
July 11, 2008
The Hobbyshop HERO presents The DrumLove EP - Starring Dutchmassive

June 27, 2008
Mickey Factz Interview w/ Formatmag.com
May 6, 2008 – Features – by John Burnett

You can feel it in hip-hop. The old heads are getting their beach chairs ready for retirement, while the up and comers build their respective movements. The changing of the guard is upon us and it dons fluorescent hues, limited stock kicks and exclusive streetwear apparel. Yet there’s so much more to the new wave of talent then their garb. Echoing this sentiment is the Bronx native, Mickey Factz, who’s barrage of mixtapes (In Search of the N.E.R.D. , Flashback and Heaven’s Fallout) have been gaining a lot of steam on the information highway. But that’s not all he has in tow. He plans on leaking a track a week until his quest for global domination is complete. Meet one of the leaders of the new school.
“when someone comes to the forefront and says I want to change how music is supposed to be listened to, you can either gravitate towards it or not. Hopefully, you will because eventually it’s going to sound like this anyway.”

Format: I feel like in hip-hop there’s a changing of the guard going down right now. Some of the cats people looked up to coming up are getting older. So I wanted to ask you who’s apart of this new wave of talent that’s going to take up where they left off and where do you fit in that mix?
Mickey Factz: In the new wave, The Cool Kids, Kid Cudi, Wale, the Knux, U.N.I., Pac Division, Remo Da Rapstar, Theophilus London. All of these artists are creative and they all have different styles. How do I fit in the genre of all of this? I feel everyone’s trying to go left but I’m really going left but it’s a diagonal left. I feel like I want to be the Jay of this new movement. I want it to be like every time I drop something it’s hot and people rock with it. That’s some big shoes to fill but because I love hip-hop so much, it’s a challenge I’m willing to take on head first.

Format: You and a lot of the other acts you named a second ago stay doing shows touring nonstop. Is that the new business model for up and coming hip-hop artists to put out a few hot tracks, grow the buzz and just tour?
Mickey Factz: Touring is the best way to make money for a hip-hop artist that’s just starting. It’s really hard to sell records right now so people want to come out and see people perform. People do want to see a show. At the shows, people will purchase your music there. After they see you perform and after they see the energy and your heart and soul on the stage they’re willing to get to know you more through purchasing your music. That way you expand on your grassroots following and that’s why I commend the Cool Kids. I commend Wale. Them going on tours and doing shows all over the place opens doors for artists such as myself, artists such as Pacific Division. From doing that it’s really pioneering a way to create revenue for artists like myself.

Format: What projects do you have coming up and how soon can we expect a full LP?
Mickey Factz: I’m releasing two singles. “Rock and Roll’n” will be released next month. The “Supra” record will be released some time in the summer. My LP will be released in 2009. I’m working on it now and it’s coming out crazy! So the leak is going to keep the fans satisfied for now. It’s going to be every week until December 31st. I’m going to be featured on a whole bunch of mixtapes. I’m going to be on tour a lot. You know a lot of cats are going to be seeing Mickey Factz more and more as the name gets bigger and bigger.
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SUPER VILLIAN DIZIGN - Vinyl Cast Toy by Erik Scarecrow

Erik Scarecrow is launching a series of hip-hop influenced kaiju this year, inspired by his childhood love of Godzilla. Featured here is the super villain Dizign colourway. It’s really hard not to see the ‘80s influence with the arm warmers and almost shell toe sneakers. This bad momma measures in at 10” and retails for about $70.00 US.
More Info: http://www.esctoys.com
June 26, 2008
Grandmaster SLAM & AKUTOU - DESIGN KINGS
AKUTOU Aka THOMAS PEREIRA
(Clink any link below)
AKUTOU SHOP - POSTERS & T-SHIRTS!
GRANDMASTER SLAM Aka MAXWELL ADAMS
(Click any link Below)






























June 25, 2008
N*E*R*D - In the Shower with Pharrell`

- A condition in which one type of stimulation evokes the sensation of another, as when the hearing of a sound produces the visualization of a color.
- A sensation felt in one part of the body as a result of stimulus applied to another, as in referred pain.
- The description of one kind of sense impression by using words that normally describe another.
News – by Isha Thompson

This Saturday, June 7,(hahaha A little late on this one, But the shirt is butta regardless, props to FormatMAG - "Dutch") the BBC Ice Cream New York flagship store is the place to be if you are a fan of N.E.R.D. To celebrate their new album, The Billionaire Boys is releasing a tee that shows the members of N.E.R.D flying in space. Limited quantities will be available, so you best be there early.
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N.E.R.D x Colette - “Seeing Sounds” Tee
N.E.R.D has gone in a new direction to promote their new album, Seeing Sounds, which is slated to drop this upcoming Tuesday. Instead of having to wait until a street team comes to your neighborhood, N.E.R.D has teamed up with BBC/Ice Cream and now Colette to release limited edition t-shirts in conjunction with the release of their new album. This N.E.R.D x Colette tee features the “Brain” logo and “Seeing Sounds” on the front of the shirt in a unique color and will be given out to the first 50 customers who purchase the new N.E.R.D album on Tuesday, June 7th. via La MJC
Over the course of the last couple of year’s the internet has had a tremendous affect on the streetwear/sneaker industry in a variety of ways. Now fashion connoisseur’s can log onto the internet and check out what their peer half-way around the world is styling themselves in. Now courtesy of photographer extraordinaire, Neek, we have a new website that will devote itself solely to bringing you the newest in “What One’s Wearing” from all over the globe. The website will be updated on a weekly basis with most of the content coming via submissions, so make sure you submit your latest “What Did You Wear Today” picture to Neek his partners.
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June 24, 2008
U-N-I Interview w/ Format Mag dot com

In the U-N-I-verse, Yonas “Y-O” Michael is Kobe Bryant and Yannick “Thurzday” Koffi is LeBron James. Luckily for us music purists, they’re playing on the same team. The Los Angeles duo, known as U-N-I, garnered praise in 2007 for their debut street album – Fried Chicken & Watermelon – and are set to release their first independent LP this summer, titled U-N-I x Ro Blvd. Present: Yonas, Yannick & Ro “A Love Supreme.” In Y-O and Thurzday’s world, it’s always a family affair, and their forthcoming effort proves to be no different – Los Angeles beat maven Ro Blvd (the U-N-I-verse’s Phil Jackson) produced the entire album.
With a shared passion for verbal artistry, the duo met during their formative years in high school. “We just clicked and started pushing forward with the likeness in our passion for music,” Thurzday says of starting out. “It was just great chemistry. We just happen to be more of a force together.” Despite being deeply rooted in west coast tradition, U-N-I strayed away from the enduring gangsta rap archetype. Fresh kicks and thought-provoking rhymes are more their style. So, as the sun sets for the day in the U-N-I-verse, hip hop enthusiasts wait for the duo’s impending sonic assault. Tomorrow’s forecast: Promising.
“We don’t wanna be known for just good music and good tracks, we want to have the full package – the lyrics, the nice concept – and then when you come to a show, it’s more.”
Thurzday: Also, as far as being creative, we try to take each song with a new approach and try to do something we never did before. We try to break grounds as hip-hop artists. We try to think out of the box and a lot of times stuff just flows for us and we just vibe off of something, come up with a crazy concept and then just execute it.
Y-O: Even if a song has been done similar to what we’ve done – like “K.R.E.A.M.” for instance, there’s been many sneaker songs out there, but I don’t think someone has sat down and come up with a creative and full concept and thought of an original video for it. We’ll spend a day or two, or even if it takes a week, just to come up with a neat concept that will stick around for years.
Thurzday: Every morning I wake up, I scramble some eggs, drink some milk, have a protein shake, I run around the block 10 times, run up some stairs like I’m Rocky and prepare myself for the competition. [Laughs]
“I like the black Michael Jackson. [Laughs] I used to want to perform like him, and then I started hearing hip-hop. And then I really got into MC Hammer.”
Y-O: While we were in Rap-Ture Kamp, when we started in 99, we put out a couple mixtapes and albums and then there were a lot of requests that people wanted to hear more of Thurzday and myself, Y-O, so we finally got together, talked it over and decided to branch out of Rap-Ture Kamp in 2006. And then we released the Fried Chicken & Watermelon album in 07.

Format: Take me back, what was it like for U-N-I starting out initially?
Y-O: I wouldn’t even say it was hard or anything, because we started in 99 as a group so we already had the chemistry. If you really think about it, we actually made the album driving to the studio, or just listening to the tracks on our own then just going to the studio and knocked it out.
Thurzday: In the afternoons we would just record a song, put a little mix on it, put it on MySpace, check the feedback for it, put some more songs up and then we started doing shows. As an artist, your stage shows are just important as your songs. We went all out on the songs and went all out on the stage and just started making a name for ourselves.
Y-O: That’s one thing we focus on other than making good music, is our stage performance and presence. We want to be a complete package to the whole world. We don’t wanna be known for just good music and good tracks, we want to have the full package – the lyrics, the nice concept – and then when you come to a show, it’s more.
Thurzday: We try to be like LeBron James. [Laughs]
Thurzday: Yeah, Kobe is the man, but LeBron is just a man-beast and on a musical level we’re men-beasts. [Laughs]
Thurzday: My mom is from Belize and my father is from the Ivory Coast, and I grew up with my mom so I would hear a lot of Caribbean music, a lot of reggae and a lot of soca. My people just loved music, so everyday in our apartment music was playing. And I liked Michael Jackson, before all that stuff. I like the black Michael Jackson. [Laughs] I used to want to perform like him, and then I started hearing hip-hop. And then I really got into MC Hammer. My older brother introduced me to a lot of east coast music, like Wu-Tang and A Tribe Called Quest. Used to also listen to the Pharcyde. My music spectrum just grew and I knew I wanted to be an emcee.
“For the past couple of years, L.A. has been spilt territory, it’s real clique-ish out here.”
Thurzday: I agree. It’s not really hard to appeal to different fans, L.A. is already a melting pot. That’s how you get Fried Chicken & Watermelon – in that it’s not a boxed in sound. We have a mix of different stuff and that kind of reflects L.A. culture.
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