INDIE PUSHA PODCAST

T-Roy Indie Spotlight

Adrian Season 1 Episode 17

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0:00 | 34:18

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SPEAKER_02

Yes, so hi. Uh DM. Okay, I do now.

unknown

Hi.

SPEAKER_02

Uh, how you doing today, man?

SPEAKER_03

I'm doing good. How you doing?

SPEAKER_02

I'm doing good. Can't complain. Uh honored to have you on this interview with uh Pusha Entertainment. Uh you out of the Bay Area. Uh uh I've been listening to uh your music. You got a lot of uh a lot of hits out here. Uh definitely like this cover you did on Rock the Boat. Uh so we gonna uh we gonna uh you know do my little extra. So welcome y'all. This is your boy AD, coming from Pusher Independent and Indy Hart. Uh we got a Bay Area native. He's performed with Trina, uh T-Pang, Lil Scrappy, and Young Bro. He's even opened up for Jada Kiss. Um he got a lot of hits out here. So we just want to give my man uh T-Row the opportunity to, you know, do his thing. So we're gonna let him uh I'm gonna uh let him do his thing right now. So let's get into it. Um how you doing out there on the West Coast, man?

SPEAKER_03

Oh man, doing beautiful, man. Enjoying this beautiful weather out here. You know, need some sunshine, let me know, man. I'll show you all to the light, man. It's good.

SPEAKER_02

Hey, hey, hey man. Hey, I appreciate it, man. Uh look like you're living good out there, living living that that nice life out there on the west side. So we're gonna get into it, man. So um, you grew up in San Francisco. So, you know, what shaped you into being the uh musician that you are?

SPEAKER_03

My family. You know, my family shaped me into it. You know, my mom's, my grandmother, my pops was a DJ back in the day when he was in high school and like his early 20s. Um moms and grandmas, you know, they grew up in the church singing. And, you know, every family function we link up with, you know, somebody always singing, you know, and black hymns and all that other good stuff. You know, and I can't sing for nothing. When I was a kid, I used to say my cousin was Johnny Gill, you know, because it was Gill last name.

SPEAKER_02

All right. So at 13, you discovered your gift uh uh with words. So what sparked that?

SPEAKER_03

Oh, what sparked that was, you know, when you go to church, I was to church going to church, you know how they give the kids Easter speeches and stuff like that. And we used to switch up the Easter speech to a beat. That's the only way I can remember it, to a beat. So I started doing it like that. And then when my little brother started doing it, I started, you know, rewriting with my mom to start rewriting Easter speeches and stuff. So like little raps and stuff. So that's what happened. Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

So uh we're gonna get into uh so what would you Pentecostal Baptist?

SPEAKER_03

Uh Baptist.

SPEAKER_02

Okay. Uh Pentecostal Pentecostal flow from Okay, okay.

SPEAKER_03

And then also, you know, peeking in front of the corner store with all the big homies, you know, they all rapping and stuff, you know. Uh shout out to Cool Nud, RBL Posse from the city, you know. Uh JT the biggest figure, you know, hanging out with all of them as a kid, as a youngster, and they all rapping and everything. Uh show Fly Mar, you know, the big homies.

SPEAKER_02

All right. So how so I guess how did like music like landscape you uh like early on in like the environment of out of, you know, being in the inner city?

SPEAKER_03

Uh man, so what shave me into doing it really uh, that's a good question. Really just save me into doing it just because I had the gip of rhyme, you know, telling my story and doing it to music and having a good time with it. And then uh once I was in high school, doing it in high school, that's what kind of like gave me like my popularity in high school, you know, rapping and especially rapping to the band, to like all the classical music with the band and stuff like that. And then my band teacher was like, you should do this for real, like you can make money on it and you got a good gift. So then I started taking it serious after that. Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

Okay. So uh with you doing it in high school and all over, playing with bands and stuff. How did you keep yourself uh to be humble and not like have an ego that you like you the you shit out of there?

SPEAKER_03

Um I got like a little ego when I'm rapping. I don't think nobody can out wrap me in the booth. But uh, but uh stay humble, uh, it's really just you know, hanging around like all the big dogs. Like, you know, uh especially talk chopping up with T-Pain when I was on the tour with him, you know, like he just like me. Everybody's just like, you know, we all the same. You know, just some got a little bit more eyes on them than others. So, you know, running around with him and learning all that game, that's what like kept me humble and stuff like that. And then also when I saw, I was in the interview, I know I was in the elevator and I saw Biz Marquee, and I was like freaking out on the inside, but had to be cool, like you and everything. I got in the car, I was like, oh my god.

SPEAKER_02

I like that. So uh was you working with T Pain, like how was how was that experience?

SPEAKER_03

That experience was great, man. I learned a lot um working with him. That was real good. Uh like just running around with him and take this and during that whole tour. And um, I learned a whole lot. I learned like, you know, to stay humble, keep cool, have a good time. If you're doing it, have if you're not having fun, and once it turns into a job, then it ain't good no more. You know what I mean? Don't do it anymore. So, you know, as long as we kept having fun, that's what kept it good. Like that, you know.

SPEAKER_02

So I guess my thing is uh for you, that that's good advice that a lot of indie artists need. But uh from you coming from the West Coast, uh, I'm over here on the east. Like what advice would you give to indie artists that's um statewide, worldwide, international, that, you know, that's following you, supporting you, uh like, and want to know how to do it like you did?

SPEAKER_03

Oh man, stay having fun and keep pushing yourself outside of your limits. Keep going outside of the, go outside from where you stay at, you know. One thing uh crackhead told me back in the day is the the world is bigger than your hood, you know? So like your hood consists of four corners, just like a jail cell, four walls. Right. You know what I mean? So the world is bigger than your neighborhood. So once you get out your neighborhood, then you can go fly high and keep going like that. So I I think that was an angel, you know, just in the crackhead body, you know? I like that.

SPEAKER_02

So, like you you perform for a lot of a lot of big name uh artists out here. Uh, one of them being uh Jada Kiss. Uh so how was that uh just performing alongside like mainstream artists? What did you learn or what did you like what did you pick up from them?

SPEAKER_03

Oh what I picked up from them, what the mainstream artists pick up from them is just watching how they rock the crowd. So by me watching how they they control the crowd, that's what I use, take a little bit of that and integrate that into my shows. And then that's how I'll be getting the crowd. Um also taking on, also, you know, I like to rap a little rap over my beats so you hear me. Because if you come to the concert, the concert to hear it to see me. And I learned that from Ice Cube, you know? Like you go to the concert to see me, you don't want to hear the track. If you want to hear the track, you'll play that in your car and at home. You know what I'm saying? But that's what I learned. Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

Uh so I see that you won a C2 TV award and you had a uh you have nominations. Like, what does that mean uh to you as a consonants?

SPEAKER_03

Oh man, winning the best, best artist of the year award, man, that was big right there. Because I was there the year before, and um I opened I did like a uh perform for the year before, and then I made like all the nominations and stuff like that, and then I held it in my hand. I told him, I said, bro, I'm coming for this country next year. You better be looking out. My album dropping next month. Right? And then it was like, okay, we'll see, you know, it's a good family competition. You know what I mean? And then once I dropped the project, they all called me, like, bro, you didn't tell me you had this coming, you know.

SPEAKER_02

I like it. You dope, you dope out here for real. And and I I I've I've interviewed a lot of people so far. And, you know, uh, like I tell them all, like, you know, uh I'm amazed that like, you know, people need to hear these interviews because you guys out here doing it the right way. Uh and I know it's not easy being an uh indie artist uh as well. So uh what keeps you from not getting discouraged or just like throwing in the towel, you know, sometimes because things might be moving, might not be moving as fast as you want.

SPEAKER_03

Oh man, I I I give that to my kids, man. They keep pushing me to go harder and keep going. You know, and just seeing like they friends listening to my music and having a good time and enjoying it, like, you know, like my daughter punking me to perform for her birthday next year.

SPEAKER_02

How you feel about that?

SPEAKER_03

Yeah, man. I'm like, I just want to be a dad and just enjoy the birthday. There is though, but you know, but it's cool, like, you know, like, you know, that's like my, you know, none of my little, my little, you know, my motivations, you know, to keep going and go hard, you know, because I did it for them. I started going hard for them, you know. I wanted to leave a legacy for them. So by me keep pushing and stuff like that, like I keep leaving a legacy for them, and then it's gonna be good. So like eight years, eight generations down the line, they still gonna hear my voice, you know? Yeah, so that's what really what I'm doing it for, for them now. Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

So what does what does like legacy like in in general leads to you?

SPEAKER_03

Oh man, it means everything, man. Uh, you know, as you see these people that's in, that's big, you know, like like their great-great great grandparents started a company and they kept it going. So now, you know, now to this day, they still living off of what their great-grandparents did. You know what I mean? And stuff like that. And they did that for their family and it kept it going down the line. So that's what I'm trying to do to something like that too, with this, with the music, you know.

SPEAKER_02

So, so uh have you ever got to a point with all the accolades and all the people you work with? Uh, have you ever felt like, you know, you you've made it and like there's no there's no more room to grow?

SPEAKER_03

Uh yeah, I did one at one point. I did at one point. Um, right before I did my real two album, like I was done. Like I'm I'm over it, you know. It's like it's it's nothing higher than this. But then, you know, the sky is unlimited, you know? Even space limited. So you can keep going and you keep elevating yourself. But by me doing that, we just kept it pushing. That's what it was a good thing, yeah. So I just keep yeah.

SPEAKER_02

Yeah, I like that. Uh, like I said, man, just keep keep pushing, you know, doing what you're doing out there. Um, because uh shout out to you to your to your your set. Shout out to to over here at the DMV. You know, we you know we got you uh in in rotation over here.

SPEAKER_03

Um shout out to the whole DMV out there, man. It's late.

SPEAKER_02

And so we have a um a Kings and Queen review on uh this Friday. Well, uh I got a DJ by the name of Kevin, uh DJ Master Kate. Uh so we're gonna be bringing uh everybody's hits that's been sending me music, um, just so everybody can hear what's going on, what's what's being being played. Um just so they uh we know I know you out there doing your thing out there.

SPEAKER_03

Oh man, I got some, I got some coming out on Friday, man. So uh speaking of that, uh I got a new out a new single dropping Friday called Dance Like It's 92. Um that's gonna be that's gonna be a global one right there. And it's really like bringing back the family and the old school and you know, and all that stuff together, yeah.

SPEAKER_02

So you know what to do with that, man. Uh send that over to me, man.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah, yeah, I'm definitely gonna send that to you, man. Uh that's gonna be good. That's gonna be big, man. So it's like really um tell you a little bit about the song where I'm working on a project with my grandmother. It's called Poniac and Cufflinks, and that's one of the singles we're about to drop together, yeah. It's gonna be big, yeah.

SPEAKER_02

That's that's that's that's that's amazing. So, how does it feel to work with a family member on a on a single?

SPEAKER_03

Oh man, I'm it's beautiful to work with her on this whole album, man. We're working on a whole album. It's gonna be a double album.

SPEAKER_02

I love it.

SPEAKER_03

It's beautiful, man. Like it's uh it's it's like uh another deep, thick memory that I'm gonna hold for the rest of my life. You know what I mean? That I'm working on with her, which is great. And um, you know, I used to sit on her lap as a kid and try to watch her try to play the organ and stuff like that, you know? So for me being this age now and actually work on a project with her, like it is it's beautiful. Like words can't explain how much fun I'm having, you know? And it was like kind of crazy us arguing about knocking 43 songs down to 24, you know? Right, right, right.

SPEAKER_02

So you now uh when when you not while you saying that, how do you how do you pick uh how you do your song choices?

SPEAKER_03

Uh I do my songs towards both of our ears to see what she, you know, what she likes and what she listens to, you know, and then also um also pick like, you know, the stuff that I know that she likes to listen to. So she likes jazz. So she got me into jazz, you know. So she likes jazz and folk music, you know, old school like that. And then that's what got me, I like jazz, you know, because listening to jazz with her. So kind of like got a little jazz with the little hip-hop stuff in it. Um one album I used to listen to all the time where it was uh was Quincy Jones' Jewjoint, Jewjoint uh album, like that. So we used to listen to that all the time. And so that's what kind of like inverted me into it. There was one called uh Cool Joe, and it had like all the rappers on there with the singers too, you know? And even had uh, what's his name? Raiden Charles was even on that beat. And it was tight, and I was just like, ah, that kind of like I wanted to do something like that, you know? So with me and my grandma, we just been, I've been getting like the jazz beats kind of like, you know what I mean, with the new school rab banoni. So it's been great.

SPEAKER_02

Uh yeah. So so uh two-part question. How is how old is your grandma? And what keeps you what keeps you versatile?

SPEAKER_03

My best, she's 80, 82, 83 right now, about 82, 83 right now, something like that. Yeah. Yeah, yeah, yeah. So we're gonna drop it, we're gonna drop the album on her birthday this year.

unknown

Okay.

SPEAKER_03

So this year's whole project will be out on her birthday. So everybody's gonna get a copy of it. Yeah. So we definitely gotta redo this interview after the album drops.

SPEAKER_02

Oh, I like that. I'm looking forward to it. So Verma uh being on the project with you. What keeps the ver the uh versatility and also how do you accept her criticism or assumption that she might not be like, hey, I might not like that, you might get to add this, might need to take this away.

SPEAKER_03

Oh, um I love the criticism because it makes me better, you know? It makes me better, it makes me better in my craft and what I'm doing too, and then also it makes me, it makes me feel real good when I'm listening to her, her criticisms and stuff like that. And even with my criticisms too, you know, like we come together and we sometimes we we compromise, you know? Right. We compromise together, and then uh also what we're trying to do, we're trying to bring out the best story that fits. That's my truth, also with her, with her music background.

SPEAKER_02

Like that. So that's what we like like that.

SPEAKER_00

It's all I can do. Yeah, you know what I'm saying.

SPEAKER_01

Like this is a stick, uh, just say that three uh in there, it's a beat is the first one on the level of the staffing of the staff. Like a left and then like a bad piece, like a gas one, and it's like a heads right for the picking like a fucking motherfuckers, that's actually mountain, so in the flow in the cloud, even what the fuck is up in the house for the glass and after the town in the lock of the land, for the only reason making them snaps for the lazy killing sex with the money out with pick them up. They're gonna take this out and previous on them, but the fucking intro Hey, y'all take this out.

SPEAKER_02

We just want to take a little musical word from the table. Okay, you hear me? Yeah.

SPEAKER_03

All right, cool, cool, cool, cool, cool.

SPEAKER_02

All right, y'all, so we back uh with uh T Row. So um I'm gonna throw some numbers at you. Uh you got 250k streams for Spitfire, another 300k for Beautiful Disaster. What is the formula for your consistency and how do you feel about hearing these numbers of what you're doing out there uh at the Indy Harvest?

SPEAKER_03

Man, um so Spitfire, that's my first project I put out, man. Uh shout out to Trina for that one, um, for helping me get that one together. Um, to push for that one. That was my first project. Uh and like for everybody to graduate to the music and listen to the music and enjoy it, which was cool, especially um the backup from my whole city that uh loves Spitfire. So with Spitfire, you know, I I dropped that one back in almost 20 years ago. Next year it'd be 20 years. So when I dropped that one, that was back when, you know, we was giving out bootlegs and stuff to, you know, bootleg CDs at the time. So what I did with my promotions, what I did, I went to all the bootleg guys and I gave them my CD. And I'm like, hey, when y'all sell a uh a DVD or you know, sell two CDs, give them a free copy of my album. You know what I mean? So that's what kind of like blew me up and kind of got me around the city. Uh that was free promotion that way, you know, which was fire. And then uh, yeah, so then the Beautiful Disaster Project was, you know, my original Kognaak and Coupling project. So a lot of people, when I dropped that one, when I came back, started dropping music again, that was the next album. And everybody thought it was a cognac and couplings project. So they was all, you know, listening into that, like, oh, I remember this and da-da-da-da-da. And I'm like, yeah, so and then they was like, this is not cognac and coupling. So I was like, nah, man, this is, you know, it's a beautiful disaster. You know, because y'all know they they robbed the studio, so I had to redo everything and revamp, you know, revamp everything. So now they now they know that Konyak couplings is actually finna come out now. So now I got a little bit more buzz and bigger buzz, and it's kind of funny how everybody's fussing at me about it. Like, when I need the album. Like it's coming, it's coming.

SPEAKER_02

So, how do you feel when people ask you that? Uh, like when you try to put uh let's say you're working on your project and it's something that you want to add change, and you know, people are like anticipating it. Like, how does that make you feel like conquer-wise to get to get that project out?

SPEAKER_03

Oh man, that's that makes me feel good, and that lets me know that I'm that I'm getting y'all attention, you know, and anticipation is always good. It's like kind of like how everybody waiting on Doomsday to drop at the end of this year, you know. Also, the anticipatation as good as getting you ready and feeling about it and to get you talking about it, you know? And it's all as good as helping me out with my rollout too. So, you know, so when it does drop, it's gonna go crazy because everybody's anticipating it. And then they already got the first single already, so they love in that one. But now when Dance Like It's 92 comes out, that's gonna take over the spring and summer. So that's gonna be like, okay, okay. Like, yeah, he got something good coming. Yeah. Right, facts.

SPEAKER_02

So what is your support like out there in the Bay Area?

SPEAKER_03

Man, my support system is beautiful. I've got a a lot of homies, a lot of family, a lot of homies turned into families that's all supporting me and backing me up with it. And, you know, I I'm love it all. You know, the support system is great. And they even tell me to push on this project. Don't work on another project, because you know, I'd be working on four or five projects at the same time. So they like, uh-uh, don't don't work, I don't want you to be working on nothing else but this one.

SPEAKER_02

So I see you got a lot of um you you you you consistent. Uh one thing, you know, a lot of people uh say they have music, and then you go and like you got two songs. You got like you got you got you got a whole catalog. So Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah. You know, I was like, all right, yeah, I see where he he he doing big things out there, he making making big noise out there, and you know, I'm I'm uh looking forward to your future projects. Um for sure. And just like how do you prepare for these for your uh like the projects? Like, you know, uh, because I know you like you say you put out you work on a lot of music at one time, so how do you like separate those for like different EPs and all that?

SPEAKER_03

Oh man, um it goes on by how I'm feeling at the time. I'm always writing, I'm always writing something different, I'm always writing different music, listening, because I get a lot of beats thrown to me all the time. So I try to, you know, if the beat speaks to me, then I, you know, I start writing a little something here, a little something there. I kind of let it bounce around to, you know, how I can get it going. So, and then when it comes down to one project, it's like, okay, I feel like this should go on this one. This is how it feels like. So once I get that project together, and then I'll I'll, you know, get a bunch of different songs for that one project right there together and then let it go from there. Yeah. And then each of my projects, I now I kind of want to give you a story. I kind of want you to close your eyes and listen to the project, and you can picture everything I'm saying. So that's why, you know, I'll go through like that.

SPEAKER_02

Okay. Uh, where uh I I I read your bio and I see that you want to start doing acting. What what what got you into want to be an actor?

SPEAKER_03

Oh, man, shooting music videos. And uh also I wrote a play, like back in the day too. I wrote a play. Um, so it was me and a bunch of people, like we wrote a play. Um, because I wanna always wanted to write my own movies and shoot my own movies. So we wrote a play back in the day, so that's what got me into acting in. And then, you know, just having fun. So especially when I was a kid, uh, acting around, you know, acting out, you know, we always play fight and stuff like that, act like we superheroes and stuff. You know, G.I. Joe's shooting each other and all that good crazy stuff. So that's, you know, I was all that gently acting and stuff, you know, it's real good. You could tell a different story, just like with the music, you know. You could you're a storyteller, so the music you tell when you shoot the video, you want the video to be part of the story that you're telling. But it's a visual, you know, a visual. So yeah, that's what got me in the acting a little bit.

SPEAKER_02

So do you have any like projects that you in the works, or you just, you know, pretty much? Yeah, yeah.

SPEAKER_03

I did a cameo which really got the bug going. Um, it's called Summer Boys. So I did a a cameo on this movie called Summer Boy Summer Boys that's on the way. And uh, you know, that cameo guy kind of gave me my acting bug. I'm like, oh yeah, let's do that. But all I was supposed to do is just work on the soundtrack, you know? So I worked on the soundtrack and we did that. It did uh he he like come down, like I was down for a meeting, and he was like, oh yeah, let's shoot you, let's put you on the cameo real quick. So I did the little cameo, and after that, I was like, oh, we gotta get it going now. So yeah, it's gonna be big. And then um this summer actually, uh so you got the album Konya Couplings coming out at the end of this year, and then next year should be the Konya Complings movie that's gonna be dropping next year. So yeah, I'm giving y'all a little heads up on that one.

SPEAKER_02

Okay. So uh where where new music comes when the uh I meant the uh show, the uh movie comes out, where where can people find the new the movie at?

SPEAKER_03

Oh, when it drops, you're gonna find you're gonna be able to find it on Amazon, Tubi, Roku, um, and Pluto. It's gonna be on all of those, all those platforms right there. Also, uh, I'm gonna do like movie premiere, so you can be able to catch it in theaters too, independent theaters out here in the West. I gotta find something out there on the East Coast, so I'm gonna be doing my homework and looking out there. So, but I know so out here in the West Coast, we got AMC that helps out with like independent artists that don't, you know, put it in the theater for like a week or two weeks, depends on how it goes and then they'll take it out. So definitely we'll be doing that too. All right, all right.

SPEAKER_02

So you got you got you got your music, you got your acting, and also I see that you are are trying to get into fashion as well. So how how important is this image to today's industry?

SPEAKER_03

Always good. Like fashion, it was really my uncle thing. Rest in peace, my uncle Steve, he started it, so he was the one that gave me, you know, he was like, man, you're gonna be the rapper. I'm gonna be the fashion designer to make sure you wear our clothes, you know. That's because what we wear is what's gonna catch everybody else to do it too. So that's how we did it like that. And then um, shout out to my uncle Steve. And then uh, so and then once he passed away, I just picked it up and like, man, we get it, we're gonna keep it going. You know, we're gonna keep the legacy alive and keep it going. So yeah, that's how that went down.

SPEAKER_02

All right.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

So that was right. All right. So I'm gonna do some uh couple of questions, a couple of rapid fire for you, then we're gonna do you do some shout-outs, and then we're gonna uh at that point, you know, let people know where they can find you at. So we're gonna do uh first first rapid fire is Bay Area or or everywhere else. Oh Bay Area Why she got the nice weather, man. Right, right, right. I'm blaming it. I don't blame it. At home, man. Old school, new school. I'm gonna say old school. All right, all right. Uh one artist you still want to work with. See, I definitely see that. Uh if not music, what would you be doing? Uh construction. Oh okay. Yeah. Let's talk let's talk about that though. Let's talk about uh why why would you do uh what is it about construction you like?

SPEAKER_03

Well, I like to work with my hands. So I used to do um when solar came out, when solar panels came out and was like big with solar panels, I jumped head first into that. I was running with like a bunch of different solar companies, putting solars on people's houses and stuff. And then um once it started going down, you know, solar companies started falling off little by little. So that's when I started going harder on the music. So yeah. But if I wasn't doing music, I probably would have jumped into this construction and stuff because I didn't know how fun it was until I started doing solar. Yeah.

SPEAKER_02

I like that. Uh what so what does success look like for you right now?

SPEAKER_03

Oh man, look at me.

SPEAKER_02

Success, man.

SPEAKER_03

20 years in the game, man. Uh, that's what success look like for me, man. Longevity, you know, uh, which is beautiful. That's what success looks like to me, man. Sticking with it and staying low with longevity. Keep elevating your craft, elevating yourself, and having a great team behind you that's gonna have your back no matter what. You know, the ones that tell you no instead of being a yes mesh, you know. You gotta have some of them people on your team too. Like, nah, I don't think you should do that, bruh. Uh-uh.

SPEAKER_02

I agree, man. Yeah. Uh uh, I appreciate uh you coming through. Uh I'm gonna let you uh take your take your moment to give your shout outs and where people can, where your supporters can find you on uh social media and uh any uh music platforms where they can find you and and follow you and all that.

SPEAKER_03

All right. Yeah, shout out to my whole team, the whole DPE TakeOver family. Off top, shout out to my babies, all my kids, man. Shout out to y'all. Uh shout out to Ivy, Ivy Productions, shout out to her, shout out to DJ Epps and my big homie DJ, man. Shout out to all the DJs around the bill area all over the globe that be playing me, spinning my music. Shout out to you, your whole camp, and everybody over there, man. Uh, y'all can find me on all platforms. Uh man, every platform, just Google, T-Roy, aka Reezy. I will pop up. All my music is gonna pop up. Continue to follow me, and we're gonna be more greatness coming, man. Blessings on blessings, you feel me?

SPEAKER_02

All right, so you heard it right here. Uh, make sure y'all follow stream support. Uh, that's what, for real, to be honest, elevation through indie uh elevation looks like in the game. So if you my motto is if y'all want the support, support others, then and be humble with it, and you'll get the same thing.

SPEAKER_03

And it's free to support, man. We ain't cost you no money.

SPEAKER_02

Don't cost you no money, support, yeah, uh, share posts, re-poster posts, uh, listen to the music or nothing. Just share, like, you know, uh even uh after this interview, y'all listen to the music. Let me know what y'all think. So I can let I can let his cam know what what what y'all think. And then so we keep this going. So I appreciate I appreciate uh the interview, uh bruh. It was it was good, good meeting you. Uh any music that you got coming out, uh, don't hesitate to uh send. Uh so we can definitely sping you.

SPEAKER_03

Yeah, definitely I'm gonna send you to y'all. Y'all be on the lookout for dance like it's 92, man. Dropping this Friday, man. It's gonna be good.

SPEAKER_02

All right, all right, bruh.

SPEAKER_03

Talk to you later.

SPEAKER_02

I appreciate you, man. Take care.

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