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Still riding the wave of “The Blueprint 3″ release, Jay-Z covers Interview magazine and inside talks about everything from the development of hip-hop and his music-making progress to Barack Obama’s infamous “Dirt Off The Shoulder” moment and who he really thinks deserved the VMA for “Best Female Video.”

ON CONSUMER’S “APPETITE” FOR MUSIC:
I don’t think [that's] the problem. The consumption of music is at an all-time high. But I think the ways that record companies are trying to monetize it is just all over the place. At the end of the day, music is in the clouds. Before, you could hold it, look at it, turn it around. Now, it’s just in the air. That’s where it’s gonna wind up. You won’t need a shelf or a wall unit like my mom and pop had with all these big-ass records. You’ll just need your phone to call it up.

ON BARACK & HIS “DIRT OFF THE SHOULDER” MOMENT:
It’s unbelievable because it’s so far away from where I come from. We were the kids who were ignored by every politician. We didn’t have the numbers, the vote, to put anybody in office, because no matter who was in the office, we didn’t think that it would affect change where we lived. For me, being with Obama or having dinner with Bill Clinton… It’s mind-blowing, because where I come from is just another world. We were just ignored by politicians—by America in general.

ON KANYE WEST’S “VMA” RANT:
I just think the timing of what he did was wrong, and that, of course, overshadowed everything. He believed that “Single Ladies” was a better video. I believed that. I think a lot of people believed that. You can’t give someone “Video of the Year” if they don’t win “Best Female Video.” I thought “Best Female Video” was something you won on the way to “Video of the Year.” But, hey, I guess it wasn’t—and that’s a whole other conversation about awards shows and artists. READ MORE BELOW THE GALLERY!

Jay-Z: “I Believe In God But Not Christians Or Muslims”

ON COLLABORATIONS:
I just love the music. There shouldn’t be any lines. All these ways we classify things as R&B and hip-hop and rock…it’s bullshit. When people say stuff like, “Oh, that’s soft rock. I don’t listen to that,” I find that elitist. It’s music-racist. [laughs] That ‘I’m the best! No one else exists!’ [is bravado]. I forget that in terms of collaborating. I like breaking down those barriers, doing an album with Linkin Park, an album with R. Kelly, or playing at the Brandenburg Gate with Bono.

ON EMINEM:
I remember Eminem came into the studio when we made “Moment of Clarity.” It’s 2003, I think The Eminem Show had come out, and he was like the biggest rapper in the world—he sold like 20 million records worldwide or some ridiculous number. I remember I hugged him, and I could feel that he had on a bulletproof vest. I couldn’t imagine being that successful. I mean, he wanted to be successful his whole career. He finally gets it, and there’s this dark cloud over him.

Jay & Bey Beat Brangelina As “Top Earning” Couple

ON STAYING “CONNECTED”:
If you’re a guy who loves to make rap music, then you have to do it, and those 18-year-olds are where the white-hot spot is, right? That’s what everyone says. That’s the demographic that you have to go for. But you don’t get to those kids by not being honest with yourself, because those kids don’t believe what you’re rapping about, so they don’t buy into it. The challenge is just making great albums, because talent—and writing in general—is not tangible. There’s no expiration date on it. For me to put out my 11th studio album and have it connect the way it has still . . . I know it’s not Reasonable Doubt. It ain’t The Black Album, either. It’s The Blueprint 3. It’s its own album, and it has connected with a lot of people.

READ THE REST HERE!

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5  Comments
  • RenoNYC2010Jan. 15th, 2010
    at 11:20 am

    I think he’s making a good point about music! I feel that we shouldn’t have to categorize music like we do… music is music!! We got genres, I think because it make it easy for music companies to know their audience… I like R&B and Hip-Hop more so then anything else… but I’m open to a lot of other forms of music! Jay calling people “music-racist” cause they like what they like is foolish on his part, because everyone is different! They don’t like Soft Rock, then they don’t like Soft Rock… that’s far from being racist!!

    I’m a fan of Jay-Z but some of the things he say is out of touch, in the sense that it seem like he’s just kicking the Willy Bo Bo… he’s not thinking about what he’s saying! But, he’s a good dude… do great things in the community!

    God Bless!!!

  • antigoneR25Jan. 14th, 2010
    at 8:43 pm

    i know right he needs to shut up! Will what he has to say when his god (devil) is sitting back laughing at him when his political connects send em back to da projects. Sold His Soul Lord Help Him

  • glendafayeJan. 14th, 2010
    at 7:48 pm

    Shut up Jay-Z

  • JJAKAJJan. 14th, 2010
    at 5:18 pm

    gay-z is funni….eatin dinner with sinn klinton…kkk ass mah f**kaz

  • SenorCafeDa2ndJan. 14th, 2010
    at 4:47 pm

    Illuminati, 666, 33 degree Mason, New World Order, Eye of Osiris

    Had to put that out there before the relegious nutbags chime in.

    LOL

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