Who wants to golf with Scarface?

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Employee
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Who wants to golf with Scarface?

Post by Employee »

:face: :face: :face: :face: :face:

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/ge ... eas-corpus" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;
For the past 9 years, our fans have been pleading with us to drop one more album, and we’ve been having light and sometimes heavy talks about getting back in the studio. Well, we hear you; the wait is over! Like you, we see all the madness going on in the world from terrorism to the economic downturn, to the slew of police shootings, and brutality incidents. Our intent is not to fan the flames and divide, but to put out the fire, and unite. But don’t get it twisted, we’re still not kissing no ass to be accepted. The new album is entitled, Habeas Corpus, and like past Geto Boys albums, no topic will be off limits. But before we can go into the studio to make the album, we must first raise the money to do so. Since we’ve been independent for going on a decade now, and we are not signed to a major label, we need your help funding the project.

We thought long and hard about how we wanted to go about creating the album, and concluded that crowdfunding would be the best way to go because it allows us to cut out the middleman by dealing directly with our fans, and most importantly we can make the kind of music we want to make without having a label censor our message. That’s what hip hop is all about. Being independent and free to express yourself without restrictions. So you say you want that real shit? Well let’s see. Kickstarter is ALL or NOTHING, which means if we get enough pledges to reach our GOAL of $100,000, Kickstarter will release the funds to us to make the album, if we don’t raise the entire amount, we get nothing, and the album won’t get made. So click one of the green buttons to the right and back us to help bring this project to life.

This is a new platform for us. It’s hard to get all three of us excited about the same thing at the same time, but we’re pumped up about our new album, and being on the front end of this groundbreaking approach to how music will be delivered in the future. The plan is simple: After our campaign is successfully funded in mid July, we will book studio time in Houston for August or September to begin recording the new album, HABEAS CORPUS. As for production, we will be in full attack mode - leaving no stone unturned. We're going to work with both seasoned and new producers to give you that Geto Boys uncut, raw feel that you love, while simultaneously developing a unique sound that takes our music to the next level. We will feature a couple of well-known skilled artists who we respect, but that’s about it. We owe it to our fans to make a Geto Boys album, not a compilation. It usually takes us 2 to 3 months to complete an album, and 3 months from the date of completion to get the album in stores.

Another first for us will be our “PIECES OF INSANITY” ART BOOK, authored by Willie D, curated by artist Lee Carrier and designed by Mario Jaramilo of the Robot Agency. The 100 Page art book will feature over 40 artists from around the world paintings, inspired by select Geto Boys songs from the past three decades, and will include EXCLUSIVE VIP ART SHOWS. We are currently on a 22 City US tour that began on June 7 in Washington DC at Howard Theatre. We partnered with SiriusXM Radio to record our performance and air it at a later date. So check back here for updates - you’ll be able to see some of the cool pictures and videos from the tour as well as get important updates about our Kickstarter. The cherry on top of the creative process will be the BEHIND THE SCENES DVD we’re going to create that shows the MAKING OF THE HABEAS CORPUS ALBUM. For the first time we are going to share with our fans and supporters how we go about the creative process of making an album, how we decide what tracks we will use, and what inspires us to create. Plus you’ll see what we do in our downtime when we’re waiting on the engineer to make technical adjustments, stuffing our faces, or when we’re just hanging out shooting the shit. We want every serious music lover in the world to be involved with this project.

WE WANT YOU TO HAVE A VOICE IN THE MAKING OF OUR NEW ALBUM AND THE MUSIC THAT’S CREATED TODAY. To show our appreciation for your undying support, we are offering loads of EXCLUSIVE GB MERCH, and NEVER BEFORE ACCESS.

CHECK OUT OUR REWARDS!

KhillA
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Re: Who wants to golf with Scarface?

Post by KhillA »

Bar hopping with Bushwick Bill sounds like the best option but not for 3K. You probably just need to buy a bag of crillz and he'll follow you around for free. Looking forward to this album.

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Re: Who wants to golf with Scarface?

Post by Philaflava »

Really thinking of having a house party for that 10K.

KhillA
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Re: Who wants to golf with Scarface?

Post by KhillA »

Thank god they don't have to worry about outside production or this project would be doomed. I mean wtf can you do with 100k?

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Re: Who wants to golf with Scarface?

Post by blastmaster »

Saw them last week in a 300 person capacity shit hole club. It was fucking epic. They all sounded amazing.

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Re: Who wants to golf with Scarface?

Post by GUCCI CONDOMS »

Philaflava wrote:Really thinking of having a house party for that 10K.
#BANNERADMONEY

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Re: Who wants to golf with Scarface?

Post by sleazy_j »

i'd rather play golf with bushwick and go bar hopping willie d. get my money's worth.



i don't see this thing getting funded via kickstarter. they're no de la soul. i'd rather hear new geto boys over de la, myself.


plus, scarface said he won't even help on it until it gets fully funded. he's only in it for the funds, not the art.


bushwick bill shows up everywhere, though.
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Re: Who wants to golf with Scarface?

Post by Sucka Ducka »

Was searching for a WE CANT BE STOPPED tshirt (cant find one) and I found this campaign the day it launched - then they added the vinyl and the art book combo signed - copped that for $175. Fuck it. Geto Boys are one of my favorite groups of all time.

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Re: Who wants to golf with Scarface?

Post by Mindbender Futurama »

Golf is fun and Scarface is a G

win-win

I want another song like "Fuck 'Em" and I'll be :ironmike:

I'm not sure I want another EPMD or NWA album, but I DO WANT ANOTHER GETO BOYS ALBUM cause they will definitely keep it raw as fuckkk
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sleazy_j
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Re: Who wants to golf with Scarface?

Post by sleazy_j »

just noticed the current backing jumped from $7,000 to $17,000 overnight.
sure enough, someone purchased the willie d plan, the bushwick plan, and the scarface plan.
not sure if one dude, but probably so since that $9,000 was added within 24 hours.
those plans say "1 of 2 sold" now.

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Re: Who wants to golf with Scarface?

Post by sleazy_j »

https://www.kickstarter.com/projects/ge ... eas-corpus" onclick="window.open(this.href);return false;

44,000/ 100,000 goal with 17 hours left.

plus scarface is in the hospital or something.

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Re: Who wants to golf with Scarface?

Post by Freezy Pazzy »

They didn't even reached $50,000, I guess this final album is doomed for good. Unless 'Face changes his mind and decides to jump in just for the thrill of one last epic album, but I highly doubt it. That's fucked up.

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Re: Who wants to golf with Scarface?

Post by Philaflava »

his pride ain't gonna allow it.

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Re: Who wants to golf with Scarface?

Post by 907 »

What a fuckin shame, I'd love to hear a new Geto Boys record.
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Re: Who wants to golf with Scarface?

Post by sleazy_j »

Pitchfork interview with Bushwick Bill.

Some dude is trying to fund a documentary about his and is doing an indiegogo crowdfund thing, but the packages don't look that rewarding.

anyhow, dope interview with Bill. apparently, Willie D was the brains behind the Geto Boys kickstarter.

Pitchfork: What’s it been like having cameras follow you for a few years now?

Richard Shaw: It’s pretty interesting. It’s just supposed to show my everyday life. Some things are happy, some are not.
Pitchfork: Is anything off-limits?

RS: It’d be hard for anyone to get into your life one hundred percent because a majority of your life is in your mind and your heart—the things you refuse not to say or do. It’s hard for a camera to capture what’s going on, on the inside.
Pitchfork: The director said you get recognized in country bars—everywhere. What’s fame like? Do you enjoy it?

RS: I’ve never had a big personality. I’m an introvert unless I’ve been drinking or something. Being short, I believe people looked and stared at me my whole life before I ever got on stage and rapped. If I was someone of "normal height" I would probably be like those people in Marvel Comic movies where they’re obscure and no one notices them until they have some kind of power, which I guess is what music does. Now it’s not "look at the short guy," it’s "It’s Bushwick Bill!"

Pitchfork: Do you like that better?

RS: Either way it’s notoriety.

Pitchfork: How is Scarface doing since the hospitalization?

RS: I don’t know… he’s had weight issues for years and I think that comes with blood pressure and all kinds of situations. He actually did a show in Rochester a week after he went in the hospital. I know he’s going on tour in September. I called him and that’s when he told me about what he said about on his Facebook, saying he wasn’t going to do any Geto Boys stuff right now but do his own thing. He believes it should be all fair, split three ways.

Pitchfork: Did you get a new eye? It looked like you had something in last time I saw you.

RS: I have a conformer. I had a prosthetic but that broke. I’ve got to get another. My mom asked me about that before she died—she wished I’d get another one.

Pitchfork: Has having one eye changed your life in any way?

RS: I was born with 20/20 vision. The only thing that changes is like a person who loses a limb has that phantom limb movement… they feel they’re doing things with two members of their body. If I’ve been in a room before when I had two eyes, my mind actually sees the whole room from memory. I might turn into the wall and bump into something because my mind is seeing it wrong—I’m not. That’s the part that gets me sometimes. I walk in somewhere and end up turning into a wall and getting knots on my head.

Pitchfork: What did you think of Straight Outta Compton?

RS: It gives the depth of what’s going on. We’re just people and the music business is a business. As much as you think this person or that is screwing you out of your money… it’s same for 2 Live Crew, it’s the same in R&B, rock'n'roll—any genre. While you’re on stage and signing autographs and seeing people like something that you thought of and how they’re enjoying it as a living thing, it gives you great joy. You’re not really thinking of it like business. Distribution, retail sales, manufacturers have to get paid, how things are taxed—after everyone is paid then the money goes back to the label 90 days later, the label has to pay for the video, tour, et cetera, then how much is left for me?

Pitchfork: Art and commerce are two different things.

RS: Right! When you see the part where Eazy-E is sitting there going over contracts, all he knows is this dude keeps giving him papers to sign at parties—never in the setting when they’re eating and drinking. It’s brought when he’s distracted by everything going on around him. That by itself let me know something shyster is about to be revealed.
What the N.W.A movie revealed is there’s also people who can pay your lawyers and your accountants off to make everything look right to you, to keep you happy. Look at the movie The Rose or the show "Empire". Business has always been cutthroat, no matter what the business is.
Pitchfork: Could you relate to that? Would you say there are similarities in your stories?
RS: As an artist I could relate to the Ice Cube vision, wanting to know what’s going on when an interviewer asks you what it’s like not having money and you’re thinking about the paperwork and what you for this, that and the other. Your mind is on making music—you’re not a businessman. You’re just somebody who had a great idea. How do you learn that unless you go to business school instead of being born with the gift of being creative? It’s hard to be judgmental either way. You’re in the studio and you say, "Hey, why don’t you say this line?" No one told you that means you’re a co-writer. You think you’re just being helpful in the creative mode, breaking bread. It’s complicated.
We ran across [N.W.A] a lot of different times or they just left and we just got there on tour. They came to Houston on Too $hort—when he had music being played from a reel-to-reel. It sounded just like the studio because there was no compression.
I like the way the movie ended because everyone realized at the end of the day, we started with nothing just making music for the ‘hood.

Pitchfork: When will Habeas Corpus be out? What happened with the fundraiser?

RS: I had my doubts about it but I figured if the money came in properly, at what point is someone going to talk to Rap-A-Lot to say "When you hired us as Geto Boys to do these songs the name was already there, you just hired voices… how do we take the name associated with us and do things without including you?" My whole thing is if there’s people out there who feel they got screwed by a record label or person, how do you turn around and do something wrong back? That’s an opportunity to show how to do it right. 'Face left the label, Will left the label. I walked away in disagreement with the group members and the label because I knew my importance. We were frustrating each other. At the end of the day you grow up and put your ego in check. None of us is on the label.

Pitchfork: So the label owns the name?

RS: Yeah and the fans believe the title. Do we be fair and ask permission and share a percentage? I believe anything done right, goes right. The [label] owner does not have a bad heart. I never understood what Willie D was trying to do. If the fans want it, it’s cool. At the end of the day, Geto Boys is a brand and that’s acceptable but the value of everything has to be in the respect for each other. When I read that Rolling Stone article, I didn’t get that line about "we wished we were on three separate stages." I don’t know where that came from. I never felt that way. That was controversy to make things sell or whatever the thought pattern was.

Pitchfork: Are you still friends?

RS: Oh, I’m cool with everybody. You gotta remember I was a Geto Boy from '84. The faces always changed. I’ve never once called to say, "I need money, let’s do a show." I was always called and said, "We’re doing shows. Are you with it or not with it?" Willie D’s trying to keep the brand alive but it’s going to take more than love to keep it alive. It’s gonna take bread being broken fairly where everyone is happy. If anyone’s ever gotten made at a label, I guess when they try to run shows for themselves and see what costs and overhead is like… At the end of the day, right beats might all the time.

Pitchfork: But you guys are the Geto Boys. The label can’t do much with the name without you three.

RS: That’s not true. Look at what’s happened before. I met Scarface and Willie D in the studio in '85. The name changed from Ghettto to Geto when Rick Rubin produced it. In '84 there was Raheem, Slim Jukebox, and Sir Rap-A-Lot. Those were the first three members of the Geto Boys with DJ Ready Red. By '85 it was Prince Johnny C, Slim Jukebox, Bushwick Bill, and DJ Ready Red. By '89 it was Scarface, Willie D, Bushwick Bill, and Ready Red. By We Can’t Be Stopped it was Scarface, Willie D, Bushwick Bill, and Ready Red, on the regrouping album, it was us. By the Til Death Do Us Part album, it was Scarface, Willie D, Big Mike, and Bushwick Bill—DJ Ready Red wasn’t even there. If any true Geto Boys fan is out there they’d see the label believed in the name even when the artists thought it couldn’t continue. The same thing happened with the Temptations and the Four Tops.

Pitchfork: So are you writing your own stuff now?

RS: I’ve got some new material. I’m collaborating with people. It’s mostly inspirational but I also want to go back to some of the gutter-mix stuff because I want to show the change, the growth, and the transformation. I want to explain why I was feeling that way back then and I view things this way now.

Pitchfork: What have you been listening to lately?

RS: I really like Kendrick Lamar. I’m still a Talib Kweli fan, Lupe Fiasco, Mos Def, Common Sense—people who say things that are relevant to everyday life. I don’t pay attention to artists that talk about throwing money away and the car that they drive.
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Re: Who wants to golf with Scarface?

Post by capable_keL »

i heard he's about a 20-25 handicap. Golfing with someone that brutal would be more of a chore than anything else
Hey, by the way who's Curt?

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Re: Who wants to golf with Scarface?

Post by Hair of the Dog »

The most shocking part of that interview was to learn he's a big fan of Kweli, Common, Lupe Fiasco, et al.

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