By Souleo. From the sophisticated glamour of the Supremes to the colorful hip-hop driven style of TLC to the carefully coordinated looks of Destiny's Child, every girl group not only makes a mark with their sound but with their sense of style too. Grammy-winning, multi-platinum producer/songwriter/recording artist, T-Pain's new girl group, Sophia Fresh is the latest to carry on that tradition with a style that embraces each member's individuality.

Cole Rose represents the artistic flair of the group with her dynamic color schemes, creativity and sky-high Mohawk.
"I am very artsy. I'll have some pants one day that will end up shorts one day or turn a shirt into a skirt. My Mohawk came about because I had a break up and cut all my hair off in a rage. I tried some weaves but the label liked the Mohawk and so I kept it. With my style things just work themselves out," she said.
Of course every girl group must have their resident girlie girl and that honor goes to Crystal with her penchant for getting dolled up.
"I just got introduced to jeans two years ago. Growing up it wasn't accepted that I wore heels and dressed up everyday. Experiencing that made me more comfortable in my skin because I am different but I am enjoying that."
Skye finds herself somewhere in the middle of each girl's style with a strong mix of vintage and couture looks that is inspired by the classic TV show, "Sex and the City."
"Since grade school I always watched 'Sex and the City.' At first I liked Carrie's style but now sometimes I feel like Samantha or Miranda. I'm very couture but also vintage. I'm also a fan of Jordan's so my style really ranges."
As Cole Rose puts it each girl's unique style is all about encouraging their listeners to be comfortable with themselves whether they rock a Mohawk, heels or couture looks.
"We want to express our individuality so we dress in different colors and express who we are. We want to show people that it's okay to be an individual as well as come together as a group."
For more information on Sophia Fresh please visit:
Check out their latest single, "This Instant" ft. T-Pain off of the Step-Up 3D movie soundtrack here:

We recently had a chance to speak with the hottest production duo in the game, Tha Bizness. Although our conversation with Dow Jones and Henny was brief (poor phone connection), the cousins from the left coast (Seattle, WA to be exact), who have banged out beats behind the boards for 50 Cent, Drake, R. Kelly, Young Jeezy, Snoop Dogg Ne-Yo and most recently the #1 song in the country, “Every Girl” by the leaders of the new school, Young Money (Lil’ Wayne, Drake, Jae Millz, Gudda Gudda and Mack Maine) gave JimmyJazz.com insight on the production game, their take on auto-tune, what they have coming up in the future and much more. Read our interview and then turn on the radio to listen to some of their joints!
Jimmyjazz.com: Congrats on everything, especially for getting “Every Girl” (Young Money) on iTunes.
Dow Jones (Tha Bizness): Shit, it only took Universal [Records] 4 months to get that thing on there.
JimmyJazz.com: By the way, how old is that beat?
Dow Jones (Tha Bizness): We were working on some stuff for R. Kelly’s new album, cause we did the “Hair Braider” joint for him early on last year when he was going through his whole court case thing. So he wanted to get some more stuff for the new album, so it was actually a track we were working for R. Kelly, but Wayne [Lil’ Wayne] ended up taking.
Young Money - Every Girl [Official Music Video]
JimmyJazz.com: That’s a big record overall…
Dow Jones (Tha Bizness): It’s a good look. We knew it was going to be a good look in the summer time … and then with the whole Drake (“Best I Ever Had”) song movement… everything just kind of collided all at once. So it’s a big thing, especially that being like his [Drake] first song… first official song to the world with Wayne [Lil’ Wayne], so that was kind of crazy, too.
(Pictured below): Tha Bizness with Drake.

JimmyJazz.com: Since the release of “Every Girl”, what has the momentum been like for Tha Bizness?
Dow Jones (Tha Bizness): For us, it’s kind of hard because we’re so focused on the next song that it’s hard to appreciate what’s going on now. Even with Jeezy’s [Young Jeezy] “My President” record, I don’t think (at least for me) I was able to feel the moment. Like I know with Henny (other half of Tha Bizness) he was able to be in DC for the inauguration, so he got to experience it in a different way, but for me, it’s really hard to sync it in. We’re not really the type to stand and look at ourselves in the mirror and pat ourselves in the back every time something goes good. We’ve been waiting for these opportunities for 10 years. So it’s kind of like we appreciate and enjoy the success and enjoy the people saying it’s a great record [“Every Girl”], and I like hearing it, but… it’s kind of hard seeing where we at. There’s so many people coming to us know like “ You made it, your this & that now… “ To us it’s like, “Ya’ll only heard 10 songs in the market place, ya’ll haven’t heard 2% of all the stuff we got coming or that we are doing. It’s good at the same time, but I don’t think we can really appreciate what’s going on probably till later, and I’m not mad at that. That’s what keeps us focused and staying on the grind. I think that’s the difference between people that want to be great and people who just want to be in this game just to be known and people to accept them. We want to let our music speck for us, rather than just doing a whole bunch of rah rah stuff. That’s why even for us right now, you don’t see us doing too many heavy interviews cause we know so much of this stuff is coming that we rather let everybody watch us move step by step, then just tell everybody “we the dopest and all this other shit” where it’s kind of like, we really still have to show and prove more than what we have, even though we know what we are capable of. We let the public ride the wave with us.
JimmyJazz.com: You have records with Jeezy but then you guys also work with indie artist at the same time. Who are some of the indie artists you are currently working with and trying to groom?
Dow Jones (Tha Bizness): There’s a whole bunch. Of coarse we have our own artist, Mistah Fab. We have a label deal with Atlantic [Records] under Fab’s own company. Then we have the Parker Brothers from Seattle, our hometown. As far as artists, not even independent, but just artists who are trying to get their buzz going right now, especially back on the west coast. Like Jay Rock, who’s on Warner Brothers, Glasses Malone that’s on Cash Money. There’s an artist from the Bay who’s called The Jacka, who just released his new album [“Tear Gas”], it was able to be on Billboard’s Top 200. Then another artist, who I’ve personally really become good friends with over the years and really feel that if he gets the right songs he could be major, and that’s Miltchy Slick from San Diego, who is also part of Kweli’s [Talib] group, Strong Arm Steady. Bad Lucc from Watts, California who is incredible…. we did a couple joints with him that are crazy. We just branching out. Our main thing is trying to take it back to letting music be music. If you listen to any of our beats you can tell that our beats have a groove. Whether it be a Jeezy [Young Jeezy] joint, a 50 Cent “Follow My Lead” joint or even the Young Money “Every Girl”… joint they all have that groove to it.
Henny (Tha Bizness): I mean when it comes to dealing with any type of artist we just try to give each specific artist the type of music that will always fit them. Whether if it’s a Mistah Fab or the Parker Brothers, it’s always about giving them a sound that will go ahead and take them to the next level.
(Pictured below): Henny from Tha Bizzness

Dow Jones (Tha Bizness): Especially in this day and age, no matter who the artist is, everybody is one song away. So it’s kind of like… if we use a formula to work good with Wayne [Lil’ Wayne] we can use the same formula to work good with anybody. I just think it’s staying diverse, letting music be music. We can go do an R&B song with a R. Kelly, we can go and do a pop song with the Black Eyed Peas or the Paradiso Girls and we can go mess with a Killer Mike and Young Jeezy and Oj Da Juiceman on some street shit. It’s just having everything across the board. We also did a couple joints with Norman Brown, who’s probably the most critically acclaimed Jazz Guitarist of our era. We trying to hit things everybody else ain’t hitting. Now and days everybody is trying to run the same race, we’re trying to run it a little different. Sort of like Catalan, we trying to do all the events instead of trying to be the fastest sprinter.
JimmyJazz.com: You guys are from Seattle, home of grunge music. It’s also known for being a rainy state and has the highest suicide rate in the country. Where did you guys get your inspiration?
Henny (Tha Bizness): Coming from Seattle is crazy. We only got Top 40 radio, We didn’t have a lot of underground stations, we didn’t have a lot of the music from the Bay area that would trickle down to Seattle. We only had BET for half a day, from like 5pm to midnight, it wasn’t even everyday. So the types of things we are influence by a lot of it had to do with just commercialism that stuck with us.
Dow Jones (Tha Bizness): Like Henny was just saying, it was just so limited. The only real rap show we had was Rap Attack, every Sunday. You’ll get 3 hours of just raw music. But that was just a small college station at the time, so it wasn’t something that was super overly advertised, it was almost in a way pirate radio that Nasty Nes was doing when he was getting everything going with Sir Mix A Lot. Our main thing, like Henny was touching on, music is life and life is music so all the places that we been, whether it be up and down the west coast, from Seattle to San Diego, to Henny being in college in Atlanta, we’ve been able to be around and see a brighter spectrum of things. You can listen to Atlanta music, but when you go there and really get to see how the 808’s are and how everything is, it gives you a different perspective. Like a lot of times [short pause] we’ll meet southern producers that grew up on west coast beats, but it just doesn’t have that sound. There’s just a certain authenticity to each region, that unless your there and be able to live it and observe it, it will be close, but it won’t be the same. That’s just our whole palate; we’re open to new things. It’s ok to be different and try new shit. You may not like everything, but that perspective of being able to see life through somebody else’s eyes can let you look at something somewhere. We got the whole Ying & Yang personality; we may look at the same thing two different ways, even though we’re working on the same project. But it’s that difference that can open up a conversation, to open up new ideas or being able to see it from a different side. At the end of the day it makes what we do better. The more options that are out there, the more you get, the better answers you can give back out.
(Pictured below): Dow Jones from Tha Bizzness

JimmyJazz.com: Recently, Jay-Z came out with a record going against auto-tune, “D.O.A (Death of Auto-Tune)”, What’s your perspective on artist and producers who limit themselves to just one thing? For instance, auto-tune.
Henny (Tha Bizness): Everything in life, when it comes down to doing anything, you have people who start out doing something that becomes their personality, that becomes something they do. And then you have a lot of people who just imitate and try to create that same type of brand that same type of success. So with auto-tune, people have been using it for years. Whether it was just a way to help correct vocals, or it was a way to try something different. You got staple people, like T-Pain, who branded that. He’s synonymous with that sound. But when other people just try it, it’s a fad. Somebody like T-Pain, he’s been able sing, he’s been able to rap and produce. You can’t take anything away from his talent. He started a niche in the game and he killed it, to the point where everybody else wanted to try it. So I don’t think it’s going to hurt him [T-Pain], when Jay-Z came out with “D.O.A (Death of Auto-Tune)”.
Dow Jones (Tha Bizness): It’s just a part of life. When I was thinking about the whole thing, it kind of reminded me of the Slam Dunk Contest. Back in the day when we were seeing the first dunks of a certain kind, it was amazing. But then after the past couple of years everybody was talking about “let’s just stop doing the dunk contest, cause it’s boring nobody does anything new….” But then you get those few cats, like Lebron [James], Nate Robinson or Dwight Howard that can come through and do something that we haven’t seen before that makes it cool again. So to each his own, there’s always going to be somebody that copies a fad. That’s what makes things popular. There wouldn’t be a chain of Target stores or even markets if people didn’t want to get the same stuff. That’s just a natural part of life. Some people overuse certain things, but so it is. But at the same time we’re paying the people that are innovators in what there doing and the first to do something. Everybody else is just following the trend, you can’t be mad at them for that. Everybody wants’ to put it out there like that’s [auto-tune] killing music. That’s not killing music, bad songs are killing music. If people were making good songs, it didn’t matter if it was a goat doing auto-tune. If it sounded good, people would fuck with it.
On Friday night, New York's Hot 97's Funk Master Flex and DJ Mister Cee debuted a new Jay-Z record titled, "Death of Auto-tune".
In the song, the now independent, Jay-Z tries to demolish the new form of hip hop melody: Auto-Tune, a voice processor that manipulates pitch and vocal control of a sound, which is frequently used by many popular artists, such as Lil' Wayne, Kanye West, and T-Pain.
Can Shawn Carter make the auto-tune fad go away? Is he that big of an artist to completely end a trend?
Here's a video of Jay-Z calling in the station and explaining the nature of "Death of Auto-tune" :
(Pictured below): T-pain and Kanye West performing the auto-tuned heavy track, "Good Life".

Photo Source: MySpace.com/tpain
A few weeks ago it was reported that multi-platnium artist/ producer, T-Pain fathered a baby boy with his wife, Amber. Just recently, the auto-tune recording artist posted a photo of his second son and third child, Kaydnz Kodah Najm, on his Twitter page. Congrats to the Rappa Ternt Sanga! Here is the photo Pain posted on his Twitter:
Photo of Kaydnz Kodah Najm

Kaydnz' older brother and sis, Lyriq and Muziq.

Shop for baby boys and girls at JimmyJazz.com:
Mike Jones (Ice Age Entertainment/ Asylum) recently granted Jimmy Jazz time to discuss his long overdue sophomore release, The Voice. Although Jones has been on a 4-year hiatus and the music business is currently on a down spiral since he last hit the scene in 2005 with hits “Still Tippin” and “Back Then”, the platinum selling Houston Rapper promises to win the ears of his fans with The Voice. Most importantly, the determined 28-year old is dedicated to proving his doubters wrong, specifically his record label, who 'Back Then’ didn’t believe in his radio hits.

JimmyJazz.com: It’s good to see you in the limelight again.
Mike Jones: Appreciate, man… long overdue.
JimmyJazz.com: It’s been 4 years since your debut release, Who is Mike Jones, why the long hiatus? Did you have issues with your label?
Mike Jones: I mean they weren’t believing in “Cuddy Buddy” when I gave it to them in 2006, but they feeling it now. I ain’t do nothing different to the record.
JimmyJazz.com: So was T-Pain on the original version of “Cuddy Buddy”
Mike Jones: In 2006, I had T-pain, Twista & Lil’ Wayne on that record [“Cuddy Buddy”]. Ain’t nothing different on that record now than 2006.
JimmyJazz.com: So what were the politics like? Obviously, Trey Songz is on the new version. Was there a issue getting the label to clear the record?
Mike Jones: Honestly man, It was 2 things; 1. The label didn’t believe in “Cuddy Buddy” in 06’ and now they are forced to see what they messed up on right now and 2. I did a record with T-Pain in 06’ with T-Pain called “I’m In Love With A Stripper” and I was the big dog at the time and I was showing him love and he did the record for me in06’ at the same time, but when I went through a political war with my label and I had “Cuddy Buddy” and I was going to use that to come on back in… his label wasn’t clearing it. Even though, we showed them the same love before.
MIKE JONES - "CUDDY BUDDY" (FEAT. TREY SONGZ & TWISTA)
JimmyJazz.com: In a separate interview, you mentioned that they doubted [record label] doubted “Still Tippin”, which is one of your biggest records to date…
Mike Jones: They doubted “Back Then”, too. Every record that I blew up in they doubted, so I’m use to doubters doubting me.
JimmyJazz.com: What’s going to separate Who Is Mike Jones from your sophomore release, The Voice?
Mike Jones: Top 10 records. “Cuddy Buddy” was my first Top 10 record, “Nest To You” is going to be my second Top 10 record and then I got a new one called “Swagg Thru The Roof” which is going to be my next Top 10 record. I got my own lane, man… and I’m going 100 miles and running at it.
JimmyJazz.com: Who produced “Swagg Thru The Roof”
Mike Jones: My homie Swole did that one, so shout out to Swole. Man, that record is so crazy. When you hear it… it’s crazy… your gonna like it. It’s a Top 10 record for sure.
JimmyJazz.com: We talked about some of your classic street records (“Back Then” and “Still Tippin”), on your new album, “Cuddy Buddy” and “Next To You” are radio singles, but what can your street fans expect from The Voice?
Mike Jones: Oh that’s on the album when it comes out. I got the street records on that album. The difference between now and then, when I came out with the first album [Who Is Mike Jones?] I was using my street records as my singles. Now, I still got the street records on the album… I just use my rhythmic records as my singles.
JimmyJazz.com: What other producers are featured on The Voice?
Mike Jones: I got Jim Jonsin on “Cuddy Buddy”, JR Rodem on “Next To You”… I got Mannie Fresh on the album. I got Mike Dean, he made like 5, 6 tracks for me. This album [The Voice], when you hear it you going to be excited. I got a track called “Tendoroni” with me T.I. and Bobby Brown.
JimmyJazz.com: Fast-forwarding to 2009, several people are losing their jobs and homes during a deep recession, how will The Voice by Mike Jones going to relate to the average consumer?
Mike Jones: I’m relating to them right now. I mean, “Cuddy Buddy” was a Top 10 record; everybody had to relate to that record to get there. That was just a record saying if you ain’t treating your woman right, she’s going to call on her cuddy buddy and everybody who I ran into across city to city, state to state love Cuddy [“Cuddy Buddy”]. And now “Next To You” is out and everybody and everybody who’s a couple wanna be next their special somebody. It came from Mike Jones, but that record is about them.
MIKE JONES - "NEXT TO YOU"
JimmyJazz.com: By the way, who’s the young lady singing on the “Next To You” hook?
Mike Jones: Her name Nenae. She’s actually the person that I got it fill in the hook before I sent it to Ashanti and Mya, but they turned the record down. Why they did, we just kept her on the record [“Next To You’].
JimmyJazz.com: So people still doubt you, when obviously you have the Midas touch with rfadio hits.
Mike Jones: I don’t know why, but I guess that’s how it is. I ain’t trippn’ though.
JimmyJazz.com: In 2008, a bunch of photos of a slimmer Mike Jones leaked on numerous urban blogs and websites. What motivated you to shed the pounds? Was it a personal thing and/or a marketing thing?
Mike Jones: It was both. Personal, marketing… health issues. There are a lot of reasons why I wanted to do the right thing.
JimmyJazz.com: What kind of impact has losing weight had on your music and personal life?
Mike Jones: Women see me and they fall in love (Laughs). It makes them more interested in the kid.
JimmyJazz.com: How did you managed to lose the weight?
Mike Jones: Treadmill and eating subway (Laughs).
JimmyJazz.com: The Jared Plan? (Laughs).
Mike Jones: I’m the urban Jared; I got my own plan (Laughs).
JimmyJazz.com: I noticed in the “Next To You” video, your love interest and you are rockin’ Yums t-shirts and sneakers. I wanted to ask you directly what brands are you checking for right now?
Mike Jones: I just support who ever support me, man. That’s basically the bottom line. I’m down with everybody, who ever supports Mike Jones I support them.




