Los Angeles Times

Carrying on a rapper’s work

With donors’ support, initiative will carry on Nipsey Hussle’s work in South L.A.

- By Gerrick D. Kennedy

Nipsey Hussle’s family says foundation will continue mission to assist South L.A.

When Nipsey Hussle’s passion for rapping became too serious to overlook, his mother discovered a program at Watts Towers that would give the then-teenager access to a recording studio for free.

Hussle spent four to five hours commuting from Crenshaw to Watts every day. He’d ride his bike to the bus stop that took him to the Metro Blue Line and then walk the rest of the way.

It was a long journey for only an hour of studio time, but this was the place where he first felt he could realize his rap ambitions.

“There were teachers, volunteers, who taught the kids how to make beats and how to record themselves. And it was free,” Hussle’s brother Samiel Asghedom, 37, recalled.

“That’s something Nip and a lot of people successful in music now went to as children. He took that small opportunit­y and ran with it.”

After Hussle’s death in March, the late rapper’s family has launched the Neighborho­od Nip Foundation to continue his mission to assist his community.

Hussle “was very adamant about being purposeful and intentiona­l and giving back and doing that right where he came from,” said music executive Steve “Steve-O” Carless, one of Hussle’s partners in the Marathon Agency, a marketing and management firm. “For us, it’s an honor to know we are going to be able to carry that vision on in the future, and we want to make sure it has the fortitude that he had. We’re really excited about it, and this is just the first step.”

A priority for the foundation, Asghedom said, will be to bring opportunit­y and open doors for youths hoping to break into music. The family is still formulatin­g the foundation’s programmin­g and initiative­s.

“We used to talk a lot about [what the Watts Towers program] meant to him. A push, a little help, can go a long way, and that’s what this foundation will 100% be about,” Asghedom told The Times on Friday ahead of a gallery exhibition celebratin­g Hussle’s forthcomin­g capsule line with Puma, the clothing and shoe maker. “The foundation will be aligned with everything Nip believed in and what helped him.”

Boosting the foundation’s efforts is a six-figure donation from Atlantic Records, which partnered with the rapper’s All Money In imprint to release his Grammy-nominated debut album “Victory Lap” last year.

“They wanted to be the first to donate,” Asghedom said. “It’s important we let people know that.”

In a statement to The Times on Friday, Atlantic Records Chairman and Chief Executive Craig Kallman and Julie Greenwald, the company’s chairman and chief operating officer, said: “Nipsey will be forever missed, but his courageous, generous spirit lives on in his incredible music and the impact he made on the community. Nip’s love for the generation coming up behind him is a big part of what’s inspiring this foundation, and we’re proud to celebrate his life by supporting his legacy.”

Puma will also contribute, with 100% of the proceeds from sales going to the foundation’s efforts.

Before his death, Hussle was working with Puma on a collaborat­ive collection with his Marathon Clothing brand.

The line will be released Sept. 5.

“Nipsey always put his community first, and we know he wouldn’t want it any other way,” Puma said in a statement.

‘A push, a little help, can go a long way, and that’s what this foundation will 100% be about.’ — Samiel Asghedom, Nipsey Hussle’s brother

 ??  ?? THE INITIATIVE will help youths break into the music industry.
THE INITIATIVE will help youths break into the music industry.

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