celebrities
Music celebrities in the growing entertainment industry.
The Royal Voice
Long Live the King! While he may have passed in 1977, he still lives within my heart and the hearts of many fans. That famous album 50,000,000 Elvis Fans Can't Be Wrong sums up my feelings about the King. Elvis fans are devoted to their King even many years since his passing.
By Steve Elliot7 years ago in Beat
Is It Ice Cube, Ice-T, or LL Cool J?
Ice Cube, Ice-T, and LL Cool J have so much in common that sometimes it is difficult identifying which is which. They are all great African-American rappers and actors who usually wear caps and sunglasses. They all started out in music and then became actors in movies and on popular television series. People know them by their stage names instead of their real names.
By Margaret Minnicks7 years ago in Beat
Reason First: Were Tupac and Madonna the Ultimate Couple in Popular Music History?
With her worn out body and waning importance in the sphere of modern music, Madonna no longer has the rights to the letter that slain rapper and actor Tupac penned for her while he was still incarcerated at the Clinton Correctional Facility. The succinct and pointed letter could fetch up to $300,000 at auction. For a letter that is over two decades old and written by a dead hip hop artist, the artifact sets a precedent. Madonna had a spectacular run through the eighties up until the early aughts. She now has the relevance of a DVD player. She can still perform but she lacks the power and ability as the new guns like Ariana Grande.
By Skyler Saunders7 years ago in Beat
Reason First: Is 50 Cent a Rolling Stone?
If you owe 50 Cent money, he’s going to let you know about it. If you claim to be his alleged son Marquise, he doesn’t want anyone to know about it. The young man was disrespected, many people hold, by the Queens, New York City rapper, who will tell you in strong language that he is not the father. Should this be a clear indication that 50 Cent’s stability within the hip hop sphere may be in question? Because he is so well known on the mic and on screens large and small. This is a telling turn of events that leads to the question of fathers in rap. Most dads like Nas, Jay-Z, Ice Cube, Master P, and Eminem (to name but a few) excel at being fathers. The cliché that runs through not only rap, but other genres as well is that fathers are merely sperm donors who may or may not stick around to see their seeds grow.
By Skyler Saunders7 years ago in Beat
A Dream Come True
(I wrote this in April, 2016) It’s been such a long time since I felt inspired to write because my life has consisted predominately of feeling sick, going to the hospital, getting treatment and coming back feeling worse during the battle for my life. Even so, overall I’m still a happy person; I pray a lot, listen to music and use makeup to keep myself sane and inspired. I love all types of music, and music has been a part of my life since I was very little in huge way. At age five, I started taking voice lessons at the YMCA, realizing very early when I was singing that it didn’t matter that I was in a wheelchair. People saw my heart, they didn’t assume that I wasn’t intelligent, they didn’t care that I couldn’t run across the playground; they saw who I really was inside, not differences. Music helped me get through a whirlwind childhood filled with a sick mother who was a prisoner of multiple addictions. It wasn’t long before I started entering voice competitions to earn money for food and for what I called my "just in case money stash" to give me a sense of security to care for me and my sister. Those circumstances put a lot of pressure on me to succeed, but instead of concentrating on that pressure, I made it a game against myself to always keep improving.
By Melissa Hevenor The Psychic In Your Pocket7 years ago in Beat
Billie Eilish an Artist for All Ages
Billie Eilish is controversial—either people love her music or they don’t like her because they think she’s too dark. I love her as an artist. Her lyrics are amazing and yes, some of them tend to be dark but that’s OK because somethings in life have a darkness like the cancer I have been fighting for over 6 years. Although, when you expose and express those difficult experiences and put that in music you’re bringing it light to help people not feel alone and relate to bring them out of the darkness. Her song "Bury A Friend" for example has a very dark vibe resembling a horror movie; however, when you dissect the song you can recognize that it has a very interesting structure, catchy hook, and can actually be applied to a variety of circumstances in life as any good song should. The line in the song "I want to end me" is so therapeutic for me to sing in terms of wanting to end the part of my existence battling cancer. By no means do I want to end my life, just acknowledging the desire to end the part of me riddled with cancer and in essence, that's what a lot of my life has been about over these last six years trying to eradicate the monster cancer that lives inside myself. "Bury A Friend" became a kind of anthem to acknowledge my efforts to do so, creating a sense of freedom by saying the words out loud.
By Melissa Hevenor The Psychic In Your Pocket7 years ago in Beat











