Sunday, February 28, 2010

I Fooled Ya Baby




I'd been listening to Nikka Costa ever since she released "Like A Feather" back in 2001 and like many others I thought I'd fallen for her. But I didn't know how much I'd appreciate her until she released her heart wrenching rock ballad, "Fooled Ya Baby." Many artists aren't brave enough to capture in words the moments when the heart is most vulnerable. But Nikka takes that moment and runs with it as she sings of her regret in hiding her feelings from the man she wanted to love.

"I hid my heart in self-defense / I felt the break and consequence / Never to return to meltin' feelings inside / I told myself I wouldn't fall again / Even in the light of day / You'll never see / How much I feel for you, baby / How much you mean to me"

She wraps her sadness around her warm vocals and makes you feel every bit of longing her heart has to give. I'm your fool, baby, and I'll stay that way as long as you keep singing to me the way you do. Check out a full rocked out performance of the song below.



I Want You You You You You You You You




A few days ago I came across a man who literally took my breath away. Most men, no matter how attractive they are, don't faze me. But this man took away all of my cool, all of my composure. He just had this amazingly thick body, warm smile and this innocent, unassuming light about him that left me in a daze. He left me feeling like a little gurl; awkward, clumsy and at a loss for words. I just wanted him and all of his gorgeous, beautiful and THICK light.

"Just wanna get to know you / And you need to get to know me / I wanna make you wonder / Lightning and thunder / And I get it from my DADDY!"

Wednesday, February 24, 2010

Madonna - Take A Bow



With inspiration from Joi and creative help from Babyface, Madonna crafted her greatest ballad, "Take A Bow." At the time, it was her at her most vulnerable, her most broken state when it comes to love. Ultimately it was one of her most beautiful moments in music. Take a bow, doll.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Ludacris & Nicki Minaj - My Chick Bad



This chick is soooooo BIZARRE! I LOVE it!!! Come on Harujuku Demon Freddy Barbie Tease!

Friday, February 19, 2010

Mehcad Brooks Wants To Show More...xXx





Yeah I wanna see it...Yeah...Show me MORE.

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Sade - Soldier Of Love Review



For Sade, music has always been about the sincerity in the message and embracing the truth of life; Yes, it's painful at times but within every aspect of it there is love. On their latest album, Soldier of Love, they're not only telling this truth, they're living it in their music.

The album opens with "Moon and The Sky", a potent tale of the sadness felt after a relationships demise. For Sade it's the painful confession of a love broken and lost. For a former lover it's a sobering reminder that love's hold can be as binding as the regret felt afterwards.
"You'll always know the reason why / We couldn't have the moon and sky....The reason why this love ain't gon' let you go."

The lead single, "Soldier of Love," is the sole heavy rock inspired song on the album. Over the bands military style beat of minimalist drums, heavy guitar jabs, and sparse horn blares Sade effectively sings of surviving the hardships of love and life,
"I've lost the use of my heart / But I'm still alive / Still looking for the light / And the endless pull on the other side." It's her serene tale of war and strength. And it's the most hard hitting the band has been in years.

Literally taking inspiration from the world outside her window, Sade creates the softly organic songs, "Morning Bird," a weeping tale of being discarded by a lover and "The Safest Place," a promise to her lover that her heart is the safest place on earth. Over gentle violins, soft guitar plucks and haunting synth wails Sade profeses that,
"My Heart has been a lonely warrior / Who's been to war / So you can be sure / Your love's in a sacred place / The safest hiding place"

Undoubtedly the charmer of the album is the uber cute, "Babyfather." A rare topic for any artist to cover, Sade creates an ode to a father's love for his daughter. As sunny guitars strum over an island drum beat, Sade and her daughter, Ila, sing of a father's love in it's finest form,
"For you he's the best he can be / Oh child don't you know? / Your daddy love come with a lifetime gaurantee." It's simply adorable.

"In Another Time" is the sweetest song of pride and triumph and strangely one of the most romantic songs of the album. Soft saxophone lilts and violin chords weave in between gentle guitar strums and light piano keys creating a sound reminiscent to a 50's prom. And it's fitting as Sade sings of a promising future to a gentle girl lost amongst a crowd of mean girls, "Darling I just want you to know your tears won't leave a trace / In another time girl / In another place."

Not afraid of recreating familiar sounds, Sade pulls inspiration from the old West to create "Be That Easy," a mellow country song about the the difficulty of living and the ease of loving a man who pushes you above the pain. The song floats along like the warmest desert breeze and wafts into your ears like a gentle camp fire lullaby.

The albums only failings are the the dull "Bring Me Home" and the somewhat above average, "Skin." Neither are particularly horrible songs but what they lack is the musical flare to invigorate the senses. They sit blandly in between a trio of dazzling songs and break up the flow of the album instead maintaining it's emotional richness.

Using love as their star player, Sade has crafted
Soldier Of Love into a softly powerful album that showcases all of the triumphs and hardships of love and allows their listeners to see life as both misery and joy, war and peace, or rather a beautiful battle field.

Prince - When Doves Cry (Live Rehearsal)





Come On With The Foot Work, PRINCE!!! Werk Those HEELS!!!

Dani Evans Sightings - NY Fashion Week

Click model, Dani Evans, has recently shown up at a couple of popular fashion houses for New York's Fashion Week. First she appeared at the BCBG Max Azria casting where she was filmed for their behind the scenes video segments for this season's fashion show. I love her fresh look and clearly she took Tyra's advice and learned to turn off her southern accent. Unfortunately, BCBG passed on using her in their show.




Surprisingly, Dani made her debut appearance this season at Yohji Yamamoto's Y-3 show, bolting down the runway with a gang of models during the Y-3 dash section of the show. Watch the video below to catch a glimpse of her and check out the rest of Y-3's impressive collection.




Tuesday, February 16, 2010

I Want His Weave

Seriously, I want Ty Ogunkoya's weave. I can just imagine the types of hair flips, hair pulls, tress tosses and lock lollies I could do with that glorious mane of weave tracks. Not to mention the androgynous appeal it would give me. It would be a SINsation!










Thursday, February 11, 2010

Her Rose Garden

Last year I came across an artist named Erika Rose and her electrifying song "Rose Garden." She had me mesmerized with her soft vocals and had my hips swaying and rolling with her eclectic blend of jazz, rock and flamenco music. However, shortly afterwards my fire for her died and I she fell into my musical limbo. But last night I randomly thought of her and found this video of her clowning around with Alicia Keys. Apparently they've known each other since they were four and Erika's been her co-writer, tour director and project manager for years. What's best though is that Erika is a complete goofball and she can "read" with the best of 'em (QWEENES!!!). She is VILLAINOUS, darling. Absolutely WRETCHED!! Check out the video below and watch her video for her mesmerizing single, "Rose Garden."






Emanuela's Voyage To Atlantis

Beautiful Brazilian model, Emanuela De Paula, travels to the aquatic depths for the cover and main editorial of this month's Wish Report Brazil. Emanuela moves through the water (and the studio) like a sea nymph in front of photographer, Jacques Dequeker's lens, making the photos, look like stills of an underwater ballet.






































Tuesday, February 9, 2010

The Making's Of Love's Soldier




Before you go out and buy the album, which goes on sale today, check out Sade on their journey to complete their latest mission of love, Soldier of Love.

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Lady GaGa And Her Lovely Monster Tales

I saw this interview on Fuse TV last month and I connected with it so much that I found myself somewhat obsessing with the idea of personal monsters for a week. Everyone has Monsters/fears, especially when it comes to our romantic lives, and looking those Monsters in the eyes and simply acknowledging that they exist is terrifying and embarrassing and ultimately freeing. But part of that terror is the question of whether or not, when the times comes, you'll be able to face your Monsters head on or will you succumb to them as you have in the past. I don't know that anyone really knows until the time arrives. But what I do know is that my Monsters are real and that I'm learning from them. And that's the important thing to take away from all of this, the knowledge of self.







See the rest of GaGa's Fuse TV interview HERE


*Side Lipton: I also love the fact that she mentions that a condom should ALWAYS be used during sexual activity. Release your Monsters and wrap it up.*

Lasto + ADTV = Bad Romance Weekend In Atlanta





You KNOW Nic E. Rock will be there and you should be there too.

Thursday, February 4, 2010

Millie Forte - The Interview

Singer, Millie Forte, has been on my musical radar for months now. Blending electro, soul, trip-hop and dance with heartfelt lyrics about life, love and heartbreak, Millie's created an eclectic mix of compelling records in the Out music scene. A couple of weeks ago I had a phone interview with him to discuss his music, his hopes, his random experiences and his life. Here's what he shared with me.



To start off let’s talk a bit about your various aliases. You go by Millie Forte now but you’ve gone by Milano Bradley, Alti Omega, Oswald Fitzgerald, and Stinky The Love Pirate. Where do all of these names and personas come from?

They’re just random characters. Millie Forte is kind of like a summary of them all at one time so it’s just a big old happy family of randomness. *laughs* There’s no real artist, like, I wouldn’t say that the artist I am is Millie Forte. It’s just everything that I incorporate into what I do is Millie Forte.

When you were going by Alti Omega I read that you were a rapper then and now you’re style has changed. What inspired that change form Hip-Hop to what you have now?

*laughs* I realized I can’t rap *laughs* It’s not that good but I don’t really remember when I decided to switch over. It was random, as most things that I do are. I mean, I always sang. It was always something I thought I did pretty well or decent but at first I didn’t want to be a singer, I just wanted to rap. But my sister told me I couldn’t rap and that just crushed my dreams *laughs* We keep it real with each other like, "You’re horrible so just scrap it." Mind you I was like thirteen I was so young. But it’s cool.

I read that you helped form the group The Forte Fam. Was The Forte Fam a family affair?

Oh no. The Forte Fam is no blood ties. The Forte Fam is a group of us [kids] from when we were little. We lived in a little neighborhood and it was a lot of older people that lived the neighborhood. There was this old lady, she was like creole or something, I don’t know, but her name was Esther Forte and she would call all the kids living in the cul-de-sac over to her house and she would teach us all music and her last name was Forte fam. And she actually was the first person to say Millie Forte, like dub me Millie Forte I guess you could say. So the kids that I’m still in contact with that are all grown up now, we’re the Forte Fam. Like keep the little dream alive I guess. But my family, my blood family, no. My dad can sing. He’s been to the studio with me a couple of times but as far as actual family, no.

Your dad he is a singer. How has that influenced your relationship with him and your music?

I can’t say it’s influenced anything. I mean, it’s brought us closer together because my dad was incarcerated all of my life until I was 18 and that was always kind of something we always talked about when we wrote back and forth or talked on like the telephone or something. It’s just something that we had in common that’s…just…I guess use it to keep us close or something? *laughs* But, I mean, he’s interested so. I mean he’s always all ears whenever it’s something about music...I love my dad. *laughs*

To kinda continue with the stories of the past I saw that you opened of for Tower Of Power and The Sugar Hill Gang. What type of impact did that have on you as an artist and a performer?

At the time I didn’t know who Tower of Power was and I knew who Sugar Hill Gang was but I was young. I was in a performance with a group called The Downtown Music Clan it was like this corporation run up with teenagers that did music and we got opportunities to open up for people. I didn’t know who they were. Now that I know who they are it’s like it makes you hold your head up a little bit. *laughs* It’s the Sugar Hill Gang, they’re legendary. I still don’t really know who Tower of Power is. I’m familiar with songs but I don’t know who they are. That’s bad I guess. *laughs* It’s terrible.

When did you realize that music and performing was seriously something you wanted to do?

When people paid attention. It’s weird because I grew up as kind of the weird kid in my family so I would do stuff that was entertaining or fun to me and I would always get the raised eyebrow like, “You’re a weirdo.” But music was something that I guess people paid attention and were like, “Oh wow.” It was like everybody just wanted to do music. Like, everybody wanted to be a singer. Everybody wanted to do something entertainment wise, you know what I mean? Like a dream for everybody in some weird way. But that was the first thing that people actually paid attention to me in like a positive light. Not because everyone was telling me, “You’re a total loser.” You know what I mean? When you’re little and you get attention like that it means something to you.

I know that you’re a former fellow ATLien. Talk with me about that time.

Okay, here’s my thing. Atlanta, the experience of living there, I can’t say it was pleasant but it changed everything, sound wise, as far as my music was concerned because I met so many people before and um while living in Atlanta. It changed everything. I think that’s when the whole electronica aspect of my music first started coming in with the more programmed noises in my music. It was fun, musically. I mean it was a good experience. I’ve actually, possibly, I’m going to say possibly, we’re in talks of relocating back to Atlanta later this year.

Oh, we?

Yes…and me. *laughs* They are my team.

Oh okay and who is a part of the Millie Forte team?

It’s not a Millie Forte team is just like a group of us. There’s my big brother, Leon, and a friend of ours, Marcus, and then there’s this songwriter that’s working with us, her name is Myra.

Is Leon your actual bio big brother?

No he’s just a good friend and I’ve known him since I was like 11 so he’s my big brother.

You do write and produce your own sound and music?

Yes.



But you do have your team with you?

Well the thing with the team is, we have a certain amount of connection with each other’s different projects. As far as me, my team really just throws the idea of what I could make it sound like or what I could sing about. It’s not really more so them sitting down with me and programming the sounds and writing the lyrics. It’s just that I don’t really work well like that. I’m the type of person that has to work on it alone and get it down and figure it out myself. There can’t really be um, I don’t want to say opinions, but I can’t really….for some reason it just doesn’t really click when I have that second idea along with my idea. Because once my idea is formed it’s like it’s written in stone, that’s what it’s going to be and I have to just work on getting that developed so two ideas is just too much. They don’t really have too much of a say so in what I do but their opinion is pretty appreciated.

What would be the reason for the relocation to Atlanta? What inspired that?

Because lately we’ve all just been networking with people in Atlanta, like, it seems to be the place where the sound that we’re working on lives. Plus, Atlanta, it’s just colorful. You can say all the bad things you want to about Atlanta but it’s so diverse if you’re the kind of person that can tap into it and not look at all of the negative stuff about it. At first it was talk about New York and I was like ugh. It just didn’t work out because I’ve been to New York and I just don’t feel that I could live in New York and operate out there. Atlanta seems to be a good place so that’s where we’re going. I’m just down for the ride I guess.

Where do you see the music taking you in the future? Do you see yourself ever having to make that move to another major city for the sake of your music?

It depends because I don’t, per se, have these dreams to be this major phenomenon artist. That’s not my goal. I just want to do music and make stuff that people enjoy, I guess. I’d much rather just be respected than worshipped *laughs* if that makes any sense. It just depends on where and how I change and how the sound changes and like I said the sound we’re working on is in Atlanta. So if it moves I guess we’ll move too or I’ll move.

No “Stans” for you. No “Stans” and lace-fronts. Awww

*laughs* Damn! *laughs* No “Stans” I’d rather not.

Besides being an artist, I know that you’re in college and you work. Are you part-time or are you full time?

I work full time and part time.

How do you balance all of that and still satisfy your creative needs.

Sleep. *laughs* I mean I work one job, my part-time job. I work that throughout the week. I’m also a dance teacher. That’s my full-time job. I do that over the weekend. School work is usually done in between work and night time or late night, which is when the music is made. But I guess the idea of the music is kind of made throughout the day when I’m doing whatever I’m doing and then I can actually make it what it is or make what it is in my head official like at night. And then there’s random days like today where I’m just off from everything. I won’t do anything because I’m lazy. *laughs*

Is dance something you’ve always been interested in?

Yeah I’ve been dancing since I was six years old. My mom threw me and my sister into ballet and tap and jazz and modern interpretive, hip-hop and all these crazy dance things from a young age just so we’d have stuff to do. It’s just always been around. Before actually, this is funny and so gay *laughs*. But before I wanted to be a singer I wanted to be a ballet dancer.

Oh a Baryshnikov. I mean it’s a little gay but that’s okay.

It’s very gay. *laughs*

That’s fine. There’s nothing wrong with that. *laughs*

It’s okay to dream. I’ll dream it, whatever.

Well besides the music and dance you also enjoy body art and piercings. What about those draws you to them?

Umm not so much piercings. I used to have a lot of piercings when I was like 16, 17. I don’t have so many piercings anymore, just my ears and my nose are pierced. But tattoos…well you’re a Cee-Lo fan. But on his first CD, I can’t remember which album it was, he said this line and it always stuck with me. He said, “What I believe within I engrave upon my skin.” And I just took that and ran with it I guess. So everything that like means something to me or has some kind of significance in my life like as a whole or even just at that moment, I’ll get it tattooed on.

For your latest tattoo you got leopard print on your arm. What does that signify then?

It signifies where I’m going musically. I very, I’m pretty sure you can cosign to this, I’m usually just pretty tame for the most part. I’m not really a wild kind of artist or anything like that. And that’s me in real life, I’m really laid back. It’s just, I feel myself taking the wall down block by block and just exposing who I am and kind of being free and an animal I guess. *laughs* Which is a mark of just self exposure I guess. Here I am, this is me, all of me. It’s just how I feel.

A little leopard roar. Rrrrr!

Rrrrr! Let it burn, bitch. Let it burn. *laughs* But yeah as far as music goes I’m working on more sounds, more wild type things so it kind of ties into that.




You once said that you don’t make music, you make feelings. Can you talk with me a little bit more about that?

When you make a song you don’t really necessarily have to mean what you’re doing or mean what you’re saying or singing or rapping or speaking or whatever. Like it can just be something that’s going to work best for you and you just put it out there and it’s just nothing and you can sell your records and you can make your money and all that stuff and it doesn’t mean anything to you. But if I make feelings it’s like everything that I put out for people to hear is like something that means something deeply to me or it could mean something deeply to who ever is hearing it. But that’s where it came from, I’m just putting my feelings on audio and then people will hear them.

You’re definitely an artist who puts his heart on his sleeve and on his records. Specifically you put your broken heart on your records. On “Good Day” you had a line that said, “And love is not a part of this story / ‘Cause all it will ever do is die.” Is it ever difficult for you to lend such a part of yourself to your music and your audience?

After the fact, after it’s like done. When I’m writing it, I’m just writing it. I’m just getting it out and when I’m recording it, it’s like I’m not really thinking about it when I’m recording it. Then when I hear it played back or two or three days after I’ve posted it on the internet I think about it and it’s a little, “That was a little deep. That was a little too far.” *laughs* I mean, it’s cool I’m human. What do you expect? I feel things, everybody does so why not put it into audio?

Are you appreciative of the heartbreak in the way that it’s inspired your music or would you rather the inspiration come from another place at times?

I guess I can be grateful for it if, to me, people like it. I guess that will make me grateful for it. It’s weird because I guess my music makes me seem like I’d be this really depressed or this woe is me type person and I’m not. I just usually write songs or write music or work on music when I feel a need to work on it, if that makes sense? So if I’m happy I don’t want to stop doing what I’m doing and write about it, you know what I mean? It’s in the moment I guess because I have happy songs too. It definitely has a big role to play. I guess that also makes me grateful for it. So people liking it and it just being something like, If I ever have writers block, heart ache will get the song out of me.

On a personal level, are you and cupid on speaking terms? Are you open to the idea of love, again?

Me and cupid? I don’t like him. I don’t like him *laughs* I mean it depends. All things have to be right. All things have to be cool. I mean I meet people and they’re cool but it’s just sometimes I don’t feel it. So I don’t go any further unless they just blow me [away]. I mean why go further and they’re getting on my nerves? It’s just me. It depends on how I feel and who the person is and what kind of person that person is.

To talk about your happier songs you do have happier ones. You just released “Show Me Your Love” with Baron. How did that song come about?

The song is actually like almost a year and a half old, from being started. I wrote it, produced and then I wrote the song to the beat. I couldn’t write a second verse and something just kept telling me to have someone sing on the second verse which is odd for me because I really don’t collaborate a lot with people. So I was thinking of people who would sound good on the song and initially Sir Ben Marx, who I had in mind, and I don’t know, I just got in contact with Baron first and he told me he liked it. He sent me a rough copy and I loved it and I recorded some more and sent it to him and a couple month later he sends me back the finished version and we put it on. I put it on the internet immediately like 10 minutes after he sent it to me I posted it on the internet. *laughs* I liked it that much so.

Besides releasing “Show Me Your Love” you also released “Sex Pot Mon-Star” and with your other song “101” you definitely expanded a bit more with your sexual side, musically. Do you see yourself as potentially becoming something of a musical sex symbol?

*Laughs* Ummm Do I see myself? I mean I guess to each his own. I don’t know. Honestly, I don’t think I could live up to the sex symbol status. I don’t think I could live up to it because I’m kind of a shy person at the same time. I blush. I’m too light skinned, I blush. *laughs* The light skins blush in public like that. But I mean that would be cool. I’ll take that too, yes. I’ll be a sex symbol.

You have an underground sound but you also seem to have an ear for what’s commercial. You want to be more so respected but if the opportunity came around for you have commercial success, would you do it…even if it was for writing or producing for other artists?

Oh sure, writing and producing for other artists, definitely. But if it was for me as like the main idea um really I don’t know. I’ve never thought about it on that level because I try and take a look at every opportunity that comes when it comes to the music thing and I have to think about it. How is it going to benefit my mission, whatever my mission is because I haven’t come to realize what the mission is, of it all. But right now I’ll say yeah I would.

There is a trade off, like so many artists before have said. Does the play into your reasoning for wanting the respect more than the commercial success?

No I think the respect part is so big to me because I put in a lot work to be where, and this is going to sound weird, but I put in a lot of work to be as far as I am now. I wasn’t the kid that was born with a pretty voice and I wasn’t the kid that learned how to harmonize like the first time. It took a long time to learn to do everything that I know how to do, musically. It’s all self-taught. It took so much time and effort to get to being as decent as I am. So the respect, to me, means so much more…and people just throwing panties and boxers. *laughs*

*laughs* Man-panties!!!

I made sure I threw boxers in there too. *laughs*

Moving on past the man-panties and the boxers, let’s talk a bit about Millie as a youngster. On “Fearless Little Bird” you sang about owning your individuality and showing it proudly. Tell me more about your own individuality and growing up as a kid. How were you?

I was very reserved and quiet and I was geeky. *laughs* I was the only boy, when I was a kid, of three. I was the middle child and I just lived up to every stereotype there was the middle child could possibly be. I just did. I didn’t play with other kids, I wasn’t a very social kid. I’d much rather sit in the window and watch kids play then actually go partake and play. It actually wasn’t until I met Ms. Forte that I even started interacting with other kids but I was just reserved and quiet and random and just weird. I had an obsession with Jim Carrey and I would reenact everything of Jim Carrey that I ever saw. *laughs* Just a simple, simple little childhood in simple little Roanoke, Virginia.




Has your hometown of Roanoke, VA inspired you, musically?

Well yes, to a certain extent. I don’t know if it’s a good place to get my work done because I’ve lived a lot of places and I’ve noticed that every time I move out of state I always am beginning to start a project. But once I get to that state I can’t record the project. Something in me just won’t…the right words just won’t come, the right music won’t come. But the idea of the album can be like born somewhere else and I never actually finish or even begin to work on it until I come back to Roanoke. It’s probably some weird connection, I don’t know. Like in Atlanta, the last album, The Beautiful Disaster, on every song the production was made in Atlanta but I couldn’t record any of it, like I couldn’t even think of words to write until I got back to Roanoke. Virginia is interesting, just because all of the people that have come out of Virginia and how creative all of them are. I don’t know what it is about Virginia.

What’s the next project for Millie?

I’m working on it. I’m working on it. I’ve been playing around with titles. I’ve been calling it The Rise and Fall of Milano Bradley. I don’t think that’s what it’s going to be at the end of it though. It changes like every five minutes of every day. I’ll record songs and then I’ll love them for like two days and then I’ll play them back on the third day and then I won’t like any of them. So I’ll record more songs and then I’ll like those, then I won’t like those, then I’ll like the old ones. It doesn’t have a sound, a signature sound, right now. It doesn’t have a title, it has an idea of what I want it to sound like but I don’t want it to be….basically I don’t want it to be anything that people would think I would do.

Breaking the mold, a bit. Keeping the gurls on their toes!

There you go! Keep bitches surprised. Shit! *laughs* I don’t know. I mean “Mercury”, “101” and “Healing Time”, “The Fall”, they’ve all been recorded for the album and I like them all and certain people like them and all. Some people like certain ones and don’t like the others but everybody has an opinion on them, which is cool. I was actually thinking about doing two albums, at one time. A little B’Day thing going on there.

I was going to say Christina. Damnit! The gays can’t go a day without talking about Beyonce!

Bitch! Gotdamn! *laughs* I mean, who knows? I don’t know. I had this discussion with my brother, randomly, to just literally release every song that I record was the idea of the album. That might be possible too, we’ll see.

Once you release this project will you be hitting the road to promote it?

I want to this time. I kind of did on the last project but I want to branch out, like branch out, be places, see people and try out new music and see what it’s like. So we’ll see. It’s all a part of the big plans with this project so hopefully it will be a part of it.

You’re an artist that’s still discovering and developing his sound. Do you enjoy that sense of freedom and looseness?

Yes, I do. It’s because…I am still working on it? *laughs* I’m definitely not anywhere near being a perfected sound but then again I don’t think I want to be the kind of artist that has a certain stamp, a certain sound. I don’t want to be the artist that has that particular sound. I want to just do whatever feels right at the moment and I think a lot of that comes from the different things I listen to at all times.

Those are all of the questions that I have for you. Is there anything that you want to add?

What do I want people to know? Just pay attention. That’s as good as it could get. If you’re interested now, you should pay attention.

Do you have a certain time frame for when we should pay attention to that new release?

It’s still like in the early stages but we’ve been in the studio like we literally live there. But I would say around late April, maybe, with the way we’re going. So hopefully late April.

Mehcad Brooks - X Marks The Calvin Klein's






Mehcad Brooks, also known as "Eggs" from the HBO drama, True Blood, is one of the newest faces/bodies of Calvin Klein's X Underwear brand. Shot by photographer Mikael Jansson, Mehcad shows off his ripped body and "bulging" assets in a pair of fitted CK X white boxer briefs. He's truly a (sexy) sight to see and hopefully there's more to come from Mehcad and Calvin Klein.