Twenty years later, The Slim Shady LP is perhaps the most unique release in Eminem’s discography. While his lampooning of pop culture would ultimately shift to Ja Rule and boy bands, in 1999 he ...
A private funeral service for Murder Inc. co-founder Irv Gotti was held Wednesday (Feb. 19) at the Greater Allen A.M.E. Cathedral of New York.
Several recording artists were in attendance, including rappers Jay-Z, Fat Joe, singer Ashanti and Ja Rule, who offered a heartfelt eulogy for his former label boss, who cofounded Murder Inc ...
Ja Rule struggled to get through his speech at Irv Gotti’s funeral following the Murder Inc. co-founder’s sudden death. The “Put It on Me” rapper, 48, choked up as he delivered a heartfelt ...
Ja Rule at the Target Center in Minneapolis (Photo by Nagashia Jackson for rolling out) Ja Rule and Juvenile, two pillars of late ’90s and early 2000s hip-hop, recently sat down for an intimate ...
Ja Rule recently chopped it up on HipHopWired’s I Got Questions with Juvenile, and he gave a real shoutout to DMX’s crazy stage presence. The NYC rapper said, “The Dog had a different ...
Irv Gotti, the producer and music industry mogul who launched the careers of Ja Rule and Ashanti, has died at the age of 54, according to the Hollywood Reporter and sources close to the situation.
We’re all here in celebration of your life because it will live on forever. I love you my brother; see you when I get there.' ...
Hip-Hop icons Ja Rule and Juvenile catch up and trade stories on the latest episode of HipHopWired’s popular digital series, I Got Questions. In the latest episode of the I Got Questions digital ...
Rapper Ja Rule had a massive influence on the music industry back in the early 2000s, and he remains one of the defining musicians of that decade. But one person he often collaborated with was ...
Among those in attendance, according to TMZ, were Murder Inc. artists Ja Rule, Ashanti, Lloyd, Charli Baltimore and Vita. Also at the service, in addition to Gotti’s family, were Jay-Z (sitting ...
Murder Inc. artists Ja Rule, Ashanti, Lloyd, Charli Baltimore, and Vita stood in solidarity, joined by Jay-Z, Fat Joe, Steve Stoute, Hype Williams, Benny Boom, Angie Martinez, the Ruff Ryders ...