Category: Interviews

  • Interview: Carmelo Anthony at AMC Empire 25 Theater

    Carmelo Anthony at A Very Melo Christmas
    Images: NaShish Scott

    On Friday, December 20, the Carmelo Anthony Foundation teamed up with Fox Home Entertainment to host a special screening of Big at the AMC Empire 25 Theater in Times Square. 250 deserving middle school students enjoyed the afternoon with refreshments, red carpet treatment and a movie.

    Possibly twice the age of most in attendance, this time A Very Melo Christmas celebrated Big’s 25th Anniversary release. All of the children looked happy and the New York Knicks Kids were exceptionally cute and talented.

    Carmelo Anthony with the kids

    Pop corn for the kids

    We had a minute to talk with Carmelo Anthony about how his foundation selects children, and the feeling that he gets when he sees the children smile:

    Esparo Voltaire, Jr. interviewing Carmelo Anthony

    We see that giving back is something that you like to do a lot. Specifically, around Thanksgiving you were at The Boys & Girls Club [giving away turkeys and packages], so how are these kids chosen?

    It’s different groups that we chose. You know, a lot of the times, we let the kids submit essays and then we’ll read the essays and things like that then, there’s a group that we select from that. Today, we have three different groups, so it’s all across the board. But regardless, I’m just here to have some fun. For me, just to get away from basketball for a day and just removing myself from that and just have fun with it.

    Carmelo Anthony at AMC Empire 25 Theater

    Carmelo Anthony with the kids, red carpet

    What’s the feeling that you get from seeing all of these kids smile?

    It’s inspiring to me. It’s motivating to me, to want to keep doing my day job, to the best of my ability. [Because I know it will motivate others.]

    Our Editor and team with Carmelo Anthony

    Evan Josloff with DUNK360

    Interview by Esparo Voltaire, Jr.


    For more Carmelo Anthony, just click here.

  • Interview: MNDR at Los Globos

    MNDR lately

    As huge fans of MNDR and their funky collaborations with legendary musicians like Q-Tip and Mark Ronson, we were not only happy to check one more thing off of our “media bucket list”, we enjoyed a good conversation with Amanda Warner, ½ of MNDR. She is a good person. Listen to our exclusive interview powered by Audibase above, so you can hear what we mean.


    What would you want a new listener to think when they first hear your sound and style?

    Well, for people who haven’t heard MNDR — the thing I’d hope to achieve is just that they feel like they have connected, that it didn’t really matter who they were, or what they are into. When they hear it and are like ā€œWhat the?ā€ and they hear explosions, brain explosions.

    Where does MNDR come from?

    I originally started the project in Oakland. I lived in Oakland for a really long time. I’m not originally from these areas. I’m originally from the upper Midwest area, from there I moved to New York. I sort of wanted to explore pop music instead of experimental music and techno. So, this version of MNDR is really born out of New York.

    What is the first musical memory you have?

    The first memory I have is probably, my dad’s a musician, so it was like my dad really liked Creed. We had like a music room and we would listen to that and he was teaching me how to play stuff.

    Where do you want to go? Like, where do you see the future?

    Hmm, like where do I see that max, climax? Honestly, like 2 things as of recent… Like this year I moved to L.A. like little under a year ago and I have done a lot of writing for other artist, and that’s been super awesome. I just wrote melody and lyric for Dev’s record, Rita Ora’s Record, Kylie Minouge’s record and a host of other artist. I just did a record with Sean Paul, I just got done working in the studio with him that was amazing. But, now I want to really focus on production, go back to making tracks and beats. I didn’t do that at all this year, I just wrote. We hope that were going to be doing a lot of MNDR sort of Ep’s and different collaborations and I really want to get a chance to produce a track for an artist, Like full track, the track and not just the song writing for like a big artist, like Rita or someone big. So my hopes would be one foot more into the studio and then… I really want to break a song on the radio, I really do. I don’t know if I will be able to do it, My shit might be to left, left to center you know what I mean, I would like to break fm radio.

    I can’t wait to hear you produce someone’s album.

    Those are my lofty goals.

    Okay so, the last thing I want to ask you. What do you think when you hear me say ‘GrungeCake’?

    GrungeCake? Actually, I think of 2 vegan cupcakes with an ill flannel hugging. No seriously, this is what I see. The vegan cupcakes are hugging. It was like so much so that I feel like I have seen that before on the Internet. It’s a very vivid image. But, they’re vegan cupcakes.

    For sure, if we go there, we would make them gluten-free.

    Yes, gluten-free, the whole sha-bang.

    Let’s make them sprouted, fuck it.

    Yeah, like the cupcakes came from the ground.

    *We’d like to thank Tilt Magazine for this opportunity.


    For more about MNDR and Tilt, just click here and here.

  • Song Premiere: Histibe’s “Aqua Cypher XL”

    That wet-wet.

    From The Editor: Histibe, the Ukrainian-based D+B producer whose been featured on some of the web’s most prestigious music outlets, selected us to premiere his new track titled “Aqua Cypher XL” from his upcoming album MILLENNIUM DRUM N BASS set to release December 16.

    If it isn’t completely obvious and potent, we are honored and very privileged and honored to be a part of Histibe’s journey, and luckily for Histibe, it doesn’t stop there. It gets better. For this very occasion, he teamed up with Art Director Joe Perez of Kanye West’s DONDA collective to produce the outstanding abstract artwork or packaging, you see above. Not only is the cover minimal in design, it captures the essence of Histibe’s recent production value and the personal message he chooses to share with his fans, this time around. Thank you.


    When Mr. Alekseyenko puts his mind to something, you’re in for a wild ride. Known to the world as an eclectic producer slash DJ and Sound Designer creating some of the most diverse yet enjoyable melodies, Histibe is back again with some new tunes. Histibe takes us on a journey to his past on his latest work. Being submerged into the drum and bass culture at a very early age, He teaches us the many variables of the art of bass music.

    If you have listened to Histibe’s last album ā€œTake The Form,ā€ he was able to pull you through a musical maze of highs and lows, loud and soft tinkering with everything from pitch to dissonance. We recently sat down with Histibe to catch us up on the new album and what he has been up to these days. December 16 seems so far away to wait on good music, right? Well, here is a little something to hold you over until then, Histibe and GrungeCake have teamed up to bring you an exclusive track release ā€œAqua Cypher XL.ā€

    Feeling a little drummy or a lot bassy, get ready because here it is, the exclusive premiere of “Aqua Cypher XL”:


    You’ve been very busy, releasing new music, getting lots of great press and now, you releasing a new album. Are you excited?

    Absolutely, I am excited to release this compilation. It was challenging for me to release 2 albums in a year. The main idea, this time around, was to really show more of my life and emotions. It’s all about self-expression, really. Basically, My Mask’s diary continues to grow with new pages.

    What should listeners expect to receive from this album?

    I think this question, can best be answered within the statement of my album’s Digital Booklet:

      The new millennium has brought some new music to a new generation. This was around 2003. A new wave of Neurofunk & Techstep Drum & Bass. But everybody here called it Drum & Bass or simply DNB. I was 15. There were no good vinyl shops here in Kyiv. I think at that time there was no iTunes even. My friend was getting some CDs from some DJs who was getting them from the abroad. That’s how we share music at the time. Also, I was making rap records at that time and was close to the various music communities in the city, but this is the whole different story. Around 2005, I literally stuck in music production. Virtuoso bass, drums, and all the energy around this. It was the new MILLENNIUM DRUM N BASS for me. I have a lot of memories about that time. Now allow me to pre-open the mask and present you a part of my life story with the help of this tracks.

    Would you say the sound of this album is a continuation of “Take The Form,” or is it in its own lane?

    For me, ā€œTake The Formā€ is still a very special album. It’s complex, and you probably couldn’t understand it during your first experience or listen. I believe the songwriting is very rare, and might go over the head of an average person. Symbolism and abstractionism are not for everyone. With this album, MILLENNIUM DRUM N BASS, I want to show tracks with a more dynamic sound. There are stories behind tracks like “Pulsar” and “World Without Clocks.ā€ MILLENNIUM DRUM N BASS is like a small book with heavy, colourful pages that can go into its own lane and be a part of series, at the same time.

    In typical Histibe fashion, your album artwork is always a treat! Can you give us a sneak peek or a little info on the artwork for your album?

    My cover art, the three singles and digital booklet were all done by Joe Perez. It was a dream for me to work with such an amazing artist. I was a fan of his work since Kanye West’s ā€œCruel Summer,ā€ but I never had the opportunity to share my music with him. Finally, in 2013 I had the chance. It was a pleasure working with Joe. A lot of enthusiasm, dynamics and ideas. His approach and the result is at a very high level. The works of Joe are like a digital display of my music. This is exactly what I needed for my tracks.

    What are your favorite tracks from this album?

    Going back in time, ā€œTears Of A Machineā€ was released on the legendary Nerve Recordings, ā€œForgotten Stationā€ was liked by Martijn from Noisia. ā€œSo Far,ā€ led me to JAY Z’s Life+Times… So, I want to leave this choice for listeners, for me personally, each track has a meaning.

    Well said. What’s next?

    I have plans to release new music and videos in 2014, amongst other surprises. The New Mask Movement EP is coming soon, and also, to be launched is a remix contest for the track “So Farā€ in collaboration with Loopmasters and juno.co.uk. It includes prizes and support for new producers. Stay tuned for the future projects on histibe.com.

    It was nice catching up with you, Histibe.

    It was a pleasure chatting with you as well. Best wishes from Ukraine!


    To view the track listing and preorder, just click here and for more coverage on Histibe, click this link.

  • Interview: Carmelo Anthony at Madison Square Garden Boys & Girls Club

    Giving back in a big way

    Tavia Mapp and Carmelo Anthony
    Image: NaShish Scott for GrungeCake

    On Friday, November 15, we joined the long lost of media chosen to cover a great cause presented by Avon, Carmelo Anthony and his foundation, in which 800 Bronx area families (of about four persons) were given a week supply of food weighing 25 lbs., essentials weighing 10-lbs. and a turkey for Thanksgiving. If you’re wondered how the families were chosen: Feed The Children partnered with Madison Square Garden Boys & Girls Club to pre-identify families receiving the boxes. Click here to see lovely images of the event now.


    My best friend Tavia (shown in image taken by NaShish Scott) interviewed the professional basketball player Carmelo Anthony about the event, his organization and our company. Hear the audio clip powered by Audibase below:

    Did you know?

    More than one in four children living in New York City (30 percent) is considered impoverished. In fact, the number of children living in poverty in New York (900,626) could fill the Madison Square Garden more than 45 times.

    For more information about the event, just click here.

  • Interview: Carmelo Anthony at Madison Square Garden Boys & Girls Club

    Giving back in a big way

    Tavia Mapp and Carmelo Anthony
    Image: NaShish Scott for GrungeCake

    On Friday, November 15, we joined the long lost of media chosen to cover a great cause presented by Avon, Carmelo Anthony and his foundation, in which 800 Bronx area families (of about four persons) were given a week supply of food weighing 25 lbs., essentials weighing 10-lbs. and a turkey for Thanksgiving. If you’re wondered how the families were chosen: Feed The Children partnered with Madison Square Garden Boys & Girls Club to pre-identify families receiving the boxes. Click here to see lovely images of the event now.


    My best friend Tavia (shown in image taken by NaShish Scott) interviewed the professional basketball player Carmelo Anthony about the event, his organization and our company. Hear the audio clip powered by Audibase below:

    Did you know?

    More than one in four children living in New York City (30 percent) is considered impoverished. In fact, the number of children living in poverty in New York (900,626) could fill the Madison Square Garden more than 45 times.

    For more information about the event, just click here.

  • Interview: Hill Harper on ‘Letters to an Incarcerated Brother’

    'Letters to an Incarcerated Brother' book cover

    L

    ast week, during my one-on-one with Hill Harper, we talked about what inspired him to author such a motivational book like ā€˜Letters to an Incarcerated Brother,’ demystifying the process of success, the dangers of what he calls ā€œlotto mentalityā€ and how his late father (a psychiatrist who worked in a maximum-security prison in Fort Madison, Iowa) associated a hot breakfast with being a mother. Besides being a genuine man who encourages and gives hope to others, Mr Harper is also best known for his roles on CSI: NY and CSI: Miami as Dr Sheldon Hawkes, and is listed as a New York Times Bestselling Author four times.

    Sure, Mr. Harper is a Harvard Law School alumnus, a humanitarian and a successful award-winning actor with over 20 years of experience and a meritorious rƩsumƩ, but he still faces dissuasion, like the rest of us.

    “The publishing company did not want to publish this book. So, I had to rework my contract, take a compensation cut, do a number of things to get this book published and that’s why, in part, I’m so proud of it because they told me people wouldn’t support this book. They told me people would sit back and say ā€˜Well, I’m not in prison, why would I read this book?’ and it’s not true, he admitted to HuffPost Live.”

    Being someone who aspires to be a notable and successful writer, role model and a groundbreaking woman in the entertainment industry via the means of journalism, the following questions were important to ask for the benefit of my audience and myself:

    If this book is something you made because of the tragedy of African-American crime and conviction rates, is there a particular inmate or a story that compelled you to write it?

    The very first letter, in the book, that I present was a letter that brought me to my knees when I got it. The earnestness and the honesty from the young man who wrote it to me said,

    ā€˜My name is Brian. I’m sixteen years old and I’m in jail,’ and he goes on to say that he didn’t have a role model that’s why he’s in jail, but he has one now and his name is Hill Harper,’ and that struck me like a ton of bricks because if he’s going to tell me, that I’m his role model then, what am I going to do to step up to the plate? To actually serve in that capacity. What am I going to do to make sure that I am serving in that way?

    I started researching. I started writing. I started meeting and interviewing and doing whatever I could to work on this issue, and this book is my most important book to date and I’m asking people to support it and read it. Again, it’s not just about people — you don’t have to be in a physical prison to hopefully enjoy and get something out of this book, but obviously, for the brothers and sisters who are in prison, I’m asking people to get the book to them. [I’m] asking them to go onto — I created a site called incarceratedbrother.com where people could get a list of prisons, Warden’s names, so, if they wanted to go on Amazon or whatever, and have the book sent directly and donate it to the prison library.

    This is a transformative work because, in many ways, we are ignoring our brothers and sisters once they get sent off to prison and we’re doing them as well as us, a disservice.

    In a recent interview, you talked about demystifying the process of success. Could you speak a little bit more about that? How would one, whether it is someone that is in prison mentally or physically, be able to break down the barriers or the bridges that we create, in order to attain our success? What speckle of advice could you share with us?

    You know, one thing that came out of this book without question, was me interviewing all of the different experts and having different people who are certainly much smarter than I am, contributing to the book. You realize success is a system. It’s not some kind of a mystical thing where it’s good luck or it’s this or it’s that, it’s just a system, and it’s about making things more conscious to our subconscious, and there’s so many things that most of us carry from our history to our gender, race, socioeconomic status, culture, [and] where we grew up. We carry all this stuff, and it’s all subconscious and we end up making choices, and we can’t even articulate why we made this choice versus this choice or why we made this decision versus this [decision]. And what success in the system means, it means taking a step back from all [of] that and making it all conscious. Sketching it out, is it active architecture. Blueprinting it out. Blueprinting every minute of your day, if that’s what it takes.

    Saying: I’m going to do this, then, I’m going to do this. Then, I’m going to do this. I’m going to make these 7 phone calls between 7:45 and 8. And now, I am going to make these 10 emails between 8 o’clock and 9. Then, I’m going to have breakfast from 9 to 9:30. Then, I’m going to brush my teeth from 9:30-9:40. That’s what it’s about. Literally creating a system of success and filing your blueprint and knowing why you’re using your time, the way you are, why you’re making every decision you’re making and therefore, things start to move. It’s just like a car. Cars only work, if they got gas in the tank. If you actually turn it on, if you put it in the drive, you take your foot off the break, and you press the gas. You can do any of those by themselves, and independently, the car does not move. So, we have to think of ourselves like that, and part of the problem is if you come from a community when you haven’t been taught those lessons organically or you don’t have the support network where they kind of make you do it that anyway, then you’re like kind of left out and you end up with what I call ā€œlotto mentality.ā€

    ā€˜Yo, I just need to win the lotto, man’ or what a lot of young brothers say, is the only way they can get out is crack, rap or ball. That’s it. As if, literally those are the three alternatives that they have. Someone convinced them of that lie, and therefore, they make choices that fulfil that lie, but it’s just absolutely untrue.

    Well, I think that has a lot to do with what they’re seeing though. Maybe, they don’t necessarily see the path of a doctor or an actor.

    You’re absolutely right. They will role model what they see, without question. Three-quarters of our young men are being raised in households not headed by the father. They don’t see that father getting up in the morning and going to work. Right? They don’t see it cause he’s not there. So, they don’t model that, but who do they see the most, who’s an adult? They see the drug dealer on the corner. Why? Cause that person’s not at work. The other men in the community that are actually going to work, they don’t see them, cause they’re at work. And so, it’s in common upon all of us in the communities to reinforce these other images. Take them to see people at work. Take them to a firehouse. Take them to a factory. Take them to see these images, so we’re questioning what’s good parenting. You understand? It’s like, the responsibility still falls back on us in the household. The world is not going to raise your child, and if you know that most of the imagery your child sees is negative, on the corner, then take him somewhere else so he’s not on the corner. Make him crack open a book like Letters to an Incarcerated Brother and write a book report about what he reads, but you gotta read the book too, so you know what’s he talking about.

    So, it’s pretty much — Everyone has to take a leadership role, in order to make it work?

    Without question. Without question, and then obviously, this is a bottom-up approach. This book represents individual responsibility approach, and I want to be clear, I’m not advocating the top-down approach either. It’s flawed, the system is broken. We need changes to the system itself, but they are not mutually exclusive. Meaning, just because the system is broken, doesn’t mean you shouldn’t take personal responsibility to getting your stuff together.

    Who did you look to as a mentor? Who was in the leadership position for you, for which you were able to not end up like someone that might be a statistic?

    I was lucky. I was raised by a single parent, but I was raised by my father. So I looked at my father. I saw him get up every morning. My father believed that he was father and mother. His mother cooked him breakfast — This is how crazy and deeply subconscious things are — His mother, my grandmother, cooked him breakfast every morning, a hot breakfast every morning, and somehow in his mind, that’s what he thought mothers were. He associated a hot breakfast with being a mother. So, he said When I was a single parent, I wanted to get up every morning and cook you a hot breakfast because that’s what being a mother is. So, I want to fill that role too.’ So, he cooked me a hot breakfast every morning…

    Wow.

    And he was not a touchy-feely type of dad, like ā€˜I love you’ or anything like that. None of that, but he cooked me a hot breakfast every morning and he felt that’s what a mother does. He needed to fill that role. So, I’ve learned about being a man from him and I respect him for that. He’s passed away and I appreciate — that you know — He wasn’t a perfect man, but nobody is perfect. Nobody expects perfection, but I was definitely blessed to be raised by someone I saw get up every morning, work hard and support me and my brother.

    There are approximately 20 copies of ‘Letters to an Incarcerated Brother’ left in stock on Amazon. Purchase it as a gift for a loved one in need of motivation this holiday season and/or for yourself. I think we all need a tinge of encouragement a few times a week.


    About Letters to an Incarcerated Brother: Encouragement, Hope, and Healing for Inmates and Their Loved Ones

    A compelling, important addition to Hill Harper’s bestselling series, inspired by the numerous inmates who write to him seeking guidance. After the publication of Hill Harper’s Letters to a Young Brother, which was named Best Book for Young Adults by the American Library Association and won two NAACP awards, the accomplished actor began to receive an increasing number of moving letters from inmates who yearned for a connection with a successful role model. Disturbed by the fact that the incarceration rate for black men is more than six times higher than the rate for white men, Harper made it a priority to address the tragedy of African American crime and conviction rates.

    A powerful message from the heart, Letters to an Incarcerated Brother provides advice and inspiration in the face of despair along with encouraging words for restoring a sense of self-worth. As the founder of Manifest Your Destiny, a nonprofit outreach program for at-risk teens, Harper has seen firsthand the transformative effect of mentorship and keeping an eye to the future. The latest addition to his Letters series (Letters to a Young Brother, Letters to a Young Sister) delivers this wisdom through visionary, compassionate messages in response to real-life circumstances drawn from his readers. As with the other Letters books, Harper will include moving contributions from top educators, activists, thought leaders, and entertainers. The spirit can always triumph, Harper assures us, and we can conquer the voices of doubt and become active architects of our lives.


    GrungeCake

  • Interview: Hill Harper on ‘Letters to an Incarcerated Brother’

    'Letters to an Incarcerated Brother' book cover

    L

    ast week, during my one-on-one with Hill Harper, we talked about what inspired him to author such a motivational book like ā€˜Letters to an Incarcerated Brother,’ demystifying the process of success, the dangers of what he calls ā€œlotto mentalityā€ and how his late father (a psychiatrist who worked in a maximum-security prison in Fort Madison, Iowa) associated a hot breakfast with being a mother. Besides being a genuine man who encourages and gives hope to others, Mr Harper is also best known for his roles on CSI: NY and CSI: Miami as Dr Sheldon Hawkes, and is listed as a New York Times Bestselling Author four times.

    Sure, Mr. Harper is a Harvard Law School alumnus, a humanitarian and a successful award-winning actor with over 20 years of experience and a meritorious rƩsumƩ, but he still faces dissuasion, like the rest of us.

    “The publishing company did not want to publish this book. So, I had to rework my contract, take a compensation cut, do a number of things to get this book published and that’s why, in part, I’m so proud of it because they told me people wouldn’t support this book. They told me people would sit back and say ā€˜Well, I’m not in prison, why would I read this book?’ and it’s not true, he admitted to HuffPost Live.”

    Being someone who aspires to be a notable and successful writer, role model and a groundbreaking woman in the entertainment industry via the means of journalism, the following questions were important to ask for the benefit of my audience and myself:

    If this book is something you made because of the tragedy of African-American crime and conviction rates, is there a particular inmate or a story that compelled you to write it?

    The very first letter, in the book, that I present was a letter that brought me to my knees when I got it. The earnestness and the honesty from the young man who wrote it to me said,

    ā€˜My name is Brian. I’m sixteen years old and I’m in jail,’ and he goes on to say that he didn’t have a role model that’s why he’s in jail, but he has one now and his name is Hill Harper,’ and that struck me like a ton of bricks because if he’s going to tell me, that I’m his role model then, what am I going to do to step up to the plate? To actually serve in that capacity. What am I going to do to make sure that I am serving in that way?

    I started researching. I started writing. I started meeting and interviewing and doing whatever I could to work on this issue, and this book is my most important book to date and I’m asking people to support it and read it. Again, it’s not just about people — you don’t have to be in a physical prison to hopefully enjoy and get something out of this book, but obviously, for the brothers and sisters who are in prison, I’m asking people to get the book to them. [I’m] asking them to go onto — I created a site called incarceratedbrother.com where people could get a list of prisons, Warden’s names, so, if they wanted to go on Amazon or whatever, and have the book sent directly and donate it to the prison library.

    This is a transformative work because, in many ways, we are ignoring our brothers and sisters once they get sent off to prison and we’re doing them as well as us, a disservice.

    In a recent interview, you talked about demystifying the process of success. Could you speak a little bit more about that? How would one, whether it is someone that is in prison mentally or physically, be able to break down the barriers or the bridges that we create, in order to attain our success? What speckle of advice could you share with us?

    You know, one thing that came out of this book without question, was me interviewing all of the different experts and having different people who are certainly much smarter than I am, contributing to the book. You realize success is a system. It’s not some kind of a mystical thing where it’s good luck or it’s this or it’s that, it’s just a system, and it’s about making things more conscious to our subconscious, and there’s so many things that most of us carry from our history to our gender, race, socioeconomic status, culture, [and] where we grew up. We carry all this stuff, and it’s all subconscious and we end up making choices, and we can’t even articulate why we made this choice versus this choice or why we made this decision versus this [decision]. And what success in the system means, it means taking a step back from all [of] that and making it all conscious. Sketching it out, is it active architecture. Blueprinting it out. Blueprinting every minute of your day, if that’s what it takes.

    Saying: I’m going to do this, then, I’m going to do this. Then, I’m going to do this. I’m going to make these 7 phone calls between 7:45 and 8. And now, I am going to make these 10 emails between 8 o’clock and 9. Then, I’m going to have breakfast from 9 to 9:30. Then, I’m going to brush my teeth from 9:30-9:40. That’s what it’s about. Literally creating a system of success and filing your blueprint and knowing why you’re using your time, the way you are, why you’re making every decision you’re making and therefore, things start to move. It’s just like a car. Cars only work, if they got gas in the tank. If you actually turn it on, if you put it in the drive, you take your foot off the break, and you press the gas. You can do any of those by themselves, and independently, the car does not move. So, we have to think of ourselves like that, and part of the problem is if you come from a community when you haven’t been taught those lessons organically or you don’t have the support network where they kind of make you do it that anyway, then you’re like kind of left out and you end up with what I call ā€œlotto mentality.ā€

    ā€˜Yo, I just need to win the lotto, man’ or what a lot of young brothers say, is the only way they can get out is crack, rap or ball. That’s it. As if, literally those are the three alternatives that they have. Someone convinced them of that lie, and therefore, they make choices that fulfil that lie, but it’s just absolutely untrue.

    Well, I think that has a lot to do with what they’re seeing though. Maybe, they don’t necessarily see the path of a doctor or an actor.

    You’re absolutely right. They will role model what they see, without question. Three-quarters of our young men are being raised in households not headed by the father. They don’t see that father getting up in the morning and going to work. Right? They don’t see it cause he’s not there. So, they don’t model that, but who do they see the most, who’s an adult? They see the drug dealer on the corner. Why? Cause that person’s not at work. The other men in the community that are actually going to work, they don’t see them, cause they’re at work. And so, it’s in common upon all of us in the communities to reinforce these other images. Take them to see people at work. Take them to a firehouse. Take them to a factory. Take them to see these images, so we’re questioning what’s good parenting. You understand? It’s like, the responsibility still falls back on us in the household. The world is not going to raise your child, and if you know that most of the imagery your child sees is negative, on the corner, then take him somewhere else so he’s not on the corner. Make him crack open a book like Letters to an Incarcerated Brother and write a book report about what he reads, but you gotta read the book too, so you know what’s he talking about.

    So, it’s pretty much — Everyone has to take a leadership role, in order to make it work?

    Without question. Without question, and then obviously, this is a bottom-up approach. This book represents individual responsibility approach, and I want to be clear, I’m not advocating the top-down approach either. It’s flawed, the system is broken. We need changes to the system itself, but they are not mutually exclusive. Meaning, just because the system is broken, doesn’t mean you shouldn’t take personal responsibility to getting your stuff together.

    Who did you look to as a mentor? Who was in the leadership position for you, for which you were able to not end up like someone that might be a statistic?

    I was lucky. I was raised by a single parent, but I was raised by my father. So I looked at my father. I saw him get up every morning. My father believed that he was father and mother. His mother cooked him breakfast — This is how crazy and deeply subconscious things are — His mother, my grandmother, cooked him breakfast every morning, a hot breakfast every morning, and somehow in his mind, that’s what he thought mothers were. He associated a hot breakfast with being a mother. So, he said When I was a single parent, I wanted to get up every morning and cook you a hot breakfast because that’s what being a mother is. So, I want to fill that role too.’ So, he cooked me a hot breakfast every morning…

    Wow.

    And he was not a touchy-feely type of dad, like ā€˜I love you’ or anything like that. None of that, but he cooked me a hot breakfast every morning and he felt that’s what a mother does. He needed to fill that role. So, I’ve learned about being a man from him and I respect him for that. He’s passed away and I appreciate — that you know — He wasn’t a perfect man, but nobody is perfect. Nobody expects perfection, but I was definitely blessed to be raised by someone I saw get up every morning, work hard and support me and my brother.

    There are approximately 20 copies of ‘Letters to an Incarcerated Brother’ left in stock on Amazon. Purchase it as a gift for a loved one in need of motivation this holiday season and/or for yourself. I think we all need a tinge of encouragement a few times a week.


    About Letters to an Incarcerated Brother: Encouragement, Hope, and Healing for Inmates and Their Loved Ones

    A compelling, important addition to Hill Harper’s bestselling series, inspired by the numerous inmates who write to him seeking guidance. After the publication of Hill Harper’s Letters to a Young Brother, which was named Best Book for Young Adults by the American Library Association and won two NAACP awards, the accomplished actor began to receive an increasing number of moving letters from inmates who yearned for a connection with a successful role model. Disturbed by the fact that the incarceration rate for black men is more than six times higher than the rate for white men, Harper made it a priority to address the tragedy of African American crime and conviction rates.

    A powerful message from the heart, Letters to an Incarcerated Brother provides advice and inspiration in the face of despair along with encouraging words for restoring a sense of self-worth. As the founder of Manifest Your Destiny, a nonprofit outreach program for at-risk teens, Harper has seen firsthand the transformative effect of mentorship and keeping an eye to the future. The latest addition to his Letters series (Letters to a Young Brother, Letters to a Young Sister) delivers this wisdom through visionary, compassionate messages in response to real-life circumstances drawn from his readers. As with the other Letters books, Harper will include moving contributions from top educators, activists, thought leaders, and entertainers. The spirit can always triumph, Harper assures us, and we can conquer the voices of doubt and become active architects of our lives.


    GrungeCake

  • Update: Aunjoli

    aunjoli-update-black-outfit-grungecake

    Growing together

    Subsequent to the kickoff of a rare and new online feature series, no other magazine has dared to produce, our female readership has increased by a whopping forty-eight percent. Since March, young women near and far, were ā€œnewly motivatedā€ and ā€œmore courageousā€ after our debut. Before us, the hashtag #CakeGirls wasn’t as cute or celebratory. Instead, women in bikinis and boys with bundles of shabby American currency would fill the feed. Every now and then, because of us, you can find other beautiful women who are smartly handling business in a way that is socially acceptable in most parts of the world.

    Aunjoli

    Since the first feature, Aunjoli resigned to a modeling agency, worked with some well-known sports brands and is making a good name for herself. She still wishes to run her own modeling agency in the future, but now, she’s focusing on building her name. Please watch this video where she discusses all mentioned, her current music obsessions, the other Cake Girls and the growth of GrungeCake. Also, visit this link to see more images of each look.

    Aunjoli

    Aunjoli

    Black & White Outfit:

    Jacket: Members Only
    Jeans: 15|Fifteen
    T-Shirt: Junk Food Clothing
    Ring: Milk the Goat

    Ciao Outfit:

    Sweatshirt: Junk Food Clothing
    Headscarf: ban.do
    Bracelet: Hipanema
    Jeans: 15|Fifteen

    Bud Outfit:

    T-Shirt: Junk Food Clothing
    Pants: Level 99

    We’d like to give a very special thanks to Michele Marie PR.

    For more Aunjoli, just click here.


    Richardine Bartee (Editorial Photographer and Editor)
    GrungeCake Staff (Behind-the-Scenes Videographer and Photographer)

  • First Look: Adi Ulmansky

    Whether cotton candy or trolls of the 90s inspire Adi Ulmansky, we love it all.

    Adi Ulmansky

    Last week, 25-year-old singer, rapper and producer Adi Ulmansky, came by Dungeon Beach recording studio in Williamsburg, Brooklyn to discuss being in the States for the first time, meeting Moby at one of her gigs and her unique fashion mode seemingly inspired by Sailor Moon, the Japanese manga series turned television series which aired on American networks from 1992-1993. Because of it, I think she will be one of the luckier musicians to garner a die-hard fan base who will inevitably emulate her fashion sense Ć  la Nicki Minaj and Lady Gaga.

    We’re not sure if there’s something in the bourekas or the ladane in Western Eurasia, but we’re coming across some talent so wintry, Vostok, Antarctica doesn’t hold a finger to their cool. We are stirred by artists in Jerusalem and its surrounding countries. Leading the pack for the girls, Adi Ulmansky is a successful young star whose appeared on the Israeli equivalent of American Idol, MTV and the American Express where she was selected for their Young Professionals project. To date, she’s released two projects ā€œShit Just Got Realā€ and ā€œHurricane Girlā€ which have been premiered praised on American-based online publications like Vice, The Guardian and JAY Z’s Life+Times.

    Adi Ulmansky

    When explaining why she came to the States, she expressed,

    I just really wanted to try and understand how it would feel to perform here because I’ve played lots of gigs in London, Prague, Europe and Israel of course.

    Shortly after, Adi Ulmansky shared that she has come to the realization that she needs to be here, in New York City.

    I have to move here. It’s where things will happen. I am in love with New York. I mean wow. [It’s] Just beyond expectations. [It’s] Just like amazing so it feels really good to be [here] and I was apart of CMJ. I think I’m really trying to create something that, just like my music, would combine different elements from different cultures. I’m really inspired by anime and the Japanese culture alongside Israeli culture, which is like, more inspired by Arab music and Arab style. I find [Arab culture] very cool. [My] braids [are] more like the 90s vibe and all the tie-dye shirts, so I’m really trying to take what I like from each and every genre or style.


    Can you tell us a little bit about your current project that you have and your time in the States?

    I just got here a walk and a half ago and first, she went to Los Angeles to play Culture Collide which is Filter Magazine’s showcase and that was pretty cool because it was kind of small but industry people and very important people to meet and perform to. Moby came to one of my gigs,ā€ she gleamed. ā€œI was like holy sh*t. That was quite amazing!

    Did he speak to you at all?

    Yeah. I couldn’t talk, you know? I was like, ā€œAre you serious?ā€ As she gasps for air to reenact her special moment.

    When you first heard the name GrungeCake, what came to mind?

    Wow, that’s a tough question. The word grunge for me is super meaningful because you know, I grew up listening to grunge music. I’m really into, you know, both musically and style wise, I’m really into all aspects of grunge. So, I guess that’s the main thing that came into my mind but — It’s funny because today, I’m doing electronic music. I don’t really do anything that has to do with rock or guitars, but you know, I grew up listening to that music. I used to play guitar.

    You definitely have the attitude. You can see it. You exemplify it.

    That’s funny. It’s kind of the first time anyone says it to me.

    Adi Ulmansky's "Hurricane Girl EP"

    Lastly, Adi Ulmansky reflected on Dungeon Beach:

    I live in Israel and there are amazing studios, cool stuff but wow, I’m just like.ā€ She’s working on a new EP which she deems ā€œa step upā€ and clues that it’s going to be ā€œway more melodic and way more aggressiveā€ from her previous releases.

    It’s her goal to combine rap and the melodic side of her music. She’s also preparing to perform all over the States and Europe. Stay up-to-date with Adi Ulmansky and visit her website to connect with her on your desired social networks. Then, download her latest project at your convenience.


    GrungeCake

  • First Look: Adi Ulmansky

    Whether cotton candy or trolls of the 90s inspire Adi Ulmansky, we love it all.

    Adi Ulmansky

    Last week, 25-year-old singer, rapper and producer Adi Ulmansky, came by Dungeon Beach recording studio in Williamsburg, Brooklyn to discuss being in the States for the first time, meeting Moby at one of her gigs and her unique fashion mode seemingly inspired by Sailor Moon, the Japanese manga series turned television series which aired on American networks from 1992-1993. Because of it, I think she will be one of the luckier musicians to garner a die-hard fan base who will inevitably emulate her fashion sense Ć  la Nicki Minaj and Lady Gaga.

    We’re not sure if there’s something in the bourekas or the ladane in Western Eurasia, but we’re coming across some talent so wintry, Vostok, Antarctica doesn’t hold a finger to their cool. We are stirred by artists in Jerusalem and its surrounding countries. Leading the pack for the girls, Adi Ulmansky is a successful young star whose appeared on the Israeli equivalent of American Idol, MTV and the American Express where she was selected for their Young Professionals project. To date, she’s released two projects ā€œShit Just Got Realā€ and ā€œHurricane Girlā€ which have been premiered praised on American-based online publications like Vice, The Guardian and JAY Z’s Life+Times.

    Adi Ulmansky

    When explaining why she came to the States, she expressed,

    I just really wanted to try and understand how it would feel to perform here because I’ve played lots of gigs in London, Prague, Europe and Israel of course.

    Shortly after, Adi Ulmansky shared that she has come to the realization that she needs to be here, in New York City.

    I have to move here. It’s where things will happen. I am in love with New York. I mean wow. [It’s] Just beyond expectations. [It’s] Just like amazing so it feels really good to be [here] and I was apart of CMJ. I think I’m really trying to create something that, just like my music, would combine different elements from different cultures. I’m really inspired by anime and the Japanese culture alongside Israeli culture, which is like, more inspired by Arab music and Arab style. I find [Arab culture] very cool. [My] braids [are] more like the 90s vibe and all the tie-dye shirts, so I’m really trying to take what I like from each and every genre or style.


    Can you tell us a little bit about your current project that you have and your time in the States?

    I just got here a walk and a half ago and first, she went to Los Angeles to play Culture Collide which is Filter Magazine’s showcase and that was pretty cool because it was kind of small but industry people and very important people to meet and perform to. Moby came to one of my gigs,ā€ she gleamed. ā€œI was like holy sh*t. That was quite amazing!

    Did he speak to you at all?

    Yeah. I couldn’t talk, you know? I was like, ā€œAre you serious?ā€ As she gasps for air to reenact her special moment.

    When you first heard the name GrungeCake, what came to mind?

    Wow, that’s a tough question. The word grunge for me is super meaningful because you know, I grew up listening to grunge music. I’m really into, you know, both musically and style wise, I’m really into all aspects of grunge. So, I guess that’s the main thing that came into my mind but — It’s funny because today, I’m doing electronic music. I don’t really do anything that has to do with rock or guitars, but you know, I grew up listening to that music. I used to play guitar.

    You definitely have the attitude. You can see it. You exemplify it.

    That’s funny. It’s kind of the first time anyone says it to me.

    Adi Ulmansky's "Hurricane Girl EP"

    Lastly, Adi Ulmansky reflected on Dungeon Beach:

    I live in Israel and there are amazing studios, cool stuff but wow, I’m just like.ā€ She’s working on a new EP which she deems ā€œa step upā€ and clues that it’s going to be ā€œway more melodic and way more aggressiveā€ from her previous releases.

    It’s her goal to combine rap and the melodic side of her music. She’s also preparing to perform all over the States and Europe. Stay up-to-date with Adi Ulmansky and visit her website to connect with her on your desired social networks. Then, download her latest project at your convenience.


    GrungeCake