Monday, February 21, 2022

UK Rap Pioneer and Music Mogul, Jamal Edwards, Dead at 31

Brenda and Jamal Edwards on 'Loose Women'. Credit: ITV.

Jamal Edwards, a YouTube pioneer who built one of the platform's earliest successes in 2006 when he founded the online music channel SB.TV as a teen in his parent's west London neighborhood, died Sunday after what his mother described as a "sudden illness."

Edward's mother Brenda, a singer and actress that is currently a presenter and panelist on the British television talk show "Loose Women," confirmed his death at the age of 31 in an emotional tribute on the show's social media accounts.

"It is with the deepest heartache that I confirm that my beautiful son Jamal Edwards passed away yesterday morning after a sudden illness. Myself, his sister Tanisha and the rest of his family and friends are completely devastated. He was the center of our world," the statement read.

She continued: "As we come to terms with his passing we ask for privacy to grieve this unimaginable loss. I would like to thank everyone for their messages of love and support. Jamal was an inspiration to myself and so many. Our love for him lives on, his legacy lives on. Long live Jamal Edwards MBE, MBA and PHD."

According to reporting from "The Sun," Edwards suffered a heart attack at his home in Acton, West London. The newspaper talked to a friend of the entrepreneur that said, "The details are still not clear but we've been told that it was a heart attack."

That same pal, identified as Dwayne by the publication said Edwards, "was out DJing on Saturday night and eventually got home in the early hours of Sunday morning.

He added, "The family are still trying to come to terms with it all, but we've heard that his mum found him in his bedroom and called an ambulance."

Following the news, hundreds of fans attended a vigil in West London and scores of friends, musicians, celebrities and even the Prince of Wales took to the internet to share their grief at his passing.
“Thinking of the family of Jamal Edwards today," Prince Charles’ Clarence House office tweeted. "His work in music but also as an ambassador for a new generation, including his work for The Prince’s Trust, were an inspiration to so many.”

Edwards was given a Member of the Order of the British Empire (MBE), an honor from the queen, in 2014 for services to music and also served as an ambassador for Prince Charles’ charity, the Prince’s Trust.

Singer Rita Orr, who along with Ed Sheeran, Jessie J and Stormzy, owe much of their early success to Edwards posted a heartfelt tribute on Instagram.

“My first ever interview was with you. Jamal,” she wrote. “Our endless talks on music and the belief you had in me and so many of us before we even believed in ourselves. I’m devastated.”

International superstar Drake also had Edwards in his thoughts. SB.TV was the first U.K. platform to interview the former child actor turned music monolith as he was making the transition between acting and rapping.

"Sending condolences and love to the friends and family of Jamal Edwards," he wrote alongside a throwback picture of the pair he shared on his Instagram stories.


Thursday, February 17, 2022

Rap Video, Flasy Social Media Post Lead to Arrests of Alleged Woo Gang Members for $24 Million Dollar Fraud

Photos courtesy U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of New York

It has been a tough month for drill rappers.

First rising star and 18-year-old drill rapper Jayquan McKenley, aka Chii Wvttz, was gunned down in his parked car in Bedford-Stuyvesant, Brooklyn, Feb. 6, while leaving an Airbnb.


On the heels of that tragedy, New York City Mayor Eric Adams urged social media firms to ban the artform’s videos from their platforms. Drill rap often refers to killing or doing a hit and Adams said the clips glorify and promote violence.

Adams eventually changed his tune following a meeting with several prominent drill rappers on Tuesday and clarified that he did not want to ban drill rap but promised he would have something coming in alignment with the artists to help.



“I don’t know if you saw the picture, but for the first time in my life, I looked cool, hanging out with all of them – and it was very interesting,” said Adams of the meeting in City Hall.

“Because, I don’t know who said it, but they said, ‘We heard you said you were going to ban drill rapping.' I did not say that. I was very clear in what I stated."

He added, “We’re going to roll out something together.”

One of the genre’s most established cliques is facing massive amounts of prison time over a scam the government alleges defrauded it of $4.3 million by submitting false claims for unemployment insurance and attempting to use over 800 stolen identities to try and get another $20 million.

In all, 11 members and associates of the Brooklyn-based Woo gang have been charged with the multi-million-dollar COVID-19 unemployment insurance fraud. Their penchant for making and distributing drill music played a significant part in their downfall.

Last year a video named “Trappin’” was uploaded to YouTube. The lyrics — with verses like “It was me and Porter, we was huggin’ the block. Unemployment got us workin’ a lot." — include details of the scheme, which ran from the beginning of the pandemic until October of 2021, according to prosecutors and it features five of the 11 gang members and associates charged this week.

“As alleged, the defendants conspired to steal millions of dollars in pandemic-related unemployment assistance and then brazenly flaunted the proceeds of their crimes on social media,” Breon Peace, United States Attorney for the Eastern District of New York, said in a statement.

“These government programs are designed to provide financial assistance to those who are most in need during an unprecedented pandemic. This Office and its law enforcement partners will vigorously prosecute gang members and anyone else who exploits the pandemic and steals from taxpayer-funded programs."

The arrests came just hours before the body of alleged Woo member and rising rap star TDott Woo was scheduled to be borne in a white horse-drawn carriage past his Brooklyn home. The rapper was shot to death outside his residence on Feb. 1, the day he signed a potentially lucrative recording contract with Million Dollar Music.

This is far from the first brush with tragedy for the alleged gang or its members.

Pop Smoke, a Brooklyn-born rapper affiliated with Woo who popularized it, was shot and killed by masked gunmen during a home invasion at a Hollywood Hills mansion. His posthumous hit single, “The Woo,” was released that July.


Below is a full list of the defendants:

ROMEAN BROWN
Age: 23
Los Angeles, California


TYREK CLARKE
Age: 21
Miami, Florida


KENNITH DESIR
Age: 20
Brooklyn, New York


STEPHAN DORMINVIL
Age: 21
Brooklyn, New York


KAI HEYWARD
Age: 22
Brooklyn, New York


KEITH JAMES
Age: 20
Brooklyn, New York


ONEAL MARKS
Age: 20
Brooklyn, New York


JAHRIAH OLIVIERRE
Age: 22
Brooklyn, New York


CHRISTOPHER JEAN PIERRE
Age: 21
Brooklyn, New York


ROLEEKE SMITH
Age: 20
Brooklyn, New York


CHRISTOPHER TOPEY
Age: 21
Brooklyn, New York

Wednesday, February 16, 2022

Legendary Drummer Howard Grimes Dead at 80

Howard Grimes in the 1970s. 

Drummer Known as 'The Bulldog,' Recorded Iconic Tracks With Al Green, Ann Peebles and Others

One of the architects of Memphis soul music and the man responsible for the driving beats tying together some of the rhythms behind some of R&B’s greatest artists, Howard Grimes, is dead at 80.

Known affectionately as “The Bulldog” for his persistence and precision behind the drum kit, Grimes death of kidney failure at Memphis, Tennessee’s St. Francis Hospital Saturday (Feb. 12), was confirmed by publicist Nick Loss-Eaton, whose firm did the public relations campaign for the artist's 2021 autobiography “Timekeeper.”

“Heartbroken to confirm the passing of Memphis soul drum legend Howard Grimes (8/11/41-2/12/22),” wrote Loss-Eaton, “a true gentleman and my favorite drummer ever.”


His bandmate in The Bo-Keys, Scott Bomar, also confirmed the death. Speaking to the Memphis Commercial Appeal, which reported the musician had been in and out of the hospital since January, Bomar said Grimes was at peace before he passed. “I think what Howard would want people to know about him was that his relationship with his creator, his spiritually, was the most important thing in his life. The second was Memphis music,” Bomar said.

Born in Memphis in 1941, Grimes career as a drummer touched seven decades. As a member of the renowned Hi Rhythm Section — essentially an all-star house band for some of the greatest soul acts of the 1970s for Memphis’ Hi Records — he set the pace for albums by Al Green, Ann Peebles and Rufus Thomas amongst others.

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