capone of capone and nore speaks on hip hop police chris lighty and beefs !

#1
allhiphop said:
Going on almost ten years in the game, Kiam Holley's story has yet to be told. As one half of the acclaimed Rap group, Capone-N-Noreaga, Capone has quietly seen it all and been through it to match. Growing up in the infamous Queens Bridge Housing Projects, he got the Hip-Hop itch at an early age. Straight from the source’s mouth, "It's funny, ‘cause Shante basically raised me man. Coming up, being a Hip-Hop fan, I felt good having people I saw on TV right in my backyard. I could see Craig G., MC Shan, Tragedy [Khadafi], Marley Marl, so I felt good.” During the release of CNN's The War Report, N.O.R.E. was forced to promote the album by himself, as ‘Pone was locked up on a gun charge.

With the release of their follow up The Reunion, came even more drama. Foxy Brown aired out rival Lil' Kim on "Bang Bang," which caused tension in the streets between all parties involved. One weekend afternoon, Lil' Kim and members of Junior M.A.F.I.A. were exiting New York radio station Hot 97 as Capone and company were entering. Screw faces were exchanged, shots were fired and Hip-Hop history was written.

As of late, N.O.R.E. has continued to further his solo career, as ‘Pone has been rarely heard or seen, leaving many to make their own assumptions about the group's future. Now with his first solo album Pain Time And Glory in the chamber, AllHipHop.com caught up with the QB G during his mastering session. We talk CNN, record executive slime, Hip-Hop police and get an inside look into what he says went down at the Lil' Kim Trial.


Click here to watch Capone talk about the worst day of his life.

Click here to watch Capone his crew and homey Noreaga.

Capone kicks knowledge about the Hip-Hop Police - check it out here.

AllHipHop.com: What’s new, man? Where you been?

Capone: I been in the muthaf**king hood! [Laughs] Nah, I’ve been in the studio recording. I’ve been working hard on this album. I’ve been really focused on doing this solo album for about three years, but prior to that, I wasn’t focused on doing a solo album. I was basically focused on just getting situated and getting it where it needed to be.

AllHipHop.com: So if you weren’t focused on doing a solo album, what was the focus all this time?

Capone: I was just recording, basically just focused on getting my s**t tight. I was away from the game for a minute. There were still things I wanted to touch and better myself at. So basically I was in the studio just grinding.

AllHipHop.com: During the height of the West coast vs. East coast, it seemed that Queens was the only borough to stand up as a unified body, and y’all did the song “L.A. L.A.” How did that come about? Y’all were throwing cats over bridges in the video.

Capone: Right know you got two ways to get in the game. Know somebody or diss somebody. And we took the diss somebody route because we knew the people we knew, and that was s**t wasn’t getting us to where we needed to be. So it was like, f**k that. Much respect to Snoop, Dogg Pound, that’s my family right now. But at that time, it was like, “Muthaf**ka, how we going to get in the game and get it right?” And the best way that we seen was a opportunity that was thrown at us to do a song for the Bad Boy mixtape. So we said ”s**t, what better song to do than to go back at the West Coast n***as on that tape." That was the biggest way to make it pop off. So we did the record “L.A., L.A.” Puff heard it and was like, “Nah, I can’t do this.” And I respected it as now, being a businessman and O.G., That’s not the art of war he was playing. So cool, we put the record out ourselves. We pressed up the record thanks through Stretch Armstrong. And we took it like that. That got us in.

AllHipHop.com: Both of CNN’s albums were hot in their own right. Can you get into the making of The War Report?

Capone: S**t, that was a lot of f**king pain and suffering making that album. We got our record deal in December of ‘95. Me and NORE had about 10,000 a piece. We went and bought all the same clothes so we could like a Rap group. Same Avirex jacket, same kicks all types of s**t. That was our first checks from rapping so we were feeling like a Rap group. After that money was gone, then back came the bulls**t. You know $10,000 don’t last long baby, especially when you got family to take care of. Two months later, my house got raided.

AllHipHop.com: By who?

Capone: Police. You know n***as rattin’ in the hood. You know I hold my weight in gold baby, I put my twirk in, I did mine. Even though a n***a trying to get out of the hood, you can’t take the hood out of a n***a. So n***as know I’m still moving accordingly. So they figure the best way to stop my shine, is to get the police involved. Then that happened and I get caught with some guns. I go to jail on February 28th. I get bailed out March 5th. March 12th, my moms die. So it was like she was holding off for me until I got home, so it bugged me out. Mind you, this is all while we were recording the album. So in the middle of June, three of my mans die in a car accident. The next day after that, I got shot. So after getting shot, you know I’m in the hospital a couple weeks, I come home. I go back to the studio. Remember I got locked up in February, so I got a case. I’m going back and forth to court through all this s**t, arm in a sling, f**ked up. On November 19th, I turned myself in to do my bid. The judge told me, “If you want to stay out another two weeks, I’ll give you another two weeks.” I was drunk as a muthaf**ker, I hurled on the court steps. I’m rocking in the court room, mad weed in my ass. I had everything, my shank. Ain’t no s**tting that back out, baby. That’s real G s**t. [Laughs] If you a gangster, you really respect it. This all happened in 1996, and I still managed to keep my head up. I think jail really focused me. Because at the end of the day, I am the only child, no brothers or sisters. All I had was my mom. That was my first time really being alone with out her. My first bid I did in jail, she was there. This one, I was on my own.

AllHipHop.com: So what about The Reunion?

Capone: S**t, I came home man. I came home like a boss. I set that coming home pretty s**t off.

AllHipHop.com: So what's your favorite CNN album right now? What's more special to you?

Capone: Ughhh, The War Report. On The Reunion, I was a rapper, The War Report, I was a street n***a. I didn’t really know anything about Rap. I wasn’t growing up to be a rapper. I stumbled upon the s**t. Like I tripped on the deal, like oh s**t sign where? I still had loose cracks in my pocket when I signed the deal! It was hard, but I made the transition. I made the switch.

AllHipHop.com: What's up with you and N.O.R.E. now a days? Keep all the way funky.

Capone: I keeps it 100% funky, I don’t front. Me and N.O., we family, it’s beyond partners. We could argue all day about records, about music, about whatever it wants. But it all goes down, because we have to see each other. So what y’all may not see on in the personal, y’all might think on record. Will there be another CNN album? You’ll see, because I can’t tell you that. Right now he’s doing him, Reggeatoning it, and I’m doing me. At the end of the day, he’s on his road to success, and I’m on my road. It’s all right for people to do that. We don’t fight, we don’t have arguments, everything is cool. You not gonna hear about me getting on the radio and saying I wrote his verse and s**t. You know what I’m saying? We don’t bump like that.

AllHipHop.com: What lead up to the separation?

Capone: I didn’t want to do the Reggaeton thing like that. He wanted to do that, so that’s basically what that is. I love Reggaeton music, but I feel like I haven’t even made my mark on what I’m trying to do.

AllHipHop.com: You cool on Reggeaton music? How do you feel about him crossing into Reggeaton?

Capone: I love Reggeaton music, n***a. My kids are Spanish, man. At the end of the day, the music is great. Man, I been to Puerto Rico. I been to the hoods in Puerto Rico. I been to the parts of Puerto Rico, that Puerto Ricans never been to. I feel like Reggeaton, it was about time. Everywhere I go that was musically orientated, I think Puerto Rico was the only place that didn’t get their national shot. Jamaican Reggae music just blew up from Shabba [Ranks] hitting the scene. Now so maybe Daddy Yankee and these dudes could take Reggaeton to the level that has longevity like Reggae music and all other types of music that’s not Hip-Hop.

AllHipHop.com: What’s up with your album?

Capone: The album is called Pain Time And Glory. I don’t know what people think of Capone as an artist. I know what people think of me as a n***a in the streets, but when you hear this album you’re going to respect me as an artist. You’re going to feel good in the way the CD [feels] to you and I’m going to feel good in the response Ima get. Every song on the album is an experience on its own. I got Scarface, Raekwon, Peedi Crakk, Akon, Bun B, Devin Da Dude on there, C-Murder.

AllHipHop.com: Can you get into the situation with you and Screw in New Jersey last year?

Capone: I can’t really talk about that situation, there’s an investigation pending on that. There’s basically a situation where we were at a comedy show where s**t got a little bit out of hand. This dude was acting a little shaky. Screw being the type of dude he is, he love his family and he considered me family. And if you’re family, you’re gonna go all out for your family. And he felt that we were in harmful situation, so he stood up. In he event of standing up, the opposition was prepared for the other opposition and my man Screw, rest in peace, got killed.

AllHipHop.com: How has that affected you?

Capone: Yo, that kind of f**ked me up. I’ve seen n***as get killed, I’ve been in shootouts, I’ve been in a lot of predicaments in life, that is one predicament that I can truly say that I hate talking about. I hate talking about that s**t. I can talk about getting shot, loosing my mom, but that situation is one situation that really gets under my skin.
http://www.allhiphop.com/features/?ID=1108 ;)
 
#2
Misleading title my man.

I already read it over at AHH & know that he doesn't speak on Lighty......lol

Edit: I just noticed, you missed the second page of the interview :thumb:
 
#3
allhiphop said:
AllHipHop.com: Can you break it down and give your side about the Lil Kim trial?

Ima take you back to the incident, step by step. This is what happened. We go to All-star weekend, There’s little tension about the “Bang Bang” song in the air. I’d seen Cease and D-Roc two weeks prior to going to Hot 97 at a basketball game, and it was all love. Slaps, pounds, hugs all that, we talked about music. Then you know, going to Hot 97 and it’s like funny face looks. Words were exchanged, it wasn’t nothing too major. But you got to understand that people are going to take care of their boss. They guarding their boss and my n***as is guarding their boss. I mean like, 22 shots were fired. That they counted. So to skip onto that, we’ll go into the court proceedings. After that incident, we all got called into the precinct. We all had the same lawyer by the same way. When I say we, I mean me, N.O.R.E., Kim, Cease, D-Roc, James Cruz, and everybody else you can think of that was there. Everybody went in there and gave their version or whatever. Nobody snitching on anybody, that was it. Nobody said nothing, that was it. Two years later, they subpoena everybody to the federal grand jury. They subpoenaed everybody I just named including our car drivers. N***as was making this s**t a fiasco. So anyway, we went to the federal grand jury. Everybody told the incident of the story, she goes in there on some like real like, “I ain’t got time for this, y’all got me in here for nothing.” Like not taking it that serious, thinking [she] could say no to everything. Like it’s that easy, like you could say to no to everything to something as simple as, “Do you know D-Roc?” But look at the repercussions of them finding out that you know D-Roc. Because if she was smart, she would of known that D-Roc and them already said they were there. You can’t lie about them not being there.

At the end of the day, everybody told their story and she was the only one that decided to lie. And we already know who told on who it was in the papers. I ain’t got to say his name. His statement was in the papers. Grand jury, everybody, went. So after the grand jury, everything was cool, I thought the s**t was over. Next thing I know, they hit my lawyer like, “Yo they filed charges against Kim.” That’s when they came out in the paper and posted all of her charges. So now this is like six or more months ago, they hit the lawyers with the subpoenas. Now I gotta go to the Kim trial. Now they want to question everybody that was there. The only thing they could ask us, “What was said in the grand jury?” I didn’t say s**t in the grand jury. I couldn’t possibly think that anybody else had anything to say, because it’s so simple. It boils down to you can’t get around a federal subpoena. We were subpoenaed to go to Kim’s trial. So in Kim’s trial, it was like amusing to me. I was in the stand; they were asking me dumb s**t. They not even asking me [about] s**t she on trial for. Like. “Did you ever see Kim with Damian Butler?” They not even asking me s**t like that. They asking me s**t like, “When did I first learn Lil’ Kim and Foxy had beef?” Stupid s**t, this is the D.A. So mind you Cease, all these other people on the stand for hours and better. I was up there fifteen minutes. It was some homo dudes in the back. So when I went in the joint, they went in there to see what I had to say. When they seen after ten minutes I had nothing to say, they got up in left. Like, “Dog why did you bring me to this?” But see, they need the other rapper names to make her case bigger. They need to make this a fiasco. Like her friends turned on her and all that. But they didn’t even know that she ain’t speak to Junior M.A.F.I.A. in years. So it’s not like they got personal beef right now, that s**t is over with. They done grew out of that s**t, but on the trial they tried to make it seem like they got all this drama. Nobody want to f**kin’ go to a courtroom and sit there, that s**t is weak. That s**t is not in my nature. The newspaper tried to make it seem like… picture me having beef with a girl to where it comes to busting guns? With a girl? That’s impossible! Another thing that made it crazier was when I got on the stand at Lil’ Kim’s trial and her defense attorney was questioning me, they had nothing to ask me, duke. I was up there for like five minutes at the most. Then the lawyer going to ask me a question from the newspaper, “Didn’t you say they went at you like a bunch of wolves in your grand testimony?” I said, “Wait a minute, dogs, you reading from the newspaper?” Luckily, the news dude I told that shit to was right there. I said that to him and he said no further questions. I was gone.

AllHipHop.com: What is your response if someone referred to you as a snitch?

Capone: They could say what they want, but obviously they don’t know the game. They don’t know the game of being subpoenaed and things of that nature. So people go and say what they want. Say it to my face and I’ll knock your muthaf**king teeth out, but then again, I might not. I might laugh at you like, “Come on dog.” Because at the end of the day, you know, I know, the court know, she know, who said it. So you know, if you want to call me that, then you just don’t like me, dog.

AllHipHop.com: Do you think the code of the streets should still apply to rappers that have achieved mainstream success?

Capone: It should apply to everybody, no muthaf**king doubt. I don’t give a f**k how much success you got. It’s a code you abide by. I got a song called “The Manual.” It’s the do and don’ts of street life. Just in case you get lost in something, you get in a jam and you don’t know what to do. Put that record on, and you’ll live longer on that street.

AllHipHop.com: What are your thoughts on the Hip-Hop police? Do you think it's justified considering many rappers come from criminal backgrounds?

Capone: Hip-Hop police is justified in a certain way in a sense that a lot of people out here catch stupid cases and I feel like the Hip-Hop police is bad, but it brings some kind of order into teaching muthaf**kers how to move. For instance, if Hip-Hop police wasn’t around, a lot of rappers would be moving how they want to move and a lot more rappers would be going to jail. So instead of a n***a bringing that mac out, or bringing that biscuit out, it’ll be like, “Nah, the Hip-Hop police is out here, I can’t even do that.” The NYPD has no more to do, there is no mafia. [John] Gotti is dead dog. It doesn’t exist like that to do that and leave us alone. So what they going to do, we the n***as making the most money in America, the entertainers. So what are they going to do? They don’t want to be running around chasing a serial killer n***a around, they want to be walking around with 50 Cent or whatever. I’m not using 50 as a scape goat, but he’s known to be with the police. So half of them n***as that probably around him that’s police, they would have been right on the street beat walking or chasing a n***a with a 100 pack worried about this n***a bucking at him or whatever. But they like, “F**k that, I’m going to the Grammy’s.” [Also,] they called Hip-Hop police because they look just like you. They be five White Hip-Hop police, they the throw offs. F**kers like me, muthaf**king that n***a right there asking you for a bag of weed is the police. So the stupid n***as don’t know the game, I’m here to school you.

AllHipHop.com: Are you still being managed by Violator?

Capone: Nah, but Violator is cool man.

AllHipHop.com: Going out on a nostalgic note, few heads don't know BIG was trying to get you down with Junior M.A.F.I.A. back in the day. Can you get into that and how that came about? How did he hear about you?

Capone: Rest in peace to B.I.G. We was North Carolina, this was 1995. I was on the road with Mobb Deep and Nas and s**t. So B.I.G. came out there. Me and Lil’ Cease, we in the club, doing our thing, B.I.G., N.O.R.E., everybody in the club, Keith Murray was out there too. They start fighting in the club. Me and Lil’ Cease, back to back fighting the whole club, we’re like, “Where’s B.I.G. and Nas? They had left us. We come out the club, n***as start shooting at us and s**t. We go back to the hotel; it’s like a thousand people outside of the hotel, wilding. B.I.G. comes out in the leather boxers on. He in the balcony like, “What up!” That was the last time I really hung out with B.I.G. Before that, he was on HOT 97. I did the real rapper fan move, b. I could admit it. I heard B.I.G. on the radio, went to HOT 97, waited til’ his ass got out and I rapped for the n***a and the n***a wanted to sign me. D-Roc was with him. ‘Cease can vouch for it too. He went back to Junior M.A,F.I.S and told them [about me]. That’s how real it was.
http://www.allhiphop.com/features/?ID=1107 my bad lol........wheres the part bout him walkin out of the room when chris lighty was mentioned ??
 
#5
for real i read that part too ....... it was askin him bout his knowledge of chris lighty being part of federal agents or summat ........ maybe he asked them to edit it out ?
 
#6
sniper said:
for real i read that part too ....... it was askin him bout his knowledge of chris lighty being part of federal agents or summat ........ maybe he asked them to edit it out ?
They question him on the "well known" fact that Chris Lighty is a one of the top "Hip Hop informants". He walked out. I can only imagine Capone - or Violator - asked for it to be edited.
 

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