Other tracks include guest appearances from Future, Swizz Beatz, Teyana Taylor, French Montana, Styles P, Yo Gotti and Jeezy.
Released in November 2017 by Def Jam, the album debuted at number 10 on the Billboard 200. When it came to villains, they were always the two that were brought up.” There’s a lot of comparisons when you want to compare to things, but that was one of the ones we were looking at with Freddy vs. Once you heard those footsteps, you knew he was in the area. The Jason character didn’t really say much, but you knew he was there. Freddy was a killer, and he might be a little more witty, cuz he talk more. Jason, where Jason, you knew he was killer. You knew his work and you knew what he do. In January 2017 (before the name change) Fabolous and Jadakiss were interviewed on HipHopDX and Fabolous shared the following: “We got the theme with Freddy vs. Jason, the mixtape name was later changed for legal reasons. Originally slated to be called Freddy vs.
#BEST WEEK EVER JADAKISS WHY MOVIE#
As you might guess from the Friday the 13th and Nightmare on Elm Street references, a horror movie theme inspired the album. The track is from the album Friday on Elm Street, a mixtape collaboration between rappers Fabolous and Jadakiss. And we already know the show has been renewed for season 6, so plenty more to come. The episode sets up another season of high stakes drama on Power. The Amazing Race, The Bourne Supremacy, Jadakiss Why and more. Japandroids, “Young Hearts Spark Fire”: Take it away, walkwithastagger: “It has the all important pitchfork blessing (both best new track and best new music), is riding the lo-fi noise-pop buzz … and the song has the perfect summer jam lyric: ‘i don’t wanna worry about dying, i just wanna worry about those sunshine girls.When Dre sticks the Cartel's cards inside Ghost…Ĭlosing out the episode, the song plays while Ghost gets an ominous warning as he’s grieving his daughter. On Friday, August 6 Best Month Ever Best Week Ever counts down the top 10 pop. Kelly Clarkson, “I Do Not Hook Up”: Troubling, and disappointing, signs of slippage - “Hook Up” fell from 23 to 32 on the Hot 100 this week.ġ0. Cobie Caillat, “Lucky” : Slow and steady for Mraz and Caillat - your radio stations might not love them, but the Adult Top 40 totally does.ĩ. Kanye West, “Walking on the Moon”: Radio’s modern-day Midas officially kicks off the “Song of the Summer” bid for his new single, premiering the video and performing on Jimmy Fallon (alas, sans Kanye).Ĩ. Also, per his very helpful Twitter, it’s Jeh-ruh-mih.ħ. b 27 25 20 JADAKISS THE LAST KISSRUFF RYDERS/D-BLOCK/ROC-A-FELLA/DEF JAM. Jeremih, “Birthday Sex”: Big stuff - an extremely sexy teaser clip for the video was released, finally clearing up just what the heck this song is about. 14 with 27,000 copies sold, outshining her prior album's best week. Perfectly mindless summer entertainment.Ħ. Jadakiss, “Who’s Real”: A local smash from Yonkers’ favorite son that’s getting tons of play on Hot 97. Green Day, “Know Your Enemy”: Colbert appearances, GMA shows, Rolling Stone covers - just another week for arguably the biggest American rock band today.ĥ. Drake, “Best I Ever Had”: Hard to recall more buzz for an artist who hasn’t even begun recording his debut album.Ĥ. 1 on the Hot 100, while “Imma Be” pops up at No. Black Eyed Peas, “Boom Boom Pow”: Are they attempting a flanking maneuver? “Boom Boom Pow” stays No. 6 this week on the Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart - doubly impressive when you consider it’s just a friggin’ mix-tape track.ġ. Drizzy’s already had to refute Rihanna make-out rumors and, more impressively, got Talib Kweli, Bun B, Lyor Cohen, and Kanye to show up at S.O.B.’s on Tuesday night. Note the rise: Last month we said he’s “maybe gonna be a famous rapper” this week, he just about already is. The man in question would be Drake, already beloved around here for his yeoman work on Degrassi: The Next Generation - his “Best I Ever Had” is this week’s Biggest Gainer. Further down the list, however, some interesting candidates have emerged, including a long-shot indie-rock duo, a veteran local-boy emcee, and the most famous Canadian rapper since Snow (sorry, Kardinal Offishall!). As expected, not much movement at the top: At this point, it’s looking like “Boom Boom Pow” and “Blame It” will have to suffer self-inflicted overexposure wounds to loosen their hold on the 1-2 rankings (considering the play counts they’re racking up, definitely a possibility). Clearly, no one has alerted him to the honor yet.Īmid the intermittent drizzle, the Power Rankings return bearing ten little nuggets of sunshine.