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Family Bidness Podcast Crew
We interview artists and creators to give them a platform to speak on their journey, who they are, and give some insight/knowledge into whatever field they’re a part of.
Family Bidness Podcast Crew
Yung Pesoo
The raw, unfiltered journey of an artist finding his voice stands at the heart of our conversation with Young Peso. What begins as a casual catch-up between old friends quickly evolves into a profound exploration of personal growth, artistic evolution, and the healing power of authentic expression.
Peso takes us through his transformation from Cash Camo—a young rapper making drill music to fit Chicago's popular sound—to Young Peso, an artist who channels genuine emotion into every bar. The turning point? A series of devastating personal losses that forced him to reconsider his approach to both music and life. Rather than numbing his pain, Peso discovered that pouring his grief into lyrics offered a path toward healing and artistic growth.
This transformation didn't happen overnight. During the pandemic lockdown, Peso established a disciplined creative routine, recording daily and honing his craft while the world stood still. "Spending my time in that way instead of being in the crib and getting high and not doing shit brought Young Peso to the forefront," he reflects, highlighting how dedication to his art became a lifeline during difficult times.
What resonates most powerfully throughout our conversation is Peso's unwavering commitment to authenticity in an era dominated by fleeting viral moments. "Being true to yourself is what's going to keep your mental and emotional self good at the end of the day," he asserts, offering wisdom that extends far beyond music into every aspect of life. His perspective challenges listeners to question whether they're following their own path or simply chasing trends.
Looking ahead, Peso shares details about multiple projects in development, including a special dedication album releasing July 23rd in honor of his mother. This deeply personal work promises to showcase the full range of his growth as both an artist and a human navigating life's most challenging experiences.
Tune in to witness not just an interview, but a genuine moment of connection between artists supporting each other's journeys—and perhaps find inspiration for your own path toward authentic self-expression.
We here. We're at the Family Business Podcast. I'm DJ Trouble Kid. To my left we have Marquette Wizard. I thought you was going to turn the mic. I ain't going to lie to you. He ain't swinging a mic. No ditty.
Speaker 2:No, ditty. We got Marquette Wizard in the building. We got DJ TK in the building. You know what we doing. You know what time it is.
Speaker 1:Tell them about the guests we got in the building, man, what we doing.
Speaker 2:Man, we got one of my bros in the building, bro, man, brother, for a long-ass time we went to school together. You know, we've been doing music for you know some years, man. You know, man, we got my brother, young Peso, in the building, bro, don't building, bro, don't forget the two o's man.
Speaker 3:You know what I'm talking about. Type shit, type shit. Hey, what's good podcast? It's your boy, peso, with two o's from the south side of chicago. You know, I'm tuned in, I'm locked in with tk and my boy, marquette, wizard in the building.
Speaker 2:Let's get it yeah, yeah, shit, so uh, what you been up to bro shit, man, I ain't gonna lie to you today.
Speaker 3:Today was a nice little subtle day. I went to a a career fair, actually in Englewood, bro. Like shit was smooth as hell. I ain't going to lie, I've been trying to get to the bag. Mainly I've been focused on getting my mind right, my spiritualness right and my whole money situation right. Man, you know, music is the end goal at the end of the day, but you still got to sustain life.
Speaker 2:You staying life, you gotta pay your bills and shit. Yeah, yeah, I feel that. Yeah, I feel like we all at that point. You know, one way or another, like everyone in this room, you know we trying to make that shit happen. You know, and it's definitely happening. You know we taking the steps every day, every state, every day that you wake up. So a blessing opportunity, you know, to get up and get that shit for yourself, like you know. So I so I mean speak more like on the music, though, because, like you know, like we kind of you know, recently reconnected these past, like probably like a little over a year, you know, compared to you know, after school ended and shit like that. Like, what can you say about, like your journey through music and the kind of music that you make now versus what you used to make?
Speaker 3:Man. Peso in general is way different from when Cash Camo first came into the game. I approach music way differently now because I understand from reading the business side of shit and then going through shit with family members where I could have had my foot in the industry twice type shit, knock on wood, that door's still going to be open one day. You feel me. But Cash Camo. Cash Camo was still trying to figure out who he was.
Speaker 3:I was probably like 19 years old when I first started rapping and a lot of shit. I really didn't know what I wanted to rap about at all. It was more like, you know, drill was popping at that time. It was more trying to make music to like what's popping today was more to like what listeners want to hear in our city. Growing up in Chicago, so a lot of shit I was making was like drill music. I'm like I got to make drill. I got to make drill. I'm trying to get out the city. It's going to get me on the city because that's the music scene right now. But as I Like, I got real situations going on. Yeah, listen to Juice WRLD. Juice WRLD is probably one of my biggest inspirations Not his sound, but based off the shit he was actually rapping about, getting in tune with your feelings, expressing yourself.
Speaker 3:So over the years, you know, I lost a couple family members. I lost one of my closest homies on Thanksgiving in 2022. Like, that was my brother. We used to walk to school together and shit for grammar school used to go to his house in the summer. That was the first death. You know death they always say come at threes. Then my uncle passed away in 2023. That man was like my father. Then my mom's passed away and that's the last, like crushing blow for me.
Speaker 3:I was like, instead of doing this shit when I was 18 years old popping pills and drinking and smoking and waking up at like 5 pm or 6 pm, missing the whole day, type shit because I'm so depressed from other shit I got going on. It's like I got to channel this shit into a positive outlook, into a positive input. Like I've always been cold at music, so put my pain into my words. Outlook and so a positive input. Like I've always been Cold at music, so Put my pain Into my words. Use what I know how to do With the skills I gained During the pandemic as far as making melodies, making choruses Making intros, making actual verses.
Speaker 3:That got Bar for bar For bars. That's catchy, but Also got metaphors and punchlines and I mean it was like Damn, when you started freestyling you started thinking More about your approach, like Eminem or like Cole Cause it was like Fuck what everybody else Think you, that nigga At the end of the day. So lock the fuck in and make some shit that motherfucker's Gonna listen to, but it's gonna make they mind race, make they mind think. So Peso is Is a general, now Peso is a boss. I think Cash Camo was just like getting brought into the Army, brought into the game, and it's like you know, here's the tool in your hand, what you going to do with it in the future.
Speaker 1:That's real, and I like how you took time to speak on you know the deaths, because that isn't the easiest thing to speak on in any capacity. So I thank you for being vulnerable enough to share that in this space, because I think we got to learn how to talk about it more. You know what I mean, but I also think you got to learn how it's like it's a when you ready kind of thing too, you feel me. And the fact that you know you're using your art to A tell your story and B like educate somebody, you feel me. What do you think are some of the lessons that young Peso can teach that cash camo couldn't as a result of your growth?
Speaker 3:shit. One lesson is, uh, I would say loyalty man. Like looking at where you placing your loyalty in certain situations. You know they say blood is thicker than water, but that's not the truth. Sometimes you feel me, I feel closer to to you when I feel close to some of my family members. You know, like the relationships I made in college and actually being out here meeting people in the industry or not that's had they foot in them but but they got the same skills as me. That's putting the same grind, same attitude, same positive mindset, and I'm like these are people I want to be around. These are people I could actually call family, because they're not trying to bring me down or it's not no jealous situation. You feel me. So it's placing your loyalty, the time you spend Realizing, like when I was bored, bro, I would just fuck around and be on the game.
Speaker 3:I was not putting no work into this craft at all. I know I had a gift, but I was like the shit. I'm making it sound like everybody else shit right now. So I'ma just fuck off. I'ma go here. I'ma go DJ just to have fun for a day. Go party, i'ma to just fuck off. I'm going to go here. I'm going to go DJ just to have fun for a day. Go party. I'm going to go play the game. I'm going to go play basketball, even though basketball ain't my sport. I'm going to go play football. I'm going to go do this, I'm going to do this and do this and do this, and then rapping starts to suffer, my mic skills start to suffer and, like, like my writing, started to suffer. So when you're not putting in that, that effort, you know they say like to become a perfectionist, that's something. Will become a genius, that's something. That's how many hours you got to put in it was like 10 000 hours it's 10 000 hours, right.
Speaker 3:So pandemic happened. I graduated from school. I was locked inside my crib. Ain't shit else to do? Chaotic eyeball mike. My cousin was in there. We was recording every single fucking day. Pandemic happened. I graduated from school. I was locked in inside my crib. Ain't shit else to do? Chaotica eyeball mic. My cousin was in there. We was recording every single fucking day, made a fucking album that motherfucker ain't drop, but we ain't gonna talk about that. That's another situation. But spending my time in that way instead of being in the crib and getting high and not doing shit Brought Young.
Speaker 2:Peso to the forefront. Would you say that now, like you kind of have like a routine now with what you do?
Speaker 3:I feel like my routine isn't set in stone, but there's certain things that I take from my routine that I use every day. So whether it's writing, listening to a beat on BeatStars, or whether it's just going on YouTube choosing beats and just freestyling- Just like to put some work in every day for it.
Speaker 3:So, like when I freestyle, I call that going through the chops, because you're basically trying to find. You're trying to find your melody, your verse, or just trying to find a punchline that you could potentially use later on down the road, or just trying to find a punchline that you could potentially use later on down the road, and that's what I just started to do now. Like you didn't see me freestyling the club before, type shit when I was listening to other people's songs and shit and I was like, damn, if I had that beat, I would have killed they ass on that song. Or if I had Drake beat, drake wouldn't be around. And that's how this picture you gotta picture yourself as being at the top at the end of the day.
Speaker 3:For for peso, right now, peso is focused on creating music, creating a collective, creating a family with this shit like being around like-minded people so we could all accomplish a goal. A family right now is I mean, I'm 25, bro, like I know. I know you can start a family whenever you want to, but I feel like I'm just getting back into the prime of my life and I feel like I just reclaimed my life after being in a dark place, because last summer I couldn't have as much fun as I wanted to being 24, like, my family was there for my 24th and 25th B-Day party, but I didn't feel like how I was when I was turning up when I was 21. Went to Atlanta when I was 21. When I went to 22, I went to Vegas. I had the times of my life. But after that, because I'm letting certain situations around me change who I am as a person, what am I really gaining from these relationships if it's not helping me as a person emotionally or mentally?
Speaker 1:So I've heard you mention you know the life transitions. I've heard you mention dating. I've heard you mention being out with your homies. How much of this really inspires your music, does it make it into your music.
Speaker 3:Definitely the relationship aspect has helped a lot with some of the shit I done wrote Probably for the past I wouldn't say this year or the year before, but I'd say probably like two to three years prior to where I'm at now A lot of shit was focused on a lot of my shit that I went through with my, with the short situation I was talking on. So it was like apologizing because it was like you know, you want to reach out to somebody, but sometimes you can't find the correct words to say, like if you texted somebody. So I was doing that shit through my art and I was like all right, this is what my apology could be, type shit. So I'm like, okay, these are the words I need to say and this is how I'm going to express it. And I finally got all my feelings out. So I was like it was a relief for me, but at the time my biggest enemy is my ego.
Speaker 3:I know that at this, at this damn point, being a Leo especially, we're very, very big ego people. So my ego wouldn't let me send that apology out to her. You know, I knew I was like this is probably all she was looking for For the past five years, which is what she told me. But it's like, if I feel good At the end of the day, that's all that mattered at that point in time. It was self fixing versus Trying to fix an actual situation, and sometimes fixing ourselves is what we need the most at a certain point in time. But when it comes to the relationship aspect, if you did something wrong to somebody, you got to realize you got to fix that situation regardless.
Speaker 2:There is a balance, like when it comes to a relationship, there's just, you know, like there has to be. You have to consider the other person, like he was talking about with the other shit. But I could understand why there might be resentment, like you were saying, on both sides. It's like if y'all willing to come together then you can make something out of it. But, like you said, like because of ego, like you didn't want to send it, or like pride or like whatever, like you still feel that way now.
Speaker 3:So I did actually end up sending her like two of the songs I wrote for her and she literally said when she read the first song she cried because she instantly knew who the fuck I was talking about, like it was. It was so many bars Like, if you read that song, you think I got that song On my phone no more Cause I got so pissed off For her this year. But Literally the bars Are talking about Our situation From 17 to probably About us being Say that in 1920 we start fucking with each other For real, for real, on a serious note. So I think she she Take that down to 19, 20, we start fucking with each other For real, for real, on a serious note. So I think she, when she finally got that, she finally understood where I was coming from for those years and why there was so much resentment. So I'm like I'm trying to think, I'm trying to remember what I said.
Speaker 3:I said why we always used to argue and I hate you the most, sorry, I'm too honest Hope you moving on. That's how I felt At that point in time Type shit. But it was another About like why they always in our business, they ain't got no lives. We had a hell of people In our relationship Trying to tell us what to do when we was kids, bro.
Speaker 2:Like just trying to push you in different directions, like hearing, like the what was going on, and be like oh, you feel like this or that or whatever.
Speaker 3:And I feel like that's still what Kind of fucked our shit up. I mean we tried to make shit better this year and I mean like shit was getting better, but Peso is still the same old peso. Sometimes. Like I stepped out, did some fuck shit even though we wasn't technically together, but we was claiming that we was together type shit. Right, that was my fault for saying the words exclusive and I'm still trying to figure out like I mean I ain't had no like real relationships. I done had flings, bro, like I try not to To be in relationships Based off like the shit I seen.
Speaker 3:Growing up I never saw like what a happy marriage was. Type shit. Yeah Me neither. It was like I always see my grandpa, my grandma, my pops wasn't around. My uncle had children by multiple women and that was my father figure, and then my cousins Cause I didn't have time to be around my actual siblings because of the way my father was moving. You know they would show me the same shit. You get this many women to have a good time. Fuck everything else. Care about yourself at the end of the day, because all you got is yourself and that's what you could depend on. But there's some real, but there's some real Genuine Ass Women out here that you gonna find.
Speaker 2:And that shit.
Speaker 3:Come damn near like Once in a lifetime. I'm not gonna lie, and this might have been One of the most genuine Women I've had in my life, cause she still try to do shit For me and help me out. But it's like I think her story and her like. I feel like you, ready to be a wife. I'm still out here, ready to be lit, focusing on getting my stability. Just because you stable don't mean that I'm stable.
Speaker 2:Right, you don't think that you can make it work. Even with that, you don't think that she'd be able to kind of go along with the things that are coming with what you're going after my first.
Speaker 3:Sometimes it feels like it's a compromise, but I can tell, based off her energy and all her for so long, because her mom literally called me her skin. That's how much I know this girl type shit.
Speaker 2:I just feel like it might not just be the right time. I don't know. Do you think she would wait for you?
Speaker 3:Not this time around. No, she said she's already waited those five years. So it's like, but my thing is still like. But there's two sides to that, though. Yeah, because. But my thing is still like. But there's two sides to that though. Yeah, because she had, truth be told, she had a nigga that was like the complete opposite of me Money making, had tons of money based on his family type shit, pharmacy, tech, going to the medical field, all types of shit.
Speaker 3:You know me, I'm a creative bro. I'm a creative Chewing through whatever I do, whether it be audio recording, audio editing us, gaming and being on switch some days type shit. Like I just love expressing myself and having fun and that. That blue collar work, feel of being a white collar worker, that shit should not just for me like. I found that shit out when I was 17. I had an internship at the city, at the cook county clerk's office. Bro, like how creative I am as a person. Like sitting in a cubicle, that shit kills me, that shit drains me, and I respect the people out there that do that shit, because that's a grind you get in a bag regardless.
Speaker 3:It just wasn't for you, though, based on who you were as a person, Bro being 17 years old, being in that office, being in the cubicle, being around government officials bro.
Speaker 1:Hey what you think about that. Speak on your experience. I got words. I got words shorty.
Speaker 3:See when you downtown and you literally where the voter registration shit come through, bro, come on with it bro. And you see how they register all districts in the city for shit, bro. The telemarketer shit where they call an old person house or a black person house. They only do that shit once, bro. They tell you to make sure you do that shit. One time you see a Caucasian name or an Indian name or another race, call them back multiple times. Even if they hang the phone up on you, still try to get them registered, man that's some shit.
Speaker 1:That's some shit.
Speaker 3:But I still value the experience because, being a communications major which is what I chose to be when I got to college I had that experience from helping them run their social media campaign for getting people registered to vote. So when it was my turn to go to the V103 block party and shit I was making sure there was black people's images being put up there and their reasons for voting. And I ended up meeting Emmett Till's aunt when I was there, bro, and that was probably one of the craziest life experiences I've had, bro. She was like how old are you out here getting people ready to vote? I'm 17. She said you're not even 18 yet, baby, and you understand how important it is. You understand what my family members went through and I was like you resemble somebody through. And I was like you resemble somebody. You look familiar. She told me Emmett Till was my nephew.
Speaker 3:I kid you not, bro, to be that close to history at 17 years old, doing something for our people, trying to get them to vote, even though the 2016 election was a piece of shit, because our vote really doesn't matter at the end of the day, unfortunately, if you understand how the electoral college works, our shit really don't fucking matter Because still at the end of the day, it's the Supreme Court and all the other constitutional pieces up there in DC picking who they want for president.
Speaker 3:Because popular votes. Sometimes it helps to sway yeah, you know what this person might have as many electoral college votes. But if we sway this here and we recount here and we take a vote away from here or there, then our agenda could be accomplished. I understand people fucked with Bill Clinton a lot back then, but it's a lot of shit that Bill Clinton did that fucked us over and set us back as black people. It's a lot of shit that Reagan did that fucked us up, all minorities up and set us up as people In the country we see in prison like this is what.
Speaker 3:How many black men and how many Hispanic men Locked up. It's all. It's all brown, all shades of brown, in the prison facility as slaves to this country, because all it is, it's another form of slavery. They getting paid At rates probably like 25 cent To the dollar To an hour, bro, so they not making shit, but they making shit For everyday products that Americans use. They making toothpaste, they making license plates, they making garbage bags, they making all types of shit that we use Shit the Walmart brothers Found it like and they fund like Private prisons, bro. Making garbage bags, making all types of shit that we use Shit the Walmart brothers found it like and they fund like private prisons, bro. The Koch brothers fund private prisons. The nigga that made Home Depot.
Speaker 1:See, you know what's dope?
Speaker 1:Like how we got to talking about internship, but how it kind of revealed this passion for politics that lives in you.
Speaker 1:So that's it's dope, because it seems to me that it's funny too just knowing that like we got a record, that's like we low-key got a record together, just kind of heard it from there. But it's funny too just knowing that like we got a record, that's like we low-key got a record together, just kind of heard it from there. But it's dope, being able to really sit down and meet the man behind the record you know what I'm saying and really sit and understand what's going on. You know what I mean, not just in your mind, but like just kind of gaining a glimpse of what you see. Because, based upon a lot of what you just said, just within those brief, just literally in what you just the presidents you just named, I'm like he knows something he tapped in the way he needs to be tapped into and that's mandatory these days. What do you want to leave the next generation with and how do you plan on using your music to leave them with it?
Speaker 3:right now in this, in this TikTok era of music, everybody wants five seconds of fame. But even when we was kids, when when you understand some of the shit that so many people we looked up to was going through, that five seconds of fame really isn't worth it. It's what you put your mindset to and what you do. Sometimes, the longer road of doing shit, and not instant success, is what's best at the end of the day. You can take Amanda Bonds, you can take. You can take Amanda Bonds, you can take.
Speaker 3:2 Chainz Amanda Bonds child star, had a lot of fucked up shit that was going on behind the scenes at Nickelodeon. They're not going to touch on that because I think she still got an NDA. But Drake Bale came out and said what the fuck was going on. 2 Chainz D1 Hooper Took the college route, went through college, got his degree, end up Becoming one of the coldest rappers Our generation has ever seen. Bro, and my thing is it's being true to yourself, because a lot of people Emulate what they see On social media. Now you got originality over Going into, like our parents used to say, the crowd or say your friend, jump off a bridge. You're going to follow them.
Speaker 2:Right.
Speaker 3:You ain't got to do that shit all the time.
Speaker 2:Whatever's hot that's right.
Speaker 3:Being true to yourself is what's going to keep your mental and emotional self good at the end of the day. Because if you know that you follow your own code of ethics whether it be you doing some bad shit you know you're doing some bad shit, but that's your code you still following what you need personally for yourself to live your life, and I don't agree with that if it's some bad shit. But there's also the other side of the coin. If you following the good code of ethics, you the good code of ethics You're still following the path that's true to yourself. Being true to yourself is what matters the most at the end of the day.
Speaker 2:I feel like that's what's going to lead you along the path. Being yourself will lead you along the path that you're meant to go down, and everything that's supposed to happen to you is going to happen. If you go against that or if, like you're saying, you're just on some popping shit, whatever, then it's like you have to keep doing that same shit, and it might not be who you are inside, but you have to keep doing it because that's how you pop, that's how you made it happen.
Speaker 1:So it's like I hear exactly what you're saying with that, but I will also say this I think, like you say, I think you kind of need to experience both to really navigate it really. You feel me Because I think sometimes you got to know what those booze feel like for real. You know what I'm saying. You got to know everybody not going to root for real. You know what I'm saying. You got to know everybody not going to root for you. You know what I'm saying. Some people are going to root against you forever. Some people are going to root against you because that's the trend. You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 1:And it's like I once heard TI say if you live by the praises, you will die by the booze. And I probably could be saying it wrong, phrasing it wrong. It was like if you live by the, the, the crowds, like you're gonna die by it. And that was some shit. I had to learn the hard way. You feel me, and it was like it's dope to see that you have this mentality, bro, like, and you like you standing on it. You see what I'm saying. So even in this interview you stood on it Like nah, that shit sound cool. But that whole situation just ran its course and even walking out of here knowing that or saying that and being aware of that. It's like I'm real interested to see what comes from you next, because now you have it's not now you have. You've always had it in you, I believe, but I think now it's kind of you got more of a reason to really jade out with this shit and really make a name for yourself and just keep it going, keep it growing and keep it spreading. You feel me, all that other shit ain't for nothing, bro, and I got to say it like that because it's easy to just get caught up wasting our time just trying to feed into what we know ain't giving us life. You feel like this music thing is really giving you that life and you got this message that people need to hear about being authentic, being yourself. All these things, man, give that shit to these people. You know what I mean and and that's the dope part about just being like sitting here and doing this you know what I'm saying.
Speaker 1:A lot of the times, these interviews go different because we're dealing with guys that sometimes we deal with guys that have years of content out. You know, in this case it's different. You know, we have the luxury to watch you grow and to see what you do from here and I'm honestly very fucking excited to see it. You know what I'm saying? Bro has been speaking very highly of you for a long time and there's been times where I'm like man, like hey bro, like what are we doing? Like you know, and bro has always been very adamant on like nah, bro, like he good people, I just I naturally just like I'm not really a social guy for real, like I think I have to be social because of the work that we do, of course, but I'm really like, I like standing myself for real, so I automatically just be like nah, I don't care who it is, nigga.
Speaker 1:Nah, my immediate yes is a no Like no.
Speaker 3:See, and that's how I kind of refer to myself, I refer to myself as an extroverted introvert. You know, I feel like I made myself extroverted to deal with the world that I'm in right now. It's you always got to network. But if I could be true to myself, man, if I had my own studio at home, I'd just probably be inside the crib recording and I'll stop every day yeah, but you know something too, though.
Speaker 1:Like something too, though, like, as cool as that is, it's all about balance. You know what I mean Seeing how you could, because the dopest recording in that studio is like you might meet that producer walking in that studio. You might meet that engineer, that artist that you've been waiting to catch, like, hey, man, let's get on this together. You know what I'm saying.
Speaker 2:No ditty.
Speaker 1:You might just like you never know what opportunity you run into for real and I ain't even going to lie, Like sometimes being in the studios, it just gives you that extra ear of creativity for real. So I'm going to encourage you to do both, and obviously you're going to find the one that you know which one you like better. But just keep swimming, bro. That's all I'm going to say to you. Keep swimming, keep surfing on your own wave and just don't allow yourself to get lost in your own sauce. Don't allow yourself to get lost in this bullshit that we see around us. You got a real good head on your shoulders and it's just going to like you're going to go as far as you allow yourself to go. You can take that however you want to take that, but you really that's the truth You're going to go as far as you allow yourself to go, bro. So just continue pushing and being the you that you are, bro. Like I knew this interview was important to bro, so I made sure I was like bro. I was tired and was tired and I'm like nah, like this shit is important. If it's important to bro, it's important to me and you important to bro. I'm like I'm. I'm here to tell you, bro, I don't watch a lot of niggas come around. This is like, bro, this is one of my brothers, bro, like real life, I've known this nigga half of my life. At this point, and when I tell you, bro, I done seen people come and go around he don't brag about he didn't brag about none of them niggas how he talk about you, bro. So I need you to know that and wear that with a badge of honor, bro, he see a lot in you and I see a lot in you as a result of that. So the world gonna see.
Speaker 1:The goal is to get the world to see what we see in you, but you got to get out in here and do some work to make that happen. And we here for it, bro, like I genuinely mean that shit. Get out here and be great bro, rumble and don't don't leave. No, bro, don't, don't, don't. Leave nothing behind. Get that shit to all, no matter where it is or where you at. Give it your all, because you got the energy, you got it. So just continue being you, bro. God about to open some tremendous doors for you, but just be ready when he open them for you.
Speaker 1:You got me most definitely but you got this shit, bro, real talk. I'm really looking forward.
Speaker 1:I'm looking forward to watching you, bro, like I'm really looking forward to watching you build and grow and become I'm not gonna feel like the young the young peso you becoming bro because it's it's dope, just meaning like real talk bro, like yeah, you say you was cash camo bro, but I feel like this version of you that I'm meeting I can remember this. You see what I'm saying. Like, I say, I remember glimpses of meeting you then, but this right here is an encounter I can remember, bro. You see what I'm saying, rob.
Speaker 3:Markman yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1:Rob Markman. It's because what you made, the way you spoke, the way you talk, so continue to carry that as you navigate this shit, because there's gonna be people that come and try to break you and throw you off. So so I don't have.
Speaker 3:I think I got like what we got, like I got like four plans right now. I got a project I'm working on with wizard right now and I'm working on. I got a project with Chino I'm working on right now. I had an R&B project that I was thinking about working on the mix. It was going to be like kind of like a old school gangster movie movie like thing reference as far as like the soundtrack for the movie, for the music and shit.
Speaker 3:Because I got a real friend From my job, you know he. He was one of the coldest singers I done seen in Chicago. Bro, like Bro got the voice. We start having these plans and shit. But you know life, life hits you sometimes, so I gotta link back up with him. And then my personal project that I'm dedicating to my OG On her birthday, july 23rd. It's gonna be like Lil Wayne dedication, cause all this shit I've been writing like Solo wise, that Wizards done heard and that other people done heard, even my family. They like this done on yo dedication, like how Wayne made his shit. So, july 23rd, keep your eye out for that date.
Speaker 2:July 23rd. Man, you heard this shit, man. You heard it from the source. Bro, man, is there anything else that you want to touch on, man, before we get out of here? Bro, the floor is yours. Bro, honestly, anything else that you want the people to know about you or what you got going on?
Speaker 3:Shit. So me and Wizard we did almost have a show last weekend. We're not going to talk about that shit, you know, but it's a nice venue If people want to come out to Rochelle, Illinois, every Saturday weekend. You know, Some days they have open mics out there, Some days it'll just be a little party afterwards. You know Club Pulse Club Pulse it's a dope place to be at. It's a good place to network at with other people. Sometimes you'll get producers and other rappers and other DJs and I was talking to Noper Ruski one time.
Speaker 3:We was chatting about like doing YouTube stuff out there. It's just making sure you got the right people and get enough people to be out there. Peso isn't just an artist, he's also a mogul, and that's what I need people to understand when I tell you I understand the business side of this shit. Now shit feels somewhat easier than shit. That been way different than what it was when I was 19 years old. I know exactly why I got my foot headed towards right now and it's kicking down every fucking door possible that come my way.
Speaker 2:Hey, man, you heard this shit. Man, you heard it, like I said, man from the source. Man, we got Young Peso. Man, we got DJ Trouble Kid, we got Marquette Wizard. Man, until next time, yo we outta here.