Royce 5’9″ responds after Benzino accused him of ghostwriting for Eminem

Benzino has recently admitted to having help writing his Eminem diss track but claims he spit the rhymes and “killed it.” He also said that Royce 5’9” sometimes ghostwrote for Eminem too.

In the video clip, shared few days ago, Zino says: “People ask if somebody else wrote it. Look, I was in the studio, and I was in the studio with some guys and I was writing and they was passing me lines and it was just, yeah, you got the team. It’s alright. I’m sure Eminem is also in the studio with Royce and Royce give him lines. All the amazing lyricists that he has been around, you don’t think they gave him a line or two? It’s hip-hop. It’s okay! Bottom line was, I spit it and the bottom line was, I killed it. And bottom line was, a lot of s–t I’ve been researching for years, as far as the stuff that’s in it. Yeah, of course I wrote that.”

In response, Royce commented on Diverse Mentality‘s Instagram post, saying: “I’m tying to figure out how my name always finds its way into THIS conversation… You getting distracted, Champ.. Focus on the task at hand.. I guess you’re shocking the world right now, so your mind is all over the place .. I understand and I ain’t mad at you. Lemme just clarify 2 things real quick…FIRST: You said “I’m sure when Em is in the studio ROYCE gives him a line here and there” Wrong.. THAT NEVER HAPPENED BEFORE.. Not even once… But to each his own…”

Royce continued: ‘SECOND, I’m not at the crib all day “sitting on my money” nor am I paying attention to everything to “Keep up with what’s hot”.. WTF, Do I look like to trying to relate to rappers my son’s age? Hanging out with them at parties and all that… Man.. I hate what this Culture does to our elders…Smh… Rooting this guy on knowing He shouldn’t be this excited about this. He helped create the Source … Goof up the rest of your legacy without me my Bruddah.. I’m good…

But Benzino did not stop. He continues to accuse Royce Da 5’9 of ghostwriting for Eminem and says he has insider information if it needs to be released. He said on Instagram: “I just got word from an insider in Skittles camp that his boot shiner Royce has wrote many tracks for him. His name is even on the songs he wrote. He’s been getting publishing from them. That’s how he eats.”

Benzino continued in the next post on Instagram, saying: “I finally got the proof I needed. Someone in their inner circle just confirmed it. Royce has ghostwroted for your rap god Eminem. Neither one of them p-ssies have responded and when they do I will not only release more diss tracks but I will also release the info I have that proves it. So stay tuned hip-hop, it’s about to go really crazy.”

You can check everything in the video below:

New Song & Video: Courtney Bell – “Westside,” ft. Royce 5’9″

Rising Detroit hip-hop artist Courtney Bell shatters expectations with the release of his new single and music video, “Westside“, featuring legendary fellow Motor City emcee and producer Royce 5’9″, off his upcoming mixtape titled Microdose which is set to be released on March 22, 2024.

Microdose is executive produced by Royce and Keith Pay Cash Miller, and also features Conway the Machine, Skilla Baby, Black Thought and Symba among others.

Courtney Bell expresses his excitement about the new single in a statement: “This record for me is a statement, not only for myself but for the Westside of my city of Detroit and everyone that comes from it. I was inspired to create something sonically that hasn’t really been heard of for my generation.”

In a cinematic nod to “The Matrix” movie franchise, the music video for “Westside” captivates audiences with its visually stunning and innovative storytelling. Playing the role of Neo, with Royce as Morpheus, Courtney Bell, known for pushing creative boundaries, aims to deliver a sonic experience that mirrors his character’s eye-opening journey, breaking new ground for his generation.

You can check out the new song and video below:

[VIA]

Royce 5’9″ responds Icewear Vezzo ‘s interview about him & Eminem

Icewear Vezzo has recently sat down with Math Hoffa and the crew on the latest episode of My Expert Opinion where the Detroit rapper talked about the misunderstanding he had with Eminem, which led to a phone call from Royce 5’9″.

During the interview, Icewear Vezzo said: “Eminem owes us nothing bro. And I think he was thinking we want something from him. We don’t want nothing from you bro. I practice when I preach. Every time a young ni–a come up in my city, I reach out and I’m like ‘ey bro what you need? Is it a verse? It’s a connection? It’s some advice?’ They appreciate that s–t. That s–t go a long way. So, sometimes that’s all it takes. At the end of the day, that’s EMINEM my ni–a! But that’s all it ever take bro. ‘Hey bro, look, I see you my ni–a. You doing good but this one where you going wrong, you can do this, you can’t do that, this s–t look good, that s–t don’t look good, all right my ni–a, I see you in 50 years.’ I’mma appreciate that s–t bro. That s–t would take me a long way. Cause I do that. That’s all it take. I feel like that s–t don’t cost nothing for nobody. Not saying he owns that to ni–as. It’s just being a boss. We don’t know nothing but few words my ni–a and if you don’t go that for us, it’s all love. But don’t feel awkward when we do get where we get and we push you out. Now we pushing you out. Now you ain’t part of this. Now you ain’t getting no credit for turning the city up. Where Detroit at right now, you ain’t getting none of this credit. We did that.”

Then he continued: “Royce 5’9″ that’s Em’s homie. Homies do a lot of s–t for ni–as. He put calls in. He ain’t talk about it. He don’t post about it. None of that s–t but Royce makes real phone calls. He show ni–as love. He get ni–as real game. He ain’t never had to give a ni–a a dollar or feature or some studio time. None of that s–t. We got our own money bro. And it don’t hurt to tap in and see where my mind at bro. It just takes a few minutes to check a ni–a temperature. I ain’t the only one who said something. We all say s–t about that. And I think we put Em in the position to make him feel like we expecting something or we think dude owe us and it ain’t that bro. So I synced him and it was all love and the first thing I though about was ‘oh you do know who I am?! Damn! Okay!'”

Royce cut the part of the video where Icewear Vezzo was talking about him and posted on Instagram with the caption: “Love and Respect @icewear_vezzo … We gon figure all of this out so we can put this narrative to bed. Once and for all… #DetroitVsEverybody.” And Vezzo replied in the comments: “Real respect.” You can check the post below:

Royce 5’9″, Denaun Porter, Swifty McVay, Kxng Crooked respond to Dr. Umar comments about Eminem

During one of the recent episodes of Joe Budden podcast, a staunch Pan-Africanist, motivational speaker, psychologist, activist and social media personality Dr. Umar said Eminem can’t be considered one of the greatest rappers of all time because he’s white. Aside from MC Shan and DJ Akademiks, Royce 5’9″, Denaun Porter, Swifty McVay of D12 and Kxng Crooked have also came out in Eminem’s defense.

“So, never heard or seen my brother say he was anything but grateful and happy to be a part of the culture. He’s not even on that. He just happens to write relentlessly, gives 100 percent effort relentlessly and always respectfully to the culture recklessly s–t on any other artist that came before him. You never heard nobody say he did sh–t to them only what he didn’t do for them. And while he might not have built an actual school, the dude never wants a camera around for anything he does charity wise…because he’s not about that, he ain’t ever been nothing but stand up donating and helping with respect to the persons situations.” said Denaun Porter under the comments section on one of the posts on Instagram.

Then he continued: “In my opinion, people choose to hate a motherf–ker these days because he doesn’t donate to the cause you deem worthy. A man counting your pocket doesn’t mean he know who you have helped. I respect Dr. Umar for what he tries to accomplish but this is just an opinion. It doesn’t change the character or is anywhere near altering to how homie moves with the highest respect for and in the culture. He knows he ain’t black. He also doesn’t act like it or expect s–t. He does try every time his best, he just humbly is one of the dopest motherf–kers that ever touched a pen and that makes some of y’all uncomfortable. Respectfully and gracefully I don’t give a f–k what a ni–a say about my brother. He will always be one of the GOATs.”

Denaun Porter’s response to Dr. Umar’s Eminem comments.

Royce 5’9″ also defended Eminem and said: “Dr. Umar said it was nothing personal. Bro is top 5 dead or alive and been that for decades via general consensus. No one man’s opinion could ever change that so let the man have his opinion lol. Nothing to be upset about. I get what he is trying to say. He feels hip-hop originated in Africa, therefore non-African could never be at the pinnacle. It originated in Queens, New York and it is not a color code but there is a few cultural characteristics that are unique to just black people. Nobody could ever crip a Cali ni–a but the whole world is slanging and banging.”

He then continued: “This is an art form and a business but most important, a skillset. Bro came up with his own way to do it on the highest level and pushed every boundary, checked every box. He cold dog. Now on the flip side, Umar is just looking at rap how high level white executives look. We gotta shock the world to be come a billionaires and we still might end up broke and in jail if we piss of the wrong gate keeper.”

Royce 5’9″s response to Dr. Umar’s Eminem comments.

D12’s Swifty McVay also came out in Eminem’s defense and said: “Some fans think he’s the GOAT, some fans don’t. Just like with any other legendary lyrical architect. But why it gotta turn into a race thing though?! S–ts stupid as f–k. He was the wrong person to ask about Em. SMH.”

Swifty McVay’s response to Dr. Umar’s Eminem comments.

 

Kxng Crooked also talked about it during his Crook’s Corner podcast which is not out yet but he gave us a snippet of the video clip where Long Beach rapper says: “Dr. Umar was almost right, when he paired Eminem with white supremacy. Because, Eminem is white and he’s a supreme emcee. He’s white! And he’s supreme MC! Almost like white supremacy but really nothing like white supremacy.”

Eminem & Cristiano Ronaldo arrive in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia to attend Tyson Fury vs. Francis Ngannou fight

Two combat sports titans, WBC heavyweight champion Tyson Fury and former UFC heavyweight champion Francis Ngannou, are scheduled to clash in the boxing ring on Saturday.

This highly anticipated bout showcases the unrivaled prowess of these two formidable athletes, adding an exceptional element to the ongoing series of “crossover boxing” events.

Fury has never tasted defeat as a professional and has met other massive punches, including three fights with Deontay Wilder in which Wilder scored knockdowns but could not keep Fury on the canvas. Fury also is set to face WBA, WBO and IBF champion Oleksandr Usyk with a targeted date of Dec. 23, which adds a bit of extra intrigue to the Ngannou fight as any injury or cut could set Fury back from his pursuit of becoming the first undisputed heavyweight champion of the four-belt era.

Ngannou defeated Stipe Miocic in March 2021 to win the UFC heavyweight championship. He defended the title with a decision over Ciryl Gane the following January and then parted ways with the UFC amid a bitter round of contract negotiations. One of the sticking points in those negotiations was Ngannou’s desire to take a chance in the boxing ring.

To attend the most anticipated fight of the year, Eminem, Royce 5’9″, Paul Rosenberg and Mr. Porter arrived in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Football superstar Cristiano Ronaldo also checked in. Check out the new video and photos below:

Busta Rhymes, Young M.A, Royce 5’9″ & more react to 50 Cent & Eminem show in Detroit

50 Cent and Eminem proved their long-time friendship remains unbroken and strong as steal as they shared the stage at Fif’s Final Lap Tour in Detroit, Michigan this past weekend.

The G-Unit boss headlined the Pine Knob Music Theatre on Sunday night (September 17, 2023), and it was only right that he brought out his close friend and hometown hero, Marshall Mathers, as a surprise guest of the show, among other Detroiters Icewear Vezzo, Kash Doll and Peezy

Eminem and 50 Cent performed “Patiently Waiting” from Get Rich Or Die Tyrin’ and “Crack a Bottle,” from Relapse album.

Before departing the stage, Eminem showed love to 50 Cent while saying a few words to the Detroit audience. “Detroit! Don’t f–king act like you didn’t know I was gonna be here. Detroit! make some noise for one of the best friends that I’ve ever known, 50 Cent. And also, make some noise for Hip Hop’s 50th birthday, y’all. It’s still hip-hop’s 50th birthday! Detroit, I love y’all, man!”

“Y’all know I was gonna do that. I had to do that.” 50 Cent added when Eminem walked out of stage.

Fif later shared a video of the moment on Instagram with the caption: “Bro when I do anything with EM people just go crazy they know he really my boy. I love him till death!”

In the comment section, Busta Rhymes, legendary hip-hop group Three 6 Mafia, Tony Yayo, Uncle Murda and Young MA commented fire emojis. While Royce da 5’9” replied with a GIF that says “that’s dynamic duo vibes right there.”

You can check everything in the video below:

Stretch Money gives his Top 4 Detroit Lyricists, talks about Eminem

Detroit rapper Stretch Money has recently sat down on MOGUL STATE OF MIND where he briefly talked about Eminem and Royce 5’9.”

“My top four Detroit rappers… Esham, I throw Marshall (Eminem) in there. I’mma throw Nickel (Royce Da 5’9”) in there and Herk. Esham, Marshall, Royce Da 5’9″, Big Herk! But Esham is over them all. Get f–king clear on that. He’s first. He’s the first of the mutants. Esham is is the top no matter the conversation. Everybody’s opinion is valid but that’s mine.” said Stretch Money.

Then he continued: “I worked with anybody but Marshall. I don’t know why. I never met him. If I had a conversation with Eminem right now what advice would I give? I would not give him no motherf–king advice. Eminem is a lord. He does not need no motherf–king advice from me. For real, for real. That’s real big head man. Let’s be clear who the f–k we talking about. Regardless the stigma and don’t nobody know him, that’s my honest to god answer to that. Why we ain’t never work? Because we ain’t never met. I don’t know that motherf–ker.

“I could work with Royce like I could leave from here today, drive to the studio and be like ‘ey, what’s up’ and sit in that bi–ch all night. You feel me? It’s like that but like I said I don’t know Eminem dawg.” he added.

You can watch the interview below:

New Song: Royce 5’9″ & 100 Kufis – “No Love”

Royce 5’9″ is back with his first new single of the year after contributing to several new songs and The Heaven Experience EP. The underground rapper who goes by the name of 100 Kufis is featured on the new song titled “No Love.”

The music was made public as a result of a partnership with the Tully app. Tully is a music management software made to assist managers and musicians in conducting business in the sector. According to their website, Joyner Lucas, who co-founded the app, uses it to manage his independent rap career.

Royce Da 5’9″ has guest featured on a trio of new singles this year. Shortee Blitz, Dem Southernfolkz, and Grafh have all dropped new singles that he appears on.

You can bump the new single below:

Rakim names best match-up to go against Eminem, Royce 5’9″ reacts

Rakim, the God emcee, has recently shared a picture of Eminem and Black Thought on Instagram, asking fans what they think about the match-up: “Conversation of the day!! Talk about it in the comments. I’ll be watching.” – Rakim wrote in the caption.

Royce 5’9″ was quick to respond in the comments: “They have the words on a string … Like a yo-yo … The two most extreme examples of lyrical overachiever that you could pair together .. We’re not worthy.”

Rakim’s post also divided hip-hop fans into half. One user replied: “Both are èlite lyricist, I’d rather see them collab than go against each other! Em’s storytelling and rhyme schemes with Thought’s lyricism and flow are a deadly combination.” Another commented: “Black Thought, by a convincing margin, only because of the congruence of his bars. Em is extremely skilled and make words rhyme (whole sentences at times), but they don’t always make sense, or have the degree of depth that a Black Thought displays effortlessly…(one man’s opinion)” Someone said: “The mechanics of Em do not offer the nuance, soul, education, or relatability that Thought bestows.. though I would love to hear Em over more soulful tracks, personally I’d still rock with Tariq.”

Check out Rakim’s post below and tell us your opinions about Eminem VS Black Thought in the comment sections of our social media accounts.

Royce 5’9″ talks about early relationship with Eminem, meeting Dr. Dre & more

Royce 5’9″ has recently sat down with Cipha Sounds and Peter Rosenberg on Juan EP Is Life podcast, where the Detroit legend talked about Hip-Hop Shop days with Eminem, how their friendship formed, meeting Dr. Dre for the first time, his career highlights and more.

About Hip-Hop Shop

“After the school graduation, I started going to Hop-Hop Shop. First time I went to Hip-Hop Shop I rapped and I got gonged. I almost was not a rapper. That killed my confidence. I thought I was not ready. I walked in there and I seen Proof, Elzhi, Marshall, all of them killers. Hip-Hop Shop was an open mic slash clothing sore that was owned by Maurice Malone. So what you do is, you stand around in the circle and Proof is like the host, he just passes the mic around. If you get it, you gotta rap. And DJ Head is up top on the ones and twos and if you don’t get reaction fast enough then he puts on gong music and you gotta pass the mic. Proof was known as the best emcee. When I walked in there, I didn’t know anybody. I already heard about Proof. Marshall did not rap that day.”

After Hip-Hop Shop / meeting Eminem

“After I succeeded at the Hip-Hop Shop, I just kept going. Bad Meets Evil the vinyl was probably the first thing that I was a part of. Around ’97. I heard ‘Infinite’ before I met Marshall. ‘Infinite’ and ‘The Slim Shady EP.’ Mr. Porter produced the whole ‘Infinite’ album. Me and Eminem get close as soon as we met. I met him the night my son was born. We have already heard about each other. I was opening up for Usher at the show. He heard me kick the acapella on stage. And he asked me to meet me. So, we met each other, exchanged numbers and we started talking on the phone and that’s how the song Bad Meets Evil ended up happening. Once we did that, he took a liking to me, he got his deal with Dre and the rest is history.

About Bad Meets Evil deal

John Schechter, he’s a good friend of mine but he was introduced me through Paul Rosenberg who’s Em’s partner. I already had friendly relationship with Paul Rosenberg. I can’t remember exactly all the particulars but Paul wanted to set it up to where Em can do things outside of his deal. Also to help build me. So we just kept doing s–t together. And at that time, I also became Em’s hypeman for a minute. We were just together all the time. We were just building.

Meeting Dr. Dre

I remember sending out my demos to Marshall when he was out in Cali so he can listen to the songs. I get the call one day, my dad comes into the room and says ‘Ryan, It’s Dr. Dre on the phone for you.’ I answered the phone like ‘hello’ and he’s like ‘Yo what’s up, it’s Dre.’ I’m like WOW. So, Marshall basically played my s–t for him and he was feeling my s–t. So he was like ‘would you be down to come out here and work with us?’ I said ‘hell yeah.’ So I went out to Cali and we started working on The Chronic two (2001). From there, I ended up signing a deal with Tommy Boy where my album was executive produced by Marshall.

Check out the full interview below:

Symbolyc One teases new Eminem & Royce 5’9″ song

Strange Fruit Project founder Symbolyc One, who is currently signed to Kanye West’s Very GOOD Beats as a producer, promises more music from Eminem and Royce 5’9″.

Yesterday, the song “Caterpillar” which is produced by S1 and Epikh Pro, turned 5 years old. To celebrate the anniversary, Symbolyc One shared one of the fans photo collage of “Caterpillar” music video on his Instagram story. In the caption he wrote: “5 years ago! More to come.”

Last year, to wish Eminem a happy birthday, the Grammy-winning producer put up the story on his Instagram account, listing his and Eminem collaborative tracks though the years. At the end of the listing, he wrote: “More to come.”

S1 and Eminem have worked on several songs together, including: “Normal,” “Nice Guy,“ “Discombobulated,” “Bad Guy,” “Caterpillar,” “My Life” and “Rainy Days.”

Is the year 2023 the comeback of Bad Meets Evil? Check out the screenshot of the story below and tell us your opinions in the comment sections of our social media accounts.

 

Redman references Eminem & Dr. Dre on a new song with Royce 5’9″

Detroit legend Royce 5’9” has released his much-anticipated The Heaven Experience EP in partnership with Passage.

The 6-tracks EP includes guest appearances from Redman, Courtney Bell and Traxx Sanders and productions from DJ Pain One, J.U.S.T.I.C.E. League and S.T.R.E.E.T.R.U.N.N.E.R.

In the song titled “Royce & Reggie,” Redman drops Eminem and Dr. Dre reference with a clever wordplay: “It’s Red ni–a / ma bars up I hit the gym / I see you walkin’ in my shoes they’re my old timbs, / And when you ignorant ni–a / media roll film / So here’s a cut I’m Dr. Dre and how I build M’s (Em’s) / In the bay they say I’m Hella tough / They say Red you spit like kids from a yellow bus.”

You can bump the new track below:

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