AKON: KONVICT


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24 HITS: AKON: KONVICT

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If you've even turned on your radio within the last year then there is no way you could not of heard Akon singing the chorus to at least one song if not three different songs on your dial. Akon is hip-hop's preeminent R&B singer/rapper- the same man who gave you the hooks to Young Jeezy's "Soul Survivor" and Obie Trice's "Snitch". Now he’s got a hit song out with Eminem titled “Smack That” as well as another hit single out with Snoop Dogg called” I Wanna Love You”. Without any hesitation one could definitely say of this former convict- that this is the year of Akon!

24/ACCESS: So have you had run in with the cops lately?
AKON: When I first got this car I'd get pulled over all the time, but the Atlanta police recognized me and let me off with a warning if I gave them an autograph. Now the entire police department knows this car belongs to me and I don't get pulled over so much. You know what's crazy? They play my song "Locked Up" in their cars when they pick kids up and are taking them to jail. The police told me that the song is the police department's anthem. It doesn't get realer than that.

24/ACCESS: You have quite a history with cars. Tell us what happened that night you got caught and went to jail.
AKON: I was driving a BMW 325, on my way to the chop shop. That's the slowest car in the whole fleet, the BMW 325. I'd been in high-speed pursuit before and always got away, but this time I didn't because the car was too slow. I didn't even want that car, it was a favor to someone else. And I wound up getting locked up for three years. I started the car-stealing hustle when I lived in Jersey, but then I brought it down to Atlanta because the entertainers were here, the athletes were here, the musicians were here, the cars that people wanted were here. I was very good at what I did.

24/ACCESS: You moved to the United States from Senegal when you were seven. What was the most difficult part of that transition?
AKON: The language barrier. Learning to speak English. Nobody in the U.S. really speaks French. Well, not in New Jersey!

24/ACCESS: So you and Snoop have a hit single out now together…tell me did you guys smo… I mean ...uh… do anything else with your time together?
AKON: [Laughs] I'll tell you what. Snoop did a concert recently in Lagos, Nigeria. He called me up, like, "Help man, I need to get me some weed!" And I had to explain to him that in Nigeria they don't smoke weed like he's used to. In Africa the weed comes straight from the tree, then you put it on your roof to dry it before you smoke. What Snoop is used to is that American weed where they put chemicals in it, suddenly it's growing purple hairs and you take one puff and your head comes off. In Africa it's truly a mellow thing.

24/ACCESS: Is there somebody out there who you have a great deal of respect for that some people might not know?
AKON: Phil Collins. I love Phil Collins. "In The Air Tonight" is an incredible song. I hope to work with Phil. He's got an amazing vocal tone. His vocal tone makes me cry.

24/ACCESS: Is there a Muslim or Senegalese proverb that you choose to live by?
AKON: It's a universal proverb: Do unto others as you would have them do unto you. When I was stealing cars I used to think, "If I stole your car it's because you did something bad and it's coming back to you. If I can't get this car, it's because God doesn't want me to have it because this is a good person." If I wanted to steal a car and took it, no problem, I figured it was because this person who owned it had done wrong and God was letting me steal their car as retribution. That's absolutely ludicrous! It's ridiculous. [Laughs] But that's how I thought at the time.

 

 


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