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This one's for the day-one lifers and new listeners alike! Get ready to dive back into a cult classic that reshaped the indie rap scene. For this episode 10 we revisited a 2010 college dorm rap nerd classic, Pilot Talk. Released July 2010, Pilot Talk was the album that positioned Curren$y to become the independent legend he is today. With features from Snoop Dogg,Devin the Dude, Mos Def, Jay Electronica, Mikey Rocks, Smoke DZA & Big K.R.I.T, this was the project that made the world know that Spitta was hear to stay. Ahmad & Vance aslo talk about Megan thee Stallion keeping Country Rap Tunes alive and well and what they're currently listening too. If you're familiar with Spitta then you should have your planes ready. Twitter / IG @Yo_Ahki/@VanceB_ Listen to this new episode and previous others on: Apple Podcasts (https://tinyurl.com/jydzz9fk) Spotify (https://tinyurl.com/c3u77hcf) Anchor (https://anchor.fm/recordreport) Follow Record Report Podcast on: Instagram: (@RecordRepPod) Facebook: Facebook.com/RecordReportPodcast Twitter: https://twitter.com/recreppodcast?lang=en any suggestions/concerns/ want to be a guest send us an email: recordreportpodcast@gmail.com
Find us on social media for daily content and information regarding all things music industry Twitter: https://twitter.com/soundcentricmus Instagram:https://https://www.instagram.com/soundcentricmusic/ Tik Tok: https://www.tiktok.com/@soundcentricmusic Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/SoundCentricmusic Website: https://soundcentricmusic.com Podcast: https://www.soundcentricmusic.com 00:00:00 - Intro 00:01:15 - Why Trevor reps New Jersey so much in his music 00:03:00 - Trevor's Mount Rushmore 00:05:30 - What is the sunset moshpit sound 00:07:15 - The production on "Arrive Alive" EP 00:09:00 - Why Trevor's lyrics are "cool" 00:10:15 - How Trevor picks his "intro" song 00:13:00 - Trevor's process for making music 00:16:50 - Trevor's insane music videos 00:23:00 - How Trevor budgets his money as an indie artist 00:26:30 - The importance of concerts for artists 00:31:00 - Why it's cool to care about stuff 00:32:30 - Weekly playlist titles 00:35:10 - Trevor's musical influences 00:37:50 - Thoughts on Drake Kendrick beef 00:41:30 - How Trevor deals with the bad days as a rising artist 00:49:15 - Trevor's goals for the year
Ep by cold as spitta --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/oursideonlymarketingagenc/support
On this episode of Da Fixx, Atlanta rhyme spitter and artist, Czar Josh joins us for our spiritual detox segment. We discuss the impact of poverty, his faith journey and the healing power of music. In our real talk segment, we explore the significance of DNA testing, exploring its emotional impact on understanding one's ancestry and the legal ramifications in cases like child custody. The conversation also addresses the consequences of promiscuity, linking it to rising abortion rates and underscoring the need for responsible sexual behavior. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Wir freuen uns, dass wir nach einer längeren Weihnachtspause wieder hier sind und euch mit den neuesten Gesprächsthemen aus der Dentalwelt versorgen können. Olaf und Björn haben die Zeit genutzt, um das Beste aus der Pause herauszuholen. Frisch, frech und ohne Einschränkungen werden sie euch auf dem Laufenden halten. Lasst uns also direkt zu den aktuellen Themen kommen: Die Fachdental öffnet am 1. und 2. März ihre Pforten in Leipzig - dieses Mal zu einem neuen Datum, aber an dem bekannten Ort. Gleichzeitig ist auch die mediaDENT gestartet und unsere Talker werden euch über den aktuellen Stand informieren. Es gibt viel zu berichten! Nicht zu vergessen sind unsere Verlage - diesmal besonders im Fokus stehen die Mediengruppe Oberfranken und Spitta. Die beiden Verlage haben spannende Neuigkeiten für euch, von denen wir euch selbstverständlich alle Details verraten werden. Seid gespannt! Zudem möchten wir an dieser Stelle Minilu zu ihrem Erfolg gratulieren. Warum? Das erfahrt ihr gleich - es ist definitiv eine Erwähnung wert! Auch im Jahr 2024 bleibt unser "Netzfund der Woche" eine feste Größe. Bleibt gespannt auf die neueste Entdeckung, die euch inspirieren und überraschen wird. Ihr könnt es kaum erwarten, mehr zu erfahren? Dann hört direkt rein! Dental Talk wird präsentiert von Dental Marketing - dem Fachmagazin für Dental-Marken ---- Egal, ob neue Trends oder Geschehnisse der letzten Tage, der Podcast von Björn Kersten und Olaf Tegtmeier kommt am Montag und behandelt die spannendsten Themen des Dental- und Marketingbereiches. Beide kennen die Bereiche so gut wie Ihre Westentasche und diskutieren mit Spaß an der Sache und meinungsstark aktuelle Themen und geben Einblicke hinter die Kulissen. ---- #dentalpodcast #dentalmarketing #dentaltalk #dentalnews #dentalpocastdeutsch #wartezimmergespräche #socialmediamarketing
Where do we even start!? Bank robberies, Children's parties, Tasks, Ghosts, and Denzel--that just scratches the surface of what we are talking about with the one and only, Kiell Smith-Bynoe. From his role as Mike in the original BBC version of Ghosts (the character of Jay is his counterpart in the American version) to his recent stint as a contestant on series 15 of Taskmaster, Kiell shows no signs of slowing down his killer career. He recentley revived his stage show, String V. Spitta while he and writing/performing partner Ed MacArthur work on a TV show based on their hit play. With the ball rolling, the show will have a run at the Edinburgh Fringe Fest. Kiell joined us to talk about the show, as well as his Overdue Rental, Spike Lee's 2006--Inside Man. Click play to listen to this wonderful chat and click the following link to get your tickets for String V Spitta during its EdFringe run from August 18th to the 26th. TICKETS! --- Support this podcast: https://podcasters.spotify.com/pod/show/overduerentals/support
Shoutout to the Bay Area's own Prince Mula for returning to my show for an interview! Prince Mula talked about his upcoming mixtape Shark City Spitta: A Side, getting a feature from DJ Drama on his song Breaking News, and starting his own fashion line. He discussed graduating from St. John's University this May, interning at Madison Square Garden, and wanting to stay in New York to make it big on the east coast. He also got into what made him never want to get a major label record deal, his radio show Slapperz Only Radio, wanting to work with Nef the Pharoah, and working on his debut album. Stay tuned! Pre-order and purchase Prince Mula's new mixtape Shark City Spitta: A Side on Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/album/shark-city-spitta-a-side/1682114204. Follow Prince Mula on Instagram and Twitter: @theprincemula Follow me on Instagram and Twitter: @thereelmax Website: https://maxcoughlan.com/index.html. Website live show streaming link: https://maxcoughlan.com/sports-and-hip-hop-with-dj-mad-max-live-stream.html. MAD MAX Radio on Live365: https://live365.com/station/MAD-MAX-Radio-a15096. Subscribe to my YouTube channel Sports and Hip Hop with DJ Mad Max: https://m.youtube.com/channel/UCE0107atIPV-mVm0M3UJyPg. Prince Mula on "Sports and Hip-Hop with DJ Mad Max" visual on YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=NpOHQhX_Szs.
We back at it with another dope episode. This time, it's another Blood Type! We talking bout the "Spitta" emcee. What make an emcee a Spitta? Is every emcee a "Spitta"? If so, why? If not, why? We gon unpack this one today! FAAAAAANNNNNNGGGGGG#HipHopculture #BinkisRecs #RhymeAnimalsPodcast #Binkisisathing #RhymeAnimalCertified #Emcee #Dj #graffiti #beatbox #breakdance #bboys #bgirls #RAOTW #beats #rhymes #life #Ska #BroadwayJungle #Toots&TheMaytals #JDilla #Giveitup #LLCoolJ #Murdergram #podcast #mixtapes #songs #mics #cyphers Support the show
Jermaine Dupri and Curren$y are a match made in hip-hop heaven. Two years ago, the duo connected after Spitta paid homage to the So So Def founder on his album, Collection Agency. Now the pair are releasing their debut EP, For Motivational Use Only Vol. 1. In their inaugural interview, the twosome speak on their highly anticipated project, relationship, legacies, and much more! It's the SoSo Jets, fools! See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
some for artist to write to if the verse go hard we can record the song. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/oursideonlymarketingagenc/support
(Ayo produced this beat ) no mix or nothing just raw studio vocals --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/oursideonlymarketingagenc/support
Interview by Haze of DGB https://www.instagram.com/mike_tall Recently we sat down with New Orleans rapper T.Y. for an exclusive “Off The Porch” interview! During our conversation he talked about life in New Orleans, growing up in Uptown, jumping off the porch, his relationship with his dad B.G., how he is holding up in prison, his thoughts on Turk posting “B.G. Free”, starting to make music when his dad went to prison, being inspired by Curren$y, explains how he linked with Spitta, joining Jet Life, not feeling pressure to live up to his dad's legacy, his relationship with Wiz Khalifa, the music scene in New Orleans right now, New Orleans influence on the rap game, the Ghetto Children group with Lil Soulja Slim & Young Juve, clears up the viral video of him having Slim's chain, his new project ‘Stick To The Script', his plans to drop a tape every month, upcoming collab project with Sledgren, his merch Stay On Game, his goals, and much more!
Most artists want career growth and they want it fast — sometimes to a fault. This is where Curren$y is an outlier. From the jump, Curren$y set out to grow both his career and fanbase slowly but steadily. He successfully did that and it's a reason why he's not only stayed in the rap game for almost twenty years, but is now still earning more money, and at a career point where most of his peers coming up have already fizzled out.Curren$y and his longtime manager, Mousa, joined me on this week's episode to explain how zigging when others zagged contributed to their career longevity. One instance is leaving his hometown Cash Money Records label to create their own, Jet Life. The two have been able to morph the brand into a full-on business empire that now includes apparel, athlete management, products, and more verticals on top of the music label. The duo built Jet Life on the back of touring and being true to their audience. To do so, they turned down more brand partnerships they can remember and even music festival appearances at times — no matter how good the bag was for each. These trend-bucking moves were covered at length in our interview. Here's what we covered:[3:15] New Orleans folks are immune to heat[4:44] Mousa and Curren$y relationship began in 2005[8:49] Growing Jet Life business beyond a record label[11:45] Turning down non-authentic business opportunities[15:59] Emphasizing touring early in Curren$y's career[19:21] Releasing an EP as an NFT[23:52] Curren$y's take on streaming farms[29:47] Macro-view of Jet Life revenue streams[34:47] Touring is cornerstone of Jet Life business[37:08] Performing on own shows vs. music festivals[43:48] Festival money goes to sports car dealership[45:16] Curren$y's partnership with NASCAR (and problems with Coca-Cola)[50:37] What's the secret to a great artist-manager relationship? Listen: Apple Podcasts | Spotify | SoundCloud | Stitcher | Overcast | Amazon | Google Podcasts | Pocket Casts | RSSHost: Dan Runcie, @RuncieDan, trapital.coGuests: Mousa Hamdan & Curren$y, @MOUSA504 & @spitta_andretti Sponsors: MoonPay is the leader in web3 infrastructure. They have partnered with Timbaland, Snoop Dogg, and many more. To learn more, visit moonpay.com/trapital Enjoy this podcast? Rate and review the podcast here! ratethispodcast.com/trapital Trapital is home for the business of hip-hop. Gain the latest insights from hip-hop's biggest players by reading Trapital's free weekly memo.TRANSCRIPTION[00:00:00] Curren$y: You can always expand and try new things, but if it feels wrong on the core, then you're setting yourself up. We never made a move like that. No matter what deal comes across the table 'cause he's money first. But he'll tell the people, the check writer like, man, just let me talk to bro. Because at the end of the day, he's going to hear me say it's half a million dollars, but he might say it's a boring job and he might not want to do it. [00:00:32] Dan Runcie: Hey, welcome to The Trapital podcast. I'm your host and the founder of Trapital, Dan Runcie. This podcast is your place to gain insights from executives in music, media, entertainment, and more, who are taking hip-hop culture to the next level. [00:00:54] Dan Runcie: Listen, you're going to love today's episode. It is with one of the most successful independent artists in the game and his longtime manager. We got Curren$y and we got Mousa. If you've been following Curren$y's journey for a while, you know that he was originally on No Limit Records 20 years ago. He left the record label. He then went to join Young Money. He was a little early on the Young Money Train, but he ended up leaving the record label before Nicki and before Drake blew up and he started his own. He started Jet Life, and he's been building up his career as an independent artist, and it's been great to see how he has navigated both how he releases music and also how he approached his business overall. And that was a big focus of this episode. We talked about his strategy for releasing music, and Curren$y is someone that is very prolific in terms of the amount of music that he puts out, but it also gets him plenty of opportunities to be able to go on tour, to be able to have several other business ventures that they have through Jet Life and through other areas. We talked about what they're doing in cannabis as well. We talked about the nightclub that they have, the apparel business, and a whole lot more. We also talked about a few partnerships that you may be surprised by, but I still think that fit well within the ethos for what Jet Life is and what Curren$y is trying to build. We even talked about some of the movie deals and opportunities that Curren$y had turned down. I don't want to spoil it. It's a really good one, but this was a really fascinating conversation, is also been great to just see how long these two have stuck together. If you're a big fan of this podcast, these are the type of episodes that you come for. Hope you enjoy it as much as I did. Here's my chat with Curren$y and Mousa. [00:02:41] Dan Runcie: All right. Today we're joined by the duo themselves. We got Curren$y and we got Mousa here, the artist-manager combination. How are you guys doing? [00:02:49] Curren$y: Man, we can't complain. The weather is nice outside and it is been pretty bad out here in Orleans. It's been a hundred degrees and raining every day, but right now it's sunny, 86 degrees, you know what I'm saying? I got long sleeves on, top down, having a good day. I can't complain. [00:03:07] Dan Runcie: See, that's the one thing about folks I know from New Orleans, like it could be 86 degrees and y'all are still in long sleeves. Y'all are still in hoodies. [00:03:15] Curren$y: Well, it is, well, because it is the heat, we're already adjusting. It's just hot in here. So now we've gone more fashion-forward, bro. It's like, just fuck it, bro. Wear what you want to wear because it's still going to be 190 degrees no matter what. So just go for it. I don't really condone that lifestyle unless you have a car. A lot of my younger brothers I see walking up and down the street, and they definitely look like they're about to commit crimes because it's a hundred degrees and they got on the hoodie and I'm, like, weary of, I'm like, hold on, you know what I'm saying, because, fuck, that don't make no sense. You dressed for action. But if you are in the car, you are in the office, you are in the studio. That's where that look really originated. People always tell me, II'm dressed like that forever, but it's been because most of my life has been like tour bus, studio, even when it wasn't me, I was like a little guy on Masterpiece bus. It was 60 degrees, you know what I'm saying? And these big mansions, it's cold as shit. So I just grew acclimated to dressing like that. I think I might have spearheaded that. I honestly, I think that I may have spearheaded that, but what haven't we spearheaded over here, you know?[00:04:25] Dan Runcie: It's true, especially folks at New Orleans, folks like y'all are trendsetters. And one of the things that I feel like sets y'all apart is that you've been doing this for so long, and you've been doing this for so long together. I mean, Mousa, you've been managing Curren$y now for, since '05, right? I know you do 'em before, but you started managing, like, '05, right?[00:04:44] Mousa Hamdan: We're friends before, but definitely since '05, since he joined in with Lil Wayne, with Young Money, Cash Money. So I think that's when he brought me on and asked me to come on as his manager. [00:04:53] Curren$y: Yep. Yeah. [00:04:54] Mousa Hamdan: And you know...[00:04:55] Curren$y: As soon as there was business to manage. [00:04:58] Mousa Hamdan: Right. [00:04:58] Curren$y: You know, right? While I was just slinging t-shirts, like ordering 28 t-shirts on a month, pressing CDs upstairs at my apartment, that was easy to do. When it began to grow and I saw, like, my two homes wasn't going to be enough to handle it, you know, what could I do but reach out to the one homie who I knew forever who don't want to smoke no weed with me, who don't want to get drunk with me, you know what I'm saying? Like, who's just like totally, his high is the business, deals closed and stuff gone successfully is him having a drink, you know what I'm saying? So it worked. It works like that.[00:05:36] Mousa Hamdan: Definitely. I like achieving goals. You know, I'm a goal seeker. And once you achieve one goal, set another one, you know? And that's my inspiration is to see how big we could really take this Jet Life, how, you know, how big deal this will be, and how long we can make it last. I mean, I thought about this morning, I was talking to one of my other homies, I was like, we've been in this game a minute, bro. Like, and he was like, look, I've been home for a little while and y'all been doing this a long time. So I say, yeah, definitely, but we not done, you know. We're nowhere near done. We really just starting, we really starting to grow even more now. [00:06:12] Curren$y: That's crazy to say that, and that's really the truth, to be here in the game. Like, Jet Life, we're like over a decade, and each year it just gets bigger. That's really what you want. It's not a big, hasn't been just one big explosion. It's a slow burn. But it is guaranteed. And we've always grown. A lot of times you see people struggling, like, not to lose ground in the game, you know, and stay relevant. And that's never been a problem with us because we've been blessed to be able to, like, generate or, like, create our own world, you know what I'm saying? And the people who listen to our music or who dress, some people dress only in Jet Life apparel. And it is because they don't give a fuck about nothing else, you know what I'm saying? They've had their time to see what the world had to offer, and they saw that ours was just uncompromised. So they lend themselves to it a hundred percent. And that's been enough to sustain, like, the lifestyle that we have. And the people that support us, they like to pass by the Jet Life store just to see what cars we might have outside. So they continue to support us because now we're going to park more and more shit. Like, they the ones who help us do it, you know? So it's good. It's good. [00:07:27] Mousa Hamdan: It definitely is. It's really a lifestyle, you know? I think it's, you know, from the beginning I remember, Curren$y said in interviews as well as told me directly, like, you know, his vision of seeing how Jet Life and how he wanted to grow. He always said it was like a balloon. And I listened, I heard that, and I was like, he's right. He's like, you could either, you could blow air in it fast and it's going to blow big and then it's going to explode and it's over. Or you could blow in it slow and it's going to slowly blow. [00:07:57] Curren$y: Yeah. Fucking right. [00:07:58] Mousa Hamdan: Then you show the longevity. And that's what we did. We're blowing it slow. [00:08:02] Curren$y: Yep.[00:08:03] Mousa Hamdan: But look at us. We're still here. There's a lot of people that we saw that came before us and during us who we feel like, oh yeah, they got the light quick and they blew up fast. But then what happened? And you know, they're not around no more.[00:08:16] Curren$y: Something explodes, it ceases to exist.[00:08:19] Mousa Hamdan: It's done.[00:08:20] Curren$y: I've never seen anything, you know what I'm saying, explode that still had it ever, you know? [00:08:26] Dan Runcie: Right, oh yeah. You know, and I feel like with y'all, specifically, you're able to see the trajectory. You're able to see everything that you've accomplished, too, because I look at Jet Life, and it started as the imprint for your record label, but now you have your apparel, you also have the other businesses you have. How would you describe the current businesses? What are the current things under Jet Life right now? [00:08:49] Mousa Hamdan: Well, we got, of course, like you said, it started with records, Jet Life Records. And then it went to, we started doing tour merch, which grew into Jet Life Apparel. We were in now Jet Life Athletics. So we started to do deals with managing athletes and growing that brand. Then of course, we've other stuff that's not necessarily labeled Jet Life, but we've opened up a nightclub in New Orleans, so so that's something that's coming. [00:09:16] Curren$y: We got a big footprint in the cannabis community. We got a couple of other startups, like a coffee shop and a cereal bar we're going to launch. We already have two films out, so, I mean, if you want to say Jet Life Films is in existence, that is true. It's so much stuff that we do, but the circle is so tight, like, nobody's going to tell the other one. Like, bro, you realize what we doing because we are still in the midst of doing it. Like, an outside person would have to come in and really show us how many businesses and what's all under the umbrella 'cause we really just wake up and try to, like, just make sure we make something happen, you know, every day. If you want to label it and put a name on it, then, it was news to me, right now just listening to how much stuff we have going on. [00:10:04] Mousa Hamdan: We forgot Starting Line Hobbies.[00:10:06] Curren$y: Yeah, we got hobby shop bro, like that. See? So the more you sit down… [00:10:11] Mousa Hamdan: We forget some of the business. But they exist and they're profitable, right?[00:10:16] Curren$y: He's got an auto body shop, it's still in existence. That's really where a lot of it comes from, his whole foray into it all was being able to survive if one thing fell down. Even though the music was the one that paved the way and drew the attention, the industry is fickle. So you see people like, we see them rise and you think they going to build this whole empire, they end up with a warehouse full of shit. They can't move bobbleheads of themselves. Nobody wants t-shirts, nobody wants home furnishing. Nobody wants it, fucking goes that way, you know what I'm saying? And we've been blessed to like, now we got two or three warehouses, you know what I'm saying? But we're moving the shit, you know. So it's just about staying true and not, we never really tried to do too much, nothing outside of what felt right to us. You can always expand and try new things, but if it feels wrong on the core, then you're setting yourself up. We never made a move like that. No matter what deal comes across the table 'cause he's money first. But he'll tell the people, the check writer like, man, just let me talk to bro. Because at the end of the day, he's going to hear me say it's half a million dollars, but he might say it's a boring job and he might not want to do it even though it's half a million dollars. So he'll just check with me, you know what I'm saying? We probably go and do the 'shit anyway 'cause it's half a million dollars. But he checks with me because in my heart of hearts, I might want to say no, but I got a kid and shit. [00:11:45] Mousa Hamdan: I'll definitely ask him. Do you want to do this though? [00:11:49] Curren$y: Yeah. And I got respect for him for doing that. The fact that he compromised his money mentality that asks me that much, gives me the strength to be able to say, you know what, fuck it, bro, you gave, I'll give. I'm going to come and do this shit, you know what I'm saying? And then lo and behold everybody wins, you know? [00:12:07] Dan Runcie: Yeah. What's an example of something that you have turned down? Like, Mousa, 'cause it sounds like you're the one that's seeing the things and you're thinking about, oh, this is the bag, but is this something that fits with the Jet Life lifestyle?[00:12:18] Curren$y: There's a lot of those, like, TV shit that'll come across, you know what I'm saying? I hope that he knows, I don't care. So he would say, I'm going to jump out in front of you, like, you don't see because these people still come up with more and more ideas. And eventually, they might put, they might table something that we want to pick up. But we've slammed them because it's like, bro, you know, just looking at something where they say, well, he can say it in his own words, but the way they phrase it makes me like, I'll never put this in my own words, I don't want to fucking do it. You know, just fuck it, you know what I'm saying? Or like post, they'll try, you know, they'll pay you for social media stuff just to say you like something or you can't wait for something to fucking hit the theaters. And I'm like, you know what? Fuck no. I don't want to say that. Because as soon as I post this, my fucking true audience is going to say, you know, how much did you get, bro? They'll say shit like that. I don't want to play them like that. [00:13:15] Mousa Hamdan: Yeah. I think we've known each other long enough and I know his answers on some things. Some things I won't even bring to him.[00:13:22] Curren$y: For sure. [00:13:23] Mousa Hamdan: You know, we had some stuff like, you know, I'll be honest with you, like, you know, media companies that come and say, well, you know, let me post this on your page or do this, that, and the others, and it's clickbait. And he was like, nah, bro, I don't want my fans clicking on that. [00:13:37] Curren$y: Yeah, I don't want that. I'm the one who have to answer for this shit.[00:13:41] Mousa Hamdan: I don't care how much it is. And the fans aren't crazy. They'll be like, Curren$y, that shit was clickbait, bro. [00:13:46] Curren$y: They're like, what? Or you had to, bro? Like, I have all that kind of shit. So I'm just like, let's save the company who wants to pay us the embarrassment of when they realized this was not organic and it didn't cross over. Like, now they won't want to spend any money. They may not want to spend money with us later on, on something that might actually work, you know? So it's just better to just say, you know, it is better to protect yourself that way. You end up in the long run, you still make that money. A few times people have double-backed because they realize, you know what, that was kind of lame. I can't believe we asked them to do that shit. And then they come back with something way dope after they've researched me, you know? 'Cause immediately you do a Google search and you are like, all right, cool. We'll get him to do the new weed spray. Let's get him to endorse this new air freshener that kills the weeds, man. Like, bro, the fuck? Like, I'm not even living like that. I'm actually a boss and I don't have to conceal the weed smell in my fucking life, you know what I'm saying? Like, I'm not promoting shit. [00:14:46] Dan Runcie: I'm even come to you with a deal like that though, knowing you. [00:14:50] Mousa Hamdan: Yeah, yeah. They'll bring all type of deals, bro. They'll try and get you out of character if you let them. You know, they'll push the button. [00:14:57] Curren$y: But it feels like trolling a lot of the time. Like, are they trying to see if I would do this, you know what I'm saying?[00:15:03] Dan Runcie: Right. [00:15:03] Mousa Hamdan: I don't think they understand that he's not saying he's true to his lifestyle. He is actually true to it. He's not going to do anything that's going to bend. [00:15:11] Curren$y: It's not about money. We got enough pots on the stove. It's a six-burner stove. And we have pots with food and all of them are cooking, you know what I'm saying? So when somebody comes with the bullshit, it's like, all right, let's just go dip in this, right, quick. You know, like I I've done that with music, when I feel like, it is just sometimes I get a little down on myself just based on the climate of music, you know? And I'll fall back and maybe I'll just come up here and we'll just make a whole collection of clothes at that time, you know? And we were able to keep the lights on and shit through the apparel. If I said fuck it from here on end, you know what I'm saying? But it just so happens, like, I get my win and it is fun again, and I want to do it. You know, so we're lucky as shit.[00:15:59] Dan Runcie: That makes sense, yeah. It's a good position to be in, right? You understand your brand, you understand what makes sense. You're only going to do certain types of deals. And I feel like this goes back to the way that you just go about this industry overall, right? You were early in terms of, let me put out my music and if people get it for free, they may get it for free, but let me go make the money on tour. Let me go make the money with these other business interests. [00:16:24] Curren$y: Yeah, because I mean, it's, shrinkage. It didn't matter how much music, like, what you do, how much you put behind the budget and what the labels do and all this shit. These people were just, our music was being stolen. This was during the time of, like, manufacturing jewel cases and all this shit that the company had to do, so that affected how much money they could give you. And then at the end of the day, everybody had the album a week before any damn, you know? So you can't feed your family like that. But what you can do, and what I did do is, and also when I did that, it was out of necessity. I didn't have no money to pay everybody for beats. But I could download Dr. Dre's instrumental for free. And as long as I don't sell this bitch, he's not coming for me, you know? I'm going to put it out for free. People going to love it. They're going to want me to come and wrap the motherfucker and they're going to pay however much it costs, you know, so that's how we did it. You know, that's just, like utilizing your natural resources. Like, what's growing in the land? Like, what's there? Just looked around and worked off what's growing out of the ground when you don't have the funds to do it. Like, you know, and you're creating business. Like, that's all we've ever done. And the more resources and the more materials we gain, you know, from gaining leverage or going up a level, then we start another joint, you know? Cause we got more to start with, 'Cause we, we did it with zero. So now it's insane. Like, we're just throwing darts at the board, like, fuck it, let's try and start a speedboat racing team tomorrow, you know what I'm saying? Like, fuck, whatever is whatever you want to do. And I've seen people do it. I've seen Master P do it because he had, like, with the bread to try it, you got to go for it. But what you had, but his circle is, was so large at the time with no limit. Like, first crack some ideas, not the best ideas, but you got love for everybody, so you going to roll the dice with everything they come with. You going to try, see, but what's working for us is we don't have that many people, like, around, you know what I'm saying? Like, as far as where the love is, it is right, it is in the room, so we not going to bounce. So if we try each other's ideas, one of 'em going to work 'cause it was just to, you got 19 people in here trying to, you know, tell you what to do and you want to keep everybody happy. You try, you going to end up trying to, like, start a golf cart company and, like, do spacewalks and sell reptiles and wild pets and then just doing everything that they ask you to do. And some of it's not going to work. [00:18:59] Dan Runcie: And I feel like with that, too, is just understanding your brand, understanding what's effective. And I know last year you had released an EP as an NFT, and I know this was the time when a lot of people were first discovering what an NFT is and things like that. What was that like? Because I know that was something that you didn't necessarily need to do to reach your fan base and do everything you wanted to do.[00:19:21] Curren$y: It wasn't to increase the fan base. It was to make our listeners aware that we are in touch with what's going on, and we are going to make sure that you guys aren't left behind as far as having Jet Life representation because we know you wear this shit every day. We know this is all you're listening to. So if the whole world converted to the metaverse, and everybody just wore headsets and live like that, how will you survive if your life is Jet Life? We got to give you something in this shit too. Rather we understand it or not, we have to learn to understand it, to become a part, to take care of y'all out there because it's real, you know? No matter how imaginary it may seem, it's real, you know what I'm saying? It's intangible, but it's a real thing. So we had to be able to provide something for our people 'cause they were there, you know? You look out of touch and, like, not sharp, not able to move, you know, then people wash their hands of you. Other companies won't want to collaborate with us that much because it won't appear that we are in the know, where if you have a big company that's not doing anything in that world, they're like, oh shit, look at Jet Life, well, let's just fuck with them. Let's put some bridge in them because they can handle this for us, blah, blah, and that be our representation 'cause we're far too big to even try to learn and far too big and far too old to even try to learn that shit, you know what I'm saying? So once they saw we did, that makes us look, you know, mobile, you know what I'm saying? [00:20:51] Mousa Hamdan: We have to exist in the future. You know, at the end of the day, we got to do what we have to do to let everybody, like he said, we're in the know, you know, we're aware of what's going on, what's coming, what's worth getting involved with, what's not.[00:21:05] Curren$y: And we going to ride with y'all because if it crashes, all us, then it did it off of us. You know what I'm saying? Fuck it. We going to roll too. [00:21:12] Mousa Hamdan: And even back a long time ago, I don't know if Curren$y even remember this, we did a deal back then with BitTorrent that we released a mixtape on BitTorrent, and it was 'cause the relationship we had with BitTorrent, they wanted to move away from everybody feeling that BitTorrent was a piracy site, and they wanted to like, well what if we give away something that we actually want shared? [00:21:38] Curren$y: Yeah. [00:21:38] Mousa Hamdan: And I remember we did that, I think we had like 156 million shares.[00:21:45] Curren$y: Yeah. [00:21:45] Mousa Hamdan: I told the record label that we were in a deal with at the time and they was like, nah, I got to see that. They didn't believe it. Well, like, what? Don't worry about it. You don't have to believe it. And that's why we're not with y'all now, because y'all don't believe the future. Y'all believing what y'all were taught to believe.[00:22:05] Curren$y: Yep. [00:22:05] Mousa Hamdan: Rather than having your own mind and realizing things change, the world changes. And you just got to be in the mix. You got to know what's going on. You got to get involved where you fit in. [00:22:15] Curren$y: You got to appear agile, man. [00:22:18] Dan Runcie: Stories like that, I feel, is what set y'all apart because if you think back to that time, no one wanted anything to do with BitTorrent or even LimeWire, BearShare, all these places where you could stream music and I get it. It was all the piracy, all the copyright. But at some point, someone asked to be able to say, all right, this is where folks are at. This is how they're getting our music. How could we get our music onto these places? Or how could we just think about it in a different way that isn't just no, don't do that?[00:22:46] Curren$y: Watch it come all the way back to the beginning because we stayed true the entire time, that company that needed to wash his hands and kind of rebirth themselves, needed to stand next to something that was pure the entire time so that they could get some of our life, you feel me? Like, that was the way that shit worked. Their name was so sullied that it was like, okay, as far as music is concerned, people know Jet Life will not falter. They won't fold. They don't go for fucking the dangling carrot. So if we fuck with them, then they would know, like, well, Jet Life wouldn't fuck with us if we were really this pirate fucking factory. So it made everything, you know, legitimate. You know, we saw good in them, so it was cool, yeah. [00:23:34] Dan Runcie: Yeah. It's interesting too, to make me think about the current thing that people are pushing back on, whether it's streaming farms, you know, people trying to drive up these streams and stuff like that. What's your take on that? Because I feel like, for you, something like that's almost irrelevant because you're not in this to, like, sell your music, so you don't care about charts or probably any of that stuff. [00:23:52] Curren$y: I can't blame them because it's not like streams, not like that shit pay you a lot of money, you know? I'm saying it takes a lot of streams to make, like, you know, substantial money. It takes a lot of people. A lot of artists don't even understand, you know what I'm saying? Like, the motherfucker call me like, bro, you did a million streams in the day. Like, so what do you think? I'm going to buy a yacht tonight, like, that was worth $12,000, bro, you know what I'm saying? That was worth 12 grand. I was like, don't trip. So I know they need those machines and shit to try and run those streams up. That could be check fraud. Like, they're trying to fucking, they're riding the clock, like, here man, we did 80 zillion billion streams in Apple music. Here's the paperwork. Fucking pay us, man. It could be that, it could be, we need to fucking this shit up so we could get a deal from some other people, maybe Pepsi Cola will reach out to us because they think we going to bring 'em all this attention and fuck them if we can't. The check's already here. You know, everybody's hustling though. It's not righteous, you know, but none of this shit is righteous. And that's kind of the ceiling that we set on ourselves by trying to, like, be legit, you know, it's not like that, you know what I'm saying? So I don't trip off the stream machines and people with the padded streams or, because I understand why they do it. We're blessed to not have to exist that way. And on the other hand, we do a decent amount of streaming because I put out a good amount of music, so I'm not going to do a million every month on one project like these other dudes, like, dude, some people only got to come out two times a year because that project will stream a million fucking streams a month every month all year. But what I will do is probably drop every month and still make it that way, you know what I'm saying? Or drop every two months, you know, and I'm still making that same bread. We just work harder, you know, because we're not doing a lot of the extra shit. [00:25:56] Mousa Hamdan: It don't hurt that he likes to record and what you're going to do? [00:25:59] Curren$y: Yeah, for sure. [00:26:00] Mousa Hamdan: You going to hold all the music? The music's going to sound old. He was writing about a '96 expedition, right? You got to put it out, bro. Next year, that thing's old. [00:26:11] Curren$y: Yep. [00:26:12] Mousa Hamdan: So at the end of the day, it don't hurt that he likes to record and the fans like to consume the music. They like the new drops. They don't feel like they're oversaturated with his music. They want more. [00:26:23] Curren$y: Yeah. The only time we hear that word is from, like, somebody outside. It's like when I'm doing, like, a press run and the people who had to Google me while we were on the elevator and we get up there to interview me, and that's like some shit they say like, so do you think you know about oversaturation? Like, fuck no, I don't think about oversaturation. I only think about my folks, like, you know what I'm saying? That's you. Y'all don't know. Y'all just tired of saying that Curren$y is coming out again with a project. I'm just tired of saying that. It shows up on y'all fucking thing. You have to mention it. You're just tired of saying this shit. [00:26:58] Dan Runcie: That's them trying to put you into a box. That's them trying to put you into what they know. But like a lot of people that serve their base, you know what they want and you are giving them exactly what they want. [00:27:08] Curren$y: Well, I mean, we interact with and we're around motherfuckers that come to this store all day, sometimes not even, to buy a shirt, like to be like, bro, when is this dropping? Like, you know, to play something for Instagram, when is this coming out? So we got our finger on the pulse of what's keeping us alive. Like, we check our posts often, you know.[00:27:28] Dan Runcie: For sure. Mousa, I want to talk to you a bit about the business of Jet Life and everything you have going on. And I know we talked a little bit about how touring is a big place where you all are getting a lot of the money, but what does the breakdown look like from a high level? Like, how much of the money you all have coming in is from touring compared to the other businesses and then compared to streaming and the music itself? Like, from like a percentage? [00:27:53] Mousa Hamdan: Well, I think, of course, since pandemic, the touring has slowed down. We haven't done anything, but I don't think, for a while, I didn't think the people were ready for a tour, you know, because different cities still had different COVID restrictions and vaccination card restrictions, which would limit the fans of coming to the venues. So it wasn't a good look. I spoke to some other artist manager, who is like, yeah, he's on the road, but he's kind of depressed because shows are not selling out. He feels like he lost it. And it's not that, it's just that the environment wasn't for that. You were going out there too fast looking for the money. The good thing with us was, like he said earlier, that if one thing wasn't doing what we wanted, we had something else that was doing it. So, crazily, the apparel skyrocketed during the pandemic. [00:28:47] Curren$y: And I was the one who thought we needed, I thought we had to stop. [00:28:51] Mousa Hamdan: Yeah. [00:28:51] Curren$y: I was like, nobody is going to buy a fucking hoodie. [00:28:55] Mousa Hamdan: He was like, bro...[00:28:56] Curren$y: There's no toilet paper. There's no fucking lights on in the store. Who the fuck is going to order a shorts, and fuck it, we're selling out of shit. [00:29:05] Mousa Hamdan: Shit was flying. [00:29:06] Curren$y: I was watching the news. There's just one, like, who are these people that are buying? Are they aware that this shit's even happening? Do they know they have nowhere to wear it to? And they're just posting the shit in the crib, in our brand new drop. Like, just fucking kicking it. The love was real, and they kept us alive, bro. I bought like fucking three or four cars while the shit was locked down. You couldn't even, we couldn't even go to dealerships, and I was buying cars because people were buying fucking sweatshirts. I'm sorry. I'm going to go back here. Y'all continue with business talk. [00:29:42] Mousa Hamdan: Definitely.[00:29:43] Curren$y: You know I'm saying? He knows, he knows, he knows. [00:29:47] Mousa Hamdan: So I think when he drops some music, there's a jump in streams, you know what I'm saying? There's a bigger check coming, you know, apparel, same thing. We drop some, a new line or a new drop, it's bam. You know, everybody wants that, and depending on what it is. But, you know, we tend to drop a good little bit of apparel. So I think now apparel and the music kind of coexist, and both have their times, that one makes a little more than the other and vice versa. The other businesses that are fresh starts are creating a revenue. Of course, we don't expect the nightclub business to make the money that the record label makes, but it's an addition. So it is always like our thought of keep putting in the pot. Eventually, that pot will get full or, like he says in the songs, we're trying to fill up a safe. Once we fill that safe up, we just got to get another safe. We're not going to empty that safe. We're going to get another safe. Now we got to fill that one up, you know? So if, you know, at the end of the day, you know, it is Jet Life, we're going to spread our wings, we're going to see what we can put our hands on that will create a revenue and at the same time, sticking to our morals and beliefs of what we feel like Jet Life should stand for. A lot of people don't know, Jet Life, at the beginning, Jets was just an acronym. Just enjoy this shit. So that's what we're doing. We're enjoying it. Or like I tell people, Jet Life has just enjoy this life. So that's where we're at with it, steadily growing, steadily trying to get involved in everything that makes sense. You know, If it doesn't make sense, we leave it alone. So the revenue streams, like I said, it kind of goes back and forth. Apparel definitely is a world of its own now. Apparel is great. You know, we moved from, originally, like you said, with touring. That's when I realized that the apparel was so good because at touring, we were selling so much what I consider tour merch, you know, which is just the name of the show, the city's on the back, a picture of Curren$y on the shirt. You know, all the fans want it. They're like, man, they really love this shit. They're buying it. [00:31:56] Curren$y: That was just a tour shirt. [00:31:58] Mousa Hamdan: So then I was like, well, damn, I'd rather wear our own clothes when I want to go to the nightclub, when I go out to eat, or if I just want to hang around. I don't want to wear a tour shirt all the time, but I want to wear something. [00:32:12] Curren$y: And I didn't want to wear no shirt with my name on it.[00:32:15] Mousa Hamdan: Right. He doesn't want pictures of himself.[00:32:17] Curren$y: I don't want no shirt with me on it, no shirt with my name on it 'cause like, who the fuck am I? You know what I'm saying? Who am I, you know, to even do that? [00:32:27] Dan Runcie: Right. 'Cause that's more like merch, right? And I didn't know that people use merch, but like, no, y'all have a clothing apparel.[00:32:33] Mousa Hamdan: Tour merch. And then we changed it to apparel. Apparel, which you wear on a daily thing, every morning you wake up and you put apparel. You were sleeping in apparel. So we had to reach that. And then every couple of months we just think, what else can we make? What else? 'Cause you know, we started with just t-shirts, you know, then went to hoodies and long sleeves. And then we're like, we got to start getting bottoms and we got to get hats and you know, so now we're, you know, building into accessories and whatever else people may like. And at the same time as well, like I said, we test fitted on ourselves. If it's something that we don't want to wear, I'll always show him stuff like, look, these are some of the new designs. This is some of the stuff that you talked about with me that we created. Now it's on paper. Do you like it? If you like it, let's push the button. Let's go with it. If it's something you would wear. 'Cause at the end of the day, if he doesn't wear it, if I don't wear it, if the other artists on Jet Life don't wear it...[00:33:33] Curren$y: It will sit in the warehouse. [00:33:35] Mousa Hamdan: Why would we expect a fan or a fellow lifer to wear it? They don't want to wear something that you don't even want to wear yourself. So if we don't want to create nothing that we don't like. You know, and that's just, I think our business model with everything we do. We don't want to do anything that we don't agree with. We don't want to do anything that goes against what we stand for. [00:33:58] Dan Runcie: That makes sense. And the point again about the merch, too, I think Curren$y, you had this line in maybe it's an interview, I think you said, but it's like, no one's calling you Sean John merch, right? As you're telling Diddy like, oh yeah, I like your merch. [00:34:12] Curren$y: Right. You know what I'm saying? And just, we have to stand on that, you know? And I think we have for a long time, and it made people change the perception of it, you know. Before, like, just, the fact that we stand behind it like that, it made people buy it who maybe weren't even thinking about it because it made people want to look at it a little more to not like it, you know, like people came in to find like what was wrong. And then it's like, well, shit's just actually, you know, I'm going to buy the shirt, you know what I'm saying? Like, they were coming to point out why it was just merch and it wasn't, you know? [00:34:47] Dan Runcie: Yeah. Yeah. One other question for you, Mousa, about touring itself and just doing live shows. Because of how well the apparel's going right now and how the business overall may have changed since the pandemic, do you ever think that you'll go back to doing the same number of shows that you were doing before the pandemic because of how much success you have with everything else? Do you think it'll scale back a bit at all?[00:35:10] Mousa Hamdan: In my mind, I've always lived thinking never forget where this started from and never forget what created this lane for you to get into. Without the touring, I never knew how much the merch sold. And I noticed that with a lot of artists, there's a lot of artists that don't sell merch, and they don't know the money that they're missing. So without the touring, without the shows that we do, like he said, we put a finger on the pulse of the fans. Well, we'll know who's coming to these shows, you know, and you can see when, all right, well, the shows are getting a little light, so what is it we're doing wrong? There's something that we're missing. Same thing with the apparel. When sales are a little low then I'm like, well, what are we doing that we used to do better? Or what are we missing? Are we getting laid back? Are we feeling like it just is what it is now? But being involved in it like that, I think, keeps us on with whatever else we're doing 'cause it's going to keep telling us, like, this is the pulse of the people. This is what you're doing. So I think we'll always do tours. Maybe we're not, you know, one time we did, I think it was 60 shows in 70 days, which was crazy. [00:36:23] Curren$y: 63. [00:36:24] Mousa Hamdan: Yeah, it was, yeah, crazy. Show every night, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday. And they're like, whoa, when is the break, bro? Like, when are we? So I don't think we'll do that. But we're going to stay out there, you know, as long as the people want to see, and he's got fresh music that he wants to perform. And you know, he's an artist, I think, that feeds off the energy, you know. And if the crowd doesn't have the energy, he's like, why am I here? Why am I performing for these people? They don't really want to see me because the energy is not there. So as long as we're feeling the energy, then I think we're there. Hopefully, I don't see it going down no time soon. You know, we're going to keep doing whatever it is that allows us what the universe puts for us to do, you know? And we're just going to be there. [00:37:08] Dan Runcie: How do you look at doing your own shows versus doing festivals? Do you have preferences? I feel like for an artist like you, your own shows where your people are going to be at, right?[00:37:18] Curren$y: Yeah, bro. This is a whole other show. Don't do it. We love, we love, we love festival checks. If I had to pick, I like, you know, me at the House of Blues. I know exactly that the people who are in there, like, are there for what we going to do, you know what I'm saying? The festival, I've been blessed to be a person that you kind of, you can't get around me in the game, you know what I'm saying? So when you don't fuck with me, people speak out to you. You look stupid, you know what I'm saying? You look crazy. So people put me on shit, like just, no, we got to have him on this festival. We got to put him on this. We got to put him on this, you know what I'm saying? And my core people are there, but they're surrounded by people who are, like, waiting for like the next person to come out and like spit fire, you know what I'm saying? And walk on the crowd, pop, you know, like, I can't do it. I'll never do it, you know? So I'm like, I don't want to put my listeners through it because and they're in there like, shit, man. There's, like, a kid who kept, like, elbowing me, you know what I'm saying? Like, some of my listeners are, like, there's always somebody to put me to the side, like, yo, I'm 51, my nigga, like, this is the shit I'll listen to. So them, them dudes don't, they don't want that. Those ladies, like, who pull me to the side, like, boy, look, you know, I could be... I'm like, Yeah, you don't have time for, you know, for that. So I like to do just my thing. But the festival checks go directly to the sports car dealerships. Like, those are the checks that get you off the lot though. So, you know, you're being a fool not to do it, you know? And that's just business. [00:39:03] Mousa Hamdan: The checks are good, yes, but I think as well...[00:39:08] Curren$y: He makes sense with this. I know what he coming with this, but I'm going to tell you, they're coming to business. He makes sense. [00:39:12] Mousa Hamdan: Sometimes, I honestly, in a lot of things that we do, I always tell him, I think he underestimates his reach, you know, and he's too humble to the point of, nah, bro, like, they're not really here for me and this, that, and the other. Now, I'll be honest with you, we had one festival show. I was a little worried. We got on stage. He wasn't on stage. He was backstage, so he didn't know nothing was going on. I literally walked to the DJ. I said, bro, this is probably our last festival 'cause it was like, there was literally 10 people in front the stage. I said, bro, if he gets out here and there's 10 people out here, he's liable to walk off stage, bro, so listen to me. The intro started and it looked like a rush. Like, I didn't know who. They had about 5,000 people or better rush to the stage. And I like, whoa, that's more like it. Then he came out, he didn't see the dead part. He saw that part. He was like, oh, my people are here. They're here. They showed up. They showed up. I'm like, you just don't know. They really did show up 'cause they wasn't here five minutes ago. [00:40:22] Curren$y: They just showed up.[00:40:23] Mousa Hamdan: Bro, but then that's understanding the festivals. You got six stages. [00:40:28] Curren$y: Yeah. [00:40:29] Mousa Hamdan: They're trying to catch everybody.[00:40:30] Curren$y: I was posting one time, there's a way to do it, you know what I'm saying? As long as you are vocal about what time you go on, your people will navigate through to get there for you, you know what I'm saying? But you also, you got the people who're waiting for somebody else 'cause I'm like, it's a gift and the curse, 'cause, like, I'm, like, the most known unknown. So it's, like they know they can't put me on at fucking one o'clock, you know what I'm saying? So then when you put me on at, like, eight, and then there's, like, whoever the fucking, whoever name was written this big on the flyer, this guy's coming after me, all right. The kids who are waiting for this guy are, like, have been pressed against the barricade for hours, like since 11:00 AM. When I come out there with my low-impact workout, like they're fucking dying, like looking at me and I'm like, I get it. Don't trip. I fuck with this guy's music too. He'll be out here in a minute, and I hope he does a backflip on top of you when he does, you know what I'm saying? Like, that shit kind of fuck with me because I'm delivering a real message. Like, every word I write, like, I mean it. So I really don't want to say it sweating to a person who's like this, like on the barricade, just like, bro, please stop. We get it. You like Chevys, you want us all to get rich? Fucking shut up. We want to fucking rap about drugs. Where's the next guy? So that shit kind of make you not want to do it. But then this guy, fucking, he's also the person who says this like, okay, you also woke some people up to the music you make. Then there's always, like, when I get done, the people who work the festival, the grounds, are, like, bro, I never heard this shit, but this was real music. Like, I couldn't understand nobody else's words, you know what I'm saying? This is fucking good. So I'm like, well, that's cool. I do leave out there with more listeners than I did, you know what I'm saying? It might be 12, it might be 150. He going to count every dollar for each one via stream, so I understand where he comes from with that. But I always like, I say it to myself sometimes, and sometimes when it gets too heavy to me, I say to the people around me, I'm like, bro, I'm actually the only one who fucking have to go and do that shit. Like, I get it. We all here, we all fucking supporting, but they're not looking at you, like, get the fuck out. And you got to do this shit for 45 minutes, you know what I'm saying? Sure. There's some people who are enjoying it, but the motherfucker who's right in front of you is dying, and you have to continue to have a good time. Like, that shit is like being a fucking Disney World animatronic or, being like a Chuck E. Cheese thing. Like, that's a rough time for me for sure. But it works, you know? That's anybody's job.[00:43:27] Dan Runcie: It's a balance, right?[00:43:28] Curren$y: You know, a hundred percent love any fucking gig that you have, any job you have, bro. I'm sure everybody at NBA, that was their dream, to go to the NBA. Some of those days sucked though for those dudes, you know what I'm saying? So it ain't always going to be the shit. The situation overall is one that I wouldn't trade for the world. [00:43:48] Dan Runcie: That makes sense. And you mentioned too that the money that you're getting from the festivals is going to the sports car dealership. Can we talk a little bit about that? How's that business set up and how's that been going? [00:44:01] Curren$y: Oh, well, me and Mousa, we've always been kind of into, like, bringing cars back to life, restoring things, and shit. But I've been holding on 'em. But as of late, we're building a stable of vehicles to kind of release onto the public, but it'll be like a collection, the same way we come out with clothes. There'll be like six vehicles put up for sale at one time that we cultivate and put together. We putting together a BMW, a few vintage sports car that we putting together. We're going to roll 'em all out at one time, you know what I'm saying? So I expect them all to be gone, like, within the week. I expect it to be like shoes. Like, I expect motherfuckers to try it and everybody will blow. You know, everybody try their hands at the shit we do. So another motherfucker with a bigger audience and shit will try to do the same thing, but you know, who cooked that shit up first. [00:44:52] Mousa Hamdan: Okay. They know, They know where they got the idea from.[00:44:56] Curren$y: Yeah, they know, too, so it don't matter. [00:44:59] Dan Runcie: Speaking of cars and trendssetting, I know you got a partnership with NASCAR as well, and I feel like there's another thing, too, where not a lot of hip hop artists are doing those deals, but we are just seeing the way things are trended now. Everyone will be following to that. And you got the Jet Life cup series. All right, let's talk about it. [00:45:16] Curren$y: Yeah, man. Yeah, man. Well, yeah. People of any other nationality other than the original rebel down home boys were not involved in NASCAR and they fucking, they had it that way. They built it that way, executive-wise, it's not like that anymore. Now, you know, doors have been broken down, kicked in, and open-minded. People are now there, and it's made it more accessible for fans. I was shocked when I went that I saw like groups of different people, I don't want to just say black people, just different people in general because the other side of it, the way it was, they weren't picking what nationality or what people they didn't want, they didn't want nothing else, but what the fuck they had, you know? So it's way different now in all aspects. It's not just minorities selling nachos. They driving the cars. They are the ones like turning the wrenches and making sure shit is right. They got headsets on, they out there doing the real thing. And I brought one of my younger homies with me, it blew him away. He's at school for engineering, and he was just, he was nervous for us to even be out there. I made a few small jokes to my friends when we first got there based on the appearance and how it looked. But it really wasn't like that once you got down into the meeting. And I read on social media, like I read a few comments. There were some people who were not excited about our presence. There's some people who weren't into the collaboration. I saw one thing under a video that I was so sad 'cause I was like, I hope my mom don't see it. Because the motherfucker was like, what is he coming to steal? And I was like, damn, if my mama sees that, she'll probably cry, you know what I'm saying? Like, it'll take a minute for me to get her over that shit. But what are you going to do? You know what I'm saying? This shit, you can't blame the behavior 'cause it was taught a long time ago. Like, they didn't pop out like that. That's what that motherfucker told him to do, you know what I'm saying? And what we doing is playing the hand and telling the people who are receptive and the new people, the younger generation, like, it could go this way instead, you know what I'm saying? Like, we were up in all the suites and eating NASCAR food, you know, and actually, I'm going to say this, I was a little bummed with the NASCAR because we couldn't get a Coca-Cola badge on our jersey. We wanted to have it because the race that day was actually Coke Zero, Coke Zero 400, all right. So, when they originally had the design meeting for the package, they included Coca-Cola logo because that was the race, you know, that's when it was coming up. And I think like they did the same thing, like, whoever is involved with the collaborations just did a little brief overview of who I was or what I was about, and they're like, oh, no. So like, that kind of fucked me up. [00:48:17] Mousa Hamdan: They'll be back though. They'll be back. [00:48:19] Curren$y: Yeah. But you know, like, I was like, well this still, you know, shit is still hard, you know? But with time, with time, yeah. And I don't know. And then, and I didn't like the you got gang with you. I heard over there, I'm sorry. [00:48:32] Mousa Hamdan: Oh, yeah.[00:48:32] Dan Runcie: That's from fans or was that from NASCAR? [00:48:35] Curren$y: No, no.[00:48:35] Mousa Hamdan: Coke exec. [00:48:36] Curren$y: Just one of the brass at Coca-Cola. And I drank a lot of Coca-Cola, so I really do need to stop, but for health and maybe for business, because motherfucker was like, to the representative from NASCAR who was showing us to where we were going to go to sit down, like, in the suite. He's like, oh, you got a gang with you. And I was just like, damn, like. I'm sure maybe I'm looking at it with a microscope, you know. [00:49:01] Dan Runcie: But still though, you can't say that, yeah. [00:49:04] Curren$y: I really don't know, I just don't know. I just was on the fence. I thought about it a lot. I think about it. [00:49:09] Dan Runcie: But like, they wouldn't say that if, like, Jason Aldean walked up in there with a group of folks.[00:49:13] Curren$y: You got a lot of people with you, you know I'm saying? It wasn't like he said the gang's all here. If he said the gang's all here, that would not have hit me like that. People say that the gang's all here, that doesn't mean that you got a street gang here. [00:49:29] Mousa Hamdan: Right.[00:49:29] Curren$y: But, whoa, you got a gang with you. [00:49:33] Mousa Hamdan: He could have said, Hey fellas and just kept it moving.[00:49:36] Curren$y: Yeah. [00:49:36] Mousa Hamdan: How y'all doing guys? [00:49:38] Curren$y: Yeah. [00:49:38] Mousa Hamdan: And you didn't have to make conversation with us. You were just passing.[00:49:41] Curren$y: It felt like it was a Chappelle show skit because it could have been where keeping the real goes wrong. Because I was like, half step, like, trying to see if I could make eye contact with one of my friends who felt like maybe that was wrong and I had support in, like, hey man, like, what? But it could have went way south. Like, there could be no more NASCAR 'cause shit if we could, would've did that. You know, we just might not have the Coca-Cola on the next one. Or maybe we will, maybe they're like, oh, shit, man. We didn't mean that. I thought I did say that gang's all here. Let's put a badge on the fucking next jacket, you know, it might work that way. And that's business and that's why we're here talking, you know? And and that's why it it pays to be true to yourself within your business. And if your circle is small, it's easier for you to be honest and not worry about if something sounds stupid or anything because, like, we have a yin and a yang, like, you know what I'm saying? Like, that's what makes it work. [00:50:37] Dan Runcie: Right. And I think that's a good note to close things out. And I want to get your thoughts on this question because as you started with the beginning, y'all have been together for a while, even in this conversation, we can see that chemistry between the two of you, that yin and the yang, you understand each other. What do you think is the secret for having the artist and manager that just stay with each other? 'Cause there's so many times that, either other artists or other managers that have been on this show and they're like, oh, yeah, you know, so and so fired me. [00:51:04] Curren$y: Somebody lied in the beginning.[00:51:07] Mousa Hamdan: Right. [00:51:08] Curren$y: Just like, who fucks up anything. You know, like, just somebody lied in the beginning. The artist was signed to nine different managers. Everybody loaned him $1,500 to help him do something. He's just signing with whoever's going to fucking give him a fucking chain or watch, and he's not being honest. Or there's a fucking, like, a discrepancy on this stack of paperwork or something, and this guy's outsmarting the artist and fucking going to rob and blind, you know what I'm saying? Like, if that happens in the beginning, the intentions are bad in the beginning, then you'll see where it looked good and then it fall into pieces because you find out, you know what I'm saying? Like, fucking, when we read for fucking N.W.A, which is one thing I didn't turn down, I was down to do that. He's coming to me with movie shit. Do you want to read this? Do you want to do this? No, no, no, no. They're like, do you want to be Easy-E? And I was like, no. At first I was like, no, like, they should call his son, you know what I'm saying? But then I end up reading for it, and then they end up getting a guy from New Orleans anyhow. So that was cool. I'm like, damn, I probably could have got that shit. But nonetheless, the part that we were reading, it was after Easy-E's wife went through the paperwork that he did with Jerry Heller and she brought, like, so much shit, attention to him. And when E and Jerry had this talk, it made Jerry cry because he was leaving even though he did so much wrong shit. But in his heart of hearts, he probably didn't think it was wrong 'cause he took dude from nothing. But it was still bad and he couldn't believe how quick Eric was ready to shut the shit down. But it's because he was wrong. Like, once that, there's nothing you could do after that. Once it get like that, it shut down. That shit is heartbreaking. And we never, like, we have not hurt each other like in that aspect, you know what I'm saying? Like, when I came to him, I was like, look, I don't, you know what I'm saying, I ain't signed nothing yet, but this is what's going on. Boom, boom, boom, boom, boom. That's that, you know. I don't know, I'm going to go talk ahead, I'm going to do this and get this and then not say this. You know, he don't fucking pop up and see I'm doing the show in Colorado and, you know what I'm saying, I didn't say anything. I just went, flew out and oh no, I made just 30 grand right quick, you know. That there's just, it's all on the up, bro. So with that, you know, you stay friends, we friends first all. [00:53:28] Mousa Hamdan: That's I think the biggest thing. [00:53:29] Curren$y: Yeah. If he wasn't in my homie, then we wouldn't do business. [00:53:31] Mousa Hamdan: We started as friends, and then we continued to be friends in this. [00:53:36] Curren$y: Yeah. All the way through.[00:53:38] Mousa Hamdan: We're business partners, but we never was just business partners. We was always friends to begin with. [00:53:44] Curren$y: Right. So that make you not be able to do no fucked up business. [00:53:48] Mousa Hamdan: And then we trust each other. [00:53:49] Curren$y: You know what I'm saying? You can't do that to your friend.[00:53:52] Mousa Hamdan: Trust is big, you know. I think he trusts my decisions, I trust his decisions. And then we talk about things, like he said, we were going to always converse about whatever decisions we want make. If there's ever a thought, I think, you know, this may be wrong or whatever, I'm going to consult with him as if he was my manager, you know what I'm saying? So we're going to talk and the trust issue, I always hear that, you know, how, why y'all been together so long? I'm like, if you build a business, who builds a business to separate, right? We build a business together [00:54:24] Curren$y: Who are these people that you're with? Who's in your car? Who the fuck are you riding with in the car? Like, who? That's why. That's why I said, like, having 19 and 30 motherfuckers. Like, now there might be 30 people in this building at a time, and they all could have a Jet Life chain, they all be a part of what's going on. But at the end of the day, you know what I'm saying? When it'll come down, it'll come down. Like, we got to sit down and fucking, you know what I'm saying, and put it together, you know. Everybody respect that because when we come out the room, we come out the with the right answer.
The guys are back with a great episode with Blacc Mel he is a multi talented artist and entrepreneur tap in and get to know him. He also release his deluxe album titled BMNBM Deluxe on all streaming platforms.
cold as spitta drops a exclusive new joint with Oursideonly podcast! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/oursideonlymarketingagenc/support
Welcome Back❗️Tallahassee has been on fire... LITERALLY. Tune in as Smoke talks about his experience with the Heat. We take a stroll back down memory lane and talk about Vacation Bible School. Also, Smoke discusses the new Duke Duece, Spitta, and Snoop Dogg; Projects. Sponsor: Creative Designs N More: Tik Tok: https://www.tiktok.com/@seewandab If you liked Smokes Shirt, check out SmokePh Apparel: https://www.etsy.com/shop/SmokephiApparel Appreciate yall
Post Birthday vibes are in the atmosphere up here on the Top Floor. Vibe up as Smoke talks about his Bday, Publix Chicken & Detoxing, Wave Jackson, and Spitta's new album
ZUM FORMAT:Im neuen Format „WORK IN PROGRESS“ meines Podcasts möchte ich Sie gerne über aktuelle Kompositionsprojekte informieren, Ihnen exklusive Klangeindrücke präsentieren und Ihnen die Möglichkeit geben, einen Blick hinter die Kulissen bei der Entstehung eines neuen Werkes zu werfen.ZU SEASON 1:In Season 1 dieser neuen Reihe wird sich alles um mein wohl größtes Kompositionsprojekt bislang drehen: ein eigenes, abendfüllendes Weihnachtsoratorium im romantischen Klangbild nach einem Libretto von Friedrich Spitta aus dem Jahre 1894.IN DIESER FOLGE:Heute möchte ich Sie gerne über die Hintergründe und Rahmenbedingungen informieren, die mich 2019 dazu gebracht haben, mit der Komposition dieses groß angelegten Werkes zu beginnen. Im Zusammenhang damit erläutere ich (in einem Abriss) die Grundzüge meiner Kompositionstechnik, die in diesem Stück zu Einsatz gekommen ist und was mir in der vielfältigen Gesamtkonzeption besonders am Herzen lag.HÖRBEISPIELE:- [00:00:00] „No.1 Pastoral-Phantasie. Unter Verwendung des Weihnachtsliedes „Vom Himmel hoch da komm‘ ich her“.----------------------------------------------------LINKS ZUR EPISODE----------------------------------------------------Herzogenbergs Oratorium und das Libretto von Friedrich Spitta:https://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Die_Geburt_Christi_(Herzogenberg)https://www.herzogenberg.ch/geburt_volltext.htm„Christus der Auferstandene“ von G.Schreck als Inspiration:https://imslp.org/wiki/Christus%2C_der_Auferstandene%2C_Op.26_(Schreck%2C_Gustav)https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kOphy2_b9HUAktuelle Kompositionsprojekte:https://www.friedrich-sacher.de/kompositionen-notenmaterial/----------------------------------------------------SOCIAL MEDIA----------------------------------------------------Offizieller Kanal zum Podcast:https://t.me/ForumOrganumMein YouTube-Kanal:https://www.youtube.com/ProOrganoPlenoPersönliche Internetseite:http://friedrich-sacher.de
- Rip to the family's affected in Uvalde - its Spitta day at the gawdcast. We celebrate Curren$y's career from the early days to the top of the mountain. We give our favorite spitta projects. Favorite producers he worked with. We try to rate the pilot talk series. -comedic genius, actor extraordinaire, movie writer & producer.. uptown legend mark ceasar joints. Mark does a light skin Michael Jackson impersonation. He also tells a ton of story's about the New Orleans hip hop scene. - We answer Twitter questions - and talk about a shit ton of random things. Do join
Musicólogo alemão do século 19 destaca a “maravilhosa variedade” dos prelúdios e fugas presentes na obra
#InDaPartmentsWitParlae #InDaPartments #MeetMeInThePartments #DigiHouseStudio #OGtalk #OgtalkThePodcast
Biggs The CEO and Keem West have a unique podcast that will make you laugh and inspire you at the same time. For their audience, the Dream Bigg Podcast helps others understand what it means to dream bigger than your current situation and continue to fight for what you want the most. They always have a good time with their guest with real conversation. This episode we had the opportunity to sit down with Mr Sly Spitta to chop it up about new Reinventing theBrand, Current State of Music, and Importance of Content. He always blessed us with a freestyle.Please Subscribe, Like, and Comment on our Channel.Follow Us On Instagram:@Day2DayNYC@bkvntg@richmixrich@mrslyspittaWebsite for Merch:day2daynyc.comthevintagenyc.com
On this episode, we kick it with the hosts of the "I Don't Care What You Think" Podcast, Ray Spitta & Amir Bryant, as they give us insight as to what their show is about and how it got started. Things get a little heated as the Gahhd Cast Boyz debate about the musical temperature of several prominent Hip-Hop artists and what that means for their careers. We also get into everyone's picks for Top Five Dead or Alive. So make sure to listen in if you're a true Hip-Hop head, as this one is dedicated to Jersey City...and, do remember to tap in on the socials: Burnz- @callme_joseph_ Bludshot- @deadass_worldwide V.S.O.P.- @thereal_vsop On Twitter Brother Ef- @efrainr711 Ray- @rvyspitta Amir- @abryant3422 GAHHD- @gahhd_podcast LBE- @lastbreathentertainment
The fellas are back this week, discussing new music drops from Alchemist & Spitta, Deanté Hitchcock & Big K.R.I.T., recapping the Verzuz between Musiq Soulchild & Anthony Hamilton, the first part of the Kanye West documentary "Jeen - Yuhs" & also the 1996 film "Original Gangsters" w/ Fred Williamson, Jim Brown & Pam Grier, the show "Yo! MTV Raps" making a come back, Ye showing he's a brother to Pusha T, ways to stop yourself from wanting something, & more substantial talk! Don't make it all the way through the episode without subscribing to us on Anchor, Apple Podcast, Spotify, & Youtube [Channel: GiveOffGoodVibes] --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/tbgp/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tbgp/support
the guys are back, & chop it up about a bunch of topics. they get to discussing things from the Ye & Drake #FreeLarryHoover benefit concert, to new projects coming from Benny the Butcher, Spitta, & more, while covering newly released music from Tory Lanez, EARTHGANG, & Rick Ross. paying respects to Slim 400 [& Young Dolph], establishing the origin of how Youtube came to be what it is today, Rubi Rose & her no double-tapping rule, the great piracy era, & a hell of a lot more! appreciate you for tuning in! sending positive energy to those closest to Slim 400; rest easy. --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/tbgp/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tbgp/support
Qualo Smoke joins the pod and talks about his new single "92 Game Spitta pt. 2" which is dropping December 3. We didn't have any topics for this week so we just chopped it up the whole time. Hope y'all enjoy! Let me know what you think! Cop your merch! shotswithslim.com
Episode 32 w/ Curren$y x Harry Fraud with an 8 track album titled Regatta! Another fire release from Spitta and it can be checked out on all streaming platforms. (links below) Thank yall in advance for checking it out and make sure you go listen to the previous episodes plus subsribe, like, all that good stuff. Music Links Apple Music - https://music.apple.com/us/album/regatta/1592427387 Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/album/5wbhD1OUSJ1AaNegEYOjvA Social Tags Instagram - https://www.instagram.com/spitta_andretti/ Twitter - https://twitter.com/CurrenSy_Spitta --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/bruceleroy/message
"What about your friends? Will they stand their ground? Will they let you down again?"- TLC "What About Your Friends" The one dynamic in a person's growth is the supportive homie. Real friends make sure that you're making sound decisions, and they'll make sure to always have your best interests at heart. In this episode, Sam gets in-depth about the purpose of having strong friends. "Show me your friends, and I'll show you you're future."- Paris the Spitta
Sports: The NBA is back and with that the Ben Simmons saga continues, he was suspended for conduct detrimental to the team. The Bucks face the Nets and the Lakers face the Warriors on opening night. The NFL week 6 is in the bag and we have a super bowl prediction. Anime: Fire Force manga is entering its final arc, still no season 3 in sight. However Kingdom season 4 is coming this spring 2022. Disney+ is dipping its big toe into the anime arena. Shonen Sunday Editor-in-Chief steps down after 6 years. With the news done the guys jump right in to this weeks reviews and damn this is a good season so far!!! Music: Prayers to Rapper and Entrepreneur Berner who revealed he has cancer. On to other drama Lil Wayne and Young Thug have dealings with court as a lawsuit against Lil Wayne was dismissed. Young Thug is suing a Luxury apartment complex for giving his bag and hard drive with over 200 unreleased songs to a stranger. The guys review Still Stoned on Ocean by Currensy aka Spitta
On April 4, 1981 a
The brothers dive into new music we got from Maxo Kream & Tyler, The Creator, Ari Lennox, Chloe Bailey & Spitta announcing the titles & dates for his 7 project series, Fat Joe v Ja Rule Verzuz, paying our condolences to Michael K. Williams & his loved ones, discussing Steve's [OG host from Blue's Clues] apology & uplifting speech, the new Matrix film coming this winter, trying to understand/comprehend why people rather be sheep than shephards, & a bunch of other interesting topics! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tbgp/support
This is for the session- This is for the morning route! The real ones know
On this episode, the fellas get into Jalen addressing the BBQ, Nia DaCosta being the first black female director to hit #1 in box offices with "Candyman", LeBron spitting the wrong lyrics to music on social media, Spitta announcing that he's dropping 7 projects & our favorite Curren$y/producer collaborative projects, Christian Rap, our Donda album reviews, the CLB cover art & how it's not good, & much more! --- This episode is sponsored by · Anchor: The easiest way to make a podcast. https://anchor.fm/app Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/tbgp/support
Episode 21 w/ Curren$y and the 10 track album is titled 'Collection Agency!' Its definitely another dope project in its entirety by Spitta and can be checked out on all streaming platforms (Links below) Thank yall in advance for checking it out and make sure you go listen to the previous episodes plus subsribe, like, all that good stuff. Music Links Apple Music - https://music.apple.com/us/album/collection-agency/1552474822 Spotify - https://open.spotify.com/album/7MBxFhu1zwccCNepKUiOMS Social Tags Inststagram - https://www.instagram.com/spitta_andretti/ Twitter - https://twitter.com/CurrenSy_Spitta --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/bruceleroy/message
On this episode of Views From The 7 we had @Spitta_P on and we get into: » Kevin Gates and his transition after serving time in prison » Who is Spitta P? » How can you prevent putting yourself in a box musically? » When your passion turns into a job how do you fall back in love with it? » Does hood beefs prevent artist from going mainstream? We've got that and much more...This is Views From The 7!!
This week we see the Might Lakers succumb to their injuries and are unable to make it past the full off season Suns. The Mavs couldn't get it done with just Luka playing at a star level KP was M.I.A most of the series which allowed the Clippers to escape defeat. Then we have the Nets who came out and dominated the first 2 games of the second round vs the Bucks who couldn't buy a bucket or stop. Moving on from the mess of sports we get into a pretty good week for anime with 86-86 reaching a turning point in the story. My hero getting ready to shift gears after wrapping up the class 1-A VS 1-B before moving to My Villain Academia one of the better arcs in the manga, plus much more with all the other shows this week hitting on all cylinders. We move into music and one of the Best albums to come out this year Corvette Coup by Curren$y the Spitta.
Monsoon Staraw and Bubba Ball shoot the shitt with Spitta Tha Don. The emcee/producer/engineer talks about how he began mixing and mastering, who influences him, growing up and evolving, and the Westside of Chicago. #FirstOfAll. Bubba Ball delivers the Underlay for the Overplay. http://www.theshittspodcast.com
von Jürgen Vagt 11.05.21 Heute begrüßte ich Herrn Dr. Christian Spitta vom dem Zentrum für BrennstoffzellenTechnik ZBT und wir sprachen über Wasserstoff in der Mobilität. Am Anfang des Interviews ging es um Geschichte des Wasserstoffs, üblicherweise wird dieser Träger zusammen mit der Brennstoffzelle als Energieumwandler gedacht. Die ersten Patente gab es schon in den 1820er Jahren und in den 1880er Jahren hat Jules Verne eine bedeutende Technikutopie veröffentlicht. Aber erst mit den Weltraumprogrammen der Amerikaner nahm das Thema wieder Fahrt und so fand die Kombination aus Wasserstoff und Brennstoffzelle zum ersten Mal Anwendung in der Raumfahrt. Aus den großen Versprechungen, die die Entwicklungsgeschichte des Wasserstoffantriebs begleiten haben, ist bislang nichts geworden. Die Energiebilanz dieser Antriebskombination ist immer noch schlecht und man muss immer noch mehr Energie als beim batterie- elektrischen Antrieb aufwenden, um ein Fahrzeug zu bewegen. Batterie-elektrische Antriebe versus Wasserstoff Jetzt im Frühling des Jahres 2021 etabliert sich der batterie- elektrische Antrieb und die Absatzzahlen von Elektroautos steigen. Hat die Kombination aus Wasserstoff und Brennstoffzelle noch Potenzial in der Zukunftsmobilität? Laut Dr. Christian Spitta gibt es die Notwendigkeit im Heavy Duty Bereich also Lkws, Busse und andere große Fahrzeuge Wasserstofffahrzeuge einzuführen. In diesem Bereich würden batterie- elektrische Antriebe dazuführen, dass sehr viel Ladefläche für die Batterie verwendet werden muss. Diese Lkws wären nicht rentabel zu betreiben und der klimapolitischer Handlungsdruck wirkt im Schwerlastbereich genauso wie bei den Pkws. Ab 2030 müssen dieselbetriebene Lkws vom Markt langsam aber sicher verschwinden. Dr. Christian Spitta betont aber auch, dass der Schwerlastverkehr zu klein ist, um die Wasserstofftechnologie in der Großserie einzusetzen. Man braucht auch noch die größeren Pkws und kleinere Transporter, damit die Wassertechnologie in der Massenfertigung rentabel wird. In den nächsten Jahren geht es um die Infrastruktur, auf den großen europäischen Transitrouten muss es ausreichend viele Tankstellen geben. Dann stellt sich erstmal die Frage, wie diese Tankstellen mit Wasserstoff versorgt werden, wenn größere Mengen Wasserstoff in den wichtigsten europäischen Häfen Hamburg und Rotterdam angeliefert werden. In den nächsten Jahren müssten dann an den Transitrouten entsprechende Tankstellen aufgebaut werden.
2011 was such a great year for the blog era of music. Don't believe us? That year includes debut releases from future superstars like Frank Ocean, Tyler the Creator, and The Weeknd. However, it was also another year of consistency from an artist that is the poster child for this characteristic in Hip Hop. We're talking about Curren$y the Spitta and one of his most highly acclaimed mixtapes in his rather large catalog, Covert Coup. Not only was this a critical project for the Louisiana rapper's musical development at the peak of the industry in the blog era (that being the late 2000s/early 2010s), but it is exclusively produced by Grammy-nominated producer The Alchemist, includes features from artists like Grammy-nominated Freddie Gibbs and the late Prodigy, and was also a pivotal mixtape in Curren$y's musical trajectory into being one of Hip Hop's most consistent artists of the modern era. For a certain time as an indie act through his label Jet Life Recordings, Curren$y released projects on Bandcamp following Covert Coupe. Most of the projects were collaborative mixtapes with DJ Drama and Harry Fraud. However, these projects truly stretched Spitta's musical element before he continued to release mixtapes every year until now. This project helped start Curren$y's collaborative LPs with producers and even included talent that much of the rap community see as modern icons. This week, with the homie Dave (@TrapBasquiat) pulling up for the four-peat, we go song-by-song on the 10-track LP and talk about previous Curren$y concerts we've experienced, Freddie Gibbs' rise in the blog era, and how this project became arguably the best mixtape in Curren$y's long list of projects. Listen to this new episode and previous others on: Apple Podcasts (https://tinyurl.com/jydzz9fk) Spotify (https://tinyurl.com/c3u77hcf) Anchor (https://anchor.fm/recordreport) Follow Record Report Podcast on: Instagram (@RecordRepPod) Facebook: Facebook.com/RecordReportPodcast Twitter (@RecordRepPodcast) #Curren$y #JetLife #Alchemist #FreddieGibbs
Yerrrrrrr! Get Ya Bars Off Podcast is back like cooked crack with another dope episode for you. The crew starts off trying to find out why Ab-Soul's " These Days " album is Loso's number one TDE album and they name their top ten TDE projects to date (9:35). The homie Sir Frass of " Oh We Wrasslin Podcast " pulls up, then, Loso discusses his story of a woman giving him a background check on herself, (1:08:14) which leads Arri to ask the crew on their definition of " Having Game " (1:20:52)? RBE has just announced their new event " Max Out " with the main event announced as Hitman Holla vs Cassidy and the guy give their thoughts (1:32:41). The guys mess around with the bubbling feud building between Geechi Gotti and Hitman holla (2:05:12). URL has released their upcoming Double Impact 4 card and its stacked! The guys breakdown the card and Arri explains his issues with the card (2:17:12). Curren$y released his new project " Collection Agency " and Arri gives his thoughts on Spitta's current run. (2:58:32). Arri recaps D'Angelo's Verzuz performance and reacts to the news of Raekwon & Ghostface being announced as the next Verzuz battle w/ S.Deezy (3:01:38). Arri gives a quick recap of the Golden Globe Awards and its winners and losers (3:07:29). Relax and enjoy the show wherever you are and dont forget to follow Get Ya Bars Off Podcast/Get Ya Bars Off Pod EVERYWHERE! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/gybo/message Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/gybo/support
The CEO of the S.M.H. music group stopped by to talk music, acting and engineering.
In part 2 of episode 3, we talk the NFL, the CFB Playoff picture, Kawhi's contract situation, Harden acting like a garden tool, and most importantly...favorite No Limit & Cash Money Records artists.
Curren$y’s flying high. Weeks after having his first child, the New Orleans native and Freddie Gibbs delivered their joint debut, Fetti. Produced entirely by The Alchemist, the album joins the ranks of Spitta’s revered collaborative efforts. In his first sit-down ever with B.Dot and Elliott, Curren$y talks fatherhood, finances, Mac Miller, producers and much more! Original Publication Date: 3/12/18 Learn more about your ad-choices at https://news.iheart.com/podcast-advertisers
Tune in as Smith and close friend Jose Rodriguez debate on curren$y and other music artists in the industry as well as taking it back to memory lane while discussing the history they both share! You don't wanna miss --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/weareaod/support
The Guys Are Back! Join Ab, Jon, & Roy as they return from a COVID-19 hiatus to discuss: Virtual Learning Prank Tory Lanez Surprise Album - 9:00 “Our Testicles Are Useless” - 18:10 - 21:00 Men's Hygiene - 21:00 “Is Vagina A Gift” - 31:30 The Greatness of Spitta - 52:38 Dr. Dre's Spousal Support Battle - 58:20 Men Holding Each Other Accountable / Protecting Women - 1:17:51 Make sure you follow the podcast to stay up to date! @MostUnknownPod @JustAbJudah @Jonny_Vercetti @Ogfoolaaay
Ceo : SpittaStudios L.L.C Booking : Bookingzay2010@outlook.com New music out now https://distrokid.com/hyperfollow/spittazay/high-life-2distrokid.com/hyperfollow/spittazay/high-life-2 --- Support this podcast: https://anchor.fm/keep-it-100-podcast/support
On this episode LilOne, Tre Blu and Spitta P discuss motivation, pain, loss, mental health, being independent , the H.M.F. Label, Upcoming Projects and more.
What my “quarantine” Time was spent doing. Also The Weeknd new album + more new music! And a salute to one of the greats, Curren$y Spitta. Enjoy!
I sit down with local entertainer and CEO of LIV ENT, Spitta Beats. Find all of my interview footage as well as links to his music at: colinsconversations.com/spitta-beats Instrumentals featured: Blokhead Johnny Jamil and the Show FreeBeatsio Sir Phaded --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/colins-conversations/message
This is a special episode of The Hustler's Choice Podcast. In today's episode I had the opportunity to interview a good friend of mine Andrew Gonzalez, AKA Yung Spitta who is a local artist from Bakersfield, California. We discuss his new project "A Short But True Story", his come up, the stipulations and misconceptions about the music industry and how sometimes we have to step back and trust the process. It's filled with nothing but value and to hear a snippet of one of his newest songs, listen until the very end! Connect with Yung Spitta Stream A.S.B.T.S here Instagram Twitter Connect with me below https://isaacmashman.com Instagram Twitter
Rising hip-hop artist Trevor Spitta came through to promote his new album Don't Try This At Home. He also discussed his musical influences, what it's like being a white rapper, his craziest story from a live performance, growing up in North Jersey and trying to break into the hip-hop scene in NYC, throwing a concert at his high school in the middle of the school day, and more! Stream Don't Try This At Home on all streaming services here: https://lnk.to/DontTryThisAtHome Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/trevorspitta/?hl=en Twitter: https://twitter.com/trevorspitta?lang=en
This week we sit down with TBW Sir Spitta the H-Town rapper that traces roots to Mo City and the West Coast. We speak to him about the effect the Bay area has on his music, his approach to music marketing, and how being positive keeps him and his team going. We also talk about his latest album release and the amount of effort his group has put into creating visuals to go with the music.
On this week’s episode of What’s Da Word we are joined by our special guest Al Spitta as he gives us his personal intake on mental health and how family suppose is important with dealing with certain issues. Also enjoy hot topics featuring Wendy Williams, Jordyn Woods, Nicki Minaj, Lil Nas X and more! --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/whatsdaword/message
PRODUCED BY ROBMIC...4 THE CULTURE --- Send in a voice message: https://anchor.fm/blackneoradio/message
Episode 88. Big J Smooth is in the building! Shouts out to the king of the North Shore for coming through to GDP HQ (@phxdownstudios), and giving everyone a window into a different part of Massachusetts. For those who don't know; Jon Glass runs his own studio up in Danvers, called Glasshouse Studios and is a producer/audio engineer. He has worked/helped develop some of your favorite artists including young Token the Spitta, Hopsin, and Joyner Lucas. A Great Dude! We discussed longevity in Music, the 2005-2010 period in Boston Music, going on tour in Europe, and strip clubs on the North Shore. I enjoyed this one a lot, shouts out to my guy! ----------------- WATCH THIS EPISODE HERE: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QT7GhFMp69k --------- The Official Score of the "Derek the Last Air Bender" was composed by Josh Schuback (@josh_schuback) & Designed by Jack Bigelow, (@jack.bigelow). Voiceover: Tim Blouin, @timblou8 The "GDP Jingle" heard in every podcast (Spotify, Podcasts, Soundcloud) was created by MyCompiledThoughts. @mycompiledthoughts This Episode was Produced: Frankie Films @frankkkkkieeeee All GDP Graphics are created by: @jack.bigelow ----------- Follow Jon Glass! Instagram: @jonglass_ @thenewglasshousestudio Twitter: https://twitter.com/jonglass_?lang=en ---------- Follow GDP! Instagram: @goldendeerproductions YouTube: YouTube.com/GoldenDeerProductions Facebook: Facebook.com/GoldenDeerProductions Website: goldendeer.productions -------- Follow Conor Holway: Instagram: @godholway LinkedIn: linkedin.com/conorholway Twitter: @boachbonnie -------- Listen to Our Podcasts Here! iTunes: itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/the-g…d1437829342?mt=2 Soundcloud: @goldendeerproductions Spotify: Search: "Golden Deer Productions" --------- This Episode was Recorded LIVE from the Best Studio in Boston, Phoenix Down Recording. IG: @phxdownstudios, @johnscottengineer Book Ya Session Right Here: phxdown.simplybook.me/sheduler/manage ----------- The Golden Hours Podcast is the biggest Podcast in Boston and the official podcast of Golden Deer Productions. The podcast is run by Conor Holway (a great guy), and we try to show love to anyone making moves in the city. Season 4 is the season of Derek the Airbender... only Derek can save the world from the Fire Deer, do you think he has the W or na??
Yo yo yo! Another Week Another Hip-Hop Podcast, this week we go over another of our favorite artists, Curren$y aka Spitta one of the legends of the game, and someone whose a profound impact on hip-hop and so many in our generation, Dave is back aka @trapbasquiat and we are lucky to have him on!
This episode tackles a bunch of different avenues on this episode. We have some discussions about what is going on the world of music. We talk about Megan Thee Stallion, Spitta, Tyler The Creator, DJ Khaled as they have they have been the big staples in music. We discuss a host of other things that have been happening in our lives and odd topics in the space of music. This episode we are joined by our country cousin @1billybowlegs & anonymous @king_draper Also remember to subscribe, rate, and comment on your platform.
Joseph joins me to discuss recent betting allegations, Madden game, Omega, new recruits, and more!
This throwback bar is from our 7th Books and Bars episode featuring New Orleans’ own, Currensy. This particular track “Example” from his Pilot Talk album, spoke directly to me after an injury in the NFL put my career in jeopardy. Listen man… When life pulls you somewhere for a reason, don’t hesitate to take the risk. Just like Spitta “shook the dice and rolled,” he also took that step when others would “stay shook and froze”. So GET BUSY… Be an example for the next generation of go-getters. #booksandBARS
Bearded Bruddas Podcast Episode 17!!!!!!!!! On this week's episode we have special guest Rod, owner of our sponsor velvet noir beard care. We get into Rod's reasons for being a Crimson Tide fan from Louisiana. We also discuss starting a growing a business, and Gambling on sports. R&B and Riesling, keeping the same energy, and Spitta appreciation is also on today's show. DONT MISS THIS ONE
Tell us who you are; What inspires you to create music; How do you stand out from other artists; What artist in the game motivated you to do music; Within the next 5 years, where do you see your career headed;..........
Tell us who you are; What inspires you to create music; How do you stand out from other artists; What artist in the game motivated you to do music; Within the next 5 years, where do you see your career headed;..........
MP3 Download: http://www.BayAreaCompass.blogspot.com Messy Marv just shot over his new free mixtape titled Never Say Nuthin You Want Played Back To You Vol. 1. Enjoy! MP3 Download: https://www.dropbox.com/sh/te2vefbhq35snqt/AABxVSHJYSTaJEflXYBTOHdsa?dl=0 Send music submissions to BayAreaCompassMusic@gmail.com Want to stay up to date with all the BayArea music? Follow BayAreaCompass Follow us on Twitter: http://twitter.com/#!/BayAreaCompass Like and Follow us on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/BayAreaCompass Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/user/BayAreaCompassMusic
This week on A Waste of Time with ItsTheReal, we traveled out to Los Angeles to sit down with Pittsburgh's own Wiz Khalifa in the studio as he records his next album! We discussed the infamous Chief Keef video shoot in the desert with 50 Cent, hitting Curren$y on MySpace and moving to New Orleans to live on Spitta's couch for a month, how Snoop talked Wiz into acting, what it was like to perform for three audience members at a CMJ performance in NYC, his inspiration for the O.N.I.F.C. artwork and the internet's initial reaction, and what he thinks of all the artists who have taken inspiration over the years. We talk growing up in the Steel City, being comfortable wearing Chucks when everyone else was rocking Jordans, spending much of his high school years focusing on recording music and performing at local colleges, and the best thing he got from signing to Warner Bros. Records. All that, plus why he's gotten heavily into kickboxing, his favorite remixes, his most hilarious dated lyric, how fatherhood changed his perspective on life, what happened when Berner asked to borrow Wiz's car, which major records he's broken as a Vegas DJ, his honest reaction to the news that there's a SuperFly remake, and much, much more! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
MP3 Download: http://www.BayAreaCompass.blogspot.com Kafani drops a new single titled Pimp Game featuring Smurf Hicks & Young Spitta! Yes that is a dope Suga Free sample tho! MP3 Download: http://bayareacompass.blogspot.com/2017/12/kafani-ft-smurf-hicks-x-young-spitta.html Send music submissions to BayAreaCompassMusic@gmail.com Want to stay up to date with all the BayArea music? Follow BayAreaCompass Follow us on Twitter: http://twitter.com/#!/BayAreaCompass Like and Follow us on Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/BayAreaCompass Subscribe to our YouTube Channel: http://www.youtube.com/user/BayAreaCompassMusic
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Always great fun chatting to Mysdiggi. We went way back to cover ground on early days in W. London, growing up around Breakers & MC's, The early Jungle scene with rinse FM and various MC crews before an unusual illness focused his mind and set him on the right path. Making his Mystrogen album, working with Australian supergroup; The Hill Top Hoods, French Electro Swingers - Smokey Joe & The Kid, his recent random success in collaborating with Sainsbury's and his plans for the future. We also chatted about his involvement with UK MMA Podcast: The Whoacast. We HAD to get some MMA and MAYMAC talk in there too. Something for the whole Family:) Salute Mysdiggi. ENJOY!
Today’s bar is from New Orleans’ own, Curren$y. This particular track “Example” from his Pilot Talk album, spoke directly to me after an injury in the NFL put my career in jeopardy. Listen man… When life pulls you somewhere for a reason, don’t hesitate to take the risk. Just like Spitta “shook the dice and rolled,” he also took that step when others would “stay shook and froze”. So GET BUSY… Be an example for the next generation of go-getters.
theEVRYDYWKND presents The Baseline. A weekly podcast touching on the hottest and most important topics in DMV Hip Hop Culture. Tune in weekly to catch our host c0pp0 x Young Mitchell discuss the DMV scene with a featured guest. This week we have Nature Boi of Dope Music Village touching on: -Rob Kardashian x Black Chyna -#MITMonday: 21 Savage's Debut Album "ISSA" -Jay-Z 4:44 Album -Chaz French x Spitta "Invite Only" -#NewMusic stay up to date @ www.theeverydayweekend.com #DopeDelivery
Who : Presented by We Inspire Network - W.I.N. Radio / Tribe45 What: The outreach is R.E.A.L.( Rap Evangelist Altering Lives) When: 24/7; 365 days a year Where: worldwide Why: Created,Called, and Commissioned to do this till we die. TRIBE 45 was formed with the Christian Emcee in mind. However it was more specifically created for the " RAP EVANGELIST". The logo/ emblem is based on 2 TIMOTHY 4:5 " But be thou sober in all things, suffer hardship, do the work of an evangelist, fulfil thy ministry." " Gospel Rap has grown exponentially over the years. R. E. A. L. MUSIC endeavors to highlight Christian Emcees who continue to holdfast the Evangelistic aspect of the Christian rap. R.E.A.L. stands for RAP EVANGELIST ALTERING LIVES. The Rap Evangelist is not your average " Christian Rapper". Rap Evangelist are the Emcees who refuse to forsake the Great Commission. Rap Evangelist have an Evangelical worldview and the gospel of Christ never takes backseat to their music or lyrics. They are not only unashamed of the gospel, they proclaim it every opportunity they have. These types of Emcees are becoming harder to find as Gospel Music continues to evolve." - Lloyd B. AKA Min.Mercy Founder of R.E.A.L. MUSIC and TRIBE 45
Shoo vänner!Avsnitt 121!En rättelse, fel YFN Lucci & Yo Gotti-sång spelades i avsnitt 120. Hoppas detta inte drabbade någon.En video, som ni kan kolla på innan ni lyssnar (youtube)Nåt från FalkenbergKodie Shane är på gång (släppte t ex detta tape dagen efter inspelning)Spitta, She Money, Scotty Cain, Mista med fler har gjort musik som låter som NBA Youngboy i åratal, vad är det som gör NBA så populär?Tråkigt meddelande: vår fest på Marie Laveau som skulle varit i helgen är tyvärr inställd. Siktar på fest senare i vår!Ha det ok.Whatever?! xoxoSånger från avsnittet:Yo Gotti feat. YFN Lucci - They LikeYoung Thug - Wyclef JeanLorik feat. Lab & Chapo - LyssnaKevin Lyttle - Turn Me OnKodie Shane feat. Lil Yachty - SadCharm - They dont knowBlaque - 808Kodie Shane - a okYoungboy Never Broke Again feat. Extendo - How We PlayYoungboy Never Broke Again - Win or loseYoungboy Never Broke Again feat. 21 Savage - Murder RemixYoungboy never broke again - So LongA Keyy - Mina skorBelly Squad feat. abra cadabra, Young T, Bugsey, Timbo & Showkey - Banana remix
What's up Trillions! We're back with a new music playlist and yes we're a day late. The first of the year 2017 to be exact. We know a lot of y'all are still in the New Year New Me mode, while some of us are in the New Year Same Me mode. Nonetheless, we know the cold weather has some of you folded up in the crib not doing much, still doesn't mean you can't jam out. So we got a nice chill playlist this week. Hope you're enjoying your weekend! This week we got music from Curren$y, Dahi Devine, Marty Grimes, Cha'keeta B, plus Young Dolph and Lil Yachty. We're interested in hearing your thoughts. Shoot us an email and let us know what you think of these mixes. What do you want to hear more or less of? CLICK HERE TO EMAIL US. 1. Curren$y - Step Outside http://www.trillmatic.com/stream-currensy-end-of-the-year-mixtape-andretti-1230/ 2. Dahi Devine - Outro/Sway My Way http://www.trillmatic.com/philly-native-dahi-devine-debuts-new-single-outro-sway-my-way/ 3. Marty Grimes - All Good http://www.trillmatic.com/east-bay-rapper-marty-grimes-kicks-back-with-all-good-announces-tour/ 4. Cha'keeta B featuring Jake Lloyd - Forever Love http://www.trillmatic.com/austin-femcee-chakeeta-b-links-up-with-jake-lloyd-on-forever-love/ 5. Young Dolph featuring Lil Yachty - Bagg http://www.trillmatic.com/young-dolph-featuring-lil-yachty-bagg-audio-memphis/ 6. Curren$y featuring Freddie Gibbs - Stash House http://www.trillmatic.com/stream-currensy-end-of-the-year-mixtape-andretti-1230/ Log on to Trillmatic.com | Mixtapes | Audio | Videos Follow us on Twitter: @BeenTrillmatic@Riffa254 @BiggUU254 Like us on FB: Facebook.com/BeenTrillmatic
DaTakeOver sits down with the OG Dj EF Cuttin. In this Episode EF talks on becoming a member of Pschoward, getting G hooked up with Spitta, being a BackPacker, and working with one of New Orleans favorite, MAC!! Tune in as they have Gems all through this joint.
Finally getting a chance to chat with Spitta about his long journey through the music game, his ventures in the marijuana biz, his love for cars and how he's the only rapper in the game to have earned three iconic chains. Kaz, Low Key and Kam from Henny Palooza takes us on a storied trip about how they made Henny Palooza the best day party in America.
Hej o välkomna till avsnitt 69! Hugo är pappa nu och måste ibland göra vad en pappa måste göra, så Sanna och Petter håller fortet (No Petter Alexis) på egen hand. Det blir som vanligt massa ny bra rap från bl a Junglepussy, Hoosam, Spitta och som vanligt Young Thug. Desseutom svensk riksbra RnB med Cherrie. På slutet bollar S & P lite #StarkaTeser med anknytning till #KritikerBråket som små-rasat på journalist-internet på senare tid. Varför vill ingen i VBDFR recensera skivor? Varför snackar vi (nästan) aldrig skit om någon? ÄR Sanna en ”Musikjournalist”?? GET INTO IT. Whatever?! xoxo
You know that whenever we get together with our friend Curren$y, it's the most hilarious conversation. So when New Orleans' own Spitta stopped by the Upper West Side this week to promote his new album Canal Street Confidential, he burned one down, ate some snacks, and spoke his mind. We discussed the genesis of his friendship with Wiz Khalifa, going to middle school with Lil Wayne, Snoop Dogg during the No Limit days, meeting Rick Ross in the Dominican Republic, the Derek Jeter gift package, New Orleans lingo, his early plans to be an elementary school teacher, and so much more! See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.
Frankie Archie II (born June 16, 1982), better known by his stage name "Frankie Da GameSpitta", is an independent artist from Pine Bluff, AR.After releasing his first two CD's "Mind of a Game Spitta" and "How The West Was Won" He gained local success by performing in clubs across his city and state, which gained him radio airplay.With the admiration from his peers and family, he is currently pushing to gain success across the nation. While on his grind as an Independent Artist, Frankie Da Game Spitta has become an entrepreneur; selling cds and t-shirts with the logo Natural State Next Line, and starting his own music label Game Spit Entertainment.With support from his many fans, Frankie Da Game Spitta has put Pine Bluff and the state of Arkansas on his back reaching for that next level of his music career.
Frankie Archie II (born June 16, 1982), better known by his stage name "Frankie Da GameSpitta", is an independent artist from Pine Bluff, AR.After releasing his first two CD's "Mind of a Game Spitta" and "How The West Was Won" He gained local success by performing in clubs across his city and state, which gained him radio airplay.With the admiration from his peers and family, he is currently pushing to gain success across the nation. While on his grind as an Independent Artist, Frankie Da Game Spitta has become an entrepreneur; selling cds and t-shirts with the logo Natural State Next Line, and starting his own music label Game Spit Entertainment.With support from his many fans, Frankie Da Game Spitta has put Pine Bluff and the state of Arkansas on his back reaching for that next level of his music career.
••••WKTB•••• from 0:00 to 3:24 WEKILLTHEBEAR - Bright Lips www.wekillthebear.com wekillthebear.bandcamp.com from 3:24 to 7:46 Tamala - Him (DJ Mitsu the Beats Remix) https://itunes.apple.com/fr/album/cosmology/id482895634 from 7:46 to 10:03 Boonie Mayfield - Heartbreak Therapy (WEKILLTHEBEAR freestyle) www.booniemayfield.com from 10:03 to 13:43 Trice Hayes ft. Gapjux - Let Go http://gapjux.bandcamp.com/ from 13:43 to 17:10 Kaytranada - All We Do (feat JMSN) https://soundcloud.com/kaytranada from 17:10 to 20:30 Buddahmann - My Everything ft. Rar Charm (produced by B.Ro) https://soundcloud.com/buddahmann from 20:30 to 22:10 Onra - Ms. Ho https://soundcloud.com/onra from 22:10 to 26:22 WEKILLTHEBEAR - We Are www.wekillthebear.com wekillthebear.bandcamp.com from 26:22 to 29:15 Olove - Gloria olovedub.bandcamp.com from 29:15 to 32:40 Galimatias - Major Crimes & Unicorns https://soundcloud.com/galimatias from 32:40 to 35:16 Suff Daddy - Chinatown Chill http://suffdaddy.bandcamp.com/ from 35:16 to 40:14 Guts - Come Closer https://soundcloud.com/guts from 40:14 to 42:59 Mr. Carmack - Grind (Lex) https://soundcloud.com/mr_carmack from 42:59 to 46:45 Jazzy Jazz (Jasmine) feat Edson X - We Can Do It https://soundcloud.com/jazzyjasmine-1 from 46:45 to 50:13 Giraffage - Music Sounds Better With You www.giraffage.com from 50:13 to 51:55 Letherette - Boosted https://soundcloud.com/letherette from 52:04 to 54:30 Spitta Andretti x Young Roddy - Grizzly https://soundcloud.com/currensy from 54:30 to 57:13 Azizi Gibson - Gold on Black (produced by MiLLz) www.azizigibson.com/ from 57:13 to 01:00:30 Dillon Cooper - Kung Foo https://soundcloud.com/thedilloncooper from 01:00:30 to the end WEKILLTHEBEAR - Henderson www.wekillthebear.com wekillthebear.bandcamp.com •THANKS TO YALL FOR LISTENING (HATERS INCLUDED)• DISCLAIMER I'm not the owner or of all the songs. You can buy, legally download and listen to the artists by checking the tracklist. The tracks are copyrighted. Edited by WEKILLTHEBEAR © Graphic design: WEKILLTHEBEAR © Artwork by: Shirley Be
Episode 4 features interviews with hip-hop artist Curren$y Spitta and ganja growing guru Jorge Cervantes as well as a heaping harvest of cannabis cultivation information with a focus on the vital early-flowering stage plus "Strain of the Week" & Danny's answers to listener grow questions. Bonus: Our "Headshop Hit of the Week" phone-call and cannabis news with Nico Escondido. See acast.com/privacy for privacy and opt-out information.