![]() ![]() What was your mindset when you wrote it? J: Coming straight from the heart. FM: “Why?” is obviously a very controversial song. FM: You have a song entitled “Is We ****** or not?” Has that line ever worked on a girl? J: Oh Kate, I like this interview! This is one of the best interviews I ever did! That line ever work? I mean, I don’t really use that, it work! I don’t really use it but it work! FM: What about “k-i-s-s me?” J: Oh yeah, they love that one! That one’s a guaranteed hit! 4. I just always loved music om listening to what my moms and pops was playing, or just hearing it on the radio, whatever, I just knew I loved music. Joking around with my friends about their clothes or their sneakers or their needing a haircut. That’s how I started, I used to just always be rhyming. FM: When you were younger how did you know you wanted to become a rapper? J: Oh I started from snappin’. I took it and ran with it cause I was looking for a name at the time anyway. He just called me by mistake and I was smart enough to experiment with it. They probably should have named my shit Jerome though! Romey rome! FM: Don’t be modest, where did that nickname come from? J: I just got it from some of my peers. Fifteen Minutes: So, your real name is Jason Jerome Phillips right? Jadakiss: Oh Kate! My middle name is Terrance though. Before taking the stage at the fashion show, Jada sat down with FM’s Kate Cetrulo to rap about life, music, and the Ivy League. It also seems there’s a “good chance” we’ll see the second chapter of the tape after the release of Ignatius and Fab’s next project, Summertime Shootout 3.Last Friday, international hip hop sensation Jadakiss came to Harvard to appear at Eleganza 2007. Jason (also known as Friday on Elm Street) as being “therapeutic” as well. “Things like that is therapeutic for hip-hop,” Kiss said, citing his collaborative mixtape with Fabolous, Freddy vs. He also said he’d consider a collab project with Push. Kiss also let a few other pieces of news slip, including the existence of a The Lox documentary, which they’ve “been shooting for a few years,” and that Pusha-T is featured on the song “Hunting Season” from Kiss’ forthcoming album Ignatius. During his performance, Kiss spit an acapella verse that called out Sigel in his hometown. The two rappers were invited to perform at a concert in Philadelphia, and tensions were already high after both had exchanged disses on their respective mixtapes. That made me feel better than that just happening out of nowhere,” Kiss said. But at the end, they kinda made him do it. “That was emotionally the worst one for me because… I really didn’t see that coming. The Lox rapper also touched on his beef and epic rap battle with Beanie Sigel in 2001. “I didn’t think that song made it look like I was partnering up with Ja for his beef.” I didn’t have to answer to nobody,” Kiss said. He was then asked if he thought or cared how 50 would feel while making the song: “I liked the song-it was a good song. He was selling that next album… was a good segue to try to say I was standing close to his enemy.” Kiss added, “We came in the game with Ja.” ![]() “I was going on tour off that… The whole 50 thing was good for me. ‘Checkmate’ actually charted on Billboards,” Kiss told Real 92.3, referencing the diss track he released following 50's The Massacre around the 37:00 mark. In the end, Kiss was eventually crowned the winner. The rappers started feuding in 2004 over Kiss’ feature on Ja Rule’s song “New York”-Fif wasn't happy that Kiss and Fat Joe were “helping” Ja while 50 was “destroying him.” The exchange between Kiss and Fif became fierce as each went blow for blow, with the latter also releasing his sophomore album The Massacre at the time. Jadakiss took some time to reminisce on his years-old beef with 50 Cent. ![]()
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