Tuesday, July 1, 2025

Maxo Kream Facing Firearm Charges, Denies Fleeing Police During Traffic Stop

Maxo Kream
Maxo Kream wants you to know he wasn’t running from the law — just driving a little too fast in his Lamborghini. Texas police, however, say that moment of speed could cost him more than just a traffic ticket.

The Houston rapper, born Emekwanem Ogugua Biosah Jr., was arrested June 27 after a routine traffic stop turned into what authorities allege was an attempted escape. Police say Kream was initially pulled over in Harris County for expired license plates — reportedly out of date since May — but drove off as officers exited their vehicle.

Although no chase ensued, officers say Maxo soon pulled over and was taken into custody without further incident. Inside the vehicle, authorities say they discovered two firearms. Because of his alleged affiliation with a criminal street gang, he was charged with unlawful carrying of a weapon by a gang member — a felony — along with a misdemeanor charge for fleeing or attempting to elude a police officer.

Kream addressed the arrest via Instagram, posting a screenshot of a TMZ article and captioning it, “Damn … I wasn’t ‘ELUDING’ my Lambo just a lil fast,” adding, “But na no more jail @persona x @coughsyrupbydestodubb s—t goin on.”

His attorney, Carl A. Moore, denied any wrongdoing, telling TMZ Hip Hop, “Maxo did not flee from the police. He complied with the commands of the arresting officer. We plan to fight these accusations in court.”

Kream is scheduled to appear in court on July 7.

The arrest punctuates an otherwise quiet musical year for Kream, who released his last album, "Personification", in 2024. Recently, he’s focused on growing his clothing label, Persona, which hosted a Houston pop-up shop the weekend of his arrest. He also appeared at the city’s Screw Day celebration, paying tribute to DJ Screw — a revered figure in Houston’s hip-hop legacy.

Still, the legal situation looms large. Texas gun laws are unforgiving, and the added accusation of gang affiliation could intensify the legal challenge. While Maxo’s team maintains his innocence, police reports offer a contrasting view, setting up a legal showdown with potential career-altering consequences.

For now, Maxo Kream remains free — but the stakes are rising. His next steps, both in court and in music, could decide whether this becomes a footnote or a fork in the road.

Monday, June 30, 2025

Is Beyoncé Country Enough? Viral Critic Reignites Debate Over Genre Lines

Beyoncé rides a white horse while holding an American flag in a promotional image for her album Cowboy Carter. The project debuted at No. 1 on Billboard’s Country Albums chart, sparking debate over its genre classification. Country artist Gavin Adcock called the album “the farthest thing from country,” while supporters praised it for expanding country’s boundaries. (Photo courtesy of Parkwood Entertainment)
When Gavin Adcock — former Georgia Southern football player turned rough-edged country artist —
posted a Reel claiming Beyoncé’s "Cowboy Carter" is “the farthest thing from country,” he reignited a long-standing debate about who gets to define a genre rooted in both tradition and transformation.

The short video, now trending across Instagram and TikTok, shows Adcock shaking his head and offering a southern-fried breakdown of why he doesn’t believe "Cowboy Carter" belongs under the country umbrella.
“Lemme go ahead and clear this up — when I was a little kid, my mama raised me on real country,” Adcock says. “I’m talkin’ George Strait, Alan Jackson, Travis Tritt. I ain’t hatin’, but don’t label somethin’ country just to make it chart.”


It’s a tone that’s part bemusement, part subtle gatekeeping — and it reveals more about country music’s discomfort with evolution than it does about Beyoncé.

Because here’s the question Adcock — and many like him — keep skirting: what exactly is “real country” in 2025?

Statistically, "Cowboy Carter" might be the most successful “country” album of the decade. Beyoncé’s genre-bending opus debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200, Top Country Albums, and Top Americana/Folk Albums simultaneously — making her the first Black woman in history to top the country chart.

According to Luminate, "Cowboy Carter "moved 407,000 equivalent album units in its first week, including 168 million on-demand streams — a figure far surpassing recent country releases by artists like Morgan Wallen or Luke Combs. These aren’t crossover numbers — they’re takeover numbers.

But success isn’t the only qualifier. The album’s DNA is country — just not the narrow kind historically confined to Music Row radio rotations. Beyoncé interpolates Dolly Parton, covers The Beatles’ “Blackbird” (written during the civil rights era), and resurrects Linda Martell, the first Black woman to play the Grand Ole Opry, giving her overdue voice and validation.

Genre boundaries have always shifted. Elvis shook up country. Ray Charles turned Modern Sounds in Country and Western Music into a landmark. Lil Nas X went viral and hit No. 1 with a cowboy hat and an 808. What Beyoncé’s doing isn’t a gimmick — it’s tradition, just one that doesn’t always look like what the Nashville establishment expects.

That discomfort is the point.

Beyoncé herself wrote in the album’s liner notes: “This ain’t a country album. This is a Beyoncé album.” And that’s the real story: she’s not asking permission — she’s asserting authority.

Artists like Adcock are entitled to their opinions. But the facts remain: "Cowboy Carter" didn’t break country music. It exposed how small the gate has been. And for many listeners — especially Black ones — that gate was never open to begin with.

Whether she’s standing onstage at the CMA Awards or headlining her own genre-defying global tours, Beyoncé’s presence in country isn’t an invasion.

It’s a reclamation.

So the question isn't whether "Cowboy Carter" is country enough.

The question is whether country music is ready to admit its roots were always bigger than its borders.

Friday, June 27, 2025

Walter Scott, Velvet-Voiced Whispers Legend, Dies at 81

The Whispers pose backstage before their performance at Gardner's Basin in Atlantic City on Saturday, Aug. 24, 2013. From left: Leaveil Degree, Wallace Scott, Walter Scott and Nicholas Caldwell. Walter Scott, co-founder of the group, died Thursday at age 81.
Walter C. Scott Jr., whose buttery vocals alongside his identical twin Wallace anchored the iconic R&B group The Whispers for more than five decades, died Thursday in Northridge, Calif., after a six-month battle with cancer. He was 81 and surrounded by family.

Desirae L. Benson, a member of the Whispers' promotional team, confirmed Scott’s death in a statement to Soul Tracks:

We all are incredibly heartbroken. It is with deep sadness that we confirm the passing of Walter Scott, beloved member of the legendary R&B group The Whispers,” Benson said. “His voice, presence, and contributions helped shape a musical legacy that touched millions. Walter’s impact on the industry and in the hearts of fans will never be forgotten. 

Formed in Los Angeles in 1963, The Whispers — originally Walter and Wallace Scott, Nicholas Caldwell, Marcus Hutson, and Gordy Harmon — became one of the most celebrated vocal groups of their era. Their string of hits spanned decades, with “And the Beat Goes On,” “Lady,” “It’s a Love Thing,” and “Rock Steady” defining R&B radio in the 1980s.

Over their career, The Whispers earned 15 top 10 R&B singles, two R&B No. 1 albums ("The Whispers" and "Love Is Where You Find It"), and widespread acclaim for their smooth choreography and timeless harmonies.

Born in Fort Worth, Texas, in 1944, Walter Scott moved with his family to Los Angeles, where he and his brother first began performing. The group relocated briefly to San Francisco in the mid-’60s to sharpen their live act. Walter was drafted into military service in Vietnam and rejoined The Whispers in 1969. The group gained momentum in the late ’70s after signing to Dick Griffey’s Solar Records, beginning a golden era of hits that kept them on the charts and touring through the 2000s.

Harmon was replaced in 1973 by Leaveil Degree following a vocal injury. Hutson died in 2000, Caldwell in 2016, and Harmon in 2023. The Whispers were inducted into the National Rhythm & Blues Hall of Fame in 2014.

Walter Scott is survived by his wife, Jan, two sons, three grandchildren, and his brother Wallace.

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