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INDIE PUSHA PODCAST
Tasha Scott Indie Spotlight
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Lucky what out there. So yeah. So we're about to get started. You know, let you let you know we're gonna do our thing, you know, have fun with it, let people know what who don't already know about what you doing, what you got going on. So I'm gonna start off tonight on the indie spotlight. We welcome an incredible entertainer who's journey has touched television, film, theater, and music from starting in classic television shows like South Central Four House, quantum touring the national to tour internationally in the Wiz. She's built a legacy rooted on in resilience and artistic music. She worked alongside Icon, contributed to the major music project under Michael Jackson's MMJ label, and continues to evolve as a powerful voice in the RB and entertainment. So, ladies and gentlemen, I want y'all to show some love for the multi-talented singer, actress, actress, and performer Tasha Scott.
SPEAKER_02Hi guys.
SPEAKER_01So yeah, so that's how we do it. So everybody know what's up. So you know, you grew up, you know, in Louisville, you know, you was, you know you won your first talent show at the A-8. Your your family, you know, relocated to Hollywood to support your dreams, your first auditions and breaking into the entertainment and you know, adjusting to the life of Hollywood at a at a young age. So we're gonna we're gonna start off just talking about that, and then we're gonna just let you have the floor and you know, you know, do your thing.
SPEAKER_04Okay, well, kinda like as you said, uh coming from Kentucky, I started out singing in Kentucky with uh an eight-piece band. I got so big there in Kentucky, I I did a talent show, I was doing all the Chitlin circuits there, and I moved my I I basically told my mom that my success needed to go further and we needed to go to a bigger city. And so the bigger city basically was California. And when I got to California, everything I did in Kentucky, I ended up doing in LA, chitlit circuits, singing and all of that. And then I got on Star Search, and then from there, like everything just kind of like rolled and just went, just went, you know, I got an agent for television and commercials. I didn't know what that was, but I ended up learning very quickly what that meant to have an agent to be on television and commercials, and you know, all of that basically led to TV shows, films, and then it also led to the major record deal that I'd had with MJJ. So that was basically my first record deal. You couldn't get no better than Sony slash MJJ. So I did a full project there, and I waited all these years to just say it's been bacon and it's been bacon, and I think the world needs to hear this beautiful project that came from me, from the label, you know, come to find out, you know, everything belonged to me. So I was just like, you know, maybe this is the time to do it. So I wanted to take everybody back, you know, a little bit to give them that flow of the 90s, you know what I mean? That that good feel of that good RB. So I just kind of like revamped a little bit and I said, you know what, why not release this jewel, you know? So I kind of was playing the jewel to different people here and there. People knew it, but now they're really gonna kind of like grasp this and be like, oh wow, wow, yeah. So they get a chance to hear my creation from the label. Yeah.
SPEAKER_01So question, how did you how did you uh become a part of the label?
SPEAKER_04I was actually doing the TV show South Central, and as we basically rapped our last show, because we only had nine episodes, maybe ten episodes, and we did a rap party, and I met a guy by the name of John O'Cohan who introduced me to Jerry Greenberg, and I sang for Jerry Greenberg over at uh Sony slash MJJ. And from there it was it was basically history, you know. I basically told him the relationship that I had had with Michael prior to them actually, I guess, finding me, recognizing me, you know, and all of that. I'd had a relationship with Michael at the age of 14, 15, because I did some songs in this in his in stud his Encino studio home. So yeah. So it was just like kind of like a full circle. It was like, oh, we want to introduce you to Michael. So I told him the story about how I had met him when I was a, you know, a teenager. So he basically said, Yeah, I know Tasha, I love her, sign her. So yeah, I got signed to MJJ.
SPEAKER_01All right. So from what you can you can tell us from you being younger, what type of person was Michael?
SPEAKER_04Oh my God, he was absolutely amazing. So me being, me, when I first met him, I was 14, 15. So I didn't see him as the age that he was. He was maybe like in his 20s, 30s. I saw a big, big, big, big, fun, fun person, a big kid at heart. And it was just, it was just amazing. Everything everything was amazing about him. He was like hands-on on the project when I was at the Encino home. Like he was coming in every day, checking on me, making sure my vocals was good, making sure I was happy, making sure I was fed. He gave me some porners about don't let this industry stress you out, you know, just be who you are because you're amazing, you a superstar, you know, all of those things. And at like at a young age where I took it all in, you know what I mean? I was just like, wow, this is coming from the king of pop. You know, you can't get no better than this to get this kind of, you know, wisdom, you know, and knowledge from. So I just, I just took it. I just, I just ate it all up. And yeah. So amazing, amazing, amazing guy, you know. And during the whole process, you know, I was, you know, I was invited to spend the night at the home with Quincy Jones's two daughters. So I was like, I was living a dream, you know? Or a dream. So yeah, it was amazing.
SPEAKER_01So, like, uh, I know we uh it was is this it with the movie where he uh did his documentary. So I guess my question is, is he calm when he was doing his rehearsals, or was he like, I know he was serious-minded and he wanted it the way he wanted, but was he like also like that that fun guy, or was he just serious, like, hey, like, let's do it right and you don't do it right, then you know, we just I never was around any of his like creations. Okay.
SPEAKER_04So if I could say what he was doing with me as I was at the studio, I kind of felt like it was a part of him making a project. You understand what I'm saying? So it was like he was passionate about it. He wanted to make sure everything was right, you know, everything. So I say, I saw I saw the perfection in him, and he could see it in me. Because it was like something that I didn't like. I was like, oh, I don't like that. He's like, she's like, she don't like it. Let her do it again. So I saw the perfection in him, and I and I and I I kind of like I'd already had that, but it seemed like it just developed more. So he was just real cool, laid back, you know, just real fun, but serious, if that makes sense. Right. Just get it right. Get it right and make sure it's great, you know. No pressure, none of that. Yeah, yeah, it was great.
SPEAKER_01So let's talk about your uh your earlier career, you know, doing talent shows and how how important was it for your family to support you doing these endeavors?
SPEAKER_04Wow, so yeah, my first talent show was in Kentucky. They actually didn't want me to be on the talent show. And so, you know, I went home and I cried to my mom, and so she marched back up at the at the rec center, talking about, oh no, you guys gonna let my daughter sing. And always tell the story. She told the little fib that my uncle worked for Motown, but he he works for Motown, but he wired Motown, if that makes sense. So he's wired Motown. So she basically told the little white line, the little fib, and they got all excited about it and let me in on the talent show. So I won all across the board. And then from there, my mom had the conversation. You know, she was like, is this what you want to do? Do you want to be a singer? And I was like, Yeah, you know, I want to be on TV, I want to be solid goal, soul train, and all that. Because at the time, that's when all that's great. You know, so from there, it was like rehearsal, rehearsal, rehearsal. And I was singing with, I was singing to 45s, because we didn't have all this technology and all of that. So I was singing to records. So I started singing to records, and then I went on to get a band, and I did so much in Kentucky that, you know, it, it, it brought us all the way to California. Now, I could honestly say my biggest support was my mother, and my brothers couldn't do nothing but support, you know. And my my my grandmother from from my understanding and what I saw and what I felt, it was my mother, my brothers, and my grandmother. Now, if anybody else was supporting, I never saw it.
SPEAKER_01Gotcha. So, uh, well, pretty much what were some of the lessons you learned while entering the Hollywood as as a youth.
SPEAKER_04As a youth?
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_04Oh, uh basically, stay focused. Don't don't hang out with the riff raff. Because if you hang out, I I felt like this. Basically, my mama said, if you hang out with the riff raff, it won't take you far.
SPEAKER_01Yeah.
SPEAKER_04So don't hang out with the riff raff. If this is, if you're serious about it, stay focused, stay prayed up, and you'll go far. Stay humble. So that's what I did. I stayed humble through it all. I wasn't, I'm never, never, never, never a hard person to work with, but I do have my perfection side about it. So it's like give and take, you know, give and take, but never hard to work with, very understanding. So I just said, I just say I stayed focused and I stood my ground. And that was it. Even, even as I went on to be a teenager and a young adult, you know, having a life, I just stayed focused on my career because that was my passion, you know. So yeah, stay focused.
SPEAKER_01So you you had some roles on Amen, 227, Full House, Quantum League, and Under One Roof. And you also worked with Whoopi, Gober, and Kifsha. How did these roles help you shape your confidence?
SPEAKER_04Wow, because uh because I was I was very shy. I was very, very, shy, very, very shy. You would never know it by my work and everything. I was very, very, very shy. My mom just really showed me that tough skin, you know? Because she would tell me what she thought they would say, like people would say, you know. So she would come at me like that, and I would have to keep that straight face, and you know, and I was just like, you know what? That's that tough love, you know? So I kept a straight face, and like I said, I always knew don't be, don't be that one that they say she's hard to work with. You know, and your humbleness and your willingness and your talent, my mom said it would take you far. So yeah. So that that that really shaped me, and I would watch and learn and look at other people, and I say, you know, I'll take a little bit of that and a little bit of that, but I'm always, I I felt like I was always 10 to 20 steps ahead of myself.
SPEAKER_01Gotcha.
SPEAKER_04You see what I'm saying? So it was like, I'm not gonna take too much from this person and that person because I just knew that I was so creative on my own, you know?
SPEAKER_01So uh, like just like put it in perspective of what you've been doing in uh in your earlier time. What keeps you humble? Because a lot of people that, you know, work with the people who you work with and did some of the things you did, you know, think they're they're above and beyond. So what keeps you stable and not to to know that like you still have more work to do and not feel like you have just arrived?
SPEAKER_04What keeps me humble is to know that it was a gift from above. It was a gift from God. And from me, my mom always told me, if you if first of all, if you don't use it, he'll take it. But then I ended up finding out it's not that he'll take it. He'll just kind of like set it down for a minute until you're ready to surface it back up. So what kept me humble was the prayers of my mom, how she taught me how to pray. And then as I got older, I knew that prayer works, and then I knew how to ground myself by meditating, you know, quieting my mind, instilling my body and pray and all things give thanks, and all things ask. So ask the creator up above, which is my father in heaven. And so when I ask with a sincere heart, so my heart is always good, my heart is always sincere. So that's where I am rooted in that. So before I do anything, that's what I do. I go to my father and I ask, if it's for me, then let it be. If it's not, then let it be.
SPEAKER_01Okay. Uh, so we're gonna talk about also, like, because you you've also like you've done a lot. What is your support system to like like other people that you work with? Do? Are they supportive of what you're doing? Or are they kind of like, you know, wish it was them?
SPEAKER_04Do you mean by family or just people around me in general?
SPEAKER_01People that's around you in general.
SPEAKER_04Uh, people around me in general, I okay, if I can be 100% and 100% honest, those people have basically all have since have passed on. My team is my team that was my support, support, support is no longer here. So I had to step back, regain myself, and re find. So now I'm refining. So right now I've found a good person in Carver Cafe. All these years, this person came and said, I see you, I see the star in you. What can I do? So right now I have so I have okay, I have support. And everything is basically keep going, T, keep grinding. I believe in you, I this, but I was also getting because everything has changed, you gotta do it yourself. You gotta this, you gotta that. And at first I didn't understand what that meant till I understood what it meant. You know what I mean? So I'll do some footwork because I know the game, I know what it takes, and then those that see they'll come, they'll gravitate. But now I can see if it's the right people that I need in my circle and in my team. So right now, the one person that is helping me now is Carver as far as my music. And then I do have a uh a young lady by the name of Simply. She does like some of my acting stuff. She gets me on Comic-Cons and she answers phones for different people that want me to do different things. So my circle is really not big because now I have kind of like figured out how to do it on my own and how to look and search for the right people. But like I said, I do have the support, the rah-rah, you know, but like the support, support that's saying, I'm gonna sit and I'm gonna type and I'm gonna do and I'm gonna call. You know what I mean? So right now, if I could just really, really, really be honest and say that that support right now is Carver and simply. And of course I know it will grow because it it just will. Because once you start climbing the ladder, there will be people that wanna come and help. And I'm so thankful that I have rooted in me. I have the eyes to see and the ears to know.
SPEAKER_01I like that. I'm a I'm a shout out, I'm a shout- uh car rider as well, good people. You don't meet a lot of people in this industry that wants to help or support you or see you grow. A lot of people are like, if you growing I may, because I ain't growing, but he like, hey, if if if I know somebody or if it's somebody that needs assistance, hey look, I got this person. And I like even for him to even give me the honor to interview you was to me a privilege, and you know, because he didn't have to. He could have just but like he could have walked somebody else. So for me, like I I appreciate it. I'm thankful, I'm glad that, you know, we had a point that even everybody's elevating and realigning and you know, I I believe that everything happened for a reason. So just have situations like this and you know, you you my my my thing is take advantage of 'em, appreciate them, you know, just embrace embrace everything that that goes on from this point because you never know. So you just treat it like it's your last and this before.
SPEAKER_04Absolutely. Absolutely. And if I could just say I've been in it, I've done things, it's not over till it's over, but at this point, I'm not chasing, I'm not running after the fame and the money and all that. Because it's just like now it it is it is what it is, you know what I mean? And the doors will open. The right now it's like the right doors will open because the resume is there. People know the work and all of that, you know what I mean? So it's like, it's not like I'm I'm chasing and I'm hungry for anything anymore, you know, like that. So yeah.
SPEAKER_01So so what you're saying is, so what has been the major transition from you acting and going into the music?
SPEAKER_04Well, music was my first love, and it still is my first love. Like I said, when I came from Kentucky, that's what I was doing. I was singing. And then I came to Los Angeles and I was singing, and then I got the agent, and then the agent, it was like, it was, it was basically, she was sending me out for television and movies and stuff, and I was like, mom, where's the where's the music? Where's the music? Where's the music? So it was only a few things that I did that didn't allow me to sing, but then after I kind of like got in the door, and they realized, oh my God, she's an excellent singer. So everything that I did basically, if you can really look at it, was singing, dancing, and acting. So it all basically came together. So, but my my heart and my passion is still my music. And people, I don't want to say they downplay it, but they like, oh, she's an actress, she's an actress, she's an actress, she's an actress. And they really don't see me as the singer because that's what I was doing. That's that was my first love. That's where my foot was, that was where my passion was. And then all of a sudden it just they consider me as an actress. And I'm like, okay, I'll take it.
SPEAKER_02Right.
SPEAKER_04Yeah.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, because uh the the the reason I asked because I know like sometimes when when people try to cross over, they they're so used to seeing that person act, or they're so they're so used to seeing them in one space that when you get into that other space, they're like, hey, is this is this the character that was the actor?
SPEAKER_02Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_01Not the singer, but you know, so it's like I like to ask the question because it's like, you know, I I know it's it's like, oh yeah, we we know you act, but you know, then when they hear you sing, like, oh, you can sing something. Oh, oh, oh, yeah, yeah, yeah. So we now we want to take you more seriously in the roles that you that you that you do. So just wanted to know how how that's that is perceived by you trying to try you know different things or going back to what you you know he was comfortable with. So Yeah.
SPEAKER_04So I don't I don't think I have a a hard time transitioning through them both. I I don't, you know, because really that's how it basically was set up and it was presented that way. So you only have a few that came up, you know, uh when I was coming up that could that could do it, you know, like you could you can really, really, really see it. So I think that was that that was that blessing in disguise where it was like, yo, she can, she, she's the real deal, you know. So that's why they used to, you know, what they still say it, you know, here and there, you know, yo, yo, she's a triple threat. She's a triple threat. Yo, she she she she can do it all, you know? So yeah, it it's an easy transition for me to, you know, jump back and forth. Yeah.
SPEAKER_01So for for the indie or mainstream person that's out here who that's that might feel like they're struggling trying to make it in the industry, even doing any any facts that's acting, dancing, singing, what advice would you give them? Maybe the ones that might be the scurs or the ones that's like Trying to make leeway, but you know, things are not happening the way I want.
SPEAKER_04Right. Well, first and foremost, if you believe in yourself, then keep going. There are steps to believing in yourself, and what and what I mean by that is you got to practice hard work dedication. You got to practice your craft, perfect your craft. Don't be too hard on yourself, you know, but make sure it's right. And have someone in your corner that's gonna tell you the whole truth and nothing but the truth. You see what I'm saying? You don't want people around you just because they see the fame and they see the money and I don't know. You want somebody that's gonna tell you the whole truth and nothing but the truth. And then all I can say is keep grinding. I mean, keep keep grinding, especially if you're young, keep grinding, keep going, and learn, learn, learn, learn the business. Learn, ask a lot of questions. If it don't feel right in your center, walk away from it. Well, just walk away from it because if it's for you, you'll be at the right place at the right time. My mom used to tell me that all the time. T, you'll be at the right place at the right time. Watch. And it it as I look at my career, I was always at the right place at the right time.
SPEAKER_02Right.
SPEAKER_04So, so stay at it, keep at it, don't get discouraged, and first and foremost, keep your faith and your prayer life, your spiritual life so strong. I don't care what that looks like, keep it strong and keep it with you and don't waver and just take it on. Just go head in.
SPEAKER_01I like that. Because you you have a an exceptional resume. You've you've worked with a lot. You toured, you know, Nashley with Dorothy and the West, you shared stages with Grace Jones, Peebo Bryce and Cece Pennison, and Tony Turr. How was it to actually work with those artists? Because I know a lot of people out here would have been like, they're like, man, I'm like, she's like, she was lucky to have those opportunities. Like, but how was it for you in your perspective of working with them and and what did they teach you?
SPEAKER_05So me, I was I I was a young boy.
SPEAKER_04I was like, I was like 23, 20, 20, 23, 24. So playing this major role, you know, and people was amazing. I was a fan, you know, because I I'm young, you know, I was a fan. I was like, oh my God, I'm working with with one of the greys. This man is amazing. Great, great, great, great. I I I feel like, you know, being that young, they're like, let's test her, you know. So everything was a everything was a test. Let's see how she can, you know, uphold. I passed all the tests. I just put it like that. They was like, you're the real deal, mommy. Grace Jones, she she dug me as as a diva.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, because she got real big energy.
SPEAKER_05So like she got real big energy, right?
SPEAKER_01So I'm not sure.
SPEAKER_04Yeah, so I was like, oh my God. She she she brought me into her room, and she was like, I just want to let you know, you are absolutely amazing the way you carry yourself at such a young age. She was like, I just want to just dub you as like diva. I was like, whoa, I'ma I'ma and and and I don't I don't carry that around, but I just know that I got I got that from an iconic woman. Like, she dubbed me as a diva at 20, 23, you know? Like, whoa.
SPEAKER_01So when you hear that though, what what what was your feeling?
SPEAKER_04I I I was humbled. I was just so humbled by it, you know, and that's and that's what amazed them. Like, she's like, she's so humble. Like she smiles, she's she talks to everybody, she gives great interviews, she just takes it all in. Whether it was bad reviews or good reviews, it was just like it was what it was, you know, and she was like, You better than me, basically. You know, Tony just absolutely loved me. Tony Terry, he just absolutely just thought I was adorable and amazing. Cece was like, my little sister. Like, she took me under her wings too during that whole time. She played Glinda, and she was like, I got you, baby, I got you. Funny story, we was at the top of the staging, and Grace almost fell. And it was like I grabbed her hand. It was like I grabbed her hand and I pulled her back. And she looked at me as if to say, Whoa, you amazing. You said my life.
SPEAKER_01Uh-huh. You ain't gotta worry about nothing else for life.
SPEAKER_04I gotta worry about nothing. So yeah, it it's just, you know, everybody that I've met, you know, I was just, they just like, man, she's a sweetheart, she's humble, she's a star. Like she, she's a star. And then when I heard that from Michael at a young age, I was like, I I really, really carried it. Because I heard it from my mom, and you know, and everybody in in in your neighborhood, but when I heard it from somebody like that, I was just like, and then others that are great, I'm like, yo, I really, really got something in within me, you know? So yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_01So like, like, yeah, because you you've you've you've done a lot. What did connect into uh MMJ label mean for your career?
SPEAKER_04Oh my God, that was that was the that was the icing on the cake. Because that was the whole reason moving from Kentucky was to be a recording artist. So when I got signed at about, like I want to say 23, 24, when I got signed, that was the icing on the cake. It was it was prophesied to my my mom, you know, she she prophesied it to me. She said, when we get to LA, if Michael Jackson ever gets a record label, you're going to be signed. You're going to be one of his artists under that to be signed. Sure enough, I got signed. And that album took every bit, maybe a year to do. And then it was just like, I was, I was on there with 3T, Reeby Jackson, MetaVision, Brownstones. And it was another guy, I can't think of the guy, his name, Lil Young Guy, and then me. And it was just like, yo, I'm on one of the biggest, biggest labels, really. Everybody was trying to get on that label. So yeah, so once, once people knew it was Tasha Scott from the TV show 5th Century, she's signed the MJ Gay. Everybody's trying to get on the project. Everybody almost got a chance to work with Dark Child. I mean, just every, everybody. I was just like, everybody was coming. I got a chance to do a song with Minavision, Joyride. Yeah, I was, and at that time, I didn't know half of these producers. And they were all up and coming producers. And then I met this guy by the name of Billy Moss. He came in. He was like, yo, I see your whole album. I see the whole theme. I see the whole this. And at that time, I'm feeling myself. You know, I'm done. I'm feeling myself. I was like, yeah, I like this. I like this. My mama wasn't really hearing it. She wanted me to be big and, you know, boisters and all that. I was like, Mom, all of that come, all of that come. Let's just get in there. Let's just get in the door, you know. She was, she loved the album, but she was just like, yeah, Bennett, you know, you know, because she she wanted me to come straight out the gate. You know. But it was, it, it, I said, Mom, it, it, it will all come, you know, to us to the full circle of where it needs to come to. So, you know, I I was on the label. By the time I was about to go into my second year, a lot of stuff had happened, you know, you know, as the world knows, I didn't know anything about what was really going on. Because from my perspective, he was everything to me. He was everything. I I never experienced anything, no bad, nothing on my behalf. I what I I saw a genuine good man, a good person, a loving person. He loved kids. Oh, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes. I I I could tell that when I was young, just being around it. It was safe. It it just felt safe. You understand what I'm saying? So the project got done, and of course, as I was about to be released, that's kind of like when everything kind of folded. It broke my heart and everything. So it was what it was, you know what I mean? So I just still went on to pursue my career and everything, and then I listened to the music all the time because it's timeless. This album was definitely, definitely timeless because I worked with some timeless producers and writers, you know. Troy Taylor, I worked with Troy Taylor, I worked with Dallas, I well, I didn't per se work with Dallas Austin, but I have a Dallas Austin track, you know. And back then, these people were amazing. And they can't they went on to be amazing, you know? So I sat on it all these years, and then one day I was just listening and I called Carver. I said, Carver, I think I'm ready. Like, I think I'm ready to release this. And he was like, Okay. So I was like, no, he picked a song. He picked right here, right now, and he sent it to me, and he said, What do you think? And I said, I said, let me go sit in my car. I said, let me go click in my car where the sounds is better because I didn't have my studio set up. I sat there in the car and it it stopped. And I was I was silent. I was silent. And then I was like, Carver, this is amazing. This is amazing. I said, I think it's time to release this. This this whole full complete. I mean, it's time for the world to hear this jewel. And it's time for them to hear my story. And then that's when we came up with basically a story of me at that age. Everything that I was going through, what I was feeling, my love, my heartbreak, you know, all of that. I was like, it's time for people to actually hear that, especially my generation. They're really gonna really appreciate the music because the music is timeless. Yeah. So I was just, I was just like, you know what, Carver, let's just do it. And I told him, I said, it is what it is. If it does what it's, if it does something, it does something. If it don't, I just I just felt like I want the world to hear my music. I always felt like I want the world to hear my voice. My voice, you know. So whatever comes with it, let it come. You know, if if producers come, yeah, let's go. Let's do it. Let's do it. Because I just feel like timing is right for me right now. And I know I've been saying it for many years, time in, time in, time in, time. But I really feel like now timing is right because I done been through some things in my life to say that now timing is right for me. Like I said, I'm not chasing anything, I'm not hungry for anything. I'm just like, let's just put some good music out so people can hear me. You know, you know, so that's just that's the way I looked at it. And so when he sent that song to me and I heard it, I was like, yeah.
SPEAKER_02Bam, that's a good day.
SPEAKER_04I was like, that's it, that's it. I'm almost like, I'm I'm almost like I love the, I love the the the the the the rawness of the the versions that that that has been recorded, you know. But I'm like, we might have to do Yeah, yeah. And revamp everything, like revamp everything, you know what I mean? Give that to them and then say, hey, we gonna come back with the remix of all of them, like boom, boom, boom, here you go, you know, because it's timeless. It's timeless music.
SPEAKER_01Yeah. You know, because we need we need some some it's a lot of good RB out here, but we need some. I'm I'm I'm a I'm an 80s baby, so I'm used to the old good old RB, you know, listen to it. You know, I still it's on my playlist now. From Michael Jackson, Chris, you know, uh uh Gerald Bill Perry, Luke, uh, uh all of them, you know, and that's uh I mean, you know, Johnny Gill, all of them and and that's what I listen to.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_01And I tell people like, we need to bring back some of this, these, these old, like, not these covers, but feel into some new flavor. And so So I'm looking forward to when you when this album drops.
SPEAKER_04And I say this. I I say I didn't mean to cut you off, but I say this. I say this to the to the major artists that are out there now. Don't be afraid to go back. Don't be afraid to go back and bring that sound back. I know we're moving on, but don't be afraid to go back and bring that sound back. Because there are people like us who still want to hear it. You know, like they say, you know, RB is dead. No, no, no, no, it's not. It's not dead because we can still go back and listen to Michael. We can go back and listen to Elvis, we can go back and listen to all those greats, and it feels good. So don't be afraid. I'm saying this to the major, major artists. And I know they probably already think it about it. Don't be afraid to go back. Don't be afraid to go back and just do that music and just present it to the world. We want to hear it. We want to hear it. And like I said, my kids love that album. My kids are listening to Frank Sinatra and they're going back and listening to Anita Baker. And I'm like, so don't be afraid and don't chastise yourself or ourselves so hard to say it's outdated, it's old. No, no, no, no, it's not.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, because I I talk to my daughter sometimes and she had her AirPod blast, and I'm like, what you listen to? She's like so-and-so, so-and-so. So I said, like, what do you actually listen to? She's like 80s, 90s, early 2000s. She might, she hit me with, she's 13, so she hit me with some 14s, and she hit me with some back in the 70s. I was like, oh, I said, okay. I said, you don't like you don't like what you listen to now? She's like, nah, she's not like that, that old fail. And I was like, I said, I was like, yeah. I said I grew up in a house, so my my daddy is uh 70, 80, 73. Oh yeah, every every day, Alexander O'Neill, Atlantic Star, Stephanie Deals, fellas high and everybody. Yeah, he would he would like people be like, how you know these songs? I was like, I grew up with my parents in the 80s, so you know, we wouldn't go down back in the day to the Wiz. Albums was about ten dollars. He was getting like 50 albums at it, you know what I'm saying? And he would uh he was so good at what he did that he was making tapes. I said, I said, what you doing? He's like, Yeah, I'm recording tapes from my friends. They want to catalog. And he was like, Yeah, man, he said, Yeah, I just I just be down here recording and and all that. I was like, man, so like I love I love just the old the old feel.
SPEAKER_04Uh, you know, yeah, the aesthetics of the old field is just it's just amazing. And and if you had a jukebox, Baba had a jukebox.
SPEAKER_01Nah, nah, nah, they didn't have no jukebox, so they uh, you know, we we we didn't have that. We just had the we you know, we just had the albums, you know, we had the the old back in the day sound system where the dial was doing like this when it, you know, start, when it go up, you know, you'll you know, hit the hit hit that level with this doing that little shaking thing, but like, you know, even now going into the store seeing albums now was crazy, like $30, $40. I'm like, right? Albums like $10 a pop, and they had the little the little ones, and you know, then you had to flip it over to the B. $45.
SPEAKER_05$45.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, the $45, just flip it over to the B side. And listen, I was like, I said, yeah, he said, you know, but I enjoy that that type of feel because like it's funny when you talk to like the the I'm gonna call it the Elder Council, and they like they they pull something out and they like, oh, you know, you know the song, like, yeah, that's it. Like, you know, like I had some I had some elder councils threw some songs out, and I was in there, I was I was, you know, singing a couple of them with them. And they was like, oh, you know, how you know that song said my dad's 73 years old.
SPEAKER_02Yeah.
SPEAKER_01Like, he that's what that's all we listened to in the 80s, 80s and 90s. Yeah. So I I So that's that's all I I I knew. So like I even laugh now because a lot of these artists, young artists now, are going back sampling songs.
SPEAKER_05There you go. See what I'm saying?
SPEAKER_01So I'm like, yeah. So I'm like, okay, so y'all, y'all, y'all try to play like y'all don't like the music, but y'all, y'all listening to it.
SPEAKER_04Y'all listen to it. Y'all listen to it. So it's not, it's not dead per se. You know what I mean? It's not. And yes, things will evolve, and that's great. And but sometimes, you know, you just gotta, you just gotta, you gotta stay where it feels good. And that's what I saw my mom do, you know. She stayed where her era, where she grew up, she stayed in that, and that felt good to her. So as things were moving along, she kind of questioned the music, but then she saw how it kind of stayed right there where it felt good. Then when my mom started saying, oh, that hippity hoppily, I don't know what I don't know what that is. And then I'm like, mom, you don't know, you don't know, you don't know. Then you kind of like had to put them up on game. But then now, now I see what she means by that hippity, hoppy, I don't.
SPEAKER_02Yeah, yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_04Like I don't want to hear that. I'm sorry. It ain't, it ain't, it ain't fueling me. It ain't making me feel something. When they say, giving me something, then you can feel it ain't giving me that. It ain't giving you that. It ain't giving you that.
SPEAKER_01So, like, so I'm gonna pick it. So, like, you because I know like we we talked about the kids, and so how does it feel when you hear your kids like, have they heard your heard your your EP or your single?
SPEAKER_04Oh, they've heard all my music. My oldest one, she was hands-on on the album. She was she was hands-on. She was in the studio every day, all day, even on the the the TV set, because I I mean, I had her when I was 19. So she was she was on my hip. I was that, I was that mom back in the day. I didn't hide my baby. My baby was on my hip. My baby was in the studio with me. So she knows this album. She grew up with it, you know. So when they hear it, they're like, well, Tajanae and Jamariana, they knew, because they grew up. Now, my young ones, they didn't really catch it until maybe a few years ago. Like, you know, like, oh, wow, that's mom, that's her music. Because by this time I was all out there doing me, and their friends are celebrity kids, you know, celebrity kids. Their mom and dads are big people. And so they're like, don't you know who your mom is? You know, look, your mama size is that this is. So they're like, let me go do my homework on my mama. So now they're like, well, okay, because my son, right now, he's the only one that still has the album on his on his phone. My girls, they lost it. So now they hit me up. Mom, send me the album, send me the album, send me the album.
SPEAKER_01So how do you feel like with your kids like listening to your music and like, wow, this is my mother, and like, like you really put out an awesome, uh, amazing music. How does that make you feel inside? No matter if if the critics out here think whatever, but like long as your kids like they feel in what you're doing.
SPEAKER_04Long as they like it, it it means everything to me because they were, they were, they saw the blood, sweat, and tears, you know, especially Tajanay and Jamariana. Amir and Malaya, they saw nothing. They they saw nothing as far as me being on TV, sets, and all that. Like I said, they got all the internet work of it all. Okay. You know, so it does make me feel good and they don't lie to me, you know. Every now and then I'll do something, they'll be like, well, that's a little dated. I'm like, well, what you mean it's dated? That's that's who I am. That's who I am. I said, I'm not really trying to uh appeal, you know, to a certain type of audience, but now that everybody's going back looking at things, they're gravitating to me. You see what I'm saying? They're and and that's that's good. That they're they're gravitating to me. And then when they say, she is white, oh my God, she looks nothing like this, and she's da-da-da-da-da. She's got all this energy, da da da da da da. So that makes me feel good, you know? Like I can roll around with my kids today. Like they like, Ma, you wanna hang out in there? I'm like, oh no, come on, mom, come on, come on, because they want, they want my energy, they want my presence, you know? So yeah, that that really It really, really makes me feel good that they don't put me behind the scenes. You know, you know, I'm not that, I'm not that mom. I'm the cool mom. Like, no, no, no, no. My mom can come. Oh, yeah, yeah, she good, she good. You know, yeah. So it makes me feel real good. You know, like I said, my my whole family was is musically inclined, actors, dancers, writers, and producers. My house never, never stopped. When my kids was young, it never stopped. It was music going, somebody was doing something. And it was never like a competitional thing. Everybody knew when they were supposed to jump in and do their part.
SPEAKER_05Yeah. Yeah, it was live. It was live.
SPEAKER_01I like it. I liked it. Uh yeah. Back back, you know, back in those days, you know, we, you know, parents that just turn on the music, you had a good time. Uh I miss those days. Yeah, I miss those days too.
unknownI think that's the thing.
SPEAKER_01We'd be in there singing, you know, sometimes, you know, might be my my cousin, we might be in there dancing, because, you know, back then they want to, you know, the older, older older my grandparents was like, hey, my song came on. Might be the whispers. Come on. Stylistic or something. Hey, I want y'all to stand up and do do the mood. We like, what? No, the move? Well, I don't care. Y'all just gonna do the moves and and and sing with the song.
SPEAKER_04We like, uh I applaud, I applaud the parents that still keep that going in their home.
SPEAKER_02Yeah.
SPEAKER_04For their children. I I I really do. I applaud them for that, you know. So that's why I said it's never lost. You know, it's it's never lost. You just gotta just just keep it going, just keep it going no matter what. So I applaud those parents that keep that going in their home. Yeah.
SPEAKER_01So we're gonna talk about how did like, you know, Whitney Houston, Anita Baker, Luther, and Mary J, how did they influence you going forward?
SPEAKER_04Well, my mom called me the young Luther Vandral. So, because that's that's all she what what when I was growing up singing, she said I had this thing, like I had this female like Luther thing going on, you know, and so I was very, very drawn to his music. I ended up meeting him years later in California. And this is how I know that I had that it thing because I was around all of these greats. You know, I was in these people's home, like they welcomed me in their home because they saw that star in me. You know, they're like, oh no, she she has it, and she's gonna be. I was like, like Michael. Like, he ha he has it. She's one of these jewels, she has it. So she can mingle, we can teach her and she can learn all of these things, you know. Anita Baker, amazing, amazing, feel-good, soulful, everything, all everything that I am, everything that I truly, truly am. That's what I grew up listening to and mimicking a little bit, you know, down to. Oh, I'm sorry. Can you still see me?
SPEAKER_00Yeah, I see you.
SPEAKER_04Okay, sorry about that. That's my son. Uh-oh. I'm so sorry. Okay, there we go. That's my son calling me. Sunset. Sunside. So, Anita Baker, uh, amazing, amazing, feel good, soulful, to Patty LaBelle. I was matching uh vocals with Patty LaBelle at nine and ten. I'm matching vocals. And at the time I was hitting these high C's, and she's looking at me like, whoa, this kid. You know? So then on to Natalie Cole. Like, I'm meeting all these greats to the whispers, the Commodore. So I was very, very much so influenced by all of them. And that's where my feel was, that I was my soul that I had, because they used to call me Little Miss Soul Tach, because I had that soul, and I used to sing with an eight-piece band all the way till I was 21. So they all influenced me. I sat back and I studied and I listened. You know, I could, I could direct the band and all of that, you know. It was just, it was just amazing. So I got all of that from a lot of those great people. So they really, really did influence me on, you know, knowing how to be a star and a performer and be a celebrity, you know? So yeah, I I think all of those amazing people that came before me. I I really do, because I am the person that I am today, because just studying them, you know.
SPEAKER_01So how do you stay, let's talk about longevity. What are your like future goals in in the entertainment industry?
SPEAKER_05Well, my future goals is to be basically keep making good music.
SPEAKER_04And anytime I have the opportunity to work with somebody, I just want to make sure that I'm working with somebody that sees longevity, that talks the language of longevity, not overnight, not I just want to put some money in my pocket, because I'm about making history. So I I listen to that and I always say you're never too old until you're gone. You can always still create something and do something. There were so many great people that came before me, before, before, before, you know, if you know anything about the Bible, you know about Sarah and Abraham. They had a home baby and they was in their hundreds. Right. You know, you know about Carl Sanders. So you're never too old to stop being great and stop creating. You know, it's okay to take a break. I've taken a many of breaks. But if it's in you, it's in your blood, keep going. So it's in me. It's in my blood. This is what I know. I I basically eat, sleep, and breathe this. Even when I'm on my downtime. Like if I'm watching something, I'm always being creative. I'm being creative, you know? So yeah, that keeps me going on to know that I have the longevity blood in me. So keep going. When you when you keep going and you keep at it, you know you got the longevity blood in you. Like people do it and then they fall off.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, true. So what what legacy do you want to leave behind?
SPEAKER_04Wow. Just uh just to I want pe I want to continue, continually be pillow talk. And she was great, she's amazing. She she stayed humble, she stayed true to who she was and who she is. So I want people to really just see my heart. See my heart, give my heart, and you know, it's a gift, and I gotta share it. So I want to share the gift, I want to continue to share the gift till I can't share it anymore. So that's the legacy I wanted people to know like she was an amazing, she did an amazing job and she kept her head above water, you know. So I don't know what may happen in the future, but I do know that I still have to tread lightly. Always tread lightly, always be looking out for those that are that'll come. But if you know, you know, stay focused, keep going. So I just want people to just understand that he's legend. And they're saying they're saying it now, and I'm I'm so humbled by it. Like I'm I'm I'm and I'm not I'm not the biggest of the biggest star. But people are calling me a legend. You don't you you don't use those words just to just to use those words. But people are calling me a legend, you know, and I didn't get I feel like I didn't get a chance to get to that point where I dreamed or I thought, but it's not over until it's over. And if they're calling me a legend now, I feel like there's something ahead of me that I gotta keep going for.
SPEAKER_00That's that's deep. Say that again. So so they can.
SPEAKER_04If they're calling me a legend, then I gotta keep going because there's something in front of me that I gotta get to.
SPEAKER_01I like that that's deep. I like that. What would you tell your younger self? Like, what advice would you give your younger self as an artist and an actress?
SPEAKER_03Woo! My younger self.
SPEAKER_05Girl, girl. First of all, I okay.
SPEAKER_04I love, I love my first child. I do, I do, I do. I love her to death. But I would have waited. I would have waited, I would have listened to my mom and not hit her and stayed focused. I was still focused, but I became more focused on raising the child. You understand what I'm saying? So I would've I would have said wait and kept the ball rolling a little longer. You understand what I'm saying? This is not, this is not like, oh, you see, she's upset that she had a kid. No, no, no, no, no, no, no. I'll let her look rubber. But I would have, I would have waited and stayed a little bit more focused because I believe right at that time, I was going into my prime. I was really, really in my prime. I was booking everything. I was booking back, back, back to back, back to I was booking. Pregnant and all. Nobody knew, but I was I was in my prime. And after she was born, I I went I went harder. You see what I'm saying? I just went harder. That's why I was that's why I could say alian 227, West Thrive Star, Start, what's free to do? I can just go down the list because I went harder. And to say to my younger self, good job. You, you, you, you, you, you did good. You you you did everything that your mama told you. You did everything that the grades told you to do. You did good. I don't, I don't, I wouldn't backtrack anything. You did good. You did good. And now today, you need to be a little bit more meaner. You need to be a little more stern. You need to be.
SPEAKER_05I'm good. I'm good. Yeah.
SPEAKER_01So what what can we what can the fans and your supporters expect from you coming up?
SPEAKER_04Well, they could expect the the the the single will be out in a couple more days. What's today? 11th, the 13th.
SPEAKER_01You got two, you got one more day.
SPEAKER_04Yeah, yeah. It's gonna be amazing. I've like I said, there are some that have heard it, but they haven't heard the remix. I did kind of play the remix yesterday. I was I was on the internet for about uh 45 minutes and I played it all the way through. There was a few people that popped in that was like, oh my God, it's amazing, it's amazing, it's amazing. So looking forward to the single, looking forward to the completed Jewel. I'm I'm gonna I'm gonna call it the Jewel, you know, even though the title is her story because I'm gonna take them back. I'm so excited about taking everybody back so that they can hear the young Tasha Scott to see where I was, you know, because everybody's like, where she been, what she do, what she sound like, da-da-da. Nobody has ever really, really, really, really heard, heard, heard the project that came there from MJJ. So I'm excited that they're about to hear this project, this jewel, my story of a young girl, like I said, my ups and my downs. I'm so excited that they're uh actually about to hear at least 15 songs, not an EP. And it's gonna, it's actually gonna take them a lot of different places. It's very colorful. I don't know if you heard it already, but it's very, very colorful. You got, you got, you got the South Central girl, which I call Tink, you got her, you got Moon Child, you know, you got her, you got Tasha Scott, you know, you got you got all these amazing personalities, but you can tell it's the same person, you know. So yeah. And the crazy thing about it was when I was in this when I was going in the studio, the producers didn't know who they were going to get that day.
SPEAKER_01So my question is how many I got today?
SPEAKER_03Uh you got two.
SPEAKER_01All right.
SPEAKER_03Uh so do you uh who do you want, darling? Do you want Stella?
SPEAKER_01Oh, this this number three?
SPEAKER_03Yeah, this is number three there, love. Oh, okay. Hey, hey, what's up? What's up with you? Her name is her name is Stella.
SPEAKER_01Hey, what's up, Stella?
SPEAKER_03Oh, nothing, darling. How are you?
SPEAKER_01I'm I'm doing I'm doing groovy today.
SPEAKER_03All right, I'm just I'm having a lovely time with you right now. Uh you're absolutely amazing there, darling.
SPEAKER_01Hey, hey, you you you you you hey oh you got it. You you you funny. This this has been one of the one of the funniest ones I I've I've actually enjoyed.
SPEAKER_03Did I stop you in your tracks?
SPEAKER_01Nah, you nah, you ain't stopping me in my tracks now. Nah. All right then. Are you sure? Oh, I'm I'm positive.
SPEAKER_04All right now then. Don't let me put the magic on you. So that's that's that's that's that's me. You know, um I love to have fun. I love to be myself. This is me. You know, when they say that saying crazy, sexy cool, yeah.
SPEAKER_02That's it.
SPEAKER_04Yeah. A ball of energy, you know, love, peace, harmony, crazy, sexy cool, you know. Yeah, that's me. Yeah.
SPEAKER_01All right. So uh as we come to a close, you know what I'm saying? So we you yeah, this is your this is your floor to do your shout outs. You know, you got your your upcoming music that you got coming out uh to talk about that. Where can your fans and supporters, where can they find you at? And uh we're just gonna let you add a floor.
SPEAKER_04Yes, they can find me on Instagram at Tasha Scott, aka Tink. They can find me on Facebook at Tasha Scott fanpage, believe TikTok. I'm not really on there as much, but I have TikTok. It's just Tasha Scott all across the board. Those are basically the only three I have: Instagram, Facebook, and TikTok. I don't really have any I have Beagle, but I don't really go on there like I used to. And really when I'm on there, I'm just really, really, really just chilling and relaxing. You know, really. I'm just I play my because I can play all kind of music over there.
SPEAKER_02Right.
SPEAKER_04Yeah, but uh those are the three. And if you can't find it, and if I'm saying them wrong, maybe Google me, as TM until it says, and everything will pop up. You know, and as that is, that's that's that's how you can find me. Like I said, my shout-outs, my shout-outs first and foremost, first and foremost, my first shout-out is to my my father God in heaven uh for everything that he has blessed me with and what he's continuing to do in my life on this journey as I give this message across where wherever it's going to come across. You know, I give a big, big, big, big, big, big, big shout out to him because if it wasn't for him, I wouldn't be who I am today. I give a big, big, big, big, big, big, big shout-out to my mom. May she rest in peace because that was my number one, number one all-time fan and the whole team, even though they are gone and resting in heaven. But I do believe that the spiritual is still working with me and behind me and pushing me. So I give a shout out to them. I give a shout out to my family for just sticking in there with me. My kiddos, you know, when they knew and they didn't know, and it it was what it was. They had a wonderful life and they still continue gonna have a great life. They're very, very, very, very talented. I give a shout out to Mr. Carver Kathy for believing in me and just saying, hey, I got you, and I I want to see you do this. I give a shout out to everybody that basically has had anything to do with my career. A godmother, you know, some of these people like are still like, yo, T. You are just amazing. And then, of course, my crazy, crazy, crazy, crazy Moon Chow fans. I give a shout out to y'all. I give a shout out to y'all because everybody, they already know you are listening to the Lovey Sounds of Tasha Scott, aka Moon Chow here at Moon Chow's Recording Studios, where it always goes down. The music is always right, it's always live. If the girl misses the beat, you'll never know. She just keeps rolling. So I give a shout-out to my fans and all my followers. Yeah, I thank y'all so much. I I I really do. And I really, really, really, really hope you guys enjoy the uh album. As you listen to the album, the single, make sure you take yourself back, drive your car, roll your windows down, sit back and enjoy the music. That's what it's all about.
SPEAKER_01Alright, so we appreciate you being on uh uh on Pusha India Podcast. As soon as you know Wednesday, I'm gonna drop it on my state cynical Lux F FM. So we're gonna drop it on there where you know where you have the EP. Easily tell the artist that you can't come back if you wanna uh drop it on you know on here, then we can do that as well so that you know you know, people can fans and supporters they can hear it. Because my whole thing is if if we don't support y'all then we can't ask for anybody else to support us, so we gotta support you know, Kansas supports us because you know, let's say uh one person that supports you one time, but oh uh I want to support it, I want to be on a on a song. It should be like, hey, uh I'm gonna support you because I see you doing great things. So that's what we we do here. We you know, we're gonna push the music. We're gonna support, uh push shit, push the music, we're gonna, you know, get you heard a new cover. He's gonna he gonna do his thing as well. And you know, uh also I appreciate him as well because like I said before, he he texted me and was like, hey, do you do you want this this exclusive? I said, of course. I said, I ain't I ain't I ain't stupid. I ain't I ain't passing down no no no no good no energy like this. So I'm I'm on because um went somewhere else when you came here and and bless my and bless my my state so my platform so I appreciate that it's no wear me so uh we gonna we're gonna make sure that we we we get you get you out there because you know you got your your fans to support so it shouldn't be no shouldn't be no problem with these these these screens and and these likes up for this for this DP and the single so but we gonna we're gonna do it.
SPEAKER_03Album, album, album, album, album, you got 15, you got 15 songs.
SPEAKER_0115 songs. She just checked me on on my own show. So we got we got album. Anything anything past what? Consider the album, what?
SPEAKER_05Anything past, I think three or five.
SPEAKER_01Three or five, okay. All right, so we got an album. So be on the lookout for the album.
SPEAKER_05I just said, I just said, you know what, let's go for the gusto. The gusto, just boom, boom, boom.
SPEAKER_01Let's just hit them, just hit them with it. Like, you know, we that's what we do when we drop, we dropping, we dropping hits. You know what I'm saying?
SPEAKER_04So make sure it's like I said, we taking them, we taking them back. We taking them back, you know, where they're like, yo, she took us back. She gave us like the whole plate.
SPEAKER_05So so if y'all got the y'all got the cutlasses, the the uh like it's it's the songmaster, you riding in your hoot thieves. Like, you know, they're gonna be like, go see, did you, yo? I said stuff like the box MTV and all that.
SPEAKER_04They're gonna be like, oh my god. It's that type of field where they're gonna be like, yo, she took me back, yo.
SPEAKER_01She took me back. Before we, whatever. You ain't never get in trouble for looking at the box. You didn't. Oh, okay. Cause, yeah, we we used to we used to love the box at like, you know, at night, because, you know, you know, we was like, oh, okay, these videos don't come on like this in the daytime.
SPEAKER_05At daytime.
SPEAKER_04No, no, no, no, no, no, no, no, no. I was so, I was sheltered, but nah. Nah. I was I was always studying stuff. Just studying, studying, studying, looking at it. Okay, yeah, yeah, yeah, okay, yeah. Yeah, I can take a little bit of that. You know, I can polish on that. Nah, I was yeah, I was doing my homework. I was doing my homework back then. Yeah, I was. Yeah, yeah.
SPEAKER_01So ain't nothing wrong with that. So uh, yeah, so me, me, and, me and me and Carver, we're gonna have to talk about some things. Get you up here to do something in in the DV. So we're gonna talk about something.
SPEAKER_05Yes, absolutely. I I would love to come. I would love to come.
SPEAKER_01Yeah. And so we're gonna we go we're gonna talk to him about some things. Like, I I I love the energy. This this I will have to say this is one of the best energies I've I've done. Like, I like I like the energy. Uh I like the you know the personality of what you're what you're doing. I'm looking forward to everything that you got going on. So I guess I'm gonna do my little my little outro and then we go on.
SPEAKER_03You're gonna do your outro, darling.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, so you say fast. Quickly, quickly. You can go on go ahead and and and and do whatever y'all do in Vegas. So tonight's conversation. Tonight's conversation was truly it uh inspiring from television classes to powerful music and unforgettable stage performance. Travis Scott continues to prove that our identity, talent, and perseverance can create a lasting legacy. We appreciate you for joining us here on the Indie Spotlight. Make sure you follow support stream, Toss and Scott's music, and stay connected for everything she has coming next. This is your boy AD signing off. And remember to keep supporting independent talent, real artist, and genuine creativity. Peace and blessings.
SPEAKER_04Yes, blessings.
SPEAKER_01All right, I appreciate you.
SPEAKER_04No worries.
SPEAKER_01Thank you.
SPEAKER_04You want me to hang around or no?
SPEAKER_01Uh we we should be good. Uh we're good.
SPEAKER_05Okay, all right. I had to hang around the other day because it was like, it's like, don't come up with me. Gotta make sure everything is good.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, if everything's good with you, then we we good.
SPEAKER_05I'm Gucci. I'm Gucci.
SPEAKER_01All right. I appreciate you.
SPEAKER_05No worries. All right. Adrian village in the building. Woo.
SPEAKER_03You know, I'm just I'm just a wonderful evening. All right, blessings.
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