Search Results

JD's World Jermaine Dupri’s free fall

45 Comments

LOL!!!

Pop-rap’s most famous talent scout on rebound with downsized So So Def

music_feature1-1_12.jpg

Not sure if you noticed, but Jermaine Dupri took down his billboard. The famous “Afroman” sign, which announced Atlanta as the home of his So So Def imprint, was unceremoniously removed more than a year ago after a decade plus at the I-75/I-85 connector. Dupri notes that it was an expensive ad, but contends its demise was mainly symbolic. “I felt like, it’s a new era in music,” he says. “A new era in life.”

After nearly two decades partnering with various major labels to develop some of urban music’s best-selling artists (not to mention going platinum himself), Dupri took his label independent last year. Ditching the deluxe working environments he’d long been accustomed to, he moved So So Def into his Southside Studios near Buckhead, and commenced operations with a skeleton staff. “Everything has been micro’d,” he says. “It’s a totally different business than it was three to four years ago. I don’t really have but, like, three people that work for me.”

He’s abolished his street team (Twitter is today’s street team, he contends) and does his own blogging. It may not be very glamorous, but Dupri says it’s worth it. For one thing, he’s finally able to get back to doing what he does best — turning nobodies into stars. Dupri once set the industry standard by developing acts like Kris Kross, Da Brat and Lil Bow Wow; not only did he write and produce many of these young platinum rappers’ hits, he signed them, outfitted them, and crafted their images. “I create artists from scratch,” he says.

But that’s not how things are done anymore. Instead of molding unknowns and putting massive promotional campaigns behind them, major labels are more likely to sign artists with an already-established regional fan base. It’s a cost-cutting measure that has made the traditional role of Artist & Repertoire all but obsolete. “Now, if you’re an A&R in New York, it’s like, let’s go to Atlanta and listen to what’s hot on the radio,” Dupri says.

Shuffling between companies like Arista, Virgin, and Island Records over the years, he became increasingly frustrated with his working environments, and was dropped as Island’s president of urban music in early 2009. He contends they fell out largely because the label wouldn’t release music from So So Def’s artists. In fact, much of Island’s top brass didn’t even so much as listen to Dondria, a Sachse, Texas-bred crooner he discovered and championed, he says. “Many of them never even went to YouTube to understand her, or pay attention to what attracted me to her,” he continues, adding that So So Def artist/songwriter Johnta Austin was similarly ignored while his music sat on the shelf, going stale.

“There are probably more artists signed with no record out, than people with a record out,” Dupri says. “The companies are not created anymore for people that are visionaries.”

Now that he’s gone independent, he can release his artists’ music on a timely basis. Dondria — who was recently added to the Trey Songz/Monica fall tour schedule — will release her debut, Dondria vs. Phatfffat, August 3, he says, and works from Austin, Detroit singer Brandon Hines, and Atlanta (by way of Dayton, Ohio) rapper Jola will follow.

Dupri’s rift with Island was also reportedly sparked by low sales from his longtime girlfriend Janet Jackson, whose 2008 album Discipline — which he executive produced — failed to go gold. Her subsequent concert tour was aborted early, and she parted ways with Island shortly before he did. Dupri declines comment on the situation (“I can’t really talk about that”), and seems to deny that the pair have broken up, despite numerous reports to the contrary last year. “That’s an assumption,” he says.

He also made waves in a recent Vibe interview, in which he dubbed Usher “disrespectful” for not asking him to executive produce his albums after the success of Confessions, and expressed disappointment that none of his songs made Mariah Carey’s last CD. Dupri contends the statements were blown out of proportion: “I can’t control people’s lives, I don’t even really care. The artist will do what the artist wants.” Though he’s currently working on Carey’s next album, Dupri says he’s “more focused on creating new artists with So So Def than established artists.”

Just getting warmed up, he also offers his thoughts on changes in Atlanta hip-hop in recent years. Everyone nowadays thinks they have what it takes to be in the industry, he gripes. Even worse, the city’s strip clubs are no longer reliable testing grounds for new music. “That’s been destroyed with payola,” he says. “Now [a DJ] will play his man’s new song, or a record somebody paying him to play.”

But make no mistake, Dupri’s not throwing his hands up in despair. After all, the godfather of Atlanta pop-rap, a former teen break-dancer who was taught to rap by MC Shy-D, is still in his mid-30s. The taste of music fans will continue to change, but one suspects that his role as a tastemaker will not.


Tags:

LISTEN UP! DONDRIA X ESSENCE.com

5 Comments

THE VIRAL SUPERSTAR

dondria-425.jpg

The music game has changed. You no longer have to pass along your demo tape to everybody who is “somebody” — fingers crossed — to get discovered by a label and blow up. Those days are long gone. Just ask the newest R&B ingenueDondria Fields, 24, who is signed toJermaine Dupri’s So So Def label. TheOklahoma-born, Texas-bred singer, whose hit single “You’re the One for Me” is riding airwaves everywhere, will tell you that all you need is a computer, a mic, and webcam.

That’s exactly how Dondria, who previously went by the moniker Phatfffat, broke onto the scene. The singing sensation grabbed the world’s attention after having her YouTube video posts earn an extremely large following. Like they say, the rest is history, or more appropriately her-story. Dondria chops it up with ESSENCE.com to discuss her viral start, Janet Jackson, and how she feels being compared to others in the industry.

ESSENCE.com: Dondria, your story is amazing, how did this all start?
DONDRIA FIELDS: I always knew I wanted to be a singer from the time I was younger and was involved in singing competitions. In 2006 I was told to go onto YouTube to view a fight video, and noticed on the side how many people were using the site to sing. I didn’t even know that was going on, and afterwards I thought it would be good for me to do the same, if only to get an unbiased opinion.

ESSENCE.com: What were you expecting to come from YouTube?
FIELDS:
All I was expecting was to record videos, and get real honest opinions from people who didn’t care anything about me. Never did I think people would start reaching out to me and start requesting videos and songs.

ESSENCE.com: You got even more than that…
FIELDS:
Within a year I had 25 videos up, received over a million views, 300,000 subscribers, and had people reaching out to me. One of which was Jermaine Dupri, who messaged me on YouTube. But, when I didn’t respond, he found me onMySpace,  and that’s how we finally made the connection.

ESSENCE.com: How shocked were you?
FIELDS:
(Laughs) At first I didn’t even think it was him. His message was, “This isJermaine Dupri, I saw your videos on YouTube and I’m trying to get in touch with you.” All I’m thinking was, don’t play with me! I ignored him for a while, but he was very persistent and kept writing me. So I started to think, “Maybe this is him.” Eventually he flew me, my mother — who is also my manager — out to meet him, and it wasn’t like I got signed right away.

ESSENCE.com: Eventually you did though, and what was your reaction?
FIELDS:
It was surreal, it took a while to register. I had never heard of anyone at that time getting signed that way.

ESSENCE.com: It really is an amazing story. Who have you met that has given you some sound advice?
FIELDS:
Janet Jackson and I had a really casual conversation in which she said that she really believed in me, and is a real supporter.

ESSENCE.com: Nice. Janet is team Dondria. What other artists have inspired you the most?
FIELDS:
Whitney HoustonAretha Franklin and Etta James have had the most influence.

ESSENCE.com: But who do you end up getting compared to, and how do you feel about the comparisons?
FIELDS:
When people hear my music, I often hear them asking, “Did Monica make a new song?” I even hear that our looks are similar. I don’t have a problem because I know I’m a new artist so there is going to be comparisons, and I don’t mind if ultimately it’ll cause people to listen. However, later on I would want it to stop.

ESSENCE.com: When I hear your single, “You’re the One for Me,” I am impressed by the quality of your vocals and how truly R&B, not pop, the record is. Will the album match the single?
FIELDS
: Yes, JD and I wanted to make sure the album had real singing. On this album we found my sound, we found my niche, and this isn’t a trendy album, this is real R&B — nothing altered.

ESSENCE.com: Why are you Dondria now, if you were called Phatfffat before?
FIELDS:
It was nickname I got from a college roommate because of how much I ate right before I sang. Although I still will answer to it, I was thinking long-term and becoming a rising icon. [The name] Phatfffat was a no-no, Dondria made a better artist name.

ESSENCE.com: Your album however, is called “Dondria vs. Phatfffat,” explain the concept.
FIELDS
: The album’s out August 3, it touches on every emotion, and something that everyone can relate to. It explains the difference between the silly girl the world met on the computer to the artist who is now showing she can do more than sing before a webcam.

Tags:

JD's World Prive to Eve

2 Comments

Blog - Robin Leach: Luxe Life

What’s your story? If you are a celebrity in Vegas, Robin Leach wants to know.

Strip Scribbles: Jermaine Dupri jumps across Strip from Prive to Eve

Nelly, Lance Bass and Jermaine Dupri at the New Year’s Eve party at Prive in Planet Hollywood on Dec. 31, 2009.
Photo: Scott Harrison/Retna/www.harrisonphotos.com
Grammy Award-winning artist and record producer Jermaine Duprireturns to his Las Vegas DJ duties tonight. He lost his regular gig at Prive in Planet Hollywood when Harrah’s officials shuttered it after they took over and assumed its considerable debts.
Jermaine, the former longtime boyfriend of Janet Jackson, spins the wheels of steel at the hot industry night at Eva Longoria Parker’s Eve at MGM CityCenter’s Crystals. No definite word whether Jermaine will be booked as a regular, but the whisper is that if tonight’s a success, he’ll certainly be back as a regular.
Tags: ,

LISTEN UP! JANET JACKSON MEDLEY ITUNES TOP MUSIC VIDEO

34 Comments

I WANNA THANK ALL MY LIFERS AND JANET FANS THAT MADE THIS HAPPEN, THANK YOU!

Tags:

NEWS JANET JACKSON AMERICAN IDOL PERFORMANCE OF “NOTHIN”

49 Comments

Tags: ,

JD's World VIBE.COM

43 Comments

VIBE.COM By: kmurphy Posted 5-4-2010 3:48 pm

Jermaine Dupri is a quote monster. Never one to mince words, the veteran music producer and label mogul has had his ups and downs during his 20-year career. But the brazen Dupri, who has fostered the careers of Kriss Kross,Xscape and Da Brat and accumulated studio time with such superstar acts asJay-Z, Usher and Mariah Carey, is a survivor. With his longtime imprint So So Def now independent and a buzz-heavy protégé Dondria making noise, we caught up with the man known as JD to discuss his thoughts on VIBE’sGreatest Hip Hop Producer of All-Time; his beef with Usher; his ex-girlfriendJanet Jackson; why he deserves more praise than the Neptunes and his outspoken views on major labels. This is Jermaine Dupri, unfiltered.

VIBE: How surprised were you when you beat out Irv Gotti in VIBE’s Greatest Hip Hop Producers of All-Time?

Jermaine Dupri: In the beginning, I didn’t pay much attention to it. I go into all this stuff thinking that niggas don’t fuck with me [laughs]. So I went into the contest like, “Ain’t nobody paying no attention to me.” You have some people who say that I helped contribute to Jay-Z’s national success when I produced “Money Ain’t A Thing.” But I have been fortunate enough to make [history-making] records such as the Da Brat being the first solo female rapper to go platinum as well being the first person Jay-Z actually made a record with from the South. People in the South say it was the beginning of them actually knowing who Jay-Z was. It’s not like I just make beats. I make movements. I can even go back to Kriss Kross as being the first kid hip-hop group that we will remember. And 10 years later, I did it again with Bow Wow. Then I ushered in the snap music era with the Dem Franchise Boyz. Things changed when you heard these records.

Do you feel like you get enough respect as a producer in hardcore hip-hop circles?

No. I’ll always get the “Oh, he’s not DJ Premier.” I can’t even get into that conversation. If I see my name with Premier, I’m already thinking I’m going to lose [laughs]. In our world, if you are super commercial going against someone who is super hip hop, a different card is played. And I expect that. I was surprised that I even beat Irv Gotti [in the VIBE Producer Tournament]. Then me and Timbaland were going head up. I just knew I was going to be out of this one fast. And I know the Dr. Dre conversations are out of the question [laughs].

“I have to ask [Usher] ‘Am I the executive producer of your next album?’ That’s disrespectful to me”

You seem unusually self-effacing about all of this.

Well, I’ve gotten past the whole, “JD doesn’t get the respect he deserves” thing. If niggas don’t pay attention to what I’ve done and how long I’ve been doing it, they will someday. But it’s kind of weird because Billboard named Mariah Carey’s “We Belong Together,” which I produced, as Song Of The Decade this year. That’s an accomplishment that no other producer had on the charts. But then Billboard names the Neptunes producers of the year? The accolades don’t even go with each other anymore. That’s why I never get my hopes up. I’m just happy to still be in the game.

There was some talk that you were going to executive produce Usher’s latest album Raymond v. Raymond. Why didn’t it happen?

Well, I didn’t really want to be executive producer of Usher’s projects afterConfession. Me as a producer, it’s kind of hard for me to go back into people’s projects when I gave you your biggest album ever…you sold more records than any other artist in this decade based on that album and now I have to ask you am I the executive producer of your next album? That seems disrespectful to me. Obviously, I’m looking at something different than everyone is looking at it whether it’s the label, the artist, management… whoever it is. I’ve had this same conversation with L.A. Reid, because I’m doing Mariah Carey’s album right now. And on her last album, I didn’t have one song on there. But I did Emancipation of Mimi and she sold more records than she sold in the last five years. What part of the game makes y’all not call me? But I’m not going to keep sticking my neck out. But I don’t feel like I’m supposed to ask to produce anymore. People are supposed to come to me and tell me that I’m the executive producer. That’s why I get more kicks working with younger artists.

Were you disappointed when the Def Jam-distributed TAG label, a place you envisioned where young artists would be able to get a shot, collapsed?

It just came down to me leaving Def Jam. It was a brilliant deal, but there were too many people trying to take the money and do different things with it. There were a lot of things happening that caused it to not go the way it was supposed to. I was invested in breaking new talent. But the label wasn’t really invested in breaking new talent. For most labels, they find it hard to break new acts. So they get a company like TAG, but spend the money on artists that’s already there. It became a tug of war situation. I’m sad that it didn’t work out.

Will you be involved in Janet Jackson’s next project?

Will you be involved in Janet Jackson’s next project?

I can tell you that she’s not working on an album. We just did the one song (“Nothing”) for the Why Did I Get Married Too soundtrack, which was released off of So So Def. Last time I heard she really didn’t want to do an album. She wanted to just do singles every once in a while. She’s looked at the marketplace—albums are not really doing what they usually do when you put all this budget out there. Janet is just trying to figure out her landscape. But the crazy part is “Nothing” is the biggest format record that I’ve ever had. It’s playing on seven different formats: gospel, AC, urban AC, urban mainstream, jazz and top 40 and rhythmic. I never had a record on a jazz station. I’m out here in LA and the biggest jazz station out here, The Wave, you know, that station when you go to hotels and you don’t know what station the radio in your room is on? This record is on that station [laughs].

How is Janet holding up?

She’s cool. She has a lot of work going on that’s keeping her in the right direction. The movie came out, which is the biggest Tyler Perry movie he has had thus far. It looks like her star power as an actress is still there. And she’s about to do the other movie (For Colored Girls Who Have Considered Suicide When the Rainbow Is Enuf) with Mariah, Kerry Washington, Whoopi Goldberg and few others. They will be shooting that in June. And then she’s performing at the Essence Festival, so she’s rehearsing for that every day.

You recently re-launched your So So Def label as an independent imprint. One of those younger artists that you mentioned is pop R&B vocalist Dondria, who you discovered on Youtube.

Right now, Dondria is my main focus. I had her for two years going back to when I was at Def Jam. When I discover a new artist, I try to figure out their niche. And while Dondria and Whitney Houston are so far apart from each other in terms of their careers, Dondria wants to be what Whitney became. I believe that that lane is opening up. Dondria doesn’t want to be Mary J. Blige. She wants to sing that big record. It took me a while to realize it and then I went into the studio one night and wrote “You’re The One.” This is my first new artist and single I’ve put out for So So Def independent. It’s a top 10 record right now and it’s a top 10 ringtone. The video even made no. 5 on 106 And Park. I’m excited to see it all happen. I’m really promoting her grassroots and making sure that everyone understands what she is about. She came to me with two million people watching her on YouTube. I had to connect both worlds.

How much of an adjustment has it been going independent?

It feels incredible. But it also makes me question what I was doing in my career before I went independent. Because now I’m really working. Niggas see me living the life and playing around. But to do this independent thing and to have it work, my life is completely different than it ever was. I’m doing everything. I do the blogging shit for real…I don’t have anyone writing it for me; I write up my own press releases so that people can get the right information about my artists. I shoot all these videos that you see on YouTube. And then I wake up every morning and do all the paper work. I’m spending my own money and talking to people I never used to talk to. It actually feels good.

Wow, sounds like a real 9 to 5…

[Laughs] I’m really working. At 16-17 years-old dealing with Columbia Records, I thought I would be doing what I’m doing now. I was working, but it was nothing like this. I rarely get two hours of sleep now. But it’s all worth it. To have Tyler Perry, a person of his caliber trust my instincts to put his soundtrack on So So Def. And then for a legend like Janet to do the same thing? I dreamed of having So So def becoming the Motown of my generation. If I can keep on doing what I’m doing, I believe that’s what I’m going to get to. I’ve proved to myself that I could put out records without the majors.

Tags:

NEW MUSIC JANET “NOTHING” OFFICIAL MUSIC VIDEO

78 Comments

JANET “NOTHING” OFFICIAL MUSIC VIDEO

Tags: , ,

JD's World WHY DID I GET MARRIED TOO? SOUNDTRACK

40 Comments

JERMAINE DUPRI
PRODUCES FIRST SINGLE FROM
WHY DID I GET MARRIED TOO? SOUNDTRACK

“NOTHING” BY JANET JACKSON AVAILABLE ON MARCH 30TH
Atlanta, GA (March 18, 2010) – Grammy Award-winning music producer/songwriter and CEO of So So Def Records, Jermaine Dupri, announced today a deal with world-renowned director/producer/ screenwriter, Tyler Perry for the release of the soundtrack for Why Did I Get Married Too? (in theaters April 2nd). The first single from the soundtrack of the highly anticipated sequel to Perry’s 2007 hit film, Why Did I Get Married? The song, entitled “Nothing” is performed by the legendary Janet Jackson and was co-produced by Bryan Michael Cox. It will be available on iTunes on Tuesday, March 30th.
Dupri, who thinks that music lovers will gravitate toward “Nothing” says, “you haven’t heard Janet sound like this in a long time and I think the song is perfect for the movie. It’s a really good record.”

Tags: , , , , ,

JD's World TWITTER UPDATE

39 Comments

WAIT TILL YALL HEAR HOW SHE SOUNDS WHOA!!!!!! WHY DID I GET MARRIED 2 COMING SOON

JanetJackson

  • Hey u guys, Jermaine n I just finished the theme song for the film. I hope u like!
  • 13 minutes ago from web
Tags:

NEW SHIT JANET JACKSON “MAKE ME” VIDEO

113 Comments

JANET NEW VIDEO (MAKE ME) MAKE SURE YALL CHECK HER OUT ON THE AMAs TOMORROW NIGHT

Tags: