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Queen Latifah returns to her rapping roots

How's this for hip-hop royalty news: None other than Queen Latifah is set to release a new album in December — and she actually raps on it. After focusing on acting (and garnering an Oscar nomination for her efforts in 2002's Chicago) and releasing two well-received collections of pop standards (2004's The Dana Owens Album and 2007's Trav'lin’ Light) it seems that the Queen is ready to get back in the game for the first time in more than a decade. (Yes, Order in the Court came out in the summer of 1998!)

Queen Latifah grew up in Newark, N.J., and got into hip-hop as a teenager, beat boxing with the group Ladies Fresh. She went on to emcee with Flavor Unit, through which DJ Mark the 45 King heard her song "Princess of the Posse." He passed a demo on to Fab Five Freddy, host of Yo! MTV Raps, who helped Latifah sign with Tommy Boy Records and release her debut All Hail the Queen in 1989, when she was only 19. The rest is a Grammy-studded stroll down the Hollywood Walk of Fame (on which she was the first hip-hop artist to get a star).

Queen Latifah recently told RollingStone.com that she almost decided to call the upcoming and still-untitled project The L Word, "Just to mess with people's heads." Hmm. I'll just leave that one alone.

The album was largely produced by LL Cool J and Dr. Dre, and other contributors include Ludacris and Kenny Flav, with a rumored cameo from Busta Rhymes.

I'm curious to see what happens with this. My recollection of Order in the Court is kinda "meh" (though I did always dig the cover art), but maybe a decade away from rapping has left her energized and inspired. We all would certainly benefit from having the Queen back in fighting shape, if for no other reason than I won't have to pull my hair out anymore when people desperately cite her as a favorite current female rapper. I mean, cite her as a godmother absolutely, of course, but it's a little depressing to read her name atop lists that are supposed to be contemporary — inevitably next to Lauryn Hill.

Besides putting together the record, The Queen has been busy: Her new film The Secret Life of Bees, co-starring Jennifer Hudson, Alicia Keys and Dakota Fanning, comes out on Oct. 17. She's also been working a fragrance line with Parlux, set to launch in 2009.

The first single from the new album is supposed to drop soon, so keep your ears open. Especially with Dre on board, this could be interesting. I definitely want to hear what she has to say — don't you?

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  • greyday's picture

    I'm excited

    I'm excited about her new CD and The Secret Life of Bees. I hope her rapping skills are still on point.
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    photoprince's picture

    Her Majesty's dykiness

    A friend who's a big Latifah fan pointed out Her Majesty's penchant for motorcycles.  In "Go Head", she even has a lady on the back: http://au.youtube.com/watch?v=N8i9mMRwUDo. 

    Or, if you prefer her in uniform and rockin' a buzzcut, check out "Ladies First" on http://au.youtube.com/watch?v=xCR1akhEfvQ.  

    glandahl's picture

    Fabulous

    I saw Queen Latifah in concert with Ziggy Marley and Crystal Waters back in 1991.  She was awesome. 

    I miss the old days of female rap.  I was a HUGE Salt-n-Pepa and Monie Love fan.  Rap was so different back then, not so angry.  Anyways I am really looking forward to her album.  I will certainly buy it. 

    pecola's picture

    To Clarify

    Though the juxtaposition might suggest otherwise, Kenny Flav and Flavor Flav are not the same person. Kenny Flav (real name: Kenny Dickerson) is a pretty prolific producer in hip-hop/R&B, who's done some Grammy winning work with Mary J. Blige. It'll be interesting to see what they come up with together because Flav's strength, IMO, has always been R&B tracks. 

    For folks interested in more talk of all things Latifah, the New York Times magazine had a long profile of her in this weekend's edition. I don't know if she's gotten any blowback from her previous answers on questions of her sexuality, but her response to it in this interview was much more composed: 

    One topic of persistent speculation on the Web is Queen Latifah’s sexuality, particularly a supposed romance with a female trainer. She has never addressed her relationships publicly and was in no mood to start. “I don’t have a problem discussing the topic of somebody being gay, but I do have a problem discussing my personal life,” she said. "You don’t get that part of me. Sorry. We’re not discussing it in our meetings, we're not discussing it at Cover Girl. They don’t get it, he doesn’t get it" — she gestured upstairs, toward Compere’s office — "nobody gets that. I don't feel like I need to share my personal life, and I don't care if people think I’m gay or not. Assume whatever you want. You do it anyway."

    -----

    "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere. We are caught in an inescapable network of mutuality, tied in a single garment of destiny. Whatever affects one directly, affects all indirectly." - MLK

    SallImSayin's picture

    It wasn't really a decade

    It wasn't really a decade away from rapping.  I remember "there they go again, them haters" from a few years ago.  But it wasn't a solo album, it was her group. 
    vivalavida's picture

    Don't You?

    mm hmm:) 

    THE QUEEN IS BACK  

     

    mm..mm..mmmhh "isn't she lovely"

     -<_>_<_>_<_>_<_>_<_>

    "The first duty of a man is to think for himself"

    Jose Marti

    Denae's picture

    Glad to hear it...

    I am SOO excited to hear about this.  :-) I love old school Latifah.  The good ol days of "Fly Girl" "UNITY" "Just another day."  Man, I LOVE that stuff. 

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