Realer Than Most Podcast

JUST ANOTHER PODCAST DAY | FT. KI FROM JEROME | RTM PODCAST EP. 10

June 03, 2024 @Reallathanmos, @whyteboi_D2E , @ow.kash
JUST ANOTHER PODCAST DAY | FT. KI FROM JEROME | RTM PODCAST EP. 10
Realer Than Most Podcast
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Realer Than Most Podcast
JUST ANOTHER PODCAST DAY | FT. KI FROM JEROME | RTM PODCAST EP. 10
Jun 03, 2024
@Reallathanmos, @whyteboi_D2E , @ow.kash

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What happens when the raw energy of Philadelphia streets transforms into powerful, reflective music? Join us as we welcome KI From Jerome, a rising star whose unique sound and storytelling prowess captivate audiences. Discover the heartfelt journey behind his hit "Two Gun Minimum" and how KI's commitment to meaningful lyrics over catchy hooks sets him apart in today's music scene. Together, we unravel the layers of his artistry and celebrate his growth and authenticity.

Ever wondered how childhood experiences shape musical talent? Travel back with us to Huntington Park, North Philly, as we reminisce about the influential artists and community bonds that sparked our passion. From sharing food to overcoming neighborhood challenges, our conversation with KI  paints a vivid picture of the intersection between friendship, struggle, and musical creativity. We also dive into the impact of local legends and the geographical nuances that define Philly’s neighborhoods.

Personal growth and artistic evolution are at the heart of our discussion. KI opens up about navigating between lifestyles, the significance of staying true to one's creative vision, and the support from a dedicated fan base. We highlight his transformative journey and the lessons learned from life's ups and downs, emphasizing how authenticity builds connections. Don't miss our passionate exploration of timeless music, the pressures of the industry, and the essence of true artistry in this engaging episode.

Support the Show.

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Send us a Text Message.

What happens when the raw energy of Philadelphia streets transforms into powerful, reflective music? Join us as we welcome KI From Jerome, a rising star whose unique sound and storytelling prowess captivate audiences. Discover the heartfelt journey behind his hit "Two Gun Minimum" and how KI's commitment to meaningful lyrics over catchy hooks sets him apart in today's music scene. Together, we unravel the layers of his artistry and celebrate his growth and authenticity.

Ever wondered how childhood experiences shape musical talent? Travel back with us to Huntington Park, North Philly, as we reminisce about the influential artists and community bonds that sparked our passion. From sharing food to overcoming neighborhood challenges, our conversation with KI  paints a vivid picture of the intersection between friendship, struggle, and musical creativity. We also dive into the impact of local legends and the geographical nuances that define Philly’s neighborhoods.

Personal growth and artistic evolution are at the heart of our discussion. KI opens up about navigating between lifestyles, the significance of staying true to one's creative vision, and the support from a dedicated fan base. We highlight his transformative journey and the lessons learned from life's ups and downs, emphasizing how authenticity builds connections. Don't miss our passionate exploration of timeless music, the pressures of the industry, and the essence of true artistry in this engaging episode.

Support the Show.

Speaker 2:

I'm really cash. I'm white boy d2a. Welcome to the real of the most podcast welcome, welcome and today we got a special guest in here right now special, special guest you want to get, you want to do the uh intro cash man. Listen, bro, you know you gotta make sure you got a warm welcome, man. Come on man.

Speaker 3:

Yo, it's so crazy, right, because I could draw, you got to. But if y'all fans are realer than most, bro, like I'm at the point where, bro, if y'all fans are realer than most, I don't even got to say shit. Bro, like, y'all know who I was rooting for, y'all know who I was rooting for, y'all know who I was. Outsiders coming in the city. I'm telling them we just had fucking uh, justin here, emory, emory, jones, son, yeah, what I say when I'm like yeah, him right there, hottest like ain't. No, everybody else was looking at. Yeah, I'm pointing at him, I ain't even. Yeah, like, but I ain't going to hold you, man, all the way from fucking fuck Jerome Street to thanks to Jerome Street, just another move up day out now. Man, man, like hottest in the city, man.

Speaker 3:

Hotest 22 years old man Went through it all, went through the ups and the downs Of Philadelphia and all that Hunting Park session. But I'm telling you, bro, like this dude, intelligent, like intelligent, like I'm not even going Talk on no rapper shit. I'ma explain him as a person, cause we been around each other and just how I thought it'd be Like intelligent Down to earth, he listen, he talk more than he listen when he around you know what I mean. And just him as a person, like, just him as a person, really reflect on his music man.

Speaker 5:

So warm, warm, warm round of applause man, I just want to say listen more than talk.

Speaker 3:

Oh, listen more than talk. Oh, listen more than talk, yeah, yeah that's some more to talk warm, warm round of applause. Man little cop from jerome man what? It, do man oh you're the hottest, hottest young in the city. Man like I ain't even my, my favorite.

Speaker 1:

You know, man, my favorite, my favorite number right now and when we say

Speaker 3:

favorite, we literally mean number one. Like real rap bro. I appreciate it, real rap bro.

Speaker 1:

Like I ain't just talking because he right here, I be listening to that shit, listening. Yeah, that nigga talking that shit. That's all I play when I get in the car.

Speaker 3:

And then it's worth listening to. That be the thing. People don't understand you feel what I'm saying. It ain't one minute and 30 second songs when it's a catchy hook and the beat all hot. So you just turn up and then don't know none of the Every song bro.

Speaker 1:

Every song.

Speaker 5:

I ain't gonna lie, I do got some songs like that now One minute and 30 second.

Speaker 1:

You getting more into your career. I'm just saying I got them. I got them, though, and you the type of rapper where I didn't get him, rob.

Speaker 2:

Markman 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz Rob.

Speaker 3:

Markman 2 Chainz 2.

Speaker 5:

Chainz 2. Chainz 2. Chainz 2, chainz 2, chainz 2, chainz 2.

Speaker 3:

Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz, 2 Chainz, 2 Chainz, 2 Chainz.

Speaker 5:

That's how I feel about 2 Gun Minimum, though Y'all probably don't see that shit that way, but I feel that way about that shit, I can see, I can see you feeling that way about it. They ain't want to. I freestyle that shit, so that shit was special to me. Yeah, that shit was special to me, but it was like this some fun shit. Right, it ain't hold that much weight to me, you feel me?

Speaker 3:

Right, yeah, hold that much weight to me you feel me right, yeah, right, and I, I ain't gonna lie, bro, like two gun minimum, even you saying what you just said or you might have, but, bro, the high pitch with the low, and then nobody never did that. Yeah, so that's, nobody never did that.

Speaker 1:

So that's where that's where it caught my ear, like sonically, like like sonically, like, like, sonically, I'm trying to see the food. Like sonically, Like that shit different sonically. I like that. Yeah, Pushing the needle.

Speaker 5:

I like that. Me and Ed was in there. Ab, you was in there that day. What's that? When I made two gun minimums?

Speaker 2:

No, I came in the day after I ain't know Yo, Brizzy called me. It was.

Speaker 5:

Brizzy was in there, I think. No, brizzy wasn't there. Brizzy was running a corner. I ain't over somebody in there, bro. That shit was electric in there. That shit was electric, bro. I ain't going to lie, I can't remember who the fuck it was. That shit hot. He told me like damn, I ain't never heard you be that violent.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, that's hot, and I ain't gonna lie bro. I'm checking my phone and all that now because I'm trying to get everything out the way, Because once I start talking, bro, I'm gonna start talking bro.

Speaker 1:

Alright, so let me go ahead and start this off, right?

Speaker 5:

I'm trying to get everything out the way, bro, let me go ahead. Welcome.

Speaker 3:

Cop from Jerome man. I mean a round of applause, man, we ain't even gonna play man. You been a soundtrack to my life For like two years, like ever since Permanent Scott. Before that, this the lifestyle I've been living lately. They want me to go back to the way.

Speaker 5:

When I was sinning daily. I ain't had a my closest homie to the way when I was sitting there.

Speaker 3:

I'm a visitor and it's crazy because, bro, I ain't gonna lie to you, right, i't going to lie to you, right, I ain't going to lie to you. When I heard Non-Invasive and Dreams, it was a couple joints, bro, that whole CD. But once you put out Bigger Picture, that stamped it Like get me inside. I ain't going to lie, Bro. The high pitch low.

Speaker 5:

That shit is incredible, bro, bro that shit really be incredible, bro.

Speaker 3:

I was really just trying to be different.

Speaker 5:

I was trying to expand my Artistry and shit. I ain't want to be seen Cause I was already. I felt like I was already different Than all the artists in the city and I ain't want nobody to try to put me into a cat. The shit I was trying to do, it wasn't a market for it. That wasn't a thing that nobody was really doing, rob.

Speaker 8:

Markman, I like how you did that though, rob Markman.

Speaker 5:

I didn't even want it to be a comparison me with nobody else, so I tried to create my own thing, not even just with the style of music, rob Markmanman, the sound, lil Jon, yeah, yeah, yeah. The sound Even down to the name of the project, the quality of the project, actually putting substance into these projects, Rob Markman.

Speaker 3:

And which one we talking about? Lil Jon. All of them, rob Markman. All of them, lil Jon, you can tell.

Speaker 5:

Rob Markman no, not all of them, not all of them Like, but after after no, no, all of them bro.

Speaker 3:

All of them. I was about to say I don't know what the fuck he talking about.

Speaker 5:

Fuck Jerome Street. Fuck Jerome Street, fuck Jerome Street. The only reason I said it wasn't because it was just like. It was like, it was just all pain. It wasn't like, it wasn't like it wasn't directed. It was like in a constant rage around that time.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 5:

But I felt like I understood it yeah.

Speaker 1:

And then you got to have a certain type of courage, yeah, to step out there like that. Yeah, because it's not normal. Yeah, right the normal sound Right With the people we normally talk about at this time.

Speaker 5:

I just feel that shit in me.

Speaker 1:

You feel?

Speaker 7:

me Biting out my back nigga you hungry as shit.

Speaker 5:

That shit is crazy and I feel like I've been vulnerable with everybody in my life. You feel me, yeah, not just friends, family, anybody that encounter me. I wear that shit on my sleeve, that shit leak out of my pores, bro, right, so damn. So it's like fuck, I can do this.

Speaker 2:

I think we jump started. Yeah, you know this, our fucking man bro, I know. But, we always start.

Speaker 8:

Well, I'm running back a little bit.

Speaker 1:

We gotta rewind it back. This nigga really like, because, like I want I do my due diligence. Yeah, so you, my favorite bro, so like I, just we to do this the right way, okay.

Speaker 3:

Oh, before you do it, we got. We always start off with a song Got to you feel me Got to Some of y'all in the realest and most family might not be familiar. I don't know how. I don't know how I'm going to play Lil' Kai from Jerome by your side off. Just Another Move Up Day. You know, Kai's most recent album.

Speaker 1:

By your Side. Tune in tune in y'all.

Speaker 2:

Just Another Move Up Day.

Speaker 3:

Produced by Nasty right.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, this whole tape Nasty. Right, yeah, this whole tape nasty.

Speaker 5:

No, no, no. This not Nasty, this not Nasty's song. This Kourt Magic, this Kourt Magic.

Speaker 3:

Oh, okay.

Speaker 2:

Nasty got like eight songs on there. Oh wow, yeah, but this whole CD crazy though.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, this Kourt Maddie shit. That second one Damn, that was easy, bro. That's my mom's shit. That's my shit, bro. I can't speak. I'm wondering where you getting this from. It's my mom's shit. It's my shit bro.

Speaker 2:

I play this every day, we was brothers.

Speaker 5:

We shared food off the plate. I remember you had more and you ain't shared with a nigga. I understand I never said you was a well-o'ed nigga. I thought you a bitch-ass nigga but you a bro-ass nigga. But the fact Make you a hoe ass nigga. And to a nigga you don't know, you a Joe ass nigga what you say.

Speaker 3:

Biting on my back, nigga you hungry as shit, nigga you.

Speaker 5:

Hungry as shit, you hungry as shit you with my homie like that's my part.

Speaker 3:

This shit so good. It's funny, I'm done. You over here laughing like a motherfucker, I can't believe he even like yo.

Speaker 2:

How you come up with this.

Speaker 5:

This is wow. I never questioned you. I ain't trying to run no tests on you. You were still my dog. I thought you fucked the love I felt for you. If you ever needed me, I was there for helping you. There was some niggas thinking I should probably put the belt to you. I remember we had nappy heads and couldn't get a cut. Dicks, niggas, we started selling drugs trying to live it up. I remember when you saw my post, I was a guy. I don't remember how you started acting when you got to one. I'm just a vibe with your transportation. I'll take you to the block. That's a business career. They like me more than you. I'll let them slide. I guess that's why you hate me now.

Speaker 7:

I should have fucked a little dog. I'm dying folks.

Speaker 5:

I'm trying to find some real ways to provide. Provide Some real ways to provide.

Speaker 3:

I'm fighting on my bed, nigga you, it's kai from jerome, it's not little no more let's get that shoot music. They ain't updating my yeah so it's little kai, but my man named kai from jerome, you feel me white boy go to what you was gonna do damn.

Speaker 1:

you're my boy, bro, so we're gonna take it back bro, because, like I, I just we gotta do our due diligence here on relative most so like you know you know where you from than most so like you know where you from, I'm from Hunter Park, jerome Street.

Speaker 5:

Jerome Street a lot of people don't know where it is. I don't like most people ride past it often, but a lot of people don't actually know what that block is. But it's right there off of Breaux, hunter Park. It's like one block over from Bre and Park, like a little small block. It's on both sides of Broad Street, but that's the only place you're going to find it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, okay, all right. So, coming up in North Philly and Huntington Park area, what were some of your early influences on music? Here, and in your house.

Speaker 3:

Is Huntington Park considered North?

Speaker 1:

Yeah.

Speaker 5:

It's kind of crazy that you asked, because a lot of people Is it like Logan? I mean I guess, we from South Philly so we call all that shit North.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

Some niggas from North would say that's not North, Nice town not North.

Speaker 5:

That shit right there, though that is.

Speaker 3:

North, that's what.

Speaker 5:

I'm saying, that's Germantown. I guess, all this shit, but all this shit's objective.

Speaker 3:

I'm calling all that shit hard. I'm not going to cut you off, bro. You were saying shit.

Speaker 2:

Germantown Uptown. That's different, that's too different. No, it's not.

Speaker 5:

I know you're not one of them bro I's why I don't say I'm not a cop from Huntington Park.

Speaker 3:

I'm not a cop from HP. Yeah, yeah, yeah, real right, real right, jerome.

Speaker 5:

I don't even be associating myself with some real shit. I don't associate myself with none of that shit. I don't even like to even tell people where that shit at bro, I want some real shit, but Real shit.

Speaker 3:

Rob Markman 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2, chainz 2, chainz 2.

Speaker 5:

Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz, 2 Chainz 2 Chainz, 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz 2 Chainz.

Speaker 3:

I remember when I'm a kid, my uncle used to deal with this, my block. It was like a small village.

Speaker 5:

It was so many in one, but I was a kid, I was around all of them. It was certain families. I was around more. My uncle used to deal with this girl across the street from us Our whole family's entangled they entangled.

Speaker 1:

I know what you mean. I know what you mean All the families intertwined. It's like a village.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, yeah, real shit. That shit ended up ending real bad. But anyway, I used to go over there. The girl got all these brothers and shit. That's like my family too. They used to listen to all different type of music but like Meek was popping I'm a kid Meek popping and shit. They got all the Flamers tapes and all they listen to Flamers and shit. They listen to all the Flamers, that's all they be banging and shit. But she got a sister. She got a sister Her name's Kin, banging and shit, but she got a sister. She got a sister Her name's Canera and shit. That's the first time I really was watching TV on demand and shit. Watching videos on demand. She had me watching Bruno Mars and shit and fucking Chris Brown. I always loved music and shit. That shit just made me start looking for that shit everywhere. I just started noticing how that shit embedded in our everyday life, bro.

Speaker 8:

I started paying attention Like damn.

Speaker 5:

it's music everywhere. I just started doing that shit myself. I was doing that shit as a kid. I always did music.

Speaker 1:

What was some of the?

Speaker 5:

Well, somebody that was real close to me, that was actually doing it my next-door neighbor and shit. It's two brothers, they both do music and shit, but one of them, when the family moved, one of them still was coming to the neighborhood. Okay, he a little older than me, a couple years older than me, and shit, but he had a generational talent. Okay. Okay, like, on some real shit, he could have put Jerome Street on the map if I didn't. Yeah, well, he had the opportunity to before I did Right, and like, maybe one day he'll get back to that too, but he was definitely an inspiration to me Mm-hmm, damn, that's fire.

Speaker 1:

So, like early on on, your next door neighbor influenced you a lot in music. What were some of the influences in the game? You was influenced by coming up In the game. What you mean by that?

Speaker 3:

The industry.

Speaker 1:

Rappers, singers, that type shit.

Speaker 5:

See, I was never like too invested in no other artist. That's why I think my sound suit unique, unique yeah man. I always liked all different type of music.

Speaker 2:

It wasn't like my style. I'm listening to you. I hear all your creative sides.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, no bullshit, I think I can do. I think I can do Like all of that shit, like that you know, but what I? Choose to do Is exactly what I feel. That's why I'm able To articulate it so well, cause I don't. I don't try Sticking one style, one genre.

Speaker 3:

You don't even use Auto-tune, do you I?

Speaker 5:

do use auto-tune. Okay, Some songs. I know I don't have to, Okay, but like it make everything like a whole lot easier. Yeah, Like sonically Right, but I know how to make a good song.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, of course, yeah, yeah, of course.

Speaker 5:

But like last year, last year the only person I and I don't think I even listened to him more than myself still, because I listen to a lot of my unreleased songs. But Because I listen to a lot of my unreleased songs, but when I look at the Apple Music John, the only person I listened to more than myself last year was Kendrick. I listened to him about a thousand more minutes than myself.

Speaker 3:

But that shit translated.

Speaker 5:

Wow bro, that shit translated in my music.

Speaker 2:

Both of y'all is, in a way, that shit crazy.

Speaker 3:

Bro, this nigga just basically a little me.

Speaker 2:

Bro, real shit, bro, that shit, really crazy.

Speaker 3:

Everything you say Like everything you think, say accent bro, like everything bro.

Speaker 1:

That shit crazy, bro, and I can't lie because, like, it amazes me, because, like all the type of sounds I hear when I hear your music and it's like, it's like you can tell it come from in you and it's not like Something you trying to like, navigate and do Like you know what I mean?

Speaker 3:

Like that shit really, yeah, what he went through and what he yeah. You can tell that.

Speaker 1:

You know, what I'm saying and the music so. So you would say you wouldn't really Listen to a or like Feed into a bunch of artists because you always knew, like I got my own sound and I wanna, I wanna, take in everything.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, but I do wanna say like when I started getting older and shit and I start cause it was like after a while, like music became so saturated, like I was just hearing a lot of people, like people that people around me just thinking hot, like it started becoming like the same person I used to, like everybody, just start liking the same people. I don't even. I'm like I just start getting tired of hearing that shit. And then when I finally start hearing like getting around people that got like selective music taste, like like they actually like you can tell like they got the own, the own taste, like right, it's just are becoming.

Speaker 5:

When I caught on to Mozzy, I'm like 15 years old and shit, I caught on to Mozzy and I over-endorged on that shit Rob Markman. So it was like that Bay Area sound type Lil Jon, no just.

Speaker 1:

Mozzy Rob Markman. Okay Lil Jon.

Speaker 5:

Just Mozzy Rob Markman. Okay, lil Jon, I over-endorged on that shit. I wasn't really making music. I wasn't really making music around this time. I'm somewhere else. I was making music prior to that, but I wasn't taking it serious. But at this time I'm not even listening to my own music at this time. I'm listening to.

Speaker 5:

Mozzy, he didn't influence me in music, he influenced me kinda in life bro yeah, like like Bozzy one of them. Yeah, like he like he, you know, on some real shit. He gave me like some type of some type of direction.

Speaker 8:

Yeah, yeah, damn. I ain't.

Speaker 5:

I just, I just I just didn't feel like a lot of shit that I've seen, a lot of that shit just wasn't resonating with me. When I listen to the nigga, I'm like damn, I feel like this. I feel like this, bro, and I start thinking damn, this shit around me, not cool, these niggas ain't fucking this shit, rob Markman.

Speaker 1:

It resonated with you. You start seeing a bunch of shit, you start realizing shit.

Speaker 5:

I'm like what the fuck Rob Markman? But it he was a huge inspiration I want to piggyback.

Speaker 3:

I always let white boy do the whole growing up started all that. I want to piggyback, man, you know you my favorite artist, and now I really consider you my homie. We've been around each other and talked about certain things. You feel me, I consider you my homie and I want you to really like, like, get music bro. You got that type of music where, like, certain questions cannot be unanswered. Like certain songs, you got even the titles to your music and your album. Like you got to give an explanation. You feel what I'm trying to say.

Speaker 5:

I don't know. Some questions going remain unanswered.

Speaker 3:

No no, we know. Yeah, I definitely know. I know what you mean when you say that. But like, for example, I was about to give you an example you from Jerome Street. You just told us where that's at. Would you agree that, jerome Street?

Speaker 5:

like yes or no made you who you are.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, of course, all right, so it made you who you are. So some people not articulate enough to hear you say that in a good way, to even put that together, and then you go to fucking apple and they say fuck jerome street. Yeah, some people don't get stuff Like we know they don't understand it and then you got. You got fuck Jerome Street.

Speaker 5:

Then, thanks to Jerome, yeah, yeah, like Like Damn.

Speaker 3:

You feel me I ain't gonna lie.

Speaker 8:

I swear to.

Speaker 5:

God, that shit meant so much to me when I finally got there I swear to God I ain't know, I ain't know I ain't know.

Speaker 3:

So what do like? What like like? Some people not don't articulate enough to know what you mean by that. When you say that Like, if he from that block, why you saying fuck that, you feel me, yeah, like if you listen, if you listen to the music, that shit is all in there, bro Like.

Speaker 2:

Some, some, some questions remain unanswered.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, yeah, yeah, but I be feeling. I be feeling like that's cool, that's cool, that fact, cool to me. Like me, I know I'm putting it all out there. You feel me Right and I like to get that puzzle, you feel me.

Speaker 3:

Right.

Speaker 5:

To make a person think or some shit that'll hit you. Four years down the line you'll be like, damn that shit. Make way more sense now than it ever did.

Speaker 3:

You feel me yeah right.

Speaker 5:

But, but I just got a life story, bro. I like I've been through shit like I everybody had, but um, like you see you saying, you saying why are you saying fuck the fuck is black? Why are you saying wife, I seen, fuck the wrong, she from?

Speaker 3:

Jerome she right. And then saying thinks, like I just want you to explain, like I saying fuck Jerome Sheehy, you from Jerome Sheehy, right. And then saying thanks, I just want you to explain to them why it's the journey. It's the journey.

Speaker 5:

I just got a great relationship with a lot of people from my neighborhood. A lot of people. But I also got. I had grave problems with people from my neighborhood too and these all. Like I said, it's kind of like a village, but it just wasn't strong the foundation, it just wasn't built right at all and we all so close with each other and me at a young age.

Speaker 5:

I started realizing damn, this is not a village Like it's not you feel me Like, no matter how close we was, niggas wasn't really close at all. You feel me, yeah, like the shit that was allowed to go on amongst each other, like it was outsiders coming to our neighborhood and shit it's niggas that's not from was outsiders Coming to our neighborhood and shit it's niggas that's not From our neighborhood Coming to our neighborhood.

Speaker 3:

Philly the worst, bro Like.

Speaker 5:

But it's not. It's not even bad For a person to come To another person's neighborhood, like that's. I'm not saying there's nothing wrong with that, but you just got.

Speaker 3:

It depends on what they doing.

Speaker 5:

You just gotta understand the chemistry and that shit just can't be explained Like I can't explain. You just had to be there, you feel me.

Speaker 7:

Yeah.

Speaker 5:

Like you, familiar with some people from down there. You know it's like the culture is just weird bro.

Speaker 2:

It's crazy. It's crazy, man, it's weird, it's crazy. All right. So, kyle from Jerome, what make you so passionate about music? What turns your head that way?

Speaker 5:

I'm a passionate person, bro. I ain't going to lie to you, it's just music. You can ask anybody. I debate a lot. I like to debate what's up, man. No, no, no, not even. It's crazy. It's on no bullshit. I don't even always got to choose the winning side, bro Right side bro right right right, I can.

Speaker 5:

I can make it feel like I won, though bro, I ain't gonna lie, I don't even know how to explain it, but, um, it's not just music, I'm just super passionate, bro, um, and I'm just, I'm real good at music. Yeah, like that. That's something that make me feel good and I do go on. I do go on blocks and times where I don't, where I just get all the way away from it. Like two weeks ago I went to the studio for the first time in two months and shit.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, like what got you back in there though.

Speaker 5:

Man, that's a good question, because it really was something. No, no, no, I think I was with Mirror Shop Mera. Lee, yeah, mera Lee. Okay, Like he had this rehearsal and shit. He had this rehearsal for his Listening party. Yeah, yeah yeah, A party for High Street. That's where we met. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah yeah.

Speaker 4:

Oh, that's what you. Yeah, that's where we met at. Yeah, yeah, no bullshit.

Speaker 5:

Shout out to Mara Lee yeah, I ain't gonna lie High Street about to come out.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, welcome to High Street, amir Ali. That shit going to be crazy. Wow, that shit going to be crazy.

Speaker 5:

I ain't going to lie the nigga a beast bro he a top pick in the city right now. You know what's crazy? I did Bail for Greatness podcast a couple weeks ago. That shit just came out. They asked me about my top five and I forgot him, bro. Afterwards I was mad as shit About that. Like I tried. I tried to get that shit On that episode, but they said they already so he including it.

Speaker 3:

So who your? So who your five? I'm here right now, yeah.

Speaker 2:

Who your top five In the city right now?

Speaker 5:

Yeah, I'm really in my top five, for sure, okay.

Speaker 7:

I said them already. Alright, that's three.

Speaker 5:

Yeah Me on. Three I like lights a lot right now. Four I like lights a lot. Honestly, I don't think this is crazy, I'm not even.

Speaker 8:

You seen his whole list, bro, that shit really wild, bro, I don't know, if.

Speaker 5:

I can kill her in this, though, cause I think she, like she, can be a. I don't know Teara Wick she hot as shit. Yeah, I always say Te be a. I don't know Tierra Whack, she hot as shit.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, I always say Tierra Whack, yeah.

Speaker 3:

I'm not going to lie, though I don't know what camera. I'm not going to lie, though.

Speaker 2:

What.

Speaker 3:

That album she just put out was mad as shit. You said it was mad, I was mad. I don't know what the fuck y'all label meetings and shit. I don't know what the fuck y'all path is for Tierra Right, but the fact we know she rap like that and y'all got her making songs like that, that's unacceptable bro, but how you know, that's not what she want to do, though.

Speaker 3:

If it is she come the realest and most. We need to talk. We need to talk to you. I don't know the we need to put a bug in. No, it ain't no situation what I'm saying is the album was fucking trash. She's like the best rapper from Philadelphia. How's your album trash and you're the best rapper in Philadelphia.

Speaker 2:

I can't speak on it though.

Speaker 5:

I can't speak on it because I ain't really good at talking. I'm sorry.

Speaker 2:

I'm going't speak on it. I can't speak on it.

Speaker 3:

I really don't want to say it, I'm going to speak on it, then we're going to get back to. We're going to get back to bro. Tierra Whack Is starting to do like you know how, like Somebody make a hit, right, right, or have a big moment, or, and that big moment they just keep trying to do Over and over and over and over. That's what they doing With her bro. They got her making All these TikTok-y songs Ever since her joint Got viral on TikTok and all that they trying to make her do, bro, push it to everybody, to your rap, my favorite rapper. Why they going off when she was on the gram, fucking every beat up? Nobody raps better than her bro. So why your whole project?

Speaker 5:

you're not rapping no, what if she's doing something different? Like what if? What if that's her plan? Like honestly, bro I ain't gonna let her some songs on her. They be creative and shit they could be creative.

Speaker 3:

All they want, though, bro you saying you went from her. But but this I'm saying that creative shit she just did. Had her shit on like 40. Now it was in fucking 800. Nobody trying to hear that from her, bro, she's a good rapper. Every time she raps, the shit go off.

Speaker 3:

Every time she try to be like even the joint where she had all the one minute joints. That was creative, but she executed it right. She executed it right, you feel me, and she still was rapping on that. The joint she just put out, bro, it just sound like somebody took fucking shrooms and some shit and just started writing her music. I'm going to have to dive into that shit bro.

Speaker 5:

What the fuck? Real shit bro. That's real. Of the most Like subscribe comment share.

Speaker 3:

if you don't, You'll fucking hate it.

Speaker 2:

Hit the bell Notifications. Like, subscribe, comment, share. If you don't, you a fucking hater. Hit the bell Notifications.

Speaker 3:

But we got Kai from Jerome in the building, so we keeping it Real times too, all the way.

Speaker 2:

All the way, all the way.

Speaker 3:

So, kai man, I ain't going to hold you bro, I ain't going to lie All right, go ahead, go ahead. No, go ahead bro it, no, all right.

Speaker 2:

So coming up in philadelphia man, uh, we really we could skip past a little bit of this stuff. I want to know your turning point in life to make you like get to this point where you are right now damn, that's crazy, bro.

Speaker 5:

Because, because I feel like it was like a lot of. I've been thinking about this a lot lately. Actually, I've been trying, I've been trying to figure that out myself. Yeah, because, because I felt like it was a point in time. I felt like when I got shot, that shit changed my life.

Speaker 7:

That shit will do it, that shit will do it.

Speaker 5:

No, but like it was so much shit that led up to that.

Speaker 5:

So then I started thinking like, damn, if that's what changed my life, if that's what changed my life, then my life changed before then, but then I started thinking like if that shit was really that defining, like I feel like that shit was defining for a moment, but I feel like it's been so many moments in my life that shaped me and changed me, turned me different ways that I can't really get, I can't give it to like one specific moment you feel me All right, but like a realization I just came to. I'm talking about my homie Boob. It's like my big brother and shit.

Speaker 3:

Boob.

Speaker 5:

Talking about Boobie and shit. Anyway, we talking about my homie, reek, and shit. Reek passed away and shit. So we just reminiscing, just talking about little different moments and shit. And and we was talking about little different moments and shit we was talking about after he passed, I went to go talk to his mom and shit. She said something to me. It was super confusing to me at the time. I heard the words and the feeling that I got from her was just different. You feel me. She said something like it was the most peace that she felt in a long time Because of the constant fear of something like this.

Speaker 3:

Or him being in trouble for something else. So after her son passed, you went to her house and she told you this is the most peace she had in a long time.

Speaker 8:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

That's something that just-. That's strong, that's heavy.

Speaker 5:

I really didn't understand it at that time but that's something that just hit me a couple days ago.

Speaker 3:

That'll fuck my head up.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, that shit started making me think about my own mom and shit, cause, cause, like I just I don't, that's something I wouldn't even, I wouldn't imagine, I wouldn't imagine he would want her to say some shit like that. You feel me Like that's a crazy ass feeling, right, like that's a crazy feeling, bro.

Speaker 3:

Right.

Speaker 5:

And I started thinking about my own mom and shit Cause I don't. I don't want her. I ain't want her most. I didn't want her most peaceful time. I didn't want her to feel that her most peaceful time and thought of me in a long time would be that she don't got to worry about that, no more.

Speaker 3:

Rob Markman Right Now, look right. So, bro, your music, your lyrics, bro, bro, like I say to you, bro, I don't even want.

Speaker 5:

I don't even want this shit to be Misconstrued Like she love that man.

Speaker 3:

She love it. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 5:

Like that's.

Speaker 3:

People just got that's for powerful minds. Yeah, if somebody don't Catch on to what you was saying or what that lady Was trying to say, they small minded.

Speaker 3:

But the minute you told me that Already the high school tour, and you said it on stage. I already caught it Like, like, like. If I'm waiting, if I keep thinking something going to happen and thinking, and thinking and it's making me anxious, then it finally happened. It's like I could calm down Because it it, you feel what I'm saying. But yeah, so we got that. We got that. Rest in peace to her son. You know condolences. So one thing I really wanted to ask you like you got a song called Wanna Feel Love. If it's all love, it's all love. But I've been peeping everything at all love, like you talk about that a lot in your music. If it's all love, it's all love.

Speaker 3:

But I've been peeping everything at all love. You talk about that a lot in your music your music, bro. When I hear your music it sound like this to sum it up it sound like you love people to death and you want the best for people but you trying your hardest to get them on what you on but people just don't want to listen or they selfish, or they just that's what I get from your music. A lot Like you got some people who probably look at you funny because you didn't change, Because you on and you be trying to get them.

Speaker 3:

That's what I get. So you ain't no names or particular sister Bruh, ain't none of that Like. Can you just explain, like, what you be, what you be talking about when you you mean?

Speaker 5:

I'ma say, i'ma say that for sure, for sure. It was a point where I was, where I, I was trying to beat that shit In certain people, certain people, heads. You feel me like I, I want, I wanted them to be, I wanted, but I wanted them to be on what I was on. But I started to like I got to a realization that like a high selfish that was like, because I just had to think about all the times where people were trying to tell me, yeah, like I just wasn't there and that's it the light. Like, like it was, it's actually specific people in my life that actually helped me come to those realizations, like Just flip the switch for me Of some sort Cause.

Speaker 5:

After meeting this person, my life changed a lot. I was looking for that change though. I was open to it. I wasn't like closed in, I, I just didn't have, I just didn't. It was, it was nothing there. It was nothing there for me to soak. You feel me like I already, I already everything that I, everything that I could already, I already I already grasped it, grasped it. Yeah, like I soaked everything up that I could and it was like I don't, I don't want to, I don't want to keep like indulging in this shit. And when I meet this person, she like expanded my whole, like my whole viewpoint, like it just grew like exponentially. Yeah, like I be feeling like a computer sometimes, bro. It's like I didn't have access to like the same and it wasn't hard to get it, but it's like how the fuck didn't have. It's just like I didn't have Access to Like the same and it wasn't hard to get it Like, but it's like how the fuck, how the fuck Didn't I have it?

Speaker 3:

Right, so what's your favorite Project From yourself, and why?

Speaker 5:

I don't, I don't, I don't got one bro.

Speaker 3:

You don't got one.

Speaker 5:

No, I got least Leafs favorite, though my Leafs favorite is Between Lifestyles. Why, why? I made that project in between. Fuck Jerome Street, fuck Jerome Street, fun Jerome Street and Fuck Jerome Street Again. No, I'm just kidding.

Speaker 3:

Fucked the wrong shit, funned the wrong shit and fucked the wrong shit again.

Speaker 5:

I don't know how to explain it. It's just not my favorite era, you feel me? Yeah, it's not my favorite. I wasn't too New bullshit bro Because around this time I was still running around and shit. I was outside, but I was trying so hard to get away from that shit bro yeah. I was trying so hard to get away from that shit. That's where the whole thing stemmed from. That's where the whole name and even the style of music, even the songs that's on there.

Speaker 8:

You feel me. I ain't gonna lie.

Speaker 5:

My whole person. I was trying to break my personality bro I ain't want to be that person, no more.

Speaker 3:

Right.

Speaker 5:

I just felt like super loved. I ain't know who the fuck I was in that time. Bro, I ain't gonna hold you Want some real shit.

Speaker 3:

The fucking title of the album, Just the title alone. It got to be your least favorite. Because, like you, between lifestyle.

Speaker 3:

Like you don't know whether to go this way, whether to go that way, so you could have a song about loving the girl and then the next song is fuck that, like. Because you between, like it's the streets, you love the streets. The next song niggas in the streets, be on there. And I got to get out. You feel what I'm saying? Like, do you feel? Like that's like what type of time you was on, or like, was it like? When you say between lifestyle, what lifestyle and what lifestyle is you talking about? Because that was only three years ago, yeah.

Speaker 5:

I feel like it's just like a thing of culture Coming from where we come from. It's like we born street niggas. I feel like even that is different levels to being a street nigga too. But I'm just talking about our communities. We just born street niggas, bro. That's what we growing up to be, bro. The community, that's like where we growing up to be bro.

Speaker 8:

That shit is like a reality.

Speaker 3:

That's crazy that you say that.

Speaker 5:

I'm moving around and shit. I went to Glen Mills and shit, I got my GED. When I'm up at Glen Mills, I'm up there with niggas from all these different cities, and shit Me too.

Speaker 3:

I went to the Mills too. I got my GED up there.

Speaker 5:

I got my GED.

Speaker 2:

What you think shaped you the most in life, though? Was it a mentor? Was it Glenn Mills? What?

Speaker 3:

was it. I ain't going to lie Anybody who went to the mills, it was that.

Speaker 5:

Well, you think that shit shaped you.

Speaker 3:

That shit made me who I am.

Speaker 5:

No, I think that shit. No, look it's life experiences, bro. It's life shaped me, bro, because I changed with literally every situation, bro. I don't know, it's like I analyze, I analyze and then I figure out what was the best thing for me to do in that time.

Speaker 8:

But I try my hardest not to compromise on my morals and shit my morals and my Rob Markman.

Speaker 5:

Absolutely Rob Markman. And this might sound crazy, but even that shit changing, bro, even my moral compass changing, I don't look at shit the same. It's certain shit. You still can't get a pass on Rob Markman. Right, rob Markman. But I just started. I just started realizing, like that's.

Speaker 2:

That's real right there what you're saying, man, yeah, I just. Man, that's growing up too.

Speaker 5:

No bullshit, bro, because a lot, because a lot of the shit, a lot of the shit that we deem cool, that we deem cool, like while I was growing up, like the shit that was cool around me, the shit that was cool for me to do, that's just never, never be cool, bro. This shit is crazy. Bro, it's like it's crazy because you wouldn't look at me like a victim, you wouldn't look at me like a victim. But, bro, I'm a fucking victim, bro, I'm a victim. This shit crazy, I don't mean like a victim like PTSD and I ain't gonna lie know what you meant by

Speaker 7:

Vick, I know.

Speaker 3:

That's why I say that's why I agree with you, cuz I ain't about to agree with no niggas.

Speaker 2:

That's why I had to see what you was saying.

Speaker 3:

I thought he was going to the ptsd like yeah, yeah yeah, but um so 2021 that's crazy, shout out lean in the building, man shout out lean yeah, you funny and shit but um you say, yeah, I'm a victim, yeah, nigga, you was a bitch like nah. But no, uh. So you say between lifestyles, and that was 2021 all right, go ahead yeah so. So, where you feel as though your lifestyle at now, like what type of lifestyle Do you have now Like in your head, like is it the right one or do you want to switch it Some more? You know.

Speaker 5:

No, I, I feel like. I feel like I'm just I'm. I feel like I'm actually like In a space where I'm living my life now. Like and Not to the extreme. I'm not living above my means or nothing. I feel like I'm aware of so many things that I could do that I'm not just doing what's right in my face. You feel me. Yeah, I'm not doing nothing because I got to right now. Right, I just feel like I know who I am now, you feel me Right.

Speaker 5:

It's not really shaped by a community of people, not by one community of people, one way of living, one way of thinking. I feel like I experienced enough of it and I created my own. I shaped what's best for me. That's why, when you said I was trying so hard to get people on what I was on, I realized that shit was kind of selfish of me.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, like.

Speaker 5:

I said that shit earlier Because everybody's just so unique, bro, everybody so unique, and everybody just be wanting everything to be so familiar. Everybody be wanting it's like all these different it's templates of people out here, bro.

Speaker 5:

It's people that just follow the same everything, bro, niggas don't got their own mind. Niggas don't think bro, like it's. People that just follow the same, the same everything, bro, like niggas don't got the own mind, niggas don't think bro, and that shit. That's like I started to notice that shit. Like I'm not saying that it was it was true to be for myself, cause I think I always thought for myself. I always thought differently than people, but I still, I still was following the same trend.

Speaker 3:

Right.

Speaker 5:

Like I still followed the same trend, like that shit was. It was just kind of crazy to me. I'm actually I'll be feeling blessed. I was able to like snap out of that shit bro, some people it'd be too late.

Speaker 3:

They already they'd be wanting to change in a week. Later something catch up with but.

Speaker 3:

I ain't going to lie, man, I'm so happy you're here, man, you know. And one thing I really wanted to talk about while we on the pod is like, I ain't got to say too much. That was our personal convo, but when we was doing a tour at Overbrook, I meant, mastery, you had said something to me. I ain't going to say what you said. That's up to you to say it if you want. But it was basically pertaining, like, your music and your album and all that. And basically we started having a certain conversation and I was telling you and I'm going to tell anybody this I don't care if you're a rapper, I don't care if you make clothes, you're a designer, a content creator, youtuber. Don't if you know that you're unique or you're moving a certain way and yours is like all right, this is is how I'm gonna break it down right here. Don't think that just because the masses like this and the masses agree with that, don't think it's right same crowd, just like he said people don't got their own brain, right?

Speaker 3:

you feel me?

Speaker 5:

I do, I do want to talk about that shit.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, and when you making music? Right, if you out here making music and you actually speaking with a purpose, your shit hold volume. That mean 10 years, 15 years later from now, when Manny About to be 40 and I'm 39 or 38 Nigga, we have put on just another move up day. Facts, right, 15 years ago, facts, niggas ain't putting on all this party hip-hoppity, fucking. What the fuck is this shit called?

Speaker 2:

I don't even know drill music.

Speaker 3:

Nobody putting on no, no, no beats by Sav Philly Drill John in 10 years. I'm sorry, we just not doing it, we not putting on no drill. Shit be for the moment, bro.

Speaker 5:

I don't think Shit be for the moment you might not, bro, but the music out there, it's going to be somebody that's going to listen to that shit, real shit. But to talk about that conversation, I agree with what you just said. I think I'll listen to that shit 10, 15 years from now. But but I'm not, I'm not just like, I'm not deleting it, I'm not taking it down it's always gonna be there, and I'm not even saying it's a part of life yeah, it's a book.

Speaker 5:

It's a book on to the next chapter but I'm not even going on to the next chapter. I'm just, I'm just, I'm like, I just, I just pay attention to the analytics and shit. I see where the shit declined at. I understand it. It wasn't like a thought of discouragement, it was just an effect.

Speaker 2:

It was just an analytical effect.

Speaker 5:

Where you think it declined at it was the skits. It was the skits. I had my man act out some things throughout the project and shit. Like I had man, I'm going to play one of them for y'all real quick, Because I was just trying to play it for y'all. Damn. Y'all going to be able to hear it through the mic? Y'all going to be able to hear it? Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.

Speaker 8:

Some of these people come really close to a point where they are more keen and aren't as moved by the incentives of ignorance anymore. But I may know another way we can push the envelope, Even when you're aware the battle with pride is one hell of a battle to win.

Speaker 2:

Yo man.

Speaker 3:

Bro, bro, bro, bro, bro bro. I gotta say this shit, bro, because I did this when we talking about it and I'm gonna do it the fuck again, bro. Fuck all that, bro, like real rap. I understand what you saying, but this is what I'm trying to tell you, bro, the music you making are for real people, it's for people with a purpose, it's for people who really out here moving in a certain direction I don't think you understand what I'm saying, though like go ahead, go ahead I'm not going away from that shit, bro.

Speaker 5:

Like I'm not going away from it, like yeah, this is crazy.

Speaker 2:

That's what I'm saying, like, what's the like? How you come up with that?

Speaker 5:

like the whole project, the whole, like that whole. The skits are super important to me because the whole project, it shaped the whole project. The songs is like the emotion, but the skits is like the subconscious Self-destruct workers inside of ourselves. Bro, you feel me? We be doing ourselves wrong, bro, on some real shit. That's the part that they supposed to play. They represent affection inside of our own body. They is me. I use the white. That's not even the one I put out Like I use All the skits, is you?

Speaker 2:

No, I took myself out of the skits completely.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, no, he Brizzy. And who else?

Speaker 5:

Yeah, brizzy and Matthew yeah.

Speaker 3:

Okay.

Speaker 2:

Shout out to Brizzy on the beat man.

Speaker 5:

I didn't want people to think that that was me. I don't even want that to be a thought. I want it to be like I kind of figured that people would be like I don't want to hear these niggas like we're kind, but I'm trying to tell them this is something that's inside of me, this is me. It's embedded in the whole project. Right, right, this the my pride and my ego, the shit I've been living out of my whole life, like that's why we don't know how to de-escalate shit, because we live out of fear Like we operate out of fear, yeah, but I'm going to keep it a bean, bro.

Speaker 3:

Look the reason I keep beating this in your head, bro, because you 22, bro, 22 years old.

Speaker 8:

Yeah, real rap you 22.

Speaker 3:

So when it come to certain shit, I know how your mind is. I was 22 before. What I'm trying to tell you, bro, is these, and I'm not saying you walking your school, but I'm gonna keep beating it in your head, because if you say so, if I say something right now like yo say I do this or do that, and then I do it and I I'm like it's declining. Wouldn't y'all expect me to change it, right? What I'm telling you, I wouldn't, Go ahead.

Speaker 5:

I'm not going to say I would expect you to change it. I'm not planning to change. I don't think I'm changing it. I think it's just adjusting it, like you got to find another way to feed them. Like I'm not saying I'll go away from it, I'm saying make it more digestible, and still not. Like I'm not dumbing it down, I'm just putting like look, when I'm dropping, I'm going, I don't even want to see this shit right now, bro. This the.

Speaker 2:

Relative Most Podcast. Make sure you share like, subscribe comment.

Speaker 3:

Because, look, this is what I wanna. This is what I wanna say, bro, like we ain't, I ain't even gonna keep Keep Keep saying it, but I used the example bro Core, an artist from Philadelphia. He was just on the pod, bro, he just was on the pod. He just Literally what I'm saying to him. He just said it. He said He'll be paying mortgage, taking care of his family, paying car notes, paying rent, doing all his shit, and then he'll walk outside and cause he don't got a chain and a watch, niggas will say you gotta be more like. No, I don't gotta be more like, cause I'm really handling real shit out here, like I'm really handling. That's basically what I'm really handling, real shit out here, like I'm really handling. That's basically what I'm trying to say to you Musically.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, this nigga got a hit. Yeah, he's on the radio Money chain, million views, cool. But, bro, I can recite Five songs from all your albums. All them niggas who, I can't do that with them. Bro, them niggas who pop, I can't do that with them. Bro, them niggas don't got skits. Them niggas don't even know what a skit is and interlude nothing. So when I'm saying this to you, bro, I'm saying bro, you saying I'm trying to make it more, bro, your shit more digestible than all them niggas.

Speaker 2:

That's what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

And digestible than all them niggas. Might be a start of something new.

Speaker 5:

That's what I'm saying you might be the start, bro. And the funny thing is, bro, the funny thing is no, no, wait, wait.

Speaker 3:

Go ahead, go ahead, go ahead.

Speaker 7:

Look, look, look.

Speaker 3:

Timeless music. That's it. It's timeless bro.

Speaker 5:

No, I'm not. That's why I'm me understand, I'm just so passionate about music.

Speaker 8:

My favorite artist From.

Speaker 3:

Philly sitting in front of me.

Speaker 8:

And we had a Crazy discussion.

Speaker 3:

I don't want you to change nothing. That's what I'm trying to tell you. Just another move, update. Nobody gonna drop nothing hotter than that this year. You feel what I'm saying.

Speaker 5:

I feel like I can't even say shit like this, but just from the style of music that I like, from the style of music that I like, I would consider that a classic for this city, bro. What Fuck yeah? As early as it is. Nah, that's a classic. That's crazy to say, bro, no it ain't, no, it ain't I, I'm not supposed to say no shit like that. I'm going to tell you why I'm not supposed to say no shit, that shit crazy. I'm not supposed to say no shit like that.

Speaker 3:

I'm going to tell you why, Alright, listen, you know, illmatic from Nas.

Speaker 5:

That's what I'm saying. I know what the project is.

Speaker 3:

You know Reasonable Doubt for.

Speaker 5:

Jay Z. I listen to it a little bit. Why is Reasonable Doubt for Jay-Z? I listen to it a little bit. I don't study them.

Speaker 3:

Why is Reasonable? Doubt a classic Nobody rapping like that. It didn't sound like.

Speaker 8:

Nobody sounded like that.

Speaker 3:

Nobody can do that, nobody can drop up. Bro, you just did that, bro, like bro, I ain't Bro, listen bro, we was together weeks, or we already, but I wanted to do it on camera because I'm telling you, bro, I'm telling you, if your fan, even you saying no bro, I'm gonna just this bro, your fans gonna be like fuck, no, how you, how you say just another move up there, classic. And you want to change shit.

Speaker 5:

Look, look look, I'm gonna do. I swear to god, I was never gonna do this shit bro. I swear to god, I was never going to do this shit bro. I swear to God, I was never going to do this shit. Because, I swear to God, I'm going to be mad as shit bro, I'm going to be mad as shit. Look, look this shit right here I'm about to play for you, bro. I swear to God, I just feel super special about this shit bro.

Speaker 3:

If I hear drill beat on your neck oh, we got rumble Nobody know.

Speaker 5:

But I hear this Like 2025, 2025, but I'm giving this shit. I'm giving this shit up Relatives podcast. Go ahead bro.

Speaker 2:

Might have to go on Patreon With this.

Speaker 5:

I made this shit. I made this shit Like a year ago now, bro, like this is one. I'm letting you hear one song, but I swear to God, I got a whole project bro.

Speaker 7:

Mm.

Speaker 5:

My magic. I just called my dog and said I'm out now. Gps to the crib in Jersey. I'm in Rome now. I've been admitting, getting smooth into my differences, but it's still probably niggas that want to kill me for this lifestyle. And we slid and hit somebody. Niggas like wow, cameras flicking through the window. Niggas like wow, came flicking through the window. Niggas like wow, your pride ruined my innocence. I only know the answer of pride and I will forgive and I will understand it. Understanding is what I lack. I was only told that you hit me, I hit you back and you hit me. What a predicament. I don't know second chances. You made your choices so little.

Speaker 2:

So little, one decision changed Kyle from Jerome man.

Speaker 8:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Me, we say anymore, bro. Like what is he talking about right now?

Speaker 5:

Say what? What the fuck is this?

Speaker 7:

Bro, you 22, bro Like what.

Speaker 5:

Come on, man, we're just love, love. A lot of us don't own the knowledge of what love is. Love is patient, love is warm, and the welcome of love is well devoted and selfless. Love me how I want it, so Tell me. You haven't put yourself in front of the team, are you better than I'm saying?

Speaker 1:

Y'all ain't better than me. I put the work in for this shit. I was up long nights and early mornings. None of y'all deserve this more than I do. Come on, bro, you can't change nothing bro You're the only one doing it.

Speaker 2:

Bro, you're the only one doing it.

Speaker 3:

Yo.

Speaker 2:

Like real shit.

Speaker 7:

Hold on, this one wasn't doing that.

Speaker 3:

yo like real shit well that shit sound like it could have been on the Miseducation of Lauryn Hill, bro. Well, right, the ending of that, bro. I listened to that project.

Speaker 5:

I studied that project last year too.

Speaker 3:

Oh yeah.

Speaker 5:

It was earlier this year. It was earlier this year actually.

Speaker 3:

You agree with? Did y'all see Apple Top 100 albums?

Speaker 5:

I seen some of it. Y'all agree with the first one, the number one album. It was.

Speaker 3:

Miseducation of One-Eleven yeah.

Speaker 5:

I don't know. I like that album a lot.

Speaker 3:

All albums, all genres. What y'all think was two, it was Thriller. Right yeah, thriller, michael Jackson. Do y'all agree that Good Kid, mad City is seven?

Speaker 5:

Like that's.

Speaker 3:

All albums ever created.

Speaker 2:

All albums ever Seven. And I didn't hear all albums ever Seven. Not a bad number, though, hmm.

Speaker 3:

That's a great number.

Speaker 5:

No, do y'all think Good, Kid Mad City.

Speaker 3:

Be honest.

Speaker 5:

Me Like full albums. Listen to it all the way through Me. I'm just asking.

Speaker 3:

I ain't gonna hold you, bro. I was born in 97, bro, and I've been listening to full albums Since I was like 7.

Speaker 5:

That's different. That's probably why you shit like that. Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 3:

Like my shit.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, I appreciate it like seven. Yeah, that's different, that's probably why you're like that.

Speaker 3:

That's probably, yeah, yeah, I appreciate it, bro, but, bro, like bro, I'm telling you, bro and when the conversation that we was having earlier is not even, I just want to tell you something now, bro, that's why I do, that's why I did do stuff like, yeah, put you on the phone With big bro Cause I'm telling you, bro, I don't, like bro, I done seen, so I did it, bro, I did it. If you look at my name Right now on the tube, bro, you gonna see me A drill soon. Get to the. You know why, bro, cause I was like 23 24, I wanna wave, bro Cause I was like 23, 24 and I was rapping how. You just heard me rap. Niggas wasn't fucking with it. So I said, all right, let me, bro, I got booked doing, I've got locked up shooting that video, bro, no, I know you went, but like niggas, niggas be, niggas, be victim.

Speaker 3:

You know how earlier he was like niggas be victim. You know how earlier he was like I'm a victim. You will, niggas, be victim to the masses. Tricked out your spot Exactly.

Speaker 5:

Shout out to Manny Don't get tricked out of your spot, sir, it's over.

Speaker 3:

It's just the last day today, man.

Speaker 5:

That shit ain't nothing. That shit gonna live. That shit ain't nothing.

Speaker 2:

Don't get tricked out your spot man that's basically what I'm saying.

Speaker 3:

Don't you not hear me on?

Speaker 5:

no, drill beat. I did like you said that shit.

Speaker 3:

No, I said I did that. No, I said, if I hear you on the drill beat I'm not talking about.

Speaker 5:

I'm only, I'm only trying to change for the better. I ain't doing no shit. I know you not.

Speaker 3:

And I ain't even gonna lie, I done seen so many people do it, bro. Like Lupe Fiasco, he got this song called Dumb it Down and he basically be talking about it Like he rapping all this super intellectual smart over the head and basically the hook is like something, something, something, dumb it down. And the nigga saying like yeah, like he basically saying it like bro, like, dumb that shit down so we can sell records. No, we not dumbing shit down. That's why rappers like you, bro, is going to stay at the top.

Speaker 5:

Bro, because you be yourself bro, but it's a way to make it feel like you're dumbing it down, bro.

Speaker 3:

See, I know what you be yourself bro, but it's a way to make it feel like you're dumbing it down, bro. See, I know what you're. You trying to dumb it down on the low.

Speaker 5:

No, I'm trying to keep it high on the low. I'm trying to keep it smart on the low bro.

Speaker 2:

Explain that Like that 2 Gun Minimal.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, bro, I put it the top song. I released it before the project. Before I announced the project, I released the song. I put it top two, right after Just Another Move Up Day, like I just told y'all.

Speaker 2:

Make sure you talking to Mike though To Mike.

Speaker 5:

Now I'm talking to y'all and shit yeah. Like I just told y'all. I just told y'all what the skits represent inside of representing the side of the project. Now I'm talking about life. The song is life experience. Right, the song is life experience. And shit Right at the two gun minimum. What song Come on Three? Slump that I'm In, Slump that I'm In.

Speaker 3:

And praise Slump that I'm In.

Speaker 5:

Going through relationship problems. Going through relationship problems Knock you off your game. Then you think about all this, all that Like imagine a person that help you like get out of, change your mindset, like help you get away from everything that you used to, and then y'all going through some shit and that shit just make you feel like you got to revert, yeah, yeah. And then boom, something I meant I realized like I'm just aware of that shit, like damn, I'm tripping. That's another one too. Man, I came a long way, you feel me yeah.

Speaker 5:

I got to pay attention to this shit. I got to pay attention to when I met Forward. Praise yeah.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 3:

And I ain't going to lie, bro, I ain't going to lie. Bro. Like, shout out Lena, bro, she'll tell you. Bro, listen, perfect example, she a perfect example, right, bro, rapping for a minute, like a minute, since we was in high school, right, always was like top level. Now she could have been on some, oh, everybody else doing this. All right, I know I can make a boppy song, boppy beat, push this, get a deal with it. All the motherfuck. We just, we just interviewed a nigga who had a boppy song. Deal with what the fuck he going through. Now we ain't gonna say it, but that's what I'm saying, bro. Like the route you going, you already good, because the route you going you got purpose. You know what you stand for, yeah I'm craving.

Speaker 5:

I'm crafting my own lane.

Speaker 3:

That's what.

Speaker 2:

I'm saying, bro, you making my point, bro, you going to be a spark for something different. That's what.

Speaker 5:

I'm saying, you saying that you trying to make it seem like I'm going away from you, no, no, but you keep saying that no, you keep saying that he think he is. Nothing, because I know what you want. I just know you passed and I'm just trying because that shit could confuse a person, bro.

Speaker 2:

I know, what you want. I don't think nothing, I know what you want.

Speaker 3:

You on some shit, like I'm still going to be me, but I'm going to just find a little way so they can digest it. And I'm telling you if you're rapping. Kai's life is not going to.

Speaker 5:

No, it's just about keeping people on these tools, bro, like. It's not really nothing that's changing. It's like I just heard a song, bro, like images friends like besides the fact that it's me ain't it just fun Like, besides the fact that it's me ain't it fun already.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, just another move, update fun. Oh J Sparks going to be here.

Speaker 5:

Shout out to J Sparks Damn when, damn. I keep it quiet like no sound, but they know my name through the whole town and we ain't clicking with no niggas.

Speaker 7:

We never joke nigga, especially old niggas. I used to hop on them blue niggas. I'm actually hop on them blue niggas. I used to ride with a nine milli. Now I got like five less than a full nigga. So I roll hit with a full nigga.

Speaker 3:

Dude.

Speaker 7:

All the other times. The ER my nigga ain't naked. The ER, yeah, when he was a certain delivery. My boy do that shit like a teacher. I miss him with seven religion. I need to smoke on some rig If you want me to run me something.

Speaker 3:

Don't give it all to him. Don't give it all to him.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, don't give it all to him, man.

Speaker 2:

Don't give it all to him, man I.

Speaker 3:

I see it, don't go too crazy in that zone.

Speaker 2:

I see what you're doing I don't do too many of them.

Speaker 5:

I just find times where I can dab at them. Bro, this shit not even out yet, I ain't even preview it yet bro I got so much music, bro.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, man, Yo real rap. Unfortunately, White Boy had something to do.

Speaker 2:

He had an emergency man.

Speaker 3:

He had an emergency. Man, he had an emergency. But listen, bro, i'ma tell you this, bro, before we get up out of here. Man, like, listen, you are the one bro like I don't know how your squad look or who your team is. Do you got a team? I met, met your manager. Shout out him yeah, I met the man uh bro, you the one, bro, and that's why, bro yeah bro, and that's why bro.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, bro. That's why when I met you, bro, all it, you know, philly, joe, dickie, niggas, bro, when I met you, you thought I knew you the whole, because I'm really one of them.

Speaker 3:

Niggas, bro, and I want people to really know this. Y'all talk, yeah, the young is this and the drill young is that when I be around these niggas, I really say something. I don't be scared to talk to them or he pop in the rap, he going bro, everybody. I say something. That's how they all get up here for real. Like yo, kyle, listen you the one, don't change this and stay on that. And you real rap bro, lil Mook, mun, money, ikey, shoebox, baby, even my big bro, ym1000. All the people that I fuck with bro that's younger than me or on a, I'm telling you, bro, I tell them that's the one I seen.

Speaker 5:

That's the video I seen too. Yo, ym. Shout out to YM. Yeah, that's my brother Shout out to YM.

Speaker 3:

Man like bro man, he'll tell you. Bro, I don't care if it's a comedian bro, an influencer, anybody that I fuck with or see it, and I feel like I could give them some type of some words or something. I mean just from a. I do it as soon as I see them.

Speaker 5:

I appreciate that shit, bro, as soon as I. Yeah, there should be more people like you.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, bro, if I'm being honest.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, if I'm being honest, it's more real, more authentic. I could've been thinking all this and not said nothing.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, but no, no bullshit. Some people don't know how to articulate that. Good bro, and, like Some people, not gonna be able To take that shit from you, evil bro.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, but you know what's worse? Some people See they favorite rapper from Philly and just brick em and just brick em. Yeah. Like I ain't going.

Speaker 5:

I ain't going.

Speaker 3:

We over here, cause that's Dickie and it's fine Yo. What's up Young, and young Bro you the one. Why niggas so cool?

Speaker 7:

Like smoke an hour.

Speaker 3:

Or something. Get relaxed, bro.

Speaker 5:

Everything not Dickie and and Joe, and that's what's wrong With the city, bro. That's how that shit Was today.

Speaker 3:

That's what's wrong with the city bro.

Speaker 2:

That's how that shit was today. That's what's wrong with the city. Go ahead, Manny. Do you have anything you want to leave our?

Speaker 3:

listeners Like you got something coming up soon. Manny want to say something.

Speaker 2:

Manny want to shout out. Shout out to Manny Shout out to Manny bro. Shout out to Manny. Shout out to.

Speaker 3:

Manny bro.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, we got Manny in perspective and all that um to it, to what y'all were just like talking about. You know, I'm saying um is that I see you coming from, I see where you coming from and the truth of it is like what you're creating right now and this is what we always gotta understand as artists.

Speaker 8:

Is that?

Speaker 6:

we creating a a fan base in the community. You feel, feel me. So when we talk about timeless music, you know what I'm saying. We talk about create, because even you saying that's a classic, I got people that I'm probably calling right now that say I made one of the best songs to ever come out of Philadelphia. You know, what I'm saying, and it was because of that reason, of what he said. I'm making love songs. Wasn't nobody else doing it? You?

Speaker 6:

know what I'm saying so. The lane was wide open and the the important thing about that is, even with me now, like not doing music for the past how many years those same not, not even just the song. Forget the song. Those same people that listen to my music. Then they buying my clothes.

Speaker 8:

They come into my events they support in a different way you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 5:

That's all I'm trying to say to you, bro. I'm never selling myself, bro, I'm going to be me the music that you making.

Speaker 6:

I agree that it's timeless music.

Speaker 8:

You know what I'm saying?

Speaker 6:

You're one of my favorite artists also. We talk about that in depth all the time, but you know this, for any artist that's listening like really be yourself and try your best to be vulnerable in your music. You know what I'm saying. And that's the stuff that people that's going to connect to when it's time to go sell a show, when it's time to go do this, when it's time to go do that, the stuff that's going to make you money outside. Everybody just want to get money from streams. When them Joneses pennies, it's like we got to get.

Speaker 6:

That's light change. You know what I'm saying, what it is that you creating. You know what I'm saying and I can see that from even when we first met. Like I told you, I'm a fan of you first. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 8:

Like I'm a fan of you.

Speaker 6:

I know I can bring value, but I'm a fan first, and just even being at the school today and seeing, before we even started, the young as they peeking ahead in order to go that's Kyle from Jordan. They scream.

Speaker 8:

They singing his song. They do that for a reason, bro.

Speaker 5:

They singing his songs, and all that before they even got there. It's crazy. You been seeing this from close up for years now, bro. Yeah, yeah, so you know, like and it's like you've been there the same amount of time. Yeah.

Speaker 6:

So it's like that fan base is what's important and that music that you putting out Just Another Move A Day, you know I love what's. That Is it Thanks to Jerome Street, the B-side.

Speaker 3:

Thanks to Jerome Street.

Speaker 5:

Overprotective and all that. No, B-side, B-side, B-side. He said he was like.

Speaker 6:

I can't tell you if the enemy white or he black, the enemy whoever keeping us in a trap, whoever holding us back, whoever selling us gas, whoever giving us duke, whoever giving us crack, whoever convincing you, your enemy is from a block away. We both hungry, but the corner store only a block away. How y'all gonna eat? You know what I'm saying. So it's like you know. To bro point. To bro point. Like no Cause. It's probably like you know.

Speaker 3:

I know how I feel like.

Speaker 6:

When you write that shit, somebody else get it. You know what I'm saying Somebody else get it. So it's like what you know is crazy though.

Speaker 5:

Like, no bullshit. Like me and ozzy in there, me and ozzy in there, I'm right. I'm writing this because, because core magic has sent me. No core magic can send me this beat. I think d will did, and I'm in there. I'm in there, um, and can I play this song? Right, quick, what?

Speaker 6:

do you?

Speaker 5:

yeah, man I need to. I need to remember this is exclusive.

Speaker 6:

I need to remember, this is a vibe bro.

Speaker 2:

You know what? I'm saying you got to tell them what they got to do, man.

Speaker 3:

You said my homie ain't shot. Nothing Like comment share. Subscribe, really the most podcast. If you don't like comment share, subscribe you a fucking hater, because that shit don't cost no money. All you got to do is click the drum so you feel me yeah, it's my shot, my shot.

Speaker 6:

I got potential to be the greatest. You see, I hate this. I got potential to be the greatest.

Speaker 5:

I'm playing it.

Speaker 7:

Patience Gay patience.

Speaker 6:

Thought I knew what I did, almost ended the business. My dog got hit in his biscuit, doing that nigga wrong. That's governmental assistance, he lose income at home. Jake snack, this sorry, break it down.

Speaker 5:

I can't tell you if the enemy white or he black, just the enemy. Who ever been keeping us in the tracks? Whoever?

Speaker 7:

holding us back, whoever giving us straps, whoever giving us dope, whoever giving us crack.

Speaker 5:

No, look, I just wanted to play that part right there Because I ain't say dope. At first I said weed, I said weed. But while I'm rapping and Nazi rapping it with me, nazi start flowing. Nazi flew right off me like he was me type shit. I said whoever giving us weed? And I stopped I'm just bopping. Nazi said whoever giving us dope, as I'm saying weed. Nazi said dope, I'm like whoever giving us weed, I stopped. Nazi said whoever giving us dope I ain't gonna lie, because no bullshit.

Speaker 7:

I swear to.

Speaker 5:

God, I take this shit too strongly. I don't take bars from niggas at all bro. But that shit was that's why I say that shit in the song and all Free Nazi Nazi got booked right after that shit. Because I ain't gonna lie that shit was. It just fit so perfectly. That's why I do understand the business of like songwriting and shit, because Nas-E deserve a credit on that shit. You feel me. Not taking a whole song from a person but that was the idea that didn't come directly from my mind.

Speaker 6:

And shout out to Nas-E man, they gonna be dead. I remember when Nas-E came home. I'm gonna say the last time this was probably what 2016, 2017,. Bro gave me one of the hardest verses to this day on my project you know what I'm saying. I got to say you probably ain't heard of the joint called Three Ways To it. It's me, him and my homie Kaji on that joint. Like bro came on fire. You know, what I'm saying. Shout out to Nazi Wanda man Free.

Speaker 7:

Nazi, yo man Nazi on there Yo man.

Speaker 3:

We appreciate Manny coming in and saying what he had to say. You know you were famous.

Speaker 2:

We got Manny interview coming real soon. We got Manny interview coming soon. We got to talk about the school tour and I ain't going to lie, that shit was epic man, and I ain't going to lie.

Speaker 3:

Listen bro. I manifested this interview. I couldn't wait bro.

Speaker 4:

We really appreciate you, bro. I manifested this interview. I couldn't wait, bro.

Speaker 3:

We really appreciate you, bro. Anytime we're going to do a part two, roll out, bro, part eight.

Speaker 8:

I don't Real rap my nigga's tripping.

Speaker 3:

This is just number one. We doing 80 parts.

Speaker 8:

Real shit.

Speaker 3:

Bro, I fucking love you, bro and I appreciate you for coming up bro.

Speaker 5:

Man, thank you for having me in this man. You already know you're welcome back anytime. Love definitely felt too. I appreciate that shit too bro. I don't spend time with too many people like connected to any part of this industry bro, like be know, be know Me, and you know, like I ain't gonna lie everybody that I met that I genuinely felt a connection with that connection still good to this day, bro.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, that's the best thing that moved my life. Yeah, man. And I ain't going to lie bro, I could feel that shit. I'm big on energy and vibes and shit, bro, and I can't stress enough how much of a. You just heard my songs, so you know where my that shit there, bro. So for me to be such a supporter to you, it's like that shit.

Speaker 5:

Tell you something bro, I appreciate that actually Real shit bro.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, bro, that shit really tell you something.

Speaker 5:

But no bullshit. You said something earlier like if I was ass, I wouldn't even be this big of a fan of you, bro. But I promise you, and not even the damn play niggas, bro. But I promise you, there's a lot of ass niggas.

Speaker 3:

There's a lot of ass niggas. I'm hot bro. Here it is, Be fucking shitty.

Speaker 5:

Hey, hey, hey hey, hey, hey.

Speaker 3:

That shit was hot, can we? Let's get a fast track, and then we're going to go ahead and close out. So, white boy, do this fast track After the fast track.

Speaker 2:

I want to know if you got anything coming out soon and then we're going to mention that when we close out.

Speaker 3:

All right, so tell him what the fast track is.

Speaker 1:

So fast track is a game that we play. You basically pick one or the other. It's like really not no thinking, just like pick one or the other.

Speaker 5:

So being as though you from how many seconds will.

Speaker 1:

I get though you can get like five seconds.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, you can take it for a second.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, like ain't no pressure, Ain't no pressure, though Ain't no pressure.

Speaker 5:

You said fast track yeah.

Speaker 1:

So we from Philly, so I like to start off with like some Philly-based questions and shit like that. So, being as though we from Philly I'm going to go groups, major figures, of state property, I'm going to bounce off you State property I'm sorry to slow you down Will just too cool.

Speaker 3:

Looking in the mirror in the city.

Speaker 5:

I don't study music. When I come across certain artists, I might go back and study them. I don't study hip-hop.

Speaker 1:

Okay.

Speaker 5:

Wait, you don't no.

Speaker 3:

Okay.

Speaker 5:

I went back to listen to, um, the blueprint and the black, oh, when I started to listen to reasonable dope, but I I couldn't get into it. Like, like for y'all in that in that era, like that's right in the 2000s.

Speaker 1:

Yeah like that, yeah you get a pass any, otherwise, yeah, I've been on your ass, I would have been on your ass.

Speaker 5:

I'd have been on your ass. It was a tournament. I would have been on your ass. We were going to kick you right out, jazzy.

Speaker 1:

Jeff touching. You know that, you know you old enough for that. You old enough, you know how.

Speaker 3:

Jazzy.

Speaker 7:

Jeff used to get thrown out. Yeah, look at it.

Speaker 5:

You don't even know about that Look at it. This is what I mean. It's a timing.

Speaker 3:

That's a. I mean Like it's a timing that was about to be a Like that's a classic DL but it's a timing thing that's added to that whole classic thing.

Speaker 1:

No, no, for sure.

Speaker 5:

No, because the timing I wasn't there for that.

Speaker 1:

No, I understand that. I don't see it.

Speaker 3:

No, I understand that, because All that major figure, you can't do that.

Speaker 5:

Major figure state property? No, I don't know major figures in depth. Right, in depth, in depth.

Speaker 3:

All right, go ahead.

Speaker 5:

But I still would pick State Property probably.

Speaker 1:

Okay, all right, so all right, Hov Biggie.

Speaker 5:

I ain't listen to Biggie as much as I listen to Jay-Z. Okay, jay-z is everywhere, jay-z, so Hov.

Speaker 1:

So, and I'm thinking of like when he was born, like who was the hottest out, like type shit 50. 50, nelly all of them. But you always say, nelly, come on, dog he was number one when he was dropping.

Speaker 3:

nobody was hotter than him All right, so I like your Nelly music dog Country Gram are one of the best albums in the world Country.

Speaker 1:

Grammar, one of the best albums in the world. I'm going to go more.

Speaker 5:

So, like now, type shit like Lord Dirk or Lord Baby. I probably would choose Lord Dirk because I grew up on Lord Dirk, but I don't listen. I never really listen to Lord Baby and I don't listen to neither one of them right now.

Speaker 1:

If I'm being honest, god, I don't like shit Because it sounds so distinct, so I really get it.

Speaker 3:

I don't want to listen to this song. I don't like Baby Neva, though. I don't want to listen to Baby Neva Like Dirk was my man, though Dirk was my man growing up.

Speaker 5:

Like I ain't going to lie, I just realized music was affecting me a lot. Bro, I swear to God, that shit was shaping my life. I be hearing you harmonizing your shit. So, you fuck with R&B. What's considered R&B?

Speaker 1:

Chris Brown Trey.

Speaker 5:

Songz. I listened to him when I was growing up, but I do like the sound. I like that sound. I do, but I can't say I was never invested in Chris Brown or Trey Songz, right, but I'm sure there's some other artists in there that I probably could see that I liked more than them two. Yeah.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I'm with you, go ahead.

Speaker 5:

Like female, is considered an R&B. R&b yeah, all right.

Speaker 3:

So who you got Shit, they're rapping now. Who you got, Damn, All right. So who you got Shit's like rapping now.

Speaker 5:

Who you got Damn near right. I like SZA. I like SZA a lot.

Speaker 3:

I like her a lot too. Who you got producer-wise Brains or Nasty?

Speaker 5:

I don't know. I feel like they both like, super, super like they. Just you can't compare them to, like I can't compare them to. I'm just saying, okay, okay, me and Nasty built a sound over years. Nasty got songs on between Lifestyles Fuck your Own Street, front your Own Street.

Speaker 2:

Your whole career. We built that shit together. You ain't got nobody.

Speaker 5:

Yeah, and Brizzy, me and Brizzy got to say them too, but we got good chemistry but we don't even got the catalog to match up with the shit that me and Nancy did. Future or thug, I don't know, bro, I like both. I never really wanted to go put on either one of them. This nigga different dog.

Speaker 5:

When he playing around me. I like both of them. I think I can say I like more. I don't think I heard too much shit from Thug that I was like I don't really like this shit. But I did hear shit from Future. I was like I don't really want to hear this shit. So I'll go with Thug Thug. Yeah, I like Thug, more probably, or I just dislike Future more, but I like both of them.

Speaker 3:

Lil Uzi or Allset.

Speaker 7:

I ain't gonna lie bro, I swear to.

Speaker 3:

God.

Speaker 5:

It's like the same shit, bro Oatmeal cream of the same shit bro.

Speaker 3:

That's not they, not no artists. Oatmeal cream of wheat Damn nigga Like what the fuck Hot cereal.

Speaker 1:

I go to food with this nigga Grits or oatmeal Chicken or fucking lamb, what the fuck.

Speaker 5:

Grit sweet, I eat that.

Speaker 3:

Yeah, hey, grit sweet hey.

Speaker 5:

Hell yeah. No, they put the pepper and the grit To the dirt.

Speaker 3:

That shit gotta be sweet Yo Cole, take us out man.

Speaker 5:

We gotta do a part two, like next week it's the Rilla the Boost Podcast.

Speaker 2:

Man, for sure it's the Rilla the Boost Podcast.

Speaker 1:

I'm Rilla, I'm Cash, I'm WhiteboyD2A.

Speaker 2:

And we got my boy in the building Kyle from Jerome he 22.

Speaker 3:

I ain't young boy.

Speaker 2:

Let him go download everything Follow you on, whatever man Go ahead man.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, I got a lot of music in my catalog.

Speaker 5:

If y'all just look at my name, y'all going to see a lot of it, but the project I'm pushing right now is just another move-up day. If y'all just go listen To that project. Eventually y'all Get to the other shit. Yeah, you will, but that's what I'm on right now, just another move up day. So when y'all get the time, just give it a try.

Speaker 3:

Lil. Ka from Jerome On Apple and all our streaming platforms. Ka from Jerome On Instagram. Hottest youngin' In the fucking city, you know on Spotify.

Speaker 5:

On Spotify, I'm Lil.

Speaker 1:

Ka In the fucking city right now and on Spotify.

Speaker 5:

On Spotify, my personal favorite, my personal favorite, sure.

Speaker 2:

It's the Real of the Most podcast and we out this bitch man.

Speaker 3:

We out, we out.

Special Guest Interview
Musical Evolution and Vulnerability
Music Influences in Huntington Park
Musical Influences and Artistic Direction
Passionate Music Discussion and Album Critique
Personal Growth and Self-Reflection
Navigating Between Lifestyles and Growth
Unique Perspectives on Artistic Expression
Passionate Discussion About Timeless Music
Navigating the Music Industry With Purpose
Artist, Vulnerability, Fan Base, Music Evolution
Rapid-Fire Music Preferences and Banter
Boost Podcast With Lil Ka

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