Memphis Bleek is shedding new light on the long-discussed fallout between JAY-Z and the original Roc-A-Fella Records crew, offering insight into Hov’s decision to distance himself from Dame Dash and others during the early 2000s.
In a recent appearance on The Breakfast Club, Bleek—one of the few Roc artists who has consistently stood by JAY-Z’s side—broke down the mogul’s mindset at the time and explained why he never felt abandoned or slighted by his longtime friend’s meteoric rise.
“I knew he had to,” Bleek said, referring to JAY-Z’s departure from the Roc-A-Fella fold as he transitioned deeper into the corporate world.
Jay-Z attends the Los Angeles Premiere of Sony Pictures’ “The Book Of Clarence” at Academy Museum of Motion Pictures on January 05, 2024 in Los Angeles, California.
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“For Jay to be where he at, he couldn’t be around us everyday. I’m a liability. Me now being married, being a businessman, of course, things have changed. But the reckless Bleek? You couldn’t be around us. Anything could happen, and then it spills right back to you.”
For Bleek, the split wasn’t personal—it was strategic. He emphasized that lifestyle differences and business responsibilities meant JAY-Z had to make a clean break, even from people he cared about. “It’s not that he don’t rock with you, or don’t rock with us,” Bleek explained.
“It’s, ‘Aye, dawg, I’m over here gettin’ to these millions, ya still in the club poppin’ bottles. I don’t need that look.’”
Rappers Memphis Bleek and Jay Z perform onstage during Power 105.1’s “Powerhouse 2005: Operation Takeover” at the Continental Airlines Arena on October 27, 2005 in East Rutherford, New Jersey.
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When asked why his perspective on JAY-Z’s departure differed from former Roc affiliates who have criticized Hov in the years since, Bleek pointed to his attempts to prepare others for the inevitable shift. “I don’t know. I tried to tell these guys,” he said.
“That’s the thing, if you really sit down — see, a lot of people, when these cameras cut on, they got an image, they gotta keep it up. But if they really sit down and have a real conversation with the reality pills on the table, they’ll tell you that I told these guys this was coming.”
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The Brooklyn rapper also recalled trying to look out for Beanie Sigel, who has publicly aired grievances about JAY-Z in the past. Bleek recounted a conversation in which he warned Beans to carefully review the contracts tied to his State Property clothing line, especially since the label read, “Manufactured by Rocawear.”
“So, I’m telling him as a brother, ‘Yo, bro, check your contracts and all that. Make sure everything is right because I see it’s manufactured by Rocawear — I don’t think Rocawear was making their own clothes, so how they making your clothes?’” Bleek said.
Memphis Bleek attends the 40/40 Club Pop-Up during Fanatics Fest at Jacob Javitz Center on August 17, 2024 in New York City.
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“And he looked at me — this is when I knew me and Beans’ relationship wasn’t the same — because he was like, ‘Yo, it sound like you hatin’ on me, fam,’ and I’m like, ‘What you mean?’ And he’s like, ‘If Jay your man like you say, why you ain’t got no record label?’”
Bleek’s candid reflections provide rare clarity on the inner workings of one of Hip-Hop’s most storied empires—and why its members eventually went their separate ways.
Watch Memphis Bleek’s The Breakfast Club interview below.
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