Skip to main content

EXCLUSIVE: Ice Cube Reveals What He Really Thinks Of Fame

By: Kyle EusticeCategory: ExclusivesDecember 5, 2024 x Video Player is loading. Pause Unmute Current Time 0:05 / Duration 1:31 Fullscreen Now Playing x video of: Ice Cube names his Top 5 favorite rap songs of ALL timePlay Video Ice Cube names his Top 5 favorite rap songs of ALL time Share Watch onHumix Ice Cube names his Top 5 favorite rap songs of ALL time Speaking to AllHipHop, the undeniably driven mogul opened up about “celebrity” and how he truly feels about it and where his work ethic comes from. Subscribe To Receive AllHipHop News Alerts. Don't be the last to know. Get breaking news in your inbox! Subscribe Email Address By entering your email you agree to our Terms of Service. Your information will be used according to our Privacy Policy. Ice Cube is still reveling in the release of his eleventh studio album, Man Down, which arrived on November 22. The 19-track project boasts contributions from a laundry list of legendary MCs, including Busta Rhymes, Killer Mike, Snoop Dogg, Kurupt, B-Real, J-Dee of the Lench Mob, E-40, Too $hort and Xzibit. Standout tracks like “I’mma Burn Rubber” and “Facts” prove the pioneering West Coast gangsta rapper inside of him is still alive and well. Ezoic Ice Cube has been famous for nearly 40 years; the ’80s were highlighted by the rise and ultimate fall of N.W.A, ’90s saw Ice Cube’s solo career take off along with his acting, ’00s officially ushered in Ice Cube the movie star and a Westside Connection reunion, ’10s produced his ninth solo album, I Am West, and saw him establish his Big3 basketball league and the ’20s was the introduction of Mount Westmore—and that’s just a tiny sliver of everything he has going on. Needless to say, Ice Cube has evolved into a household name. Speaking to AllHipHop, the undeniably driven mogul opened up about “celebrity” and how he truly feels about it. Ezoic “I appreciate fame,” he said matter-of-factly. “It’s It’s been very good to me. It’s provided me with a lifestyle that I could have never dreamed of. And I appreciate my fans because they’re the reason. And so, you know, I look at my fans as my little army. They the folks that’s always supported my projects. And sometimes you might like my projects. Sometimes you might love it. Sometimes it might not be your cup of tea. But they always give me another look and another chance to give them something cool, so I appreciate that.” While Ice Cube’s new album isn’t doing numbers like Kendrick Lamar’s GNX project, which opened at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 with more than 300,000 total album-equivalent units sold in its first week, he doesn’t really care. He made the album for his day-one fans, who expect nothing but raw and real lyrics with a healthy dose of straightforward, hard-hitting, West Coast rap-soaked beats. Ezoic “People like a simple song,” Cube noted with a shrug. And that formula has worked for him. His music resonates with a wide variety of people from all types of backgrounds, which he called “pretty incredible.” He continued, “What I tried to do throughout my whole career is just give a real perspective. And some people get mad at that perspective sometimes and it turns them off or whatever. And so to have people to understand it, to rock with it, to look at it as art and then, we drop the street knowledge. So it’s cool because I think you can learn a lot about who I am and who we are as a community listening to the music.” Like Chuck D once said, Hip-Hop is akin to the “CNN for Black people” and Cube has always tried to paint an accurate picture of what life was like for him—no matter what stage he’s in. Even at 55, he’s rhyming about reuniting with fellow Lench Mob member J-Dee, who was released from prison in 2021 after serving 25 years for murder. He also reflects on some of the hard-earned wisdom he’s learned throughout his life in “Ghetto Story,” how disillusioned he’s become with social media on “Talkin’ Bout These Rappers” and how having an ego isn’t always bad on “It’s My Ego,” all relevant topics to him. As for Cube’s relentless work ethic, he credited his mother Doris Benjamin, a former hospital clerk and custodian, and father Hosea Jackson, who previously worked a machinist and UCLA groundskeeper. “I would attribute it to my parents,” he said. “I saw my moms and pops get up and go to work every day. Sometimes my pops would have a couple of jobs and he wouldn’t let nothing make him miss work. It was always, ‘This is another day to prove your worth,’ so to speak. We can’t on our success; that does nothing for anybody. We have to execute every day and then everything turns out right.” For those who haven’t listened yet, find Man Down below. Share AllHipHop | Click to share on Twitter (Opens in new window)Click to share on WhatsApp (Opens in new window)Click to share on Telegram (Opens in new window)Click to share on Facebook (Opens in new window)More

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

EXCLUSIVE: Lil Durk Co-Defendant “Cuz” Seeks Protective Order in Explosive Murder-for-Hire Case

Lil Durk By: Grouchy Greg Watkins (@GrouchyGreg)Category: ExclusivesDecember 4, 2024 Now Playing x video of: Lil Tay's father threatens to sue after rumors circulatePlay Video Lil Tay's father threatens to sue after rumors circulate Share Watch onHumix Lil Tay's father threatens to sue after rumors circulate Lil Durk’s co-defendant has filed for a protective order in the rapper’s federal murder-for-hire case, citing fears that sensitive evidence could endanger witnesses. Subscribe To Receive AllHipHop News Alerts. Don't be the last to know. Get breaking news in your inbox! Subscribe Email Address By entering your email you agree to our Terms of Service. Your information will be used according to our Privacy Policy. The high-stakes legal saga surrounding rapper Lil Durk continues to play out as the rap star gears up for a trial in January 2025. On Tuesday (December 3), Durk’s co-defendant, Kavon London Grant, aka “Cuz,” filed a motion in federal court to...

RAPPER TRINIDAD JAMES FOUND DEAD OF APPARENT SUICIDE… Read more at: http://nahadaily.com/articles/rapper-trinidad-james-found-dead-apparent-suicide-atlanta/ | The Most Entertaining Page of the Day

ATLANTA — “I think the fact that he wasn’t able to afford anymore gold is what really pushed him to do it” Says a neighbor of the one hit wonder rapper Trinidad James. Rapper Trinidad James was found dead in his bedroom at his mothers house where the rapper has lived for months after being dropped from record label Def Jam. “He really was a happy boy — besides his teeth he really never complained about much” Says his manager as he watched EMS carried his lifeless body from the house. His mother whom was devastated by her sons actions still had nothing but kind words to say “He really had a face only a mother could love and to be honest I surely am going to miss it” Read more at: http://nahadaily.com/articles/rapper-trinidad-james-found-dead-apparent-suicide-atlanta/ | The Most Entertaining Page of the Day

EXCLUSIVE: Miami’s Denzel Curry Responds To Trick Daddy’s Comments + Reveals Upcoming Double EP

Denzel Curry was one of the rising rappers highlighted in the recent documentary The Field: Miami. The 53-minute film featured numerous South Florida artists sharing their thoughts about the “real Miami” and its Hip Hop scene. But it was one of Curry’s statements about his hometown’s support for its own that garnered a reply from the self-proclaimed “Mayor of Dade County” Trick Daddy. “They don’t f**k with us like that,” said Curry in The Field about some of MIA’s rapping old heads. “Certain people that I can say that f**k with us, but at the same time we don’t ask them for s**t.” In an interview with AllHipHop.com, Trick Daddy expressed, as a Miami rap veteran, he does not feel obligated to back every up-and-coming rapper from the city. The Thugs Are Us album creator said, “When you say, ‘support the rap artists,’ everybody that wants to be a rapper, I’m supposed to support it? Even if I feel like he can’t rap? What if I feel like his songs are wack? Even if I feel like his jeans ...