Realer Than Most Podcast

A PRODUCER STORY PT. 1 FT BRIZZY ON DA BEAT | RTM PODCAST | EP. 03

May 06, 2024 @BRIZZYONDABEAT Season 1 Episode 3
A PRODUCER STORY PT. 1 FT BRIZZY ON DA BEAT | RTM PODCAST | EP. 03
Realer Than Most Podcast
More Info
Realer Than Most Podcast
A PRODUCER STORY PT. 1 FT BRIZZY ON DA BEAT | RTM PODCAST | EP. 03
May 06, 2024 Season 1 Episode 3
@BRIZZYONDABEAT

Send us a Text Message.

As we settled into the studio with BRIZZY ON DA BEAT , a sense of anticipation hung in the air, reminiscent of the first time he strayed from sports and let his heart beat to the rhythm of music at the teen age of 15. Our episode takes a deep dive into the soul of this artist, traveling from the streets of Flint to the vibrant beats of Southwest Philly. Feel the weight of West African heritage and a medley of musical influences, from I BE MISSING YOU to soul, as they weave through our conversation, painting a rich background that has nurtured BRIZZY ON DA BEAT profound love for music.

The shift from spitting bars to crafting beats wasn't just an artistic choice for our guest—it was a life-altering gamble during his college years at Penn State. The struggles and victories of a young rapper transforming into a producer in Philly's cutthroat music scene unfold before us. It was a banking job, of all things, where the magic of networking kindled the flame for our guest's first major placement, a leap of faith that cemented his unwavering dedication to producing.

To round out our session, we tease the curtains back on Brizzy on the beat's ascension, from humble beginnings to the dizzying heights of success, rubbing elbows with A-list celebrities. The groundwork is laid for a gripping build-up to his collaboration with JT, leaving listeners on the edge of their seats. And with a cliffhanger that has A&R Dallas Martin entering the fray, we promise that this is merely the prelude to a much grander narrative. Your engagement with our journey—through likes, comments, and subscriptions—doesn't just fuel the show; it infuses it with your spirit, helping us strive for that coveted title of the most successful podcast out there.

Support the Show.

Realer Than Most Podcast
Exclusive access to premium content!
Starting at $3/month Subscribe
Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

Send us a Text Message.

As we settled into the studio with BRIZZY ON DA BEAT , a sense of anticipation hung in the air, reminiscent of the first time he strayed from sports and let his heart beat to the rhythm of music at the teen age of 15. Our episode takes a deep dive into the soul of this artist, traveling from the streets of Flint to the vibrant beats of Southwest Philly. Feel the weight of West African heritage and a medley of musical influences, from I BE MISSING YOU to soul, as they weave through our conversation, painting a rich background that has nurtured BRIZZY ON DA BEAT profound love for music.

The shift from spitting bars to crafting beats wasn't just an artistic choice for our guest—it was a life-altering gamble during his college years at Penn State. The struggles and victories of a young rapper transforming into a producer in Philly's cutthroat music scene unfold before us. It was a banking job, of all things, where the magic of networking kindled the flame for our guest's first major placement, a leap of faith that cemented his unwavering dedication to producing.

To round out our session, we tease the curtains back on Brizzy on the beat's ascension, from humble beginnings to the dizzying heights of success, rubbing elbows with A-list celebrities. The groundwork is laid for a gripping build-up to his collaboration with JT, leaving listeners on the edge of their seats. And with a cliffhanger that has A&R Dallas Martin entering the fray, we promise that this is merely the prelude to a much grander narrative. Your engagement with our journey—through likes, comments, and subscriptions—doesn't just fuel the show; it infuses it with your spirit, helping us strive for that coveted title of the most successful podcast out there.

Support the Show.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

REALER THAN MOST Podcast. You already man. Family of the show.

KASH:

You already know man, oh man, let's go. Man, cor Cor, cor. He always say his. I want him to do his appreciate Because he always talk nice. You know what I mean.

REALLA:

I don't watch BRIZZY go through his Situations, like of trials and Tribulations, and he stayed focused and he kept going. You know what I'm saying. So, like when I hear about an artist that really had ups and downs and people be like they give up so fast with this music industry. You know what I'm saying. Or they say they an artist and then five minutes later they give up and they doing something different. I actually watch you stay consistent. You know what I'm saying. And you had your times where you probably had to fall back and just get your mind right. Everybody get those times, but I'm proud of you, man, to be where you at right now, man, I just want to give you a round of applause for staying focused, super proud of you.

KASH:

Out of all the songs, man, we always start off with a song, so what's something out there? You want us to start the show off with man?

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

Y'all put me on the spot. My favorite record that I got out, man, that's a couple man, I'm not going to lie, it's a couple. But we can do Babyface E Tell the Truth.

WHYTE BOI:

Where HE from?

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

Flint, flint, michigan.

:

Shout out to Babyface E Shout out to Flint Michigan.

KASH:

Shout out to the Midwest man. All right man, we gonna get y'all Babyface E Song title Tell the Truth, Produced by Philly Zone.

REALLA:

My boy Crazy, crazy.

KASH:

Crazy, crazy, crazy yeah.

:

Y'all need to understand me on this bitch. I got bris on the beat. He go crazy. Hey, I'm like a mental patient when I'm in the booth. That line should get you nowhere. So I'm going to tell the truth. Nigga, think he safe behind that. Crazy Can't die twice. So you ain't coming back. I was fucked up for a minute but I'm coming back. I want them think that I miss because I'm coming back. I told my own Tracy niggas around me, so he bought the strap. It's another gun up in my car. That's why I'm jogging back. We ain't running out.

:

I was born on the north side, was raised on the south, almost had some kids, had some stains on the couch, couldn't afford a gun. I got that flame on me. Now who wanna bang with me now? Glock used to be a plain Jane. This is what you know I done. Finally got up in that lane. I ain't switching out. You need me more than I need you, bro. I ain't missing out. You need money just to be for niggas. Brown rich and I'm a scat or a black.

WHYTE BOI:

My bitch ass, fat Nigga, stink it. I ain't ready. My shoes in my bag. Part-time mechanic. I got everything I need. I don't want for shit, nigga, you don't need to smoke. No weed. If you been coppin', zip Yo man, give him a round of applause.

KASH:

Man, yeah, man, that was Babyface E the Goosebump.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

Crazy man.

KASH:

Thank y'all thank y'all. You all ready man, so where we startin' man Birdman.

WHYTE BOI:

Handrub, we gon' start from the beginning. We gotta go already man.

KASH:

So where we starting? Man Birdman.

WHYTE BOI:

Handrub.

:

We gonna start from the beginning. We gotta go. All we meant with.

WHYTE BOI:

Brizzy bro we gotta give him his just due, bro Philly producer. Super well-known Philly producer. Placements everywhere Made his bones, put the work in. You know what I mean. Like we gotta give him his just do, bro. And like, and me just being a fan alone, I'm saying I just gotta give you just doing, starting. You know from the beginning right, I mean so we gotta go to the beginning, yeah like. Yeah, I mean where you from, you know, I mean, what's your nationality?

KASH:

And like.

:

And like how was your?

WHYTE BOI:

Like, what was your upbringing Like in your household, like so, like when did music come in at?

REALLA:

He wanted to know who is Brizzy on the beat man Facts.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

Brizzy on the beat From Southwest Philly.

WHYTE BOI:

Shout out to Southwest. Southwest man, southwest Philly. Shout out to Southwest. Shout out to Southwest man.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

Southwest Philly. Damn my boy. Give my boy, a whore.

REALLA:

My boy said Southwest like three times. Give my boy a whore, shout out to Southwest.

KASH:

Shout out Southwest.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

I love Southwest. I love Southwest.

WHYTE BOI:

I love.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

Southwest.

REALLA:

Yeah, no for sure.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

Yeah, 14 years old dog, I fell in love with music man. I just I don't know. Music was like, always like in me, but 14 years old, I'll never forget it. It was like I just came from school one day and I didn't want to play ball. No more, play ball, no more. I lost confidence in playing ball for some reason, it just wasn't like Football or basketball. Basketball.

WHYTE BOI:

What type of music was in your household, though? Like growing up.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

Well, my family is West African, my mom's from Liberia, my father's from Ghana.

WHYTE BOI:

Shout out to Africa, shout out to West Africa, shout out to all over. Africa.

KASH:

Shout out to Ghana. Shout out to.

WHYTE BOI:

Liberia. Shout out to Mom Dukes. You know what? Shout out to the Mom Dukes Shout out to the Mom Dukes.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

I am all in. Shout out to everybody. Shout out to my mom. She always used to play like a lot of music man Like Lucky Doobie, he's a legend. She played a lot of music man. My dad, he played a lot of soul music. From what I remember when I was growing up but I don't know, man, music just was something that I felt like was spiritually given to me. I just felt it in my soul to do it. Feel it? Yeah. So I started off as a rapper. I was rapping really-.

WHYTE BOI:

First favorite song.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

Oh man, first favorite song, I'll say my first album that I actually was able to get off somebody was Jay-Z's Hard Knock Life, Vol 2.

WHYTE BOI:

Ooh that's the same one. Yeah, bro, that shit changed my life.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

Then my mom bought me X Flesh of my Flesh. That was the same time Classic dog. That was the same time Classic yeah bro, that album was crazy man Facts and it was like I had the clean version and all that you feel me. Right, my first favorite song, bro. I really can't remember right now. Matter of fact.

WHYTE BOI:

I'll say matter of fact yeah, from that album From Hard Knock Life Volume 2.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

I can't even. It was Matter of fact. I'll Be Missing you. When I was a kid, that was one of my favorites.

REALLA:

I'll Be Missing you.

WHYTE BOI:

Puff and Drunk. I was a young boy. Yeah, dog, that was one of my favorites as well. That was my shit.

KASH:

Y'all excuse the noise. This Philadelphia Nigga's 12 o'clock of a clocking outside, so excuse the noise y'all, y'all know, we in Philly.

REALLA:

We on a busy street.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

I was a fan of Big Pun when Big Pun was out.

WHYTE BOI:

So basically like 9, 7, 9, 8. It was a time bro.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

I like all music, bro. Music was being made back in the day, dog, so I loved everything for real, for real. Keep it a bean.

REALLA:

Make sure y'all share, like and subscribe and hit the notification bell so you can get more content from us. Support, support. Thank y'all.

KASH:

So let's fast forward just a little bit. When it come to the producing part.

WHYTE BOI:

What was the transition from rapping to fully producing?

KASH:

Yeah, and what situation was it where you was like all right, I know for sure. Now I want to produce and not rap, no more man.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

What was that question? When did that come about? That's a great question, bro. I ain't going to lie, man. That's a great question. I had turned 21. I was 21 years old, penn State, penn state. Still, I was just broke broke, broke broke. I was investing money in music and not seeing no return, like I'm getting all these little shows, I'm getting a little couple hundred dollars, but it's like man, I just wasn't happy, right, right, I wasn't happy. I just started losing the love for it. I was praying, but I was more like selfish, like why it ain't working for me and it's working for him.

REALLA:

I was a hater down there.

KASH:

I was too. When it comes to that music, rap, shit. That shouldn't make you do that.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

I didn't take no accountability For my bad spending, my vices. You look on the TV to make you do that, bro. I didn't take no accountability for my bad spending my like vices and wrong vices.

KASH:

You look on the TV you 16, 17, and you got good-ass music. And then you on the TV looking at niggas mumble rap. You gonna be like how the fuck.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

Mumble rap wasn't even out at that time. Mumble rap wasn't even out at that time. I'm going against myself for real bro, I took no accountability.

KASH:

Now let me say this right, let's get to the meat and potatoes, man, because the shit that you knowing out here, man, is like. I know a lot of Philly producers and niggas ain't mean like, and I ain't gonna lie like, I feel as though, like, when it come to like a scale of Philly producers right now, you got to be at the top bro. You have to be, because the producer making all them drill beats ain't from Philly.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

No, no, he is who. I'm going to bring him up here. Who Nas he? Hot, but not.

KASH:

That's who I'm talking about. Oh, all right, all right, yeah, he the one making all them drills. Okay, and then you got the other one. You feel me well, y'all producers, I can name drop Swaggiano.

WHYTE BOI:

I don't think he got more placements than Brizzy. That's what I was about to say it's Brizzy than them that's all opinion based people.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

No, look, this is really the most this is really the most.

KASH:

We ain't doing all that. I'm humble the most.

WHYTE BOI:

We ain't doing all that, bro. That's not no slight I'm humble the most.

KASH:

That's not no slight bro we fuck with swaggy up here, yeah, we, yeah. That's why I know, that's why I named him. He fired, that's why I named him. But you gotta be first yeah, bro you feel me, you have to be you put the work in bro.

WHYTE BOI:

It's like for us to be like.

KASH:

Like you put the work in bro, you deserve to be yeah, like everybody, like we understand the world, all sensitive and all that, and then everybody take key to something and then fill it away, that's why I said Briz has to be first. It's not. No, I ain't shitting on nobody or seeing this person.

REALLA:

It's all love plus the game is built on this man.

:

Come on, we just said the top five.

KASH:

You know what I'm saying, so you, know we gonna name our five. Yeah, like you know, they get placed with Nicky.

REALLA:

Buss and John.

WHYTE BOI:

Yeah, he going crazy with that, so you know you you, man, if I'm gonna let you say it. So go, you know, going through, yeah, I'm gonna let you say it your transition to. Just being a producer, and you like I'm going to just be a producer. What was that first placement where you like, oh shit, this might could work?

REALLA:

The feeling of that first placement, though, man, when you like, I made it to this first placement.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

That first placement bro came when I said though I'm getting back into music Right ASAP Bro listen.

WHYTE BOI:

That's what I'm saying. Hold on, Cora Don't rush it, that's crazy. I know, but like we got him here he ain't going nowhere. Hold on, let me get you your drink you know what I Hold up my man said hey, man, that's yours, hold on, hold on, we're going to get into that.

REALLA:

Wow, that's yours, korn, you got to get there, come on, so I'm like I'm like, I'm like I'm going to just do this music.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

I'm going to just do this music, man, I just felt it in my soul. That's what I needed to do, but did I as a rapper? That was the question. So I went back. I went back to. At this time also, I was working at the bank too. I worked at Bank of America, I worked at Citizens.

REALLA:

My boy had a job, not one job. Crazy, hold on y'all.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

I'm like, damn, I need to get back into this music stuff. So I was doing banking for a manager of a producer that's really well known in the city Legend to me at that time too and I was doing banking for his manager. So I was like, man, I'm thinking about getting into music, man Getting back into music. And he was like, yeah, well, I got a studio it's down Jackson Street. So I'm like alright.

WHYTE BOI:

If you at the bottom, there's only one way to go Climb bro 2018.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

2018. I think going into 2018, this young boy named Rico Havoc Started going crazy in the city.

REALLA:

Shout out Rico Havoc. We know who Rico is. Shout out Rico Havoc. This is a real story.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

Shout out Rico. Yeah, man, y'all gotta get.

:

Rico up here for sure.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

He has a crazy story that people need to hear. And he's a talented artist. He's literally a goat. He just gotta, he just gotta, master that and know, and he's a talented artist, he's, he's, he's literally a goat. He just got a. He just got a.

WHYTE BOI:

Master that and know that he's a goat right, he'll take over man, because he's shout out rico, havoc, he, he, he, he. Welcome up here.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

Yeah, brother but rico havoc was popping at that time, going crazy. He had the streets in a frenzy, in a chokehold, you feel me. So I wanted to work with him and I only knew one person that was locked in with him. That was like personally, no, which? Was my brown and also at that time, uh, there was an anr that I just got like familiar with, that I just kept seeing everywhere. His name was dallas martin, he's atlantic.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

He, you know, he just just was putting on for Philly because he got meek. You feel me. He's just doing his thing, it was inspiring. You feel me, rick Ross?

:

and part of that culture.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

You feel me, I had some admiration for him. He was just really doing his thing Right. I wanted to definitely lock in with Rico. However, I didn't feel like I was production ready for him Because his beats was hard. And I had confidence in my stuff. But it's like, how do I bring someone that raps like Crazy Street got a crazy flow? How can I bring him to my world?

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

right, I just felt like man. Let me just go down to atlanta because I thought. I thought about him and other artists, because I also had another artist in the city named young 187 who was fire, shout out the young man shout out the young 187 he's one of. He's still, till to this day, dog his moment coming. He's one of my favorite artists in the city. Um, like they just had particular beats that I just did not know how to like really make yeah, I was a fan of that stuff.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

So some told me to just go down to atlanta. Right, this is like the beginning of 2018. I was like I don't know nobody in atlanta. I don't, I think I got family down there, but I don't know nobody in the a. So I ended up just looking up studios. But that's how God worked. One of the engineers at Heat Factory he knew somebody that ran a big studio down in Atlanta. So I'm like all right, I'm going to just take the risk and just go to Atlanta. I don't know when, but I'm going to let you know.

KASH:

They from 51st Street, all of them right.

WHYTE BOI:

Yeah, no, you know, chrissy from down the bottom.

KASH:

Yeah, but all of them yeah.

REALLA:

54 from Viewmont oh, they from all that area, yeah, but it still feel good it just felt good, it's Philly, it's Philly in general.

WHYTE BOI:

The win is the win. Baby, the young fellas.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

The home team is the win. It just felt good, bro, just talking to all these niggas on FaceTime and we all like from the same spot, like we about to do business.

KASH:

And what song are you talking about? It's called Grease, grease, grease, featuring G Herbo. Yeah On, started the album started.

REALLA:

Don't get us, don't get us Flagged.

KASH:

Yeah.

REALLA:

It made the tape.

WHYTE BOI:

It made the tape. You gonna get that whole Interview flagged.

KASH:

Nah, I don't remember that.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

Damn, I had to play that man. Rico Go stream.

WHYTE BOI:

Go stream that. Right now Rico got a song with G Herbo.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

Rico.

WHYTE BOI:

Hammond.

KASH:

Yeah, man G Herbo.

WHYTE BOI:

Grease Is on Rico. I'm not going to lie.

KASH:

You know, like I really was sitting over here, quiet and didn't say nothing For 10, 15 minutes because God let him tell the story.

WHYTE BOI:

Yeah, I didn't.

KASH:

Like he know you like personally and stuff. Like I didn't. I had to hear all that. You feel me, I know what you're doing now. Yeah, you feel me Like let's talk about it. Probably more than these niggas I probably know, but before I don't, so I had to hear that. So I had to hear that. I had to hear you come up. You feel what I'm saying, cause there's really a lot of Producers and rappers and bloggers and all entertainers that really just be neat In the Especially Philadelphia. Yeah, because we got.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

I love Philly man, all types of people. I ain't leave Philly yet for real Down to basketball players All the way up to rappers.

KASH:

All the way up the rappers, all the way to invented whatever you just feel yesterday then you just in this city, you just feel like major, why even try?

KASH:

like you feel me, like people be really wanting to do something and strive and do this and do that. So somebody hearing you saying you really felt like this at this time and then you ain't do shit in seven years and then when you came back, you get in G Herbal songs and Black Poppies and all types of stuff like and it's people in the city that's trying to quit today, bro, like it's people that shot quick quit today, tomorrow and the next day and they could see a video it is and listen to this pod and it could be a producer or anybody bro, that's like anybody. Like we got a lot of wasted talents in the city because people be feeling like they're not going to succeed and it's too hard and oh, oh, I guess it just was that person blessing it ain't for me. But no, because I tell people all the time if you don't quit, there's no way you're going to lose.

KASH:

Like every day you one step closer to you. Feel what I'm saying. So if you don't quit, you ain't going to lose. So that's why I just let you tell that, because that's not even a genre, it's like a conversation genre where people chip in and shit, like people really need to hear that, bro, like for real, for real. And we ain't even say the other shit you done, because now you even bigger than what you even got to.

WHYTE BOI:

That's why I let him walk it down.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

You know what I'm saying.

WHYTE BOI:

At the end of the day, like he Brizzy, now A motherfucker go to his Instagram and he around the top eight-lister stars and all that, but like it was a Brizzy before that. All right before we continue, make sure you share, like subscribe.

REALLA:

Hit that notification bell at the top, man, and look, it won't hurt you to follow and subscribe on the page, man. If you don't, you's a motherfucking hater man. But look, moving forward, man. We got Brizzy on the beat here, right? You want to do something? You want to play your fast track? All right. All right, let's talk about a little more and then we're going to go to fast track.

WHYTE BOI:

All right, we can do that, because I ain't going to lie about a little more, and then we gonna go to fast track, alright, we can do that.

REALLA:

I wanted to touch on.

KASH:

I didn't even touch on that but it's cool, just let it flow and then I get the fast track together the shit I wanted to talk on we ain't even touch, and on some real shit. You know people wanna hear about JT man. You know that, bro, I ain't going to lie.

WHYTE BOI:

You know, I'm going to ask him that. You know, that's my favorite shit.

KASH:

You know that. You know I got to get that. You know I got to get that. You know I got to get that.

:

You know, I got to get that. You know, I got to get that.

KASH:

You know, I got to get that, this. We got to get the meat and potatoes All right.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

So listen, I'm going to give y'all the options. This is really the most. It's really the most, and we're going to just call it spade to spade, because I probably was talking too much, I don't know.

KASH:

No you're chilling. No, no, nigga, this shit, this shit, this shit about crazy.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

Y'all want. Y'all want the build up, or y'all want to know where we at.

WHYTE BOI:

Nah, we can get the build up.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

I want the build up Cause I feel like I feel like the producers especially, that I'm really cool with Need to hear the whole story man, or the ones that like send me loops, the ones that really support me.

WHYTE BOI:

Yeah.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

The ones that really got love for me and you know, no matter what, because I got a great realm of people to help me get here. You understand what I'm saying, yeah. This stuff takes time. This is built by brick, Like literally built off bricks by brick, brick by brick.

WHYTE BOI:

Yep, I feel that bro.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

You know, so Rico ends up doing a record. They calling me letting me know it's going crazy. They in LA, I'm in Philly, what's?

WHYTE BOI:

next.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

I'm like man, chilling, everything's still regular, still grinding, Still trying to figure out how to make paper Working, these jobs, and you know, trying to, you know, just find myself still growing as a producer. But I was obsessed with this shit. Yeah, like I don't, like I haven't even mastered FL Studio all the way yet, bro, but I just know what.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

I'm good at dog, and that's all I was just focused on doing, bro, Knowing what you're good at. So next thing you know Fire, I think, like a week later, two weeks later, Rico called me like yo man, my A&R is going to be calling you.

WHYTE BOI:

Now, mind you, who was his A&R at the?

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

time. Do you remember that I just mentioned Dallas? Dallas Martin was his A&R.

:

He ended up signing.

WHYTE BOI:

Rico.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

Right and I always felt like if I was able to get one record with Rico, and that's crazy because I was going to ask you, like how you?

WHYTE BOI:

that's why I need the buildup, that's why I don't want you to rush him, Because you see how we had to skip that.

:

We had to wait until how he met him.

WHYTE BOI:

But the buildup to it is crazy. I didn't know that. I didn't know that Dallas Well, I knew that, but I didn't know that in the twine, like that, you know what I'm saying?

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

It's.

WHYTE BOI:

God bro, you know what I'm saying it's God, bro.

REALLA:

No the reason why I was going to do that is because my man said he felt like he was talking too much, so I was going to switch it up a little bit and then we was going to go right back to his story. But that's why I said what I was saying. We all, we vibing, make sure you share, like, subscribe, leave your comment. Man, we want to see comments Under our videos. Man, we really want to know what people think.

REALLA:

Because, if y'all want us To keep bringing comments, content to y'all, we need to know what to bring to y'all. You know what I'm saying. Let us know how we, how we doing you know what I'm saying.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

Hit that subscribe button, man, and I feel like you know you guys are a group of guys. I feel like y'all all are opposites.

REALLA:

Yeah, we are.

BRIZZY ON DA BEAT:

But at the same time. That's how y'all build each other. You know what I'm saying? Somebody good at this, somebody good at that, somebody good at that, if y'all know how to channel all that in y'all can be the most successful podcast in the world.

WHYTE BOI:

Appreciate that.

Artist Origin and Musical Influence
Transition From Rapping to Producing
Music Industry Success Story
Building Momentum for Podcast Success

Podcasts we love