NEW VIDEO – “Freedom Writers (Ft. Dee-1)” by Palermo Stone

Palermo StonePalermo Stone “Freedom Writers (feat Dee-1)” [Official Video] – click this link to view the video now! Palermo Stone and New Orleans rising star Dee-1 come together for a crisp visual to their uplifting, positive single, “Freedom Writers,” which appears on Palermo Stone’s new album, “R.A.R.E. [Revitalizing Art; Reinventing Emotion] (Deluxe Edition)”.  The two trade reflective verses over young British talent, Jazz Logic’s, production.  The visuals were shot by Devin Ashmore and the footage was edited by Edge Media. R.A.R.E. (Deluxe) was released March 24, 2013 and is available for free download, click this link to download it now! 

Palermo Stone is a Pittsburgh hip hop artist with two solo albums under his belt.  He is an extremely diverse artist who prides himself on creating music with a powerful message.  His style focuses on bringing the musical and artistic aspect back to hip hop. Having developed successful relationships with several hip hop focal points, including Mac Miller, The Come Up, and New Orleans artist Dee-1, Palermo Stone is on the road to becoming a national force to be reckoned with. His latest album, R.A.R.E. [Revitalizing Art; Reinventing Emotion] (Deluxe Edition), was released March 24, 2013 and is available for ONE DOLLAR; click this link to download your copy today! For more information about Palermo and his team check out their social media links below:

iTunes: https://itunes.apple.com/us/album/freedom-writers-feat.-dee/id579433152

Audiomack: http://www.audiomack.com/song/palermo-stone/freedom-writers

Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/palermostone/freedom-writers-ft-dee-1

Twitter: @PalermoStone @dee1music @JazzLogicUK @RARENation @devin_annimal @Edge_Media_

PALERMO STONE Keys ft Ads Antalik, MNI

Artist Name: Palermo Stone

Song Title: Keys (feat Ads Antalik, MNI)

Director/Production Credit: JMY JAM

Additional Information about Video:
Palermo Stone recruits label-mates Ads Antalik and MNI to provide some
feel-good visuals for “Keys,” a standout song from his latest release,
R.A.R.E. [Deluxe]. Aus10 production finds the trio searching for the
keys to their happiness before a standout closing verse from Ads
Antalik. Palermo Stone’s R.A.R.E. [Revitalizing Art; Reinventing
Emotion] (Deluxe Edition) is available for one dollar ($1) at
http://palermostone.bandcamp.com.

Artist’s Twitter: @PalermoStone

Artist’s Facebook: facebook.com/PalermoStone

Artist’s Website URL: artistecard.com/PalermoStone

The Leak: “Rollin Out” NTB ft. Silas Omega & Palermo Stone


NTB teams up with captain Silas Omega (formerly known as Optimus) and rising emcee Palermo Stone to bring you “Rollin Out”. This collaborative effort shows 3 very different areas of Pittsburgh hip hop fusing with a HITTofMcM produced track to ring bells for NTB’s solo mixtape “The Revolution” and Top Flyte’s collab. tape “T-Minus 13″, to be released on Dec. 5th.

Rollin’ Out Ft. Silas Omega and Palermo Stone (Prod. By HITTofMCM) by NTBisHipHop

“Wheel’s Up….Your Top Flyte is rising….”

Artist’s Twitter: @NTBisHipHop , @SilasOmega,  @PalermoStone
Artist’s Facebook: www.facebook.com/NTB
Artist’s Website URL: http//www.wearetopflyte.bandcamp.com

Other links:
http://www.hulkshare.com/WeAreTopFlyte
http://www.soundcloud.com/NTBisHipHop
http://www.youtube.com/TopFlyteMafia

ForestHills-RegentSquare Patch: Palermo Stone

Local hip-hop artist Palermo Stone reconnects with Woodland Hills High School art students.

By Akasha Brandt

Palermo Stone has grown from being a Woodland Hills High School kid messing around making music for fun, to a well-recognized recording artist with a handful of successful CDs stuffed in his back pocket.

Now the 23-year-old, up-and-comer in the Pittsburgh hip-hop scene has gone home to enlist the help of WHHS students to create original album artwork for a new CD, “RARE,” set to release Dec. 21.

“I know many of the students are hip-hop fans, and I want to help them see that they can use hip-hop for positive and even educational purposes to better their lives and the lives of those around them, like I have,” Stone said.

Stone, who used to be part of Mac Miller’s crew, is part of a collective art movement and small label he created called RARE Nation, which stands for Revitalizing Art; Reinventing Emotion.

Other artists, photographers, musicians and DJs are part of what is considered the RARE family, all of whom desire to bring back originality and passion to todays music and art.

Now Stone is bringing the RARE dream back home.

“I wanted to find some way to give back to Woodland Hills, and this is the best way I know how,” Stone said.

Art teacher Michelle Hutterer selected two seniors interested in pursuing careers in graphic arts to work on the album artwork for RARE. Both students worked individually and met with Hutterer for consultation on their projects.

Hutterer said she was pleased to see Stone come back to the Woodland Hills community as an example to students to be true to their roots.

“I think it’s really a positive thing. It gives them a sense of community to see people leave here and pursue their dreams” said Hutterer, who grew up in the Woodland Hills area, decided to stay to teach there and personally values the community.

The two students’ artwork could be spread throughout the country.

Stone and Rami Bensasi, a Pittsburgh hip-hop music reviewer, expect the album to have a national reach because of a high-profile track recorded with famed New Orleans artist Dee-1.

Stone also mentioned his own fanbase reaches globally.

While students in the Woodland Hills School District might be into hip-hop, Stone and his friends have another unlikely listener in the administration.

Superintendent Alan Johnson is a self-acclaimed hip-hop fan.

While he said his iPod might not be full of the genre, he admitted that listening to popular music helps him understand his students better.

Johnson likes RARE music because, unlike some artists, they sing about relationships, community, and Pittsburgh.

“They’re trying to be about the art form that they care about and it’s not about violence,” said Johnson who thinks that hip-hop often gets a bad rap for being violent.

Like Hutterer, he wants his students to get a reality check from hearing about the young artists’ experiences working towards success.

The bottom line, he said, was that successful performers are like business savvy entrepreneurs fighting hard to get on top. Afterall, Stone has a degree in entertainment business from the online Full Sail University.

“[Students] think they’re going to go out to be a NASCAR racer, NFL player or hip-hop artist. You can do whatever you want to do but you’re not going to do it without hard work,” Johnson said.

Johnson wants to continue evolving the school’s connection with the RARE artists, even suggesting that he would like to have the two main artists—Stone and Ads Antalik—teach classes or lectures on the music business.

“To me, I just see nothing but positives coming from that,” Johnson said.

click here for the original post

The Leak: “Freedom Writers” Palermo Stone featuring Dee-1


Palermo Stone partners with New Orleans buzzing artist Dee-1 for “Freedom Writers,” the first single from Palermo Stone’s album, R.A.R.E.  The track finds the two trading uplifting stories over smooth production from 16 year-old British producer, Jazz Logic.  R.A.R.E. will be released December 21, 2012.

Artist: Palermo Stone (Pittsburgh, PA)
Song: “Freedom Writers (feat. Dee-1)”
Album: R.A.R.E. [Revitalizing Art; Reinventing Emotion]
Producer: Jazz Logic

Freedom Writers ft. Dee-1 by palermostone

Twitter: @PalermoStone, @dee1music, @JazzLogicUK

The Leak: “Only in America” Palermo Stone & JKJ

In the heat of the 2012 Presidential Election and the always-interesting Presidential Debates, there is a lot of talk about this nation of ours. R.A.R.E. Nation artist Palermo Stone teams up with frequent collaborator, Wonderhitz frontman JKJ, to bring you their take on things in “Only In America.” Palermo Stone’s album, R.A.R.E. (Revitalizing Art; Reinventing Emotion), will be released December 21, 2012. JKJ will release C.O.A.L.S. (Confessions Of A Lost Soul) on December 24th.

Artist Name: Palermo Stone, JKJ
Age: 23, 21
Location: Pittsburgh, PA
Song: “Only In America”
Album: (Unreleased)
Producer: Louie Alexander
Twitter: @PalermoStone, @JKJ412
Facebook: Palermo Stone, JKJ

The Leak: “Used to Know” Palermo Stone

Artist Name: Palermo Stone
Song Title: Used to Know
Album/Mixtape Title: R.A.R.E.
Album/Mixtape Release Date: December 2012
Producer: Aus10
Label: R.A.R.E. Nation

Palermo Stone releases “Used to Know” as newly founded R.A.R.E. Nation’s first official release, produced by R.A.R.E. in-house producer, Aus10. The movement, R.A.R.E. (Revitalizing Art, Reinventing Emotion), is quickly gaining momentum and members. Look for more releases and an upcoming website launch in the next few weeks. In a world of media robots, R.A.R.E. is more than music, it is a community of individuals committed to being unique, being themselves — being R.A.R.E.

Artist’s Twitter: @PalermoStone
Artist’s Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/PalermoStone
Artist’s Website URL: artistecard.com/PalermoStone


The Leak: “Cost to Be a Boss” JKJ ft. Palermo Stone & Scoot

Artist Name: JkJ
Song Title: “Cost To Be A Boss” ft. Palermo Stone & Scoot
Album/Mixtape Title: ’91
Album/Mixtape Release Date: March 14th, 2012
Producer: Mike Mars
Label: WonderHitz Enterprise

JkJ releases another new track off of his collective entitled ’91. The Tape will be released on March 14th and will consist of some already released singles as well as some new music.

Artist’s Twitter: @JkJ412 @PalermoStone @TheRealScoot412
Artist’s Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/YallKnowTheName
Artist’s Website URL: www.wonderhitz.com


Review: “For My Culture” Palermo Stone

 

The Palermo Stone is a fragment of stone that holds the names of ancient Egyptian Pharaohs; it was created as a means of preserving their legacy in the hopes that they will be forever remembered.  Enter a rapper by the same name, hoping to make his name forever remembered in a quickly growing Pittsburgh hip hop community.  Though he has worked with some of the Steel City’s most prominent hip hop figures, can For My Culture serve as the means by which Palermo Stone can carve his name in the foundation of Pittsburgh’s growing hip hop reputation?

“ReOccurring Dreams” starts the project off.  Using the instrumental, less the drums, from “Billionaire Dreams,” the closing track from his first solo work, Beautiful Music, the opening track provides fans of the first album a seamless transition into this one.  After a slow opening, FMC quickly picks up with the title track, featuring frequent collaborator JKJ, whose one of two contributions on the album come here in the form of a standout verse.  The pace continues with the semi-radio-friendly “Fast Girl (Cheetah, Cheater)” accompanied by one half of The Come Up, Franchise.  The opening tracks don’t offer a moment of breathing room, as listeners find themselves totally invested in keeping up with Palermo’s varied delivery and shifting subject matter, not to mention solid all-around production by the likes of 93P, among notable others, who handles 6 of the 16 songs.

Halfway through the album, however, Palermo throws us a huge curve ball and gives a moving testament to his enormous diversity as an artist by delivering the interlude “Memories,” a ballad free of rapping that is bursting with emotion and remorse.  The dark tone continues in the next two tracks, showing that the Culture is not all fun and games, and the quality only improves as the work continues.  As he raps on the most easily accessible cut for new fans, “When Will I Learn,” “Sleeping with temptation, flirting with the truth / I just need a confirmation, do you love me, is it true? / Asking myself questions that I know the answer to / Of course you do / Cause if you even knew the half of it / You’d have to quit,” he uses some sharp wordplay to expose a vulnerability that wasn’t seen in the first half of the album, but which becomes more apparent throughout its remainder.

For My Culture, as all works, is not without flaws, though.  The intro, “ReOccurring Dreams,” feels as if Palermo is trying to find his feet over a tricky instrumental, and some of the clever lyrics are lost amid a relatively timid delivery.  As an artist, it is apparent that he is still perfecting his craft, which is a never-ending process.  Thankfully, the relatively (and I stress relatively) low point of the album comes at the beginning, and quite literally many of the songs are better than the one they are preceded by, which gives the listener a unique feeling of a crescendo as the album draws to a close.

To complete the journey through For My Culture, Vinny Radio (also of The Come Up) provides the only moment in all seven features that Palermo is undeniably out-shined, as he delivers a mind-blowing, rewind-worthy verse.  Fortunately, any chance that Palermo is content with someone stealing the spotlight is quickly dispelled on the closing “Made of Stone,” which boasts a rapid-fire delivery and the most dense, revealing rhymes of the album: “Real name Tyrone / It means ‘young soldier’ so I never back down from a war / Seen a lot of stuff, cuz / Seen a cracked out bitch / Seen a badass chick / Under one common theme… Both fiend for a hustler / Need some cream, it’s a must, bruh / Tryna see where it comes from.”

Coming in as his second solo project, it’s clear from the beginning that For My Culture is Palermo’s best body of work to date.  Combining stellar production, multi-layered references and a penchant for slipping in thought-provoking references in such a way that suggests he didn’t even want you to catch them the first time through, Palermo has successfully created a project that not only blows any of his previous work out of the water but also holds its own with Pittsburgh’s heavyweights.

If you can relate, download the album and share with the world.

Overall Rating: 4 / 5