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Nas, Def Jam at odds on N-word album
By Jim Welte - MP3.com
October 18, 2007 at 05:00:00 PM | more stories by this author

Rapper says he's going to drop an N-bomb as the title to his next album, while his label denies the explosive title.

In 2006, Nas declared Hip-Hop Is Dead and stirred the pot for months on end.

Nas Nas

If he's going to do the same in 2007 with an album called Ni**a, he's going to have to convince his label to let him do so.

The rapper and Def Jam are reportedly at odds over Nas' desire to tackle the N-word controversy head-on by naming his album after the incendiary word. A source close to Island Def Jam Music Group Chairman Antonio "L.A." Reid told Fox News yesterday, "There is no album release by Nas on the release schedule at this point. And they would be unlikely to release an album with that title. How would that look at Wal-Mart?"

Nas announced the name during a show last week in New York, and defended his decision to MTV's Mixtape Monday earlier this week. But further explanation from Nas was not required for the Rev. Jesse Jackson to weigh in.

"The title using the N-word is morally offensive and socially distasteful," Jackson said in a statement to Fox News. "Nas has the right to degrade and denigrate in the name of free speech, but there is no honor in it.

"Radio and television stations have no obligation to play it, and self-respecting people have no obligation to buy it," Jackson added. "I wish he would use his talents to lift up and inspire, not degrade, making mockery of racism."

The use of the N-word in hip-hop lyrics, a longtime source of controversy, became a much-discussed topic earlier this year in the wake of radio show host Don Imus' comments insulting Rutgers University's women's basketball team.

Jackson, Rev. Al Sharpton, and others spoke out after the Imus incident, imploring rappers to use to controversy as a reason to abolish the word altogether in hip-hop.

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12 Comments

Oldest First | Newest First
Everybody who remotely knows Nas understand his lyrical sting. I'm from Angola, and I don't really understand why black people let themselves get overpowered by this word. I understand about racial slurs like anyone else since I'm black, but b4 I came to the US I had no idea black are still so hurt by this. Rappers and comedians are trying to make the next-gen feel free from this word, and the only way to do it is to expose it, and make use of the positive connotations, because it's the past; People, move on! More about this issue on my blog sometime soon...
Posted 10/24/2007 10:48pm
Newsflash - this is NOT the first time a hip hop artist has used the n-word as a title for their albums.

2Pac -Strictly For My N-

NWA - Efil4zaggin
Posted 10/21/2007 8:50pm
alright, this report is going down the lane that most media goes down. Sensationalism and hype. Nowhere in the report does it even discuss what angle Nas is taking on the word. Instead, all they have is the hype. Rev JAckson quotes, etcc... I'm sure not one person has even asked the question of what angle is he attempting to illustrate...

get the info first then spark the drama...
Posted 10/19/2007 5:24pm
I don't know if any of you recall, but not only did "Hip-Hop Is Dead" chart at #1, but it also shook the entire foundation of the culture. Ever since that album dropped, every other rapper tried to explain why they ARE hip-hop and why it isn't dead. That being said, Nas is needed in hip-hop more than most will admit. Without his spin on the way things are, we would have a bunch of Souljah Boy's and J-Kwon's running around wildly. He's one of music's few untouchables, and if he wanted to name his album "Lindsay Lohan," I'm sure he has good reasoning.

Nas will roll with the title AND Def Jam will back him. P.S. How come there's no commoton over Keenan naming his record "V is for Vagina Something smells funny...
Posted 10/19/2007 1:09pm
im a big fan of nas i have all his songs and the reason he does not sell as much records as many artist is because he writes what he feels is important, not what is hot. this is what has made him a ledgend but as a african american i have to say even i am offended when i hear two black people call each other the n word. i think the constant use of the word and trying to make a positive out of a negative sometimes goes wrong. useing the n word has not made the meaning go away. when i was younger i used it more often than i do now because as i matured i realized that this word i was useing had many meanings depending who and how it's used so i try and control my use of it.
Posted 10/19/2007 12:10pm
What's with the censorship, MP3.com? Anyway, Nas is an idiot as is any other black person using the word. They say the word has been reclamed.
I say it's BS. The only way for this to be true if the use of the word by whites and others didn't cause offence. And it certainly does. I don't understand why people would go to such length to demean themselves.

And if that was true, this site would not be censoring the word in the first place.
Posted 10/19/2007 10:28am
Nas could go in the footsteps of Radiohead and others and release this album without a label, i'm pretty sure that he isn't hurting financially and could afford to take the chance for his art. It's interesting that even though Al Sharpton and Jesse Jackson disagree with what Nas is doing here, everyone has the same thought in mind, just different interpretations of how it should be accomplished.
Posted 10/19/2007 9:53am
Def Jam is a business and is not obligated to release a record with whatever title Nas wants. Regardless of whatever statement he's trying to make, I don't think he has the clout to get away with this.
Posted 10/19/2007 9:45am
*yawn* ODB already had "Ni**a Please."
Posted 10/19/2007 7:11am
Nas is crazy but if this is what he thinks would bring this album attention then I'll say go for it he probably has a big reason or meaning behind doing this anyway. Can't wait to see what Def Jam will do about this one.....
Posted 10/18/2007 11:30pm
I know Jesse Jackson ain't taking smack about this! He's nothing more then a selfish blood sucking trouble maker. Plain and simple weather I agree with the title or not Nas has the right to express him self the way he wants to. (If Gays and lesbians have the right to get married then Nas should have the right to release the album entitiled the N-word) I'm quite sure 80% of his fans(black or white is going to know what he's getting at.) Geez!
Posted 10/18/2007 9:36pm
This argument can go on forever. Period. Everyone has to make there own choice unless they are just followers like 75 percent ( random number ) of people in this world. But thats how it works.
Posted 10/18/2007 5:28pm
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