Club Shay Shay - Anthony Hamilton Part 2
Club Shay Shay
Shay Shay Media & Playmaker
4.8 • 7.5K Ratings
🗓️ 12 November 2025
⏱️ 65 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
Summary
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Anthony Hamilton — Grammy Award-winning singer, multiplatinum songwriter, and one of the most soulful voices in modern R&B — joins Shannon Sharpe for a raw, emotional, and Southern conversation about music, manhood, heartbreak, and legacy. From the “born in a pot of collard greens” grit in his voice to the stories behind his biggest records, Anthony breaks down a life built on struggle, faith, and timeless storytelling.
He opens the episode performing “Charlene,” unpacking the real breakup behind it — waiting by the door, balancing ambition and love, and how men often hide behind their careers. Anthony talks about how long a partner should stand beside someone chasing a dream, the struggle of supporting a family with limited means, and why attention, not money, is the real love language.
After performing “Coming From Where I’m From,” he reflects on how growing up without his father pushed him to hustle harder, and how being adopted at 14 changed his life. He shares that his father didn’t return until right before his wedding — a reunion only made possible by his future wife. Shannon brings up viral memes about his music “sounding like walking home from work,” Flau’jae discovering “Charlene,” and Anthony realizing he’d officially become “old school.”
With “Her Heart,” Anthony discusses making mistakes, breaking promises, and how men grow emotionally. He opens up about crying as a man, why vulnerability is strength, and the meaning behind “I Cry.” Then the mood lifts as he performs “Cornbread, Fish & Collard Greens,” reflecting on why men rarely approach women anymore, social media replacing real connection, and the lost art of old-school flirting.
Anthony shares his favorite Southern dishes and his craziest food experiences before revisiting his early break as a background singer for D’Angelo. He performs “How Does It Feel,” shares lessons D’Angelo taught him, and remembers missing his final phone call. He opens up about D’Angelo’s pancreatic cancer, Angie Stone’s passing, their snowstorm sessions, and the heartbreak of their son losing both parents in one year.
Shannon and Anthony dive into Drake — linking in Toronto, studio sessions at The Embassy, and late-night rides in Rolls-Royces. Anthony compares Drake’s home to Prince’s legendary jam sessions, then takes us inside the homes of Nelson Mandela, Will Smith, and Jamie Foxx, plus his private talk with Barack Obama after performing for him.
He breaks down writing Donell Jones’ “U Know What’s Up,” creating “Thug Mansion” with Tupac, winning a Grammy with Al Green, and collaborating with The Roots, Jill Scott, Chris Brown, Jeezy, Rick Ross, Nas, and more. He discusses unreleased songs with John Legend and Ty Dolla $ign, appearing in DaBaby’s video, signing with Jermaine Dupri, and how music has changed in the streaming era.
Anthony reflects on grinding in New York City with just $67, how Nick Cannon bought him his first car, and the struggles artists like Kevin McCall face. He recalls working on American Gangster with Denzel Washington, Empire with Terrence Howard, witnessing a killing at seven, and his barber days — where the “struggle beard” became his signature. He shares the moment Michael Jordan gifted him Jordans and his experience working with Oprah on They Call Me Dad. He closes by reflecting on raising six sons, marrying young, and how dating feels different after marriage.
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Transcript
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| 0:00.0 | Thank you for coming back. Part two is underway. |
| 0:03.8 | Also someone you were very close to, Angie Stone. |
| 0:07.0 | Yeah, man. |
| 0:07.9 | And she tragically lost her life in an automobile accident. |
| 0:12.6 | And then you had to sing. You sung at the funeral. |
| 0:15.6 | So in both of them. Yeah. That was pretty hard. And, you know, and they wanted me to go and view her body and that before going to view it I was just like I don't want to see her all messed up and mangled up. I just don't want to see that right it's hard enough that you know she's gone and the way she left right and so she's like no, please. And I went and she looked amazing. |
| 0:39.4 | I'd never seen anybody laid the rest looking so peaceful. |
| 0:44.2 | And she had a smirk on her face like, I told y'all. |
| 0:47.7 | I'm serious, man, in all Angie Stone fashion. |
| 0:52.0 | Right. |
| 0:52.4 | So it's just good to be able to be there for a family, man. What's one of your favorite Angie Stone fashion. Right. So it was just good to be able to be there for a family man. |
| 0:56.5 | What's one of your favorite Angie story? |
| 0:58.7 | So me and Angie were working on the duet that we had. |
| 1:03.2 | And we were in New York City down in the village. |
| 1:07.6 | And it was, we had let out the studio at 4 a.m. |
| 1:10.6 | And it was a blizzard. Yeah. So we had to |
| 1:13.1 | all get in the same cab. First we had to get a cab that wanted to pick up black tails up. |
| 1:18.7 | And so we ended up, you know, slipping and sliding in the snow. And that was one of the funniest |
| 1:24.1 | things because, you know, Angie, she almost almost bust up but and uh we laugh about it |
| 1:29.6 | right and just being on tour we did a silken sandpaper tour so we always would bring that that |
| 1:34.1 | that's the blizzard the snowstorm in new york city you know country we're country we wasn't used to |
| 1:39.4 | that right you Angie and diangelo have so i mean think it's it's got to be tough for him |
... |
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