Last December, Lil Wayne hit
send on a series
of tweets that rocked the music world. "I am a prisoner and so is
my creativity," he wrote, blaming Cash Money Records and its cofounder,
Bryan "Birdman" Williams, for refusing to release his long-delayed
album Tha Carter V. "I want off this label and nothing to do with
these people, but unfortunately it ain't that easy."
Eight weeks later, the 32-year-old rapper dropped another
bombshell: In a 21-page document filed with a federal court in New York on January
28th, Wayne
sued Cash Money for $51 million, citing a wide range of alleged financial
misdeeds. Among other things, the lawsuit claimed that Cash Money withheld key
accounting documents from Wayne, and that the label owes him $8 million for Tha
Carter V under a 2012 deal that guaranteed a staggering $10 million advance
per album. (Cash Money reps did not respond to repeated requests for comment.)
Lil Wayne has been one of Cash Money's flagship stars since
he signed with the label at age 12, and for years he saw Williams as a father
figure, frequently dubbing himself "Birdman Jr." on record. But that
relationship has broken down, perhaps irreparably. Wayne tells Rolling
Stone that he and Birdman are no longer on speaking terms. "I have no
words," he says. "I'm super-numb to it, to tell you the truth."
It's 2 p.m. Miami time when Rolling Stone reaches the
rapper by phone last week. But Wayne is just waking up and is understandably
prickly about discussing the lawsuit. "That's a legal matter,
homeboy," he says. As for the "I am a prisoner" tweet from
December, he tries to play it off with a sex joke at first: "I love being
a prisoner in some pussy. That's what I meant." After we talk some more,
he admits that the legal wrangling has been weighing on his mind. "I'm
human," he says. "But it's nothing that a good blunt can't
cure."
Wayne says that Tha Carter V, which he finished
recording some time ago, is on ice for now. "It's super-done," he
says. "Cake baked, icing on top, name on top, candles lit. I would have
released it yesterday if I could. But it's a dead subject right now. It's a
jewel in the safe. It's that stash-house money."
In the meantime, he's been putting in 12-hour studio shifts
on an all-new project: the cleverly titled The Free Weezy Album, which
he plans to release for free in March. "I'm working on it every day,
man," he says. "I guarantee it's going to be something dope. If you don't
want a musician being creative, don't get The Free Weezy Album."
The album will follow another unconventional release from
Wayne's circle: If
You're Reading This It's Too Late, by his protégé Drake, which went up
for sale online in mid-February with no advance warning. The project, which
includes some apparent lyrical shots at Cash Money, sold nearly 500,000 copies
in its first four days and debuted
on the Billboard 200 at Number One.
"Right now, anybody could put out a new song on the
Internet and it could become the hottest thing ever," Wayne says.
"When I was starting, you couldn’t do that type of shit. But that's
wonderful – the game is wide open, and my job is just to stay vital."
Wayne keeps up with younger artists – "I like Rae
Sremmurd and Migos," he says – but after nearly 20 years in the business,
he feels that his age is starting to show. "Sometimes I don't know what
the hell they're talking about on Instagram," he says with a laugh. When
that happens, he turns to his 16-year-old daughter, Reginae: "I had to call
her, like, 'What the hell is "on fleek"?'"
Last year, Wayne hinted that he might be ready to retire
from music, but he says he's got other ideas now. "I've thought about
it," he says. "But for a person like me that bleeds, eats, sleeps and
shits music, it's hard to do." He hopes to spend much of 2015 on tour, and
he'd like to do some recording overseas while he's at it. "When I go home,
I want my actual house to be a vacation," he says. "And I might give
y'all three new kids from four different women. You know how I do it."
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