July 20th, 2007

Sean Kingston – Me Love, Album In Stores July 31st

 
Sean Kingston – Me Love

“SEAN KINGSTON” IN STORES JULY 31
EPIC/BELUGA HEIGHTS

http://www.seankingston.com
http://www.myspace.com/seankingston

RealTalkNY’s Interview with Sean Kingston
Bio below…

Sean Kingston, a 17 year old native of Jamaica, is not just a new face in popular music; he’s accomplished the rare task of creating a new genre where rap, reggae, dancehall, pop, a touch of doo-wop and remarkable songwriting all combine into something totally fresh. Add in Sean’s family roots which cite Jamaican legendary producer Jack Ruby as his grandfather and reggae king Buju Banton as a close family friend and you have one of the most exciting debuts this year. And while hip-hop lyrics have sparked the biggest debate in years, Sean finds himself in the center of the controversy – but not where you might think. The teen prefers to show his creativity without using profanity.
It’s no wonder then that Sean is quickly becoming a household name with his first single “Beautiful Girls,” a song cross-pollinating on both urban and pop radio stations coast to coast. The unmistakable hit boasts the instant hook of “Stand by Me” which acts like a muse for the song produced by savant J.R. Rotem. Sean is the first signing on J.R.’s label Beluga Heights and his debut album Sean Kingston is due out on July 31 on Beluga Heights/Epic.

“I heard the track ‘Stand by Me,’ one night in the studio, the radio was on. I asked J.R., did anybody ever use this sample? He made the beat right there on the spot and I wrote the words down while he played it back to me. I loved the way it turned out and I think my sound is a lot different than what else is out there. It all just worked and we knew we had something special with the track. I’m also singing about something people can relate – being in love and this other person who you think is your world tells you they want to end the relationship.”

Kingston wants to make it clear that he is no cookie cutter artist that has the songs laid out for him. He comes up with 100 percent of his lyrics. Sean also understands that at 17 years old and making urban music he has a responsibility to fans, “With this album I thought it was important to not use curse words or negative slang that might offend people. I write my own songs so it’s like if I can write a great track without using those words than that’s the style for me.” Sean continues, “As an artist, my whole goal is to make powerful and classic album. I want everyone to feel my music and understand my heritage and that’s what this album will do. The music is all about the authentic Sean Kingston vibe. JR is a talented dude and a dope producer and he saw that I had something different to offer from other artists out there. Together we’re a powerful force and I’m ready to share it with the world.”
Sean talks about J.R. more like a big brother, rather than an Executive Producer of his album. Couple of years ago, Kingston started randomly hitting music industry contacts on MySpace. Although none of the A&R reps responded, Rotem emailed him back. J.R. almost had no choice. “Sean would hit me up at least three times a day!” J.R. says.

“He had a real distinct sound,” Rotem remembers. “I worked with some of the best and I don’t see why Sean can’t grow to be one of them. His potential is limitless.” Rotem invited Sean for a meeting in Los Angeles; coincidentally the young performer was already in the process of moving to California. Shortly after their initial meeting, Rotem had a flagship artist for his Epic records joint venture, Beluga Heights. For Sean, it was almost like a prophecy beginning to be fulfilled. Not only is music his love, it is in his blood. Now Kingston says he’s looking forward to making music and living out his dream.

In just a short time, Kingston has already done what few in his age bracket can accomplish – get people excited about music again. His album is shaping up to be filled with a string of hits including “Me Love,” “Got No Shorty,” “There’s Nothin’” featuring Paula DeAnda, “I Can Feel It” and “Take You There.”
Perhaps one of the most eye opening tracks is “Dry Your Eyes” where Sean visits the hardship of watching his mother and sister be sent to prison when he was just 15 years-old. He sings to his mother to not let herself be saddened that she’s away from the family and to know that they’re always there for her.
“I always had my sister and my brother,” he began to explain. “My brother was there but he was running around doing his own thing most of the time. When my mother and sister went away, it took a lot out of me. My sister went away for four months and my mom has been away for over a year. When she went away, I was like ‘nah man, this is too much.’ I was only 14. I missed her like crazy but I pulled through and used it as my motivation. “Dry Your Eyes” is a defining song on the album for me because it touches on something that’s very personal to me. The dope melody that’s on there makes me feel even closer to it.”

Sean has a certified hip-hop knocker on his hands with the reggae remix of “Colors” (2007) which features the legendary Vybz Kartel and the always profound Kardinal Offishall and will appear on Sean’s album as a bonus track. “Unity and representation is where Colors came from,” Kingston elaborated. “The song is about representing whatever flag that you’re loyal to – whether it is Jamaica, the States, your block etc. It’s a lifestyle record that can be a street anthem no matter where you’re from and where you at now. The reggae version came up because I knew I had to do one special for my native Jamaica. The first person I thought of was Vybz Kartel. His verse came out crazy. Then Kardinal, that’s my homie, really attacked the track.”

“In the future I want to have my own label and work on the business side,” he said. “I went to acting school when I was younger, so I want to get into that. I want to get into every aspect of the business. It took me a little while to develop and build my sound, to find out who the real Sean Kingston was. I didn’t know if I wanted to harmonize, or to rap. But I found out that I can do it all.”



30 Responses to “Sean Kingston – Me Love, Album In Stores July 31st”

  1. crakk Says:

    1st again haaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaaa

  2. crakk Says:

    he cool, like his music but wont be buying tha album.

    ps:

    funny how he did that track Gangsta, lol

    he shud stick to love songs, he not a gangsta and we wont believe him

  3. ACE Says:

    dude is real creative

    he got tha reagge swagga wit a lil hip hop in there too

    tha kid is fresh air

  4. rocafella Says:

    damn tht is not hip hop it pop regae wtf thought the dude was kinda hard when he made colours with game and rick but now dam strait pop

  5. antoniowned Says:

    his regular voice is tight…that colors shit he did with game and rick ross is straight fire

  6. mrmiami Says:

    sean kingston? more like sean montego bay…

  7. JamRock Says:

    Dude took that song Beautiful Girls from JO-JO, I aint gone lie JO JO version is better.

  8. crakk Says:

    “I heard the track ‘Stand by Me,’ one night in the studio, the radio was on. I asked J.R., did anybody ever use this sample? He made the beat right there on the spot and I wrote the words down while he played it back to me. I loved the way it turned out and I think my sound is a lot different than what else is out there. It all just worked and we knew we had something special with the track. I’m also singing about something people can relate – being in love and this other person who you think is your world tells you they want to end the relationship.”

    ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^

    he didnt write shit, he took the song from Jojo

    Jojo’s version
    http://www.zshare.net/audio/27730347a9b18d/

    ha ha

  9. crakk Says:

    okay maybe didnt steal it per say but Jojos version is better

  10. BABES, BLING & BOOZE Says:

    random….but did anyone else think this dude was a fat lesbian when they first saw the “beautiful girls” video??

  11. Tami Says:

    yeah I agree JamRock JoJos version is better than his

  12. DopeBoyFresh Says:

    whats so special about JR Scortum he just takes songs and adds drums or some other stuff in it . Nothing creative about him at all .

  13. whoa Says:

    who is dudes target audience? girls 13-17? dudes 10-14? international audience? i dont understand, but dude got a crazy buzz workin right now. it seems like he might go platinum, just because of his buzz right now, and he not even that dope to me. i guess he just came out at the right time

  14. Charlie Says:

    hes garbage…. Ben E king is rooling around in his grave for what he did with the beutiful girls song…

  15. GLOCK Says:

    IS IT BEAUTIFUL GIRLS OR IS IT HIS SO CALLED GANGSTA TRACKS??

    CAN’T YALL SEE THROUGH THE DECEIT?

    HE’S A FAKE, ONE MINUTE SINGING SOME BUBBLE GUM SHIT, THEN THE NEXT MINUTE PREACHING SOME GANGSTA SHIT?

    LIKE HOV SAID IS IT ONE MIC OR SHORTY OWE YOU FOR ICE?

    YALL HYPE THIS CLOWN UP. HE AINT REAL. HE GARBAGE.

  16. Bitch Magnet Says:

    who would post 7 paraghraphs bout him?

  17. Flippin-saint Says:

    Stop hating on him, an artist cant make love songs all the time, thats why he made a track for the males/gangstas etc, and beautiful girls for the mainstream, the radio. U fucking idiots

  18. BashBizzle Says:

    He should stick to making love and pop songs coz that gangsta image will be his downfall. Everyone knows that’s not you!

  19. Bitch Magnet Says:

    fuck himmm!!!!!! im not fukkin wit it

  20. damn Says:

    lol @ #10

  21. DICK RIDER Says:

    he cool to me

  22. GOTHATERSPISSED Says:

    NIGGA TRASH SINGING LIKE FIF AND JA

  23. WillZ Says:

    i’m surprised this isn’t leaked yet

  24. paperchaser Says:

    this guy is a fuckin clown this is the reason why hiphop is dead. Fat fuckin goof

  25. RealTalkCA Says:

    he has good music, thats whats gonna make me listen to him, not if hes “real” or “truely a gangsta” or whatever man, im feelin some of his music so ima check his shit out

    if i wanted to listen to some “real” gangsta shit, id listen to eazy e, aight??

  26. DopeBoyFresh Says:

    LOL @#10 he do look like a fat dyke

  27. MVP Says:

    Was Sean Kingston the kid that played Biggie in the Sky’s The Limit video?

  28. Corey F Says:

    He needs to be singing about which buffet he’s gonna eat at today.

  29. Yoda Says:

    He looks like a fat Lauryn Hill with her head shaved. Not a good look…

  30. TIP Says:

    i hate that fucking beautiful gurlz song that shit was whack as fuck but maybe if he do a remix wit t.i. and yung joc maybe that beautiful gurlz shit can blow up more it is
    now

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