now has control of his master recordings. And on “4 Your Eyez Only,” he digs in to deeply emotional narratives, and continues his penchant for tackling left-field subject matter, like “Foldin Clothes,” about the thrills of domesticity. “It’s a celebration of growing up,” he said. “I chose this path, and damn it feels good,” comparing its energy to how other rappers might celebrate a new Bentley.
It also transformed him from a student of the great storytelling rappers to a teacher. That’s clearest on “False Prophets,” released separately just before the album (it wasn’t included because it disrupted the narrative), which found Mr. Cole diagnosing the neuroses of his peers and heroes without naming them, though the internet filled in the blanks quickly.
Rappers rap about other rappers all the time — subliminal insult, direct attack — but rarely from a place of love. “That speaks to the state of us as a people,” he said. “For so long my mind state was, I have to show how much better than the next man I am through these bars. Who’s the best? Let me prove it. And it’s just like, damn, I’m really feeding into a cycle of keeping black people down, I’m really feeding into that.”
Mr. Cole knows that the disease of stardom inspires cries for help, and now, instead of judging from afar, he wonders, “There’s nobody around you to listen? There’s nobody listening?”
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Listening is his new métier. The way Mr. Cole presents in his HBO special, which he directed with Scott Lazer, is primarily as observer, not actor. He returns to Jonesboro, Ark., where his father is from, and the two men visit a community center that serves as a makeshift museum of local black history. In another scene, in Ferguson, Mr. Cole watches as two men argue about government obstacles to black progress. Throughout the show, apart from when he’s rapping, Mr. Cole’s voice is barely heard, but his eyes are taking it all in.
“I felt like it would be mad powerful for black people to see black people talking to each other. And you see a rapper who’s considered one of the biggest in the game, just listening.”
He added, “These are people that never get to be heard, by the world or even by each other.”
That lack of representation, Mr. Cole said, can lead to potentially catastrophic misunderstandings. In March of last year, police raided the Sheltuh; Mr. Cole believes a neighbor was fearful it was a drug den. Security footage that captures the raid is used in the HBO special, showing dozens of heavily armed men forcibly entering the building only to find, well, nothing. (A ticket was issued for a small amount of marijuana found on the premises, he said.)
“I wrote six songs that weekend,” Mr. Cole noted wryly — they included the powerful “Neighbors,” from the new album.
After speaking for a couple of hours, Mr. Cole wandered back upstairs and chatted with a friend who’d recently spoken to a friendly neighbor, who took pains to note that she was not the one who had called the authorities. Mr. Cole, who prefers privacy, was frustrated that the locals had caught on to his presence. But he also saw it as an opportunity.
The HBO special was around the corner, and if his neighbors were inspired to watch it, “they’re going to listen to black people for a hour,” he said. “See how human they are, and see black men walk around with their daughters, and get a whole different perspective.”
“If I’m listening,” he said, “why can’t you listen?”
Via. NY Times 
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streetbeatradio-blog · 7 years ago
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 J Cole
About J. Cole        
J. Cole is widely considered to be one of the best storytellers of the new hip-hop generation, eschewing hype and hedonism in favor of levelheaded honesty and conscious self-reflection.
Since signing with Jay Z’s Roc Nation in 2009, the Frankfurt-born emcee/producer has collaborated with the likes of Drake, Kendrick Lamar, Miguel, Bas, KQuick, French Montana, Rick Ross, Melanie Fiona, Trae Tha Truth, B.o.B., Jadakiss, Tyga, Mark Morrison, Gudda Gudda, Bun B, Beyonce, Elle Varner, Bei Maejor, Sean Garrett, TLC, Missy Elliot, Trey Songz, Curren$y, Wiz Khalifa, Yo Gotti, Kanye West, Pusha T, Big Sean, Rihanna, Chris Brown, Tinie Tempah, Lil Wayne and more.
Most recently, his latest album Born Sinner was certified Gold, and he may or may not have gotten engaged to his high-school sweetheart. He’s currently on the on the international “What Dreams May Come Tour” with Wale, and is slated to perform at VH1’s Super Bowl XLVIII Blitz in Manhattan alongside Janelle Monae, Fall Out Boy, TLC, the Goo Goo Dolls and Gavin DeGraw. Stay tuned.
Facts Only
Jay Z "shunned" J. Cole upon their first encounter outside the former's Roc The Mic studio.
Cole Was born on a United States Army base in Frankfurt, West Germany.
He started rapping at the age of twelve.
He was a first-chair violinist for the Terry Sanford Orchestra as a youth.
During his beginnings in the Bomm Sheltuh collective alongside FilthE Rock and Nervous Reck, his original moniker was Therapist.
His first pieces of production equipment were an 808 beat machine and an ASR-X.
Cole attended Fayetteville, North Carolina's Terry Sanford High School.
He received an academic scholarship from New York's St. John's University, graduating magna cum laude with a degree in communication and business.
J. Cole has a strong passion for basketball.
His earliest musical influences were Canibus and Eminem.
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filthebommsheltuh-blog · 8 years ago
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I double dog dare ya to FRONT on this one yo.This,my friends,is the ARTchitect that gave A plethora of FayetNAM artists(yes,INCLUDING BOMM SHELTUH and J.Cole)their FIRST FayetNAM Venue to perform at&hone their talents.#JustThoughtI'dRemindYall@davilleskateshop !-CheckMOut!
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alisha-khalifa-blog · 8 years ago
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Discovering His Passion…
                When Cole was around fourteen, he became a huge fan of this local group called Bomm Sheltuh. He was determined to get their attention, and when he finally did, he was given the opportunity to spit a few rhymes during their show. Cole wounded up murdering his freestyle which landed Jermaine some studio time with the hip hop group.
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dvllsrjx · 5 years ago
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I double dog dare ya to FRONT on this one yo.This,my friends,is the ARTchitect that gave A plethora of FayetNAM artists(yes,INCLUDING BOMM SHELTUH and J.Cole)their FIRST FayetNAM Venue to perform at&hone their talents.#JustThoughtI'dRemindYall@davilleskateshop !-CheckMOut! https://www.instagram.com/p/BJiHt-8hVRb/?igshid=v7xxx765phxj
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