Spit Your Truth

Ep 27 From Fruity Loops to Kingdom Work: A Producer's Journey Pt 2: TsadiqqMuzik144

Abiah Season 1 Episode 27

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Brotherhood, beats, and divine inspiration take center stage as Zadak Music returns for an intimate conversation about his journey deeper into truth music production. What begins as a casual catch-up between spiritual brothers quickly transforms into a profound exploration of creative purpose and supernatural encounters.

Zadak shares a remarkable testimony of unexplainable miracles that strengthened his faith, including water bottles that remained inexplicably cold despite sitting in scorching summer heat for a week. "The only way you can explain it is that it's the power of Yah," he reflects, revealing how these divine interventions shaped his spiritual journey alongside family members who discovered the truth around the same time, each accepting it at their own pace.

Music remains at the heart of his ministry, with Zadak offering unprecedented access to his creative process. From crafting original samples to his methodical beat-building approach—starting with textured melodics before layering counter melodies, baselines, and drums—we witness the meticulous craftsmanship behind his distinctive sound. The revelation that he produces approximately 15 beats weekly, amassing nearly 1,000 beats in recent years, speaks to his dedication. Most fascinating is his disclosure that some of his most powerful music originates directly from dreams where melodies and concepts are divinely imparted.

Currently working on a 13-song album he hopes to complete before summer, Zadak expresses his desire to collaborate with the entire truth music community. "I want to be the DJ Khaled of Israel," he shares, envisioning projects that bring together multiple artists on powerful tracks that honor the Most High. The conversation ultimately reveals how true brotherhood in music extends beyond business transactions to genuine support during difficult seasons—a testament to building genuine connections in a creative community united by faith and purpose.

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Speaker 1:

and, like I said before y'all, we giving y'all part two. We right back, right, right, right, right back with part two. Spit your truth podcast and my beloved brother, our beloved brother I don't know why I always say mine like that like he ain't y'all brother too, my bad y'all. But our beloved brother is Zadak Music and I just had to do a part two because it just didn't seem like I. You know, he had enough justice, he had enough to. He ain't spittin' truth enough y'all. And you know me, I like to get everybody's juice and everybody's grit, everything from everybody. So we got to do it. So, bro, we at part two two. How was your day today, man? Like you know we, it's a new day, all right, it's like about a week or two later. You know I'm saying like so you know, we, we getting into part two. How was your day today?

Speaker 2:

it's always a block. You know it's always a block. Right, I had a of life. You know what I'm saying, right, right, it really is. You know they say every day you above ground, you got air in your lungs. It's a Barack. That is real, yeah.

Speaker 1:

And for those that don't know, he's Santa Claus, barack, yeah, yeah, my bad, but no, most people should know. And for those that don't know, he's Santa Claus, but nah, most people should know. Most of my listeners should know already. You know what I'm saying, so I'll pray, but uh. So In part one we touched briefly on the musical background and you know, like the back, the musical background and and you know, like the humble beginnings and all that, and then you're coming into the truth. So I want to talk about the three years into the truth. What was you like? What was it like for you, like after you came into the truth and like three years after that? So what was on your mind? What was you like for you after you came into the truth and like three years after that? So what was on your mind? What was you studying and what do you remember Like was you like collabing with a truth artist then? Or like just give us the low low on three years in.

Speaker 2:

Okay, three years in in the truth for me probably was like I wasn't really doing the music as strong as I am now. So I never really stopped doing the music, but like the direction wasn't where it is at. You know what I'm saying? Because I didn't even know there was a, a I don't want to say a niche but I didn't even know truth music even existed at that point. I just knew about the scriptures, I knew that I was listening to Brother Jacob on the Hebrew Israelite network. That's what I was listening to for the longest. Right, I was listening to him and, um, yeah, when it comes to the music, I didn't even know that there was like a true hook up. Now he would do Um, like, uh, new music Wednesdays and stuff like that. But like, at that point I was like I ain't gonna say I was Connected because you know, all of my equipment wasn't when it is now. I was moving and everything was transitioning, you know what I'm saying. So it wasn't set like now, also moving and everything was transitioning, you know what I'm saying. So it wasn't set like now.

Speaker 2:

Also, at around that time, mos Hayah was showing me a lot of miracles, a lot of miracles, things that would just happen. You know, like I'll give you an example my mom, at one point she was kind of under the weather or whatnot, and you know we found out about around about the same time. So we in the walk together Keep in mind, it was like summertime, like blazing hot outside or whatever, and she was living in this apartment, so we had to walk a certain distance and when she got to the car it was hot, she was hot, the car was hot and I had some bottles of water in the back. Now, these bottles of water was in the back seat of my car for about a week. Right, it was like, do you have some water? I'm like so hot right now.

Speaker 2:

I was like, yeah, I do. I got some waters in the back. So I reached in the back. When I tell you, when I gave her that water, it was cold. Like that's unexplainable. The summertime has been in the back of the car for a week. Like that's unexplainable. Wow, it's been in the back of the car for a week yeah, that is extraordinary bro, yeah that's unexplainable yeah for it to be like that.

Speaker 1:

And then, uh, hold on for it to, for it to be that hot. You said it was real, real hot, so and then you had the waters in the car and you pulled one out and it was cold like man. That wasn't nothing but the power of y'all right there bro absolutely.

Speaker 2:

You know, like I say I was, I have witnessed a lot. I've witnessed a lot. You know, like a whole lot of different miracles, a lot of different just things happen that normal people would be like oh, they would, they would try to explain it with some type of scientific. You can't explain it like that, it's no way.

Speaker 1:

The only way you can explain it is that it's the power of Yah. That's it. You know what I'm saying? That's great.

Speaker 2:

But yeah, around that time Yah was just showing, showing me who he was, you know, just showing me everyday, showing my mom, showing anybody that was truly calling up on his name who he was for real that's deep, that he was showing anybody.

Speaker 1:

And you said in part one that showed that you know your mother and a couple of your siblings like walked into the truth with you, right yeah, like it was pretty much we all found out probably somewhat around the same time.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, like it was pretty much we all found out probably somewhat around the same time. But the accepting of it was different. You know what I'm saying. Like I accepted it immediately. It was like a light bulb came off in my head for real. And my mom's, I believe she accepted close to immediately. She was trying to. You know, I ain't going to say she was trying to hold on, but the scene was playing and it was doing what it was supposed to do and she was extremely wise now Okay to do. And he, she was extremely wise, now okay. Yeah, I wish you know my little brother. He believes, but you know, I gotta see the plant. The seed is planted and it's growing and it's doing what it's supposed to do. You just gotta let y'all do what he does. And my sister, on the other hand, I'm not 100% sure about her. One way or the other, I can't lie to you.

Speaker 1:

You ain't 100% sure on that, huh.

Speaker 2:

But I mean she knows the truth Right.

Speaker 1:

Well, as long as y'all did y'all the due diligence, just to tell her job done. Yeah, yeah, yeah, you know After that, what else can you do?

Speaker 2:

That's about it. That's literally about it.

Speaker 1:

You know, like I used to tell my cousins and you know people that that I felt like was near and dear to me, and some of them took it. Some of them was like, yeah, man, I get what you're saying, I get it. I just kept on going. And some of them was like Nikki, crazy, yeah, all the most I told us to do is to say it once, all at once Right, we'll sit back and be thinking that that the people that we talk to and we go out in the highways and byways and talk to people, that people will go like listen to us, or you know, just because it's coming out of the Bible or whatever, people go listen to us, but most high said man, they don't even listen to us. Or you know, just because this be coming out of the bible or whatever, people go listen to us, but most I said man, they don't even listen to me.

Speaker 1:

Bro, what you think you about? Like that, all right, man, you know I look at the bible man, like our father man, he, whoever, whoever, wrote the bible and canonized it. They, they wrote the bible to mirror black folks in such a way, like our mannerisms and things, that we would say how we would come at each other or interact, and then they have our God. Like that too. You know what I'm saying. Yeah, there'll be certain things he'd be saying in the Bible, like hold on, like, oh, that's something I will say it like to a nigga, like you know what I'm saying. But he said let's, let us go down and make man in our image. So, absolutely so. Have you ever thought about doing a project like an album?

Speaker 2:

oh yeah, I got, um, I got an album in the works. Really, I got 13 songs. I got all of these for them. Of course, I got about maybe 35% done with the lyrics and I mean I got a concept of what I want it to be but, like you know, it's still in the works, okay, hmm, you know it's still in the works, okay, hmm but so what's the title of it?

Speaker 2:

that's a good question, that's a super good question. I got a, I think I've got one title, but I'm not sure I ain't gonna release it just yet. You know what I'm saying. I'm not one, but yeah it's, but I'm not sure I ain't going to release it just yet. You know what I'm saying. I'm not wanting to, but yeah, I've been working on it for a little bit, you know. I tell you what.

Speaker 2:

This is one thing that, let me see this. This had to have been like maybe earlier this year that this happened. When I tell you, like my music and I'm so thankful to y'all, I just want to put that out there I'm thankful to y'all that I could do it at the level that I'm doing it, you know, because I got like milestone beats, like this beat changed the game for me here. And then, a little bit later, this beat changed the game Like I'm growing and growing and growing every time I make music. You know what I'm saying. But, like, every so often I'll have like a beat in my head or something like that and I, you know I'll make the beat.

Speaker 2:

But one time I got, I got a dream and the music came through in the dream, like, oh, let me see how it went. I don't exactly remember the dream. I know it was me and my brother. He was like at a school or something and it was like the world was about to end or something like that, and somebody, they dropped a bomb somewhere and it was about to hit the school and nothing happened or whatnot. And I don't want to give you the name of the song, but I did say in the dream that the fact that nothing happened was because it was all Yacht, and at that moment, like I started to hear the melody, I got the hook and everything. It's one of the songs on my album and I got all of that in a dream Dream. Yes, sir, dream, and I got all of that in a dream dream. Yes, sir.

Speaker 1:

I think that's something. Hey, what did the most high said man when he told, when he cursed Miriam and turned her ass white? Right before that, he said hey, if there's a prophet or one of my servants, I'll talk to them in dreams and visions. Yes, sir, you know, and when people be like man, I had a dream. I had a dream about this and about that and it'd be like something that's like fire and brimstone type shit. Like man, I don't. I just don't be taking that type stuff lightly, though you know what I'm saying. Yeah, man, you might not hear his voice audible. You'll hear it in a dream, absolutely.

Speaker 1:

I think, that's more scary.

Speaker 2:

It is. I'm telling myself, absolutely. Yeah, I think that's more scarier. It is, I tell myself, because in your subconscious anything can happen for real, yep crazy man, but that's crazy so.

Speaker 1:

So a good portion of the album well, at least one or two songs came from inspirational like visions and dreams and stuff like that that I'd be getting that too Sometimes. Yeah, so what? What made you want to go ahead? No, go ahead, go ahead, go ahead.

Speaker 2:

I was going to say honestly, um, that one song and you know pretty much all of the songs kind of just called to me really to be real, you know what I'm saying. Like I was really connected to the vast majority of right. You know, like I just knew for a fact that I would do something with it.

Speaker 1:

That's what's up. So now you said you got 14 songs 13 13 songs and 30% done on the lyrics yeah, just about like that so I want to be done before the summer.

Speaker 2:

Just gonna finish it off right. So about like that I want it to be done before the summer.

Speaker 1:

I'll just go and finish it off. Should we be expecting any features now? I'm not trying to plug myself on your album, but I'm just saying anybody that you've been wanting to work with you're trying to get them on an album. Who could we expect to feature on the deck project? I ain't going to lie, I want to get them on the album. Who could we expect to feature on as a deck project? I'm hey, I ain't gonna lie.

Speaker 2:

I want to hear that shit bro I tell you what I would love to have anybody that can because every song has its own type of theme. The songs like the structure of it. You know what I'm saying. If you can fit with the structure, then you can get on the track. And if you spit it, you know what I'm saying, if you can spit it. Also, I don't really got no hooks. I ain't gonna lie to you, I don't really got no hooks. I got some hooks, but you know they're not really there. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

I'm the hook master, bro. That's one thing that I say I can do. Good, might not always be able to write a hot 16, but a hot hook, yeah, because most of the time, man, you can dislike a hook. It just got to be catchy, that's it. That's what I'm saying. Gotta be catchy, like. I think that. I think I don't know. I ain't heard you rap, bro, but if you made, if you rap like you made Beast, and I know, like you, you on point that album gonna be fire Right. Yeah, point that album gonna be fire right yeah, I hope it is.

Speaker 2:

I answered man you praising the most highest gonna be fire, bro you know, what I'm saying hallelujah.

Speaker 1:

yeah, see a lot of people, people be so hung up on the lyrics and hung up on, you know, making a making a dope-ass album and you know, like trying to make the best album they can and sometimes we can lose sight of who we really making this album for. You know what I'm saying, that's true, yeah. So the biggest thing is like, man, hey, go do it, and you know, praise y'all and just know that the most hired man, hey, go do it. Then you know, praise y'all and just know that the most higher, definitely, as long as he's pleased, hopefully we good, you know what I'm saying. Yeah, yeah. So I don't, I don't try to. I mean, I definitely put my best, my best foot forward in everything that I do, but I don't, I try to make it to the pleasing of the most high. Because you know, man, we don't, honestly, we don't know. Then again, we do know because if, think about this, if he didn't like your shit, you wouldn't be doing it.

Speaker 1:

This is true If he didn't like your shit, you wouldn't be doing it. Your real shit it's a lot of brothers. This is now here.

Speaker 2:

Man is it was making music or a music and it just went like where they just gave up. You know what I'm saying? Yo, I give you it. I don't want to catch you. I give you a perfect example of that. Oh yeah, they got this artist that was. He was featured on Brother Jacob's Hebrew-Israelite Nicker. His name is GT and he had this song called Going Back Home to Jerusalem and I tell you that was like one of the most fire songs that I heard. You could tell he made it like when he was first coming in the truth because you know certain words got said or whatnot, but it was good, it really was good. The beat was on point. How did the hook go? I'm going back home to Jerusalem. That's how it went. Look, I like that track a lot.

Speaker 1:

It's just like he made that one song and disappeared. People get discouraged, man. I mean, we just got to be real. It ain't no movie, it ain't no money in this. Yeah, you know, we, you can make the little streams and stuff like that. But like, if you think you're about to come in and like, change the game and nah, the reason why there ain't no money in it is because we haven't made our genre valuable.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, you know what I'm saying. It's up to us to make it valuable and then maybe we can be, you know, combatting and really getting at these secular music you know what I'm saying projects like and shutting them down, because I know it's a lot of our music that's way better than the stuff that's out right now. Way better. Yeah, even the Wackus brothers, sisters that make truth music and I don't believe anybody back, it's just, you know, you just got to get your bars up, you know, get your production up. But even those people are better than all these secular people out here. I'm saying, except for, like you know, like some, some spitters like, uh, who else? Uh, kendrick Lamar, no brothers like that Like aim.

Speaker 1:

Aim you got to get your bars up and if your bars up then you might be a top contender. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

I'm not even gonna hold you. I'm gonna be real. Mm-hmm, I don't think Kendrick is human, bro. I'm gonna be real. I don't think he's human. Why you say that?

Speaker 2:

It's. I don't know, like I don't. It's hard to explain it. You know, I know what the industry is about. You know what the industry is about and it's just got too much Stuff going on for me to just believe that he doesn't allow some type of dark spirit to inhabit him. Right, and like the, the bars are just too well put together for it to just be a human. I might be reaching a little bit, but I don't know.

Speaker 1:

You know what I'm saying oh man Bro, we live in a world where now anything is possible. That's true, anything, man. You know we, you see some things out here like these reptilian motherfuckers and you know all type of crazy stuff. Man, I wouldn't put it past it. Like kendrick lavar, he has the bars and they'd be like like certain songs, like that, uh, uh. So I ain't gonna lie, man, I really me personally, like they, not Like Us, really was. It was an alright track, but it wasn't like. I mean, it was a good diss track but it shouldn't have been played and got the airtime that it got because it was just a diss track. You know what I'm saying? And I always wondered like, why did it get that? They even let him perform that at the damn Super Bowl. They let him perform a diss track at the Super Bowl, but didn't let Lil Wayne New Orleans one of the top dogs perform when it comes to Weezy.

Speaker 2:

I think, personally, he should have just not even opened his mouth. I think he should have just bowed out gracefully, all right, because I mean, his time has passed. You know what I'm saying. And he was good. Actually, if I'm, I'm going to be honest, I don't really listen to it. I mean, if it comes on or whatever, I'm unable to mess with it and I can't mess with it. But I tell you, the last time I ever heard anything from him was probably the quarter four. That was a while back. And when I tell you that was mediocre in my opinion it was that was when I caught on to his formula. At that point he was just set up punchline, set up punchline, set up punchline. Nothing good about that hold on.

Speaker 1:

But you said the carter ford was mediocre, the one with megaman on it and she wheeled and was that one? Yeah, was that the carter ford, john? And what? And uh, yeah, dreams of the bottom and all that album that album was dope bro, but look, I think that was one of his best ones for real Set Up Punchline.

Speaker 2:

All he did was just do Set Up Punchline.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, we was. We by that time we was like everybody was like Weezy Fatigue, like nigga, you on everything everybody's song, like we just tired of hearing you. Like that was summer. He did like 90 songs. I'm like who does 90 songs? Yeah, a lot of songs. But you gotta think about it. Like look look what he did for cash money. He kept cash money going, like cash money. He, he kept cash money going. I did yeah, he kept man, baby wasn't gonna be able to do that, baby can't right.

Speaker 1:

and he and the nigga ain't, he ain't got no, like no kind of sex appeal I'm just no homo, y'all like no homo for real, no diggy but, he don't, he just he's an ugly nigga like just for real right. It's ugly like ugly. It has to be the money that why women are messing with him. It has to be Because. I don't see him having no type of personality or nothing like that. He's probably gay, I don't know.

Speaker 2:

But I just Look, we already know how them boys get down for real Right.

Speaker 1:

So yeah, wayne had to put the. You know Wayne, little skinny nigga tatted up all that. You know what I'm saying. He's a little skinny dude, like boxing his head, like he can rap, he can talk about Eat Coochie man. He was man, little women was killing. It was loving that they hear Lil Wayne that's some of their Lil Wayne man. He dropping all them songs talking about Eat Coochie and everything. Man was this going like now?

Speaker 2:

it's like, yeah, like, uh, look, look to me personally. You know I'm saying I, when I was listening to the secular music, really, really, really hard, or whatnot, I pretty much gave everybody an opportunity. You know I'm saying me being the musical person that I am, I pretty much listen to anything and everything. You know what I'm saying. I did and Wayne being one of those I gave him this opportunity, I tell you the Carter III was way better than the Carter IV. You could tell he didn't have a specific formula for the Carter III, it was straight up rap. But the Carter IV was formulated. It's like he didn't have nothing to really talk about and he's like oh, I'm going to just do a whole bunch of metaphors and that's it, just a bunch of metaphors.

Speaker 1:

He was hitting us with a lot of metaphors. That album was like metaphor it out. Now that I'm thinking about it and I'm playing some of the songs in my head, I'm like yeah, he's hitting us with it, that's it.

Speaker 2:

That's all he's doing and, honestly, you know, when Push, when Push hit him with that Exodus, it is over with. Really, he lost a lot of his fan base when he did that.

Speaker 1:

When he you said what now?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I remember Pusha T.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, pusha T he hot the Clips, they hot they been hot for years.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, they like. When he hit him with that disc truck it was pretty much over because little. When he came back it was floppy. He said push a t's name, like it was. He shouldn't have done that. So you know, I think personally in this case he should have bowed out. He shouldn't have gotten mad about somebody else being picked for the Super Bowl or any of that. He should have just congratulated him with Lamar and went on about his time, and people would have respected him more if he had done that.

Speaker 1:

Right, right, but I mean honestly, can you blame him, though? Like I mean he could have handled it differently. But you know, when you done did so much in your career and especially when you done got your flyers and everything but them done be like, yeah, we gonna throw it in New Orleans, we gonna throw this in your city, but you can't come. Like what, Hold on, what, I can't come Like man, nigga about to turn up, yeah, you about to turn up, you throwing a party in my city, but I can't come. I'm not invited. I am my city. You know what I'm saying. When you talk New Orleans, who the first couple names to come up? Master P, cash, money and Wayne. Yeah, you know what I'm saying yeah, for sure.

Speaker 1:

Master P and everybody was there. Lil Wayne didn't come. They didn't let the nigga even come. He couldn't even buy tickets. Like nigga, you can't come, period. No, stay away.

Speaker 2:

But I definitely could see how that's a problem.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I'm saying so, I, I mean, I, I don't blame him, but he could have definitely handled it differently. But I ain't gonna lie, wayne does not have the lyrical, the lyrical, the lyrical prowess to to do a diss track against Pusher T, he don't, or anybody not anymore. Before he did Young Wayne yeah, he'll eat you. But now Pusher T, he, pusher T and Malice, they both done just got better and better and better. Every year. Every time I hear something they do, it's like damn, they spitting. And then Malice came back like he, everybody's saying Malice saved Pusha T's career. But I'm like Pusha T still was hot, yeah, he was still pumping, like he still was relevant, like you know what I'm saying. Like Pusha T still was hot, yeah, he was still pumping, he still was relevant. You know what I'm saying. A lot of people don't know that Arby's that boom, boom, boom, boom. That song, the little clip, little eight seconds, that was a Pusha T song.

Speaker 2:

He sued the shit out of them, of course. Did you know that they made? I'm Loving it with McDonald's too. Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

I heard about that, I'm like yeah, them boys, they hot man, I ain't gonna lie. This new album they got, I'm listening to it like the first couple songs. My favorite song is that. What is it called? Ace of something. Oh yeah, I know what you're talking about. They did a video to it, man, that song, that is true, like true clips type of music, like them type of beats, they like real boom bap rappers. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 6:

Because that's what for real he was a boom bap producer.

Speaker 1:

You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, Like yeah, he could produce other stuff, but uh for real produce the living daylights out of that album. Man, I'm beyond.

Speaker 1:

He really did yeah he did and they first album was he produced that album and that shit was fire too. Like, yeah, it's called. Uh, the first album was called. Lord Willing had that song grinding on it. Yeah, that shit. I was listening to it earlier like I ain't gonna lie, the clips is hot, man. Like it is like things they be saying like bro, like, like what you be having to bro, like what you be having to rewind it back. I ain't nut-riding, I just like good lyricism. You know what I'm saying Because I'm not a lyricist, I'm a rapper. So you know I love good lyricism. When I hear it like, ooh, I be keying in, like a lot of people, a lot of truth music artists. Be like, I don't be listening to secular music, I do. I still listen to secular music.

Speaker 2:

Like right, right, yeah, like I try not to, I ain't gonna lie to you, I do, but I try not to. I ain't gonna hold you right.

Speaker 1:

I'm saying I mostly just listen to beats yeah, I listen to like secular music of our time, like artists that made music when we was coming up, like growing up like I don't listen to. Like secular music of our time, like artists that made music when we was coming up, like growing up like I don't listen to none of this new shit, uh, uh, but like I ain't gonna lie, like it's like a couple artists right now that I can say that I like I rock if they sound, come on, that's uh, I like uh, like that's uh, I like, uh. Like Offset man, I like not Offset but Takeoff, I like Takeoff. Like he was the best one out of the Migos.

Speaker 1:

Every time I heard him on a song I was I listened like and I think he had the best verse on Bad and Bougie. You know what I'm saying? Uh, huh.

Speaker 2:

I ain't gonna lie to you. I can't even tell the difference between any of them, dudes man take off.

Speaker 1:

His flow was a lot. He was the one that was. He was the one came out with that and was doing it first before everybody. Yeah, yeah, he was the one of the first ones I heard and then after that everybody else started like trying to memorize that like. But I'll say it in the other one they trash like it's real shit. I don't even know how them niggas it's rich right now for real, like well, we know how I'll say rich because he, you know, he got that money off of cardi b dumb ass and shit.

Speaker 1:

Cardi b is another rapper that I can't say like. I like her delivery, I like the way she has certain beats. I want to listen to all her shit. Certain songs. I like when she's popping that shit, I don't know, I just I like when motherfuckers don't know how I can be popping that shit. You know what I'm saying. And he'd be like, hey, okay, he ate that, like you know. But uh, yeah, but I don't listen. Like I said, I listen. I listen to a lot of different genres. So I just don't listen to hip-hop, but uh, I still listen to a sector for inspiration.

Speaker 2:

You know, I'm saying like I hear something like dope and I might steal that bar and just change it into something, you know, raising the most high, exactly I feel that too, because when it comes to the music, when it comes to the beats or whatnot, I get inspiration every so often too, and you know, where else is it going to come from, if it don't come from something that's already made Right? That's the best thing about a sample that shit right here.

Speaker 1:

I don't care about that, though. And so you said you wanted to try to get it done for the summer out. Yeah, I want to go out and finish for the summer out. Hey, y'all, we gotta, we gotta, we go do a petition for him to get this album done asap so we can hear it, because I'm interested in the hearing. You know your bars. Like you know, I'm saying machete never told me that you rapped. I was like this is something new to me. I'm like, yeah, I need to hear something. I might just put you on blast and turn on a beat and let you. You know, freestyle. No, don't do it like that, don't do it like that. Hey, I thought about doing that to one brother that was on here one time, because he said he could freestyle. I'm like I'm going to just put him on spot. I don't know. I don't know about freestyle, right, right, how long does it usually take you to write a song?

Speaker 2:

That's a very good question too. I guess it varies, you know, I'm saying, depending on if I got that inspiration, like if I, if I made a beat and once I start making the beat, I start it, let me see how can I explain it it starts to come to me like the beat starts to resonate with me and then, like every so often, you know, I hear a lyric, I hear a bar, here and there, I hear something like that, and then I write a title that I go with it and I'm like, ok, I'm going to keep that because I've already started writing to it, right? So, yeah, it's got to resonate with me. You know what I'm saying. Come up with some type of bar.

Speaker 1:

Right, I get it. I get it. It be like that sometimes, man, like, like certain beats you done sent me like, and it'd take me a while to write to them, and then certain ones I get, it'd be like, yeah, I already know what I'm about to say and it just when that rule, I'll catch you, like and it tell you what to do after that. Like, you know absolutely what's up, man, you know we, I know that that you said in part one that you, you know you really focus on, you know, the production and making the best quality beat that you can make. You know, so, how many times have you made a beat and it was like this shit trash.

Speaker 2:

Okay. So in the process of making music a lot of times, the first beat I ain't gonna lie to you. I'm probably gonna erase it. I'm probably not gonna keep it For real. It's probably gonna be going straight into the dumpster it has to warm up and then after that usually it's done.

Speaker 2:

After that. Sometimes I don't even erase them, sometimes I just just keep them, but the majority of them, if it's the first one, nine times out of ten, I ain't keeping it, damn. Yeah, my first one's gotta go Like the first pancake. Right, it's the test pancake. Yeah, it's gotta go.

Speaker 1:

I used to get that to my little niece. Like here you go, like you always get that test pancake away, like it did the other my little niece. Like here you go, you always get that test pancake away. The other one's like, yeah, make sure you put enough butter on there so it can have the burn marks on the other side, type of shit. That's crazy. I get that, though. Man, what's your creative process? What do you start with first? Do you start with the 808, the drums, the synth? What's the first element to the beat that ties everything in?

Speaker 2:

Well, for me, I always start with the melodics. You know what I'm saying. So with that, I pick a sound that is attractive. You know what I'm saying. So with that, I pick a sound that is attractive you know what I'm saying Something that I haven't used as a recently or whatever, something that has a movement to it, something that is interesting to the ear, right, that's got some texture to it, right, and then from there I layer interesting to the ear, right, that's got some texture to it, right, and then from there I layer sounds. You know what I'm saying. If I use a progression, I do the progression like maybe three times and layer the sound.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

And then after that, I find something that has some movement to it. After that I find like something that has some movement to it. After that I find like something that's uh, what's the what's the term? It's gonna be the counter melody. And then I find something that's the baseline and then I do the drums. Okay, Okay. And then after that it's just done, yeah, pretty much. Well, I put what it is, the little bells and whistles on it. Then you know what I'm saying, right.

Speaker 1:

You know Right, right, hey, and Right, you know all types of stuff like that, right, Right, hey, and and, like I said, y'all, like if y'all done heard my music, I'm sure y'all have a lot, of, a lot of the, the, the, the beats that I've done, A lot of the songs that I've done, like in the last, I would say, like the last two, three years I've known, we done known each other for like what, two or three years now, yeah, yeah, cause I, I did that before dishonor part three, like two, two years ago, two years ago, and that's when I met you. I met you like a little bit before that. So, yeah, it's been about three, three years. My praise to the most high man. Like no, it's, it's good to know that you know we got, even though we don't talk all the time, like you know, it's still that love.

Speaker 1:

And I hit him up like bro, I need you to, you should freak this beat for me. Like you're freaking and sending it back, and I'm like, oh, every time he done freaked the beat, it's like yeah, like yeah, you just made this shit better, bro, like we always make a like that Death Before Dishonor, one that you sent me, man, that I sent you and you did it. It sounded super like. It sounded like a Chopped and Screwed DJ Screwed type of beat like it sounded like a chopped and screwed DJ screwed type of beat. Like when he sent it back I'm like, okay, like I know he's from the South, but sheesh, like, so I just put beat chops on it and just gave it that chopped and screwed type feel to it Like and it, man, that was one of the best beats that I done got from you, that you done chopped up. For me that's pretty good. Uh, oh, yeah, that that joint was fire. That, uh, what else? That dirty game, man, wait, when you hear that dirty game, well, yeah, we, I, it's five of us. I got two sisters and me and two other brothers.

Speaker 1:

Uh, I finished it and my artist was like I don't like the way it sounds. I don't like the way I sound. So you know, we just did it again. If she listening, like, don't be mad at me, but that's how you know, that's how I just said it like that, because I was irritated. You told me you wanted to record it again, but it sounded dope to me. But yeah, man, when we get finished with it, it's going to be flame man. So, on average, how many beats do you make a week? On average? On average, let's see.

Speaker 2:

Probably about, probably about if it's just the average, probably about maybe 15. Sheesh, see how you got it, because I be making like three a day, wow. And I tell you, in like 2023, 2023, I had to have made overall like 500 beats. I was kicking them out left and right in 2023. 2024, I probably made like 250. 2024, I probably made like 250. And then, like in this year, I probably made around 250. So, overall, I almost got a thousand beats.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, Y'all need it, man. I'm going to personally see to the development and creation of your website, man, because a thousand beats man, you supposed to have a website. Man, you have a website getting paid off of that.

Speaker 2:

I'm going to be real.

Speaker 1:

What's up?

Speaker 2:

Look, this is how the website thing didn't happen the last time. So I got with JP and this is not a knock on JP in any way.

Speaker 1:

Right.

Speaker 2:

He did exactly what he was supposed to do. He is stand up dude. So he put me in touch with this guy. And the first red flag I should have noticed he's not in this country. That was the first red flag. Should have noticed he's not in this country. That was the first red flag. Oh shit.

Speaker 2:

But being that it's JP, I'm like all right, cool, I'm going to see what your man got, let's do it. So he was like I can make your website and this and that. And he came through with a design that I asked for and that was cool. And he made my I asked for and that was cool. And he made my new um, my new tag, and that was cool. He had asked for 200. I'm like all right, william, that's not that bad, that's not. I can do two, you know I'm saying so. He gave me the tag, he gave me that design.

Speaker 2:

I sent him the money and he was working on it for probably I ain't like how hold you? I don't know how long, probably a month maybe, and I'm like you told me it was gonna be done last week and then you told me it was gonna be done the week before that and then you told me it was gonna be done this tuesday. What's the deal, you know I'm saying. He told me something. Long story short. He said it was done. I looked at it and it's just like, in order for me to use the website, I need you the access to the website. I thought that once it's done I will be able to do whatever I need to do it.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, but that ain't how it happened. So I told JP about it. Jp got on him and he was finna, pay me back. Jp was finna, pay me back the money that he didn't give, because I was like man, give me my money back. You know what I'm saying, right? But um, I'm like you know what, it's all good, I ain't gonna I'm not even gonna trip on that. I didn't want jp to pay me because it was not his fault, right, right. So I'm like you know I what I'm saying. It's all good.

Speaker 1:

I'm going to just leave it where it is. Man, bro got you, I got you, I did. So we'll talk about it. We ain't going to talk about it on the podcast because it's business. But yeah, bro, I got you. Man, don't even worry, you ain't even got a baby. Like we'll get it done. Yeah, we'll get it done. Man like, all right, because I had asked about that, I had asked my check about that. Like man did you, like y'all, y'all got him a website going and all that.

Speaker 2:

Like I'm trying to, I'm trying like huh, let me be honest with you. You know, I don't really know if you rock with me, sheck. Still, I'm going to be real. There's just certain aspects about me, sheck, that it rubs me the wrong way. You know what I'm saying. And he's probably a cool dude, and I know he's a cool dude.

Speaker 2:

It's just like, when it comes to the work, there's no understanding of work and life. And I know you got the juices is flowing and you, you, you got your lyrics and you want to do it when you want to do it, but like I don't work for you. You know what I'm saying. This is the producer that I'm. I'm like a single entity. You know what I'm saying, right, I don't work for anybody and I don't appreciate being talked to like I work for you. That, to me, was the whole reason why I just just blowed up on that. I'm just like. I don't want to be disrespectful, I don't even want the conflict, right? I just I'm gonna just leave you alone, to be honest hmm, interesting, you know that's interesting.

Speaker 1:

I mean I love my bro and you know, Hmm, Interesting, that's interesting. I mean I love my bro. You know we have our differences at times and that's just it. But I understand that. You know, at times, you know, people have a certain sense of urgency that you may not always have. You know what I'm saying, so I get it and that's where you know, sometimes you just gotta meet people where they at. You know what I'm saying. They don't mean step down to they level and I'm not saying that the brothers or anything like that. I'm just saying like sometimes you just gotta, I don't know, understanding goes or brother's belief or anything like that. I'm just saying like sometimes you just gotta, you know, like I don't know Understanding goes both ways. You know what I'm saying. Yeah, yeah, yeah, I definitely understand. Yeah, so I mean not to say that you was wrong or anybody wrong. I'm just saying like you know, we, we, uh, definitely, man, Okay.

Speaker 2:

Another thing. Another thing when you have Okay. Before I even say that, I'm going to say I've always been going back and forth about the price of my music. Yeah, At one point it was $60. Then, you know, for Mesh point, it was 60. Then, you know, for Meshack, because he was about to, you know, do my whole website, I was like yo, I'll give you a discount because you're about to do my website, right, Mm? And I'm just like, in my opinion, I dropped everything to a singular price that made sense for me and made sense for Yisrael. At the same time, I was like 35 is super easy. You know what I'm saying?

Speaker 2:

it's very that's what I said. I just was like it is what it is. I want people to make as much music for the most high as possible, and that's a good way to do it right there. And I don't like when your craft is not respected. You know what I'm saying. You know what I'm saying. Like, if you set a price for something, if anybody set a price for something that I know that I want, if I don't know anybody else that can do that, then I'm definitely gonna mess with you, right? You know I don't like the disrespect of my craft because I ain't going to hold you.

Speaker 2:

I used to do the sample thing. Now I make my own samples. You know what I'm saying. So, like, I can tell you I make a one-on-one. I can't tell you nobody else that sound like that, and I'm not really trying to brag, I just know what I can do, right, I'm not really trying to brag, I just know what I can do Right. And to say that I'm like sitting at price and you're like, nah, I can't do that, okay, well, if you can't do that, then I guess I can't really rock with you then well, I'm gonna say that's for a reason yeah, go ahead, go ahead.

Speaker 2:

No, that's it. That's all I want to say, my bad so I definitely feel you, I definitely.

Speaker 1:

And that's why, when you, when you told me and I'm just speaking from my experience with you and how I deal with you, you know I, when, when I first met you you was, you know you said you had the beat packs and I'm like, why are they selling beat packs for? Like he should be selling straight and me the brother had conversation, I'm like he should be, you know, selling exclusive beats, like you know, instead of beat packs and stuff like that. It's shit hot, like that's. When I, and that's why I came to you like that, like bro, like I, yeah, I just want this beat, I don't want the whole pack, just but what you want for this beat, and you know, and that's why I broke bread, like hey, okay, you want x, y and z, I'll give it to you. And since you giving it to me on, because exclusive beats, what you were selling them for was still cheap, still very reasonable. 60 bucks is very reasonable for exclusive beat, let me say it again. So, so the people can hear it for a exclusive beat, the brother was selling them for 6060, right, and on the back end I would give him 34% on the royalties, because I'm just, that's just me. I'm real. Like you know, if I eat, everybody in my circle go eat. You know what I'm saying. That's just what it is, and not to say nothing about anybody else. This is this. I'm speaking on my experience and how I dealt with the brother and how I deal with it, because I understand that when you, when you charge, when you Offer a, a pay, a normally paid service for free, people tend to devalue it when it's time to pay for real. So I think that me personally and this is how I am I'm big on ownership. So that's why I came to you like, bro, I want an exclusive on me, one-on-one type of shit. You know what I'm saying and I had you do it the way that you did it, that you sent them to me, because that's my master. You know what I'm saying? Yeah, so, like I said, I'm big on ownership and I definitely am big on, you know, like, respecting somebody's craft, because I want somebody to respect my shit.

Speaker 1:

I was mixing and mastering people's stuff like 25 a song, bro, 25 a song. Like you can't go nowhere and get somebody to mix, your mix and master and use they lander. Like, yeah, I paid more. I paid more for lander than I was charging people a month. You know what I'm saying. So I get it.

Speaker 1:

I don't disrespect my craft, because I put work into this and it ain't like. It ain't like this shit came overnight. Like this is years and years of me practicing, trying, trying, failing, getting it growing. I get it. I get the struggle and that's why I had to come at you and ask one brother to another hey, look, I know, when you said 60, I said I looked at my cash app, like okay, so what's this nigga cash app? Like 60, like I'm about to buy two of these motherfuckers like what. You know what I'm saying. Like it blew my mind and that's why I was buying so many of them from you. Like that, because it was a deal like and then I know that you know you had and the brother would. I hit him up like man, hey, I need this, this and this. And that he be like alright, then he'll send me like three or four videos what you think about this, what you think about that, what you know, I don't like that, I don't like that, I don't like that. Then he just sent me an email with a bunch of songs like man, what, what you think? Oh, I like this one. All right, cool, let me, let me go ahead and mix it up and this and that a couple days I get it back in my email master cash app. You know what I'm saying and I just feel like I definitely feel you on that, bro, like I definitely feel you on that, and people will.

Speaker 1:

People will disrespect your craft if they feel like when I say it Fuck it, this is the truth. People will yeah, people will disrespect your craft because they think that it ain't as good or it's menial to them. It's menial to them because you just made a beat like, okay, whatever, you got a bunch of beats you just sent me. You just sold me a beat pack for this and this and that wooty woo, but not knowing that that beat pack is you still in there. You done sold that part of 15 other motherfuckers. That's why I didn't want the beat pack. No, I don't want shit. You done sold somebody else.

Speaker 1:

No, you was like, yeah and when, when I first came into this and I and I look, I'm going to have a label, I'm going to start a label I knew what it was going to take. It was going to take money, it was going to take sacrifice, it was going to take planning, it was going to take for me to have certain things in order. That's why one of the times when I came to you like, bro, would you, you know, think about exclusively making beats For me, you know, think about, you know, exclusively making beats for me? You know, when you was like, yeah, yeah, definitely. But I got a producer, I got my little nephew I make.

Speaker 1:

I had to understand that I had to have these things and I have to have certain like lander, my mixing equipment, my, my mixing, uh, like, uh, like, all my like waves. I got waves. And then I got the lander, I got all these other things like native instruments and stuff like that. All that stuff costs. If I wanted to do this, you got to pay the cost to be the boss. You know what I'm saying? I just understand that shit. I done bought beats for $100.

Speaker 1:

That wasn't nowhere near what I done got from you for $60 so yeah, so, and definitely when you was like man, I make my own samples.

Speaker 1:

I'm like, let me hear one. And you sent me that. What was it? It's called perfect walk. That was a song. Oh yeah, you made that beat. And I'm like, damn, that's a sample on there. I know what he is, but I can't, I can't, I don't know what sample it is. And you was like nah, hit the flow, like what, yeah, that's. Then the next week I came back to you was like, bro, yeah, we, we need to be exclusive, like you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

Oh, I get it, bro. Not even, not even to mention that. Man, look the stuff that I was asked to make. It's not easy. Yeah, you know what I'm saying. It's not easy. You know what I'm saying. It's not easy and I'm like, bro, you asking me to make things that are completely out of my element. You know what I'm saying and I'm doing it, and you can't pay that.

Speaker 1:

Okay, like they say, a man makes time and he pays and he makes a way for what he want to make a way for bro. Sure, you know I'm saying so like you can't be mad because one person don't don't value it the way that that other people value it. Bro, I'm saying yeah because you just got to focus on the ones that value it like and rock with them. Like I get it, like you know what I'm saying. And like I said, I love my bro, like I love him, like, like we done had our ups and downs, but you know it, it is what it is Like. I just I just understand that everybody move differently and sometimes my reality ain't your reality, because I don't, and that's why I don't understand why people do what they do, because that's not my reality.

Speaker 1:

you know what I'm saying so yeah, and it's not your reality, it ain't your reality. Understand what the brother, why he was on there. You just, your reality is this to okay whatever you know what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

I ain't got no problem with him. You know what I'm saying. Yeah, you know, I ain't got no problem with him. You know what I'm saying. I know he was wondering why I haven't said nothing. Well, handling it in my own time.

Speaker 1:

Right right. And it's all love. Yeah, you know, and even if he hear this, it's all love, it's still all love. He just just understand it.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, just understand that it. You know you gotta, you gotta, we gotta start learning how to support one another in the right manner. You know what I'm saying yeah, and and don't support, don't support me the way you want to support me. No Support, support looks like you helping me up. If somebody want to want you to win, bro, they gonna help you to win. Yeah, want to want you to win, bro, they gonna help you to win. Yeah, they gonna help you to win. And if they, even, if they, even if I'm just say this, man, you, you can see how people move with with time like, and see how people are with time like, and let you go through a situation, let you go through a situation and see, see how many people reach out and see you know, see what's really going on. Or you know, even, you know, keep your mind, help you keep your mind sane. Like, like I went through, I went through some, I've been going through some shit this year, bro, like my, my job ain't my job situation ain't been the strongest either. Like so no, and there's been a couple brothers that has just been like that sensed it in me, like, hey, bro, what's up with you. Like you know I'm saying and there's been something that sensed it in me and said something and just left it at that, like like. But to the other ones that you know reached it in me and say something and just left it at that, like like. But to the other ones that you know reached out to me and hey, bro, you all right, you good, you all right, bro, you good. Yeah, so often like I'll talk to a brother, and a lot of you might. It's unlikely, brother, it ain't unlikely, but you wouldn't think that me and him would converse as much as we do. But we do like, and you know I check up on him, he check up on me, and it's love, like I get it like. You know I'm saying it's love, man, you know just like how I hit you up, like, bro, how you doing. You know I'm saying I just try to make sure that I, that y'all know I love y'all and that I'm here If you want to talk or whatever, I'm here. You know what I'm saying. We ain't even got to record this shit. Yeah, definitely, yeah, y'all you return the same favor and that's why I still rock with you. You know what I'm saying.

Speaker 1:

Regardless of the music stuff, you a good brother with some integrity and you strong in y'all, regardless of the music stuff. You a good brother with some integrity and you strong than y'all, and that right there is. That make you my bro bro off top. You know what I'm saying. We rocking like that. You know what I'm saying. You rock with y'all.

Speaker 1:

Anybody that don't rock with y'all, I ain't we on some Tupac shit. Now, that's the only time I get on some Tupac shit. Hey, you don't rock with my father, I don't rock with you. His enemies, my enemies yes, sir, you know what I'm saying. But other than that man, I'm just trying to show love man, and it's been a beautiful thing that you know that the most has brought you into this and and and kept you strong and kept you going like you know I'm saying because I'm sure you done, went through some things that was like man whoa, that that was some bullshit like, but you still here, you still, you still rocking with y'all. So all praise, so praise, hallelujah, oh yeah, hallelujah. Oh praise, so Praise, hallelujah, oh yeah, hallelujah. So when do you, when do you the album coming out? Hopefully it come out this, this, uh, this summer, most high willing before the summer over with? And who do you? What, what, what brothers or sisters? In the truth music genre would you like to work with? Everybody, everybody. I get that. I get that.

Speaker 2:

Literally everybody, humble, the Rock, everybody, everybody. No name servant Everybody, okay, everybody.

Speaker 1:

Okay, hey, Okay, hey, we hey. It's nothing but a Facebook message away, bro. You know what I'm saying. Like you can hit a bunch of people up. But my thing is like I told say what now, jeremiah, yeah.

Speaker 3:

Yeah.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, I told him I want to be the DJ Khaled of Israel. Dj Khaled of Israel. Yeah, just like you know, not, I mean he good, but like in the aspect of putting people on tracks like that, that's what I want to do, yeah you got to have a distinctive ear, I do, I do. That's the thing. But like that's what I want to do, I want to go and put several brothers and sisters on one track. You know what?

Speaker 1:

I'm saying Like a cypher type of thing.

Speaker 2:

Like how he did it. You know what I'm saying. Albums with so many different people. I want to do that for the truth music. You know what I'm saying, right?

Speaker 1:

Hey, that would be dope, bro, that would be dope. I did a couple of albums like that where I got a bunch of people on them, like most of my death before the sonnets was like that, except for part four. Part four was was like mostly me and just my artist that was on the label with me at that time. And part five was a compilation. Part three was a that was, that was. I had a couple of features on there. Uh, part two was featured out. Part one that was like my first album, right, right, but that's dope. Man, like, uh, the brother Yoel Yehuda, he does the same thing to put together like, like compilations and stuff like that, and that's, that's a good thing and that's a good way to show unity. No, absolutely, mm. Hmm, so how I man, I don't know man, I don't think I done asked you a lot. Man, we just sitting here talking like I ain't even really you know, I get it. I'm pretty much out of questions, y'all I'm reaching right now, like, cause the conversation is so good man, like we don't get to talk a lot, so I'm just, you know, just enjoying the build, like you know what I'm saying. It's a beautiful thing that you know that most have brought us together and it was. You know what I'm saying. It's a beautiful thing that you know that most have brought us together and it was. You know, for part two, like part one was fire, y'all Like, and you know we, we, it was more questions and you know him telling us everything that you know we wanted to know. And part two is just like more like, yeah, we chill, lay back. You know we had, you know it's been a long work week for both of us and like, shit, you just sitting here chilling, just enjoy the build and if you don't, then get off the pot, like, no, don't get off the podcast, y'all don't get off the podcast.

Speaker 1:

But all praise to the most high man is like man I definitely and I know y'all hear that beat in the background playing man it, it, that's one of his like he. He sent me some beats, man, and the first one he I listened to like in the beginning of part one. I played it as an intro and no, you can't have it because I already I got dibs on like, I got dibs on that one. But I don't praise man, my bro, man I'm, he's a, he's a definite talented producer and I done heard his beats on a couple people lips, like I done heard his beats on a couple people albums.

Speaker 1:

I'm like, man, this brother is like really like producing, producing, producing in the kingdom. Man, I love it, bro, like that's why I gotta help, like I gotta help you win, bro. Like you know, I'm saying because I want to see you win. So let's talk about that website, bro, definitely, like, uh, yeah, I'll start working on it, like, because I uh, I just gotta, I just gotta it's just another piece of code and that I got to learn, uh, like how to embed, like, uh, certain things, like I know how to put the music on there, but like to embed it and so they can.

Speaker 1:

Like, you know, we'll talk about it though, bro. But yeah, man, all praise to the most high man. We, uh, we really have, you know, set and and and and and and just talked and spit our truth man and you know, and I I wanted to get kind of personal, but I don't, you know, like I'm just going to be real, Y'all don't know him like that he to be asked super personal questions and shit Like. But you know me, I don't be caring for real, for real man, I'm an asshole, but no, you wasn't supposed to agree with that one, bro.

Speaker 2:

Like you, agree too quick.

Speaker 1:

But all praise, man. This has been a beautiful build, bro, I don't want to hold you too much longer. We got part two done, man, and it's been. I just can't say just how beautiful it was, man. I'm really. I feel edified, like you know, in a sense of like brotherhood. You know what I'm saying, just to know that, you know, just to reassure me that the brotherhood between us is still strong and we good, and you know you still good with other people and you just ain't got no beef. You just trying to work in the kingdom. My all praises, man, like so, yeah, all praises Hallelujah.

Speaker 2:

Yes, sir, I have no problem with anybody at all.

Speaker 1:

In general, right, but especially in israel. I have no problems with anybody, right, right, and if and if y'all got problems with him, then you got problems with me. So I know I'm playing, but uh, yeah, man. So go ahead and hit them with your links, man, tell them where they can find your music. We, we work on them, we go. Y'all just heard me broker to deal with the website. So y'all don't ask about his website or where it's at, just you know, get on his. So just go ahead and hit on what that your links and tell them where you know they can they can find you get in touch with you if they want to buy beats or whatever. Like you know, I'm saying okay.

Speaker 2:

So I got an Instagram it's SedeqMusic144. I got a TikTok it's also the same name SedeqMusic144. And whatever that website, I'm going to have the links up in the description of the TikTok.

Speaker 1:

And I'm going to have it on my Instagram as well, and that's how we do it, like my bro Dave saying already already. So, bro, I thank you for getting on the podcast with me. Part two, I think might have to call, I'm gonna call, I'm gonna call. Uh, music and rhythm and beat, rhythm, rhythm and 808s and 808s and Bible Scripts yeah, that might be the title to your episode, I don't know. But part two, we got it done. Y'all, I'll praise. This is your boy Abiyah the Spit, your Truth Podcast.

Speaker 1:

We are streaming. I'm back, streaming y'all, like. I'm back with it every Wednesday 12 pm. I'm sorry y'all, I'm back with it every Wednesday 12 pm. I'm sorry y'all, I didn't get the last two weeks in.

Speaker 1:

We just moved from, basically, my closet in my house. We just moved from the closet in my house to the Simons Radio Simons Studios and we bigger and better. We done JFK and we bigger and better. We done JFK and we doing it big. So just give us some time, man, so we can work out all the kinks and get things done. We still working. Y'all's wanting entertainment it's the deck music. We still working, man, and getting it done, man, just be patient with us, man. So Wednesdays, we back at it. Wednesdays at 12 pm Eastern Standard Time.

Speaker 1:

I don't have to tell you all the time breakdown. You know where you live at. So just be real, like, let's just be real, like, have common sense, y'all. Like. You know where you live at, I don't have to break it down for you. But if I do have to break it down for you, I'm not, I'm not, I'm just not like for real. But all praise to the most high man. I thank y'all for tuning in, man. I thank y'all for this being rocking with us. Man, spit, your true podcast episode 26. No, this episode 27, I think hold on, hold on, you know it's episode 26 y'all. So no, this will be 27 because the first will be 26. So, yeah, man, I said man, I I just really enjoyed the conversation, bro, and I thank you for giving us a little bit of your time and uh and and your and your heart and your mind, and you know your insight and your truth. Thank you, bro.

Speaker 1:

uh, yes it's all love man, love and respect man, and you know, till it, till we do part three, because I think I might make him uh originally yeah, I might have to make you, uh, we might have to get on stream yard man, and get on the video, though, man.

Speaker 1:

So you have to get that lineup going, bro. So we can. You know I'm saying we can, we can get on there, like, yeah, I definitely want to. You know I'm saying we can, we can get on there, like, yeah, I definitely want to. You know, I'm saying I put you on the video like and like how you make a beat live, like that'll be dope I definitely, definitely, yeah, that'll be dope.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, mate, have a. Have a how you make a beat live time with us, like, and we just sit and rock out to it and then we can do a live show, have people in the chat you know what I'm saying and bring somebody up and then see if they can freestyle to it. Damn, I just got an idea y'all.

Speaker 1:

Hey, if y'all steal my idea man, I'm telling y'all I'm coming to your house and I'm taking all your equipment and I'm going to smash it. I ain't even going to steal it, I'm just going to smash it in your house and leave.

Speaker 2:

I don't pray.

Speaker 1:

Right, man, I do that shit because I'm crazy and I'm an asshole, so I will do that shit y'all. So don't fucking play with me, but I don't pray this man, let's get to it man. We love you bro. Stay safe, man, let's get to it. Man, we love you bro. Stay safe, man, go with y'all. Love you too, bro. Oh yeah, definitely, man, and I feel it. I feel it because you show it. And definitely, man, go with y'all. Man, keep your faith in the most high man and walk with uprightness and integrity, man and righteousness, man, and you'll be alright, bro. Yeah, so go ahead and tell them what you want to I've been talking about. So you go ahead and tell the fans what you want them to know.

Speaker 2:

We go close on now, bro yes, you know, and yeah, and the word keep your lamp lit. And you know, make as much kingdom work as you possibly can.

Speaker 1:

For sure, all praises to Boya Beer and your beloved brothers of deck music 1-0-4 on Spit. The Truth Podcast, hosted at Simons Studios, doing it big. All praise to the most high. To the next Wednesday.

Speaker 3:

No-transcript in your life and ask hard questions.

Speaker 1:

Gain the knowledge from your elders, gird yourself and get the rep in this righteous kingdom on the rise, but first we gotta get our mind right.

Speaker 6:

Meditate on.

Speaker 1:

Torah, teach our season, lead our life Spending corners with my. Aki's trying to wake up dead. Jake, we cooking food up on this track for all you Jets, come get a plate, make that statement. Blues unite and teaching Torah on the Sabbath. Going hard for our creator, disrespect, we'll let you have it. Yeah, it's tragic how he cooked it. Got that kick hitting your back, that 808 cracking your ears. Watch me ride this hat. We praising and serving our father.

Speaker 6:

Praise, praise and serving our Father we praising and serving our Father Praise praise and serving our Father.

Speaker 6:

Blessed be his name, yahweh. He reigns supreme, guided my steps like a light In every dream, through the trials and storms. His mercy is sustained, a fountain of hope. He washed away my shame, creator of all the heaven scenes, and proclaimed. His glory is revealed, but eternal is his flame. I'm walking in his truth. His word is my delight against these haters. He shields, turning that dark to light every heartbreak scene. His love is my peace from the burdens. Relief in him the joy won't cease. His presence is is ominous. It's contagious. Forever remains. He blesses. It's gracious.

Speaker 3:

King Dayawi, hello Yahuwah, peace our almighty Aluwah, these might be words that you're not used to, so young, you just pull up your booster, listen close, so you can increase your evil now and receive as you rock. So, my brother, you won't die. Keep it lit to the apple of your eye, read it daily and pray. We will unify, cause we need to worship him in truth and spirit. This sermon exposes cap him. When you hear it, these prophecies, we gonna have to share it. Yahushua Hamashiach, it's all the merit. We need to blare it, I am not here for the back and forth.

Speaker 4:

I'ma leave that up to y'all, cause I got 66 on my bezel. That's the type of time I'm on. I ain't talking all tomorrow. What side are you on? Are you a Christian or an Israelite? There's two sides of the coin. Well, y'all miss the trees for the forest. Y'all treat my kind like a tourist. Y'all been traveling with that bull ish Might as well. Call you all lit. Well, did y'all forget the mission? Cause at times it seems like y'all did, cause you keep if you are you a foe or a friend, cause I ain't trying to fit in. Have you checked the balance? Cause it's a tight rope that you're walking on with the goat, not the lamb. Well, crisis king, I said that in front of anyone. I'm just trying to break you out of it. Slam it like Harriet Tubb. Well, they looking for something. Now you better book it and cut it out. This is the Spit.

Speaker 3:

Your Truth Podcast.

Speaker 4:

Well, Christ is king. I said that in front of anyone. I'm just trying to break you out of it. Slam it like Harriet Tubman.

Speaker 7:

They say they swinging all they swords, but fools they can't afford. They can't listen to the Lord. But he is the main source. He's tearing up the storm Like tornadoes in the storm and it's trying to make it easy. This ain't the final form and niggas think it's sweeter than syrup from out the corn. I'm waiting for their death, cause it's greater than when they born. So shut it like a drawer. We don't wanna hear no more. But I'ma cry it loud with my soul and my vocal cords. Yeah, i'ma tell the crowd we closing up all they doors. And I'ma cry it loud with my soul and my vocal cords. Yeah, i'ma tell the crowd we closing up all they doors. And I'ma say it loud my daughter won't be no whore. And I'ma put my foot in they ass. Like Ganondorf. I'm always bringing heat when I spaz like I'm a torch Bass.

Speaker 5:

Let's get it. I know it. I hold my hands high to y'all who we raining down the mountain. Let's get it. We'll see you next time. This is the Spit, your Truth.

Speaker 6:

Podcast.