Freddie is really becoming quite the media darling these days. Much congrats to him for that. Above, Freddie talks “Malcolm In The Middle”, which is a choice track off his latest mixtape, Midwestgangstaboxframecadillacmuzik. This ‘short film’ was shot by Evan Hurd.
Also, Fredrick hits the New Yorker in a piece about the current shift and transition in Hip-Hop.
Freddie Gibbs is the one rapper I would put money on right now. And, though it may be irrelevant to his gift, the criminal life that Raekwon raps about on “Cuban Linx II” is still very familiar to Gibbs. When I spoke to Gibbs on the phone, he told an unadorned story about growing up in Gary, Indiana. “We don’t even have a movie theatre,” he said. “We don’t even have a mall. I can’t ride around Gary and get inspired—we don’t have anything.” Several years ago, Gibbs was selling drugs out of a friend’s recording studio. He eventually decided he could rap better than the people coming in to record. His efforts found their way across the Web to Interscope Records, and Gibbs was signed. He moved to Los Angeles in 2005, and began to work at a relentless pace. “I was two hundred per cent into this rap thing,” Gibbs said. “Four P.M. to 1 P.M. the next afternoon in the studio.” When Joe Weinberger, the man who signed him, left Interscope, Gibbs was dropped.
Read the rest of the piece here.