Saturday, May 24, 2008

***DAME GREASE EXCUTIVE PRODUCE'S MAX B'S"PUBLIC DOMAIN 3:THE ART OF LIP SINGING"


PUBLIC DOMAIN - Max B. & DJ Whoo Kid


The Waviest One Max Bigavell aka. the Million Dollar Baby is bringin' the pain on this special DOMAIN installment courtesy of DJ Whoo Kid. In between giving you "Domain Pain" and "Million Dollar Baby 2.5," Max B cooks up some street narcotics to keep the wavy movement in the streets. Going at Jim Jones and his ex-Dipset bandmates, Max B. and Whoo Kid stir up some shit on this CD.





TRACK LIST

Milli Vanilli Skit
1. Paperwork (Jim Jones Crissy Diss)
2. Picture Me Rollin
3. Chase You Home (Feat. Al Pac)
4. Get Low (Feat. Al Pac)
5. We Got Doe (Feat. Al Pac)
6. Uncle
7. Bad Whiskey
8. Chevy Clean
9. Ready To Ryde (Feat. Mack Mustard)
10. The Sunami (Feat Al Pac)
11. City Wit No Hoes Skit
12. Lip Sang (Jim Jones Diss)
13. G'D Up Remix (Feat. Henny Tha Don)
14. Baby I Wonder (730 Dips Diss)
15. Try Me
16. Make It Hot(Freestyle Feat. Nick Ganz)
17. Niggaz Done Started Somethin (Feat. Greene Team Allstars)


* EXECUTIVE PRODUCED BY MAX B, DAME GREASE, YOUNG LOS & G. MONEY BAGS.
** MIXED BY DAME GREASE & ROC ISSAC

DMX: Anniversary:THE DEFINITION OF A CLASSIC ALBUM:

THE DEFINITION OF A CLASSIC ALBUM: DMX
It was ten years ago today that I bought DMX's first album "Its Dark & Hell Is Hot." I was in the 6th or 7th grade at the time and me and my friends were stuck on stupid for this album. The influence and impact that X has had on Hip Hop music was insane. Def Jam won over the game with not only help from Dog himself, but from everyone a part of this classic project we all have come to know. From the phenomenal production of Dame Grease, P.Killer Trackz, Young Lord, Lil' Rob & Irv Gotti, to the art direction by hip hop's elite photographer Jonathan Mannion. All the pieces came together to make a perfect fit. It was this album that ended Puffy's shiny suit run and the annoying sound of bubble gum hip pop music. This is the album that saved my life and made me want to actually pursue a career in music. The depth of each song gave real meaning to what music should of stood for. It took the commercialism out of Hip Hop for a moment and gave fans a real reason to respect the actual art form.


DMX - GET AT ME DOG FEATURING SHEEK OF THE LOX



[Featured Artists:] From Left 2 Right:

-THE LOX
-KASINO
-BIG STAN
-DRAG-ON
-LOOSE CANNON
-MASE MURDER















DMX - STOP BEING GREEDY




THE PLAYERS


DEE & WAAH started Ruff Ryders as a management company in the Late 80's. The two brothers managed local acts through out their neighborhood before stumbling onto a couple of acts that would change their management company to a label, and later on, a movement. Dee & Waah discovered acts such as Harlem rapper at the time, Mase, who were then known as Murder Mase. They also managed to get their group at the time "The Warlocks", who later changed their name to The Lox and signed with Puffy as a trio under his Bad Boy imprint. It was until the brothers discovered a hardcore emcee by the name of Dark Man X in Yonkers and was able to get him a deal with Def Jam to upstart their own label Ruff Ryders Entertainment.



DAME GREASE came into this project while being managed by Dean Brothers Dee & Waah at the time when Ruff Ryders were just a management company. Holding down more than his share of tracks, he gave this album a tuning that would make the industry bow to his presence and take notice of the heat he really had to offer. Vacant Lot is more than just a sound, and Grease proved with his gritty production that he could definitely change the course of history alongside X by being the belt of this classic LP. From bangers such as "GET AT ME DOG", "LET ME FLY" (Grease/Young Lord), "ATF", "FOR MY DOGS" and the notorious underground classic "Niggas Don Started Somethin'" featuring The Lox & Mase, Grease took everyone along for a ride and showed niggas how this was really suppose to be done.

DMX - NIGGAS DON STARTED SOMETHIN'


IRV GOTTI was the A&R ear at Def Jam who scouted and found X after getting much word about him through brothers Dee & Waah in Yonkers. Gaining a hand in Executive Producing the project with the Dean brothers, Gotti & Lil' Rob (Top Dawg Productions) opened up the album with a classic intro that would never be forgotten. It was Irv's hungry street mentality that gave this project a boost from the corporate end of the table. He was able to construct and orchestrate the perfect album with the help of everyone else around him. As much impact the intro had on this album, it was "Crime Story" produced by both Irv & Lil' Rob that got much recognition.

DMX - CRIME STORY


P.Killer was one of the producers who helped croon this album to the classic it came to be. Holding down songs like "Fuckin' Wit' D", "Stop Being Greedy","X is Coming", and the single "How It's Going Down", PK brought just as much heat to show that he meant serious business behind the boards. My favorite cut from PK off the album had to be "Look Through My Eyes" with back up production by Grease. On the title track, X was able to air out his emotions where he battled with inner demons.

DMX - HOW'S IT GOIN' DOWN


SWIZZ BEATZ, younger nephew of the Deans were just coming out of High School at the time, but were able to make the album just in time to give X a hit that would have everyone from Baltimore to New York chanting "THATS HOW RUFF RYDERS ROLL". Swizz orchestrated "RUFF RYDERS ANTHEM" for X although the dog wasn't too happy about recording to the beat. Swizz's style of production evened out the gritty sound and gave some originality to X's album. Ruff Ryders Anthem put Swizz on the map giving him the opportunity to expand his horizon to later work with big acts such as Jay-Z, The Lox, Mya and many others. He served as an inhouse producer for Ruff Ryders until he later on branched off and started his Full Surface imprint with J Records. Swizz's simple melody was enough to give everyone a reason to jump on the Ruff Ryder bandwagon.

DMX - RUFF RYDER'S ANTHEM

In closing, I love everything about this album. It gave hip hop a voice again when we were all lost to the antics of shiny suits and poppy 80's sample records. DMX and the team responsible for this album not only inspired me, but inspired a generation who would take notice of how real music could be again. Because of this album, I was able to attain an internship working for Grease himself after I graduated High School and learn everything I could about the game itself. Fuck the critics, Its Dark & Hell Is Hot is a true Hip Hop Classic Album with over 20 million records sold to date and counting.

DAME GREASE ON ROCKME TV!!!

"CONNETICUT KUSH VIDEO" DAME GREASE Feat. MAX B & MESSIAH

Dame Grease Speaks On Swizz, Ruff Ryders and Max B

Dame Grease Speaks On Swizz, Ruff Ryders and Max B

April 21st, 2008 | Author: ------

After reflecting on the state of hip-hop with esteemed producer Dame Grease, Grease offered a few words to HipHopDX on who he thought the next “big thing” of hip-hop would be as well as revealed his relationships today with his old Ruff Ryder crew.

“Throughout my entire career? Wow, that’s hard. I fuck with Max B hard, he’s my favorite artist, Max,” Grease said when discussing his favorite artist that he’s worked with throughout his career. When asked if Max B would be the next big thing, Grease said, “Honestly, yeah his shit is hot, and I’m fucking with him so I’m going to make sure he’s going to get that official platinum quality music, that star quality sounds. He’s got his own crew and he ain’t working with Vacant Lot, he’s working with Grease, and I’m executive producing his next mixtape as well.”

After attempting to pry some information on the rumor that Grease is currently scoring a few films, the brains behind the sound of Cradle 2 the Grave, said that he was working on two films, but wouldn’t part with any more information.

When asked to reflect on some of his former boys in the Ruff Ryder click, Grease showed love to almost all of the old members including Styles P and Jadakiss, yet shined some light on hostility between another of DMX’s great producers, Swiss Beatz. “Um, believe it or not, me and Styles are on the phone almost every day. Me and Jada is actually cool, like at the Sheek release party we were just kicking it like, 'Nigga, we’ve got to do what we’ve got to do.' I mean look forward to Jada and Grease in the studio. Actually, Swizz Beatz, he don’t like Grease, I mean he’s cool when we see each other and it’s like, 'Hey.' You know as far as any type of friends or work opportunities, I actually blocked all of their albums, like Cassidy and Shawnda. I mean more power to him, blesses to him and more power to him. But niggas fuck with Grease. Actually, I’m more on that vibe, you’re guaranteed to see a lot of differences with who I work with. I'll keep it 100% official. I fuck with who fucks with me, if you fuck with me I fuck with you. I keep it like that. If you notice songs and things I do, I mean you might hear a lot of me and Styles or Hell Rell and Max. I mean we’re chilling, we’re in the club, our kids play together in the park. You know.”

Dame Grease also discussed new albums for Donny Goines, himself, and working with DJ Webstar so keep an eye out for those releases when they hit stores.

Reported By: Jake Spilman Jr

HIPHOPGAME INTERVIEWS DAME GREASE!!

5/21/2008

Your new album Goon Muzik is about to drop. How did you put this album together?

I started off making it as a mixtape, but based on the quality of the music, Babygrande actually picked it up for an album. It’s like a movie. It turned into a full production and it’s one of a series. It’s really a series of movies and it’s me doing my ‘hood narrating on it and I have a couple of guys behind me painting a picture without blatantly saying that we’re bringing New York back because that shit is corny and bullshit to me. We’re just giving more of a visual-audio feeling with this.

How was it rapping on Goon Muzik?

I’m ‘hood narrating. I’m not a rapper. I’m more of a ‘hood narrator. That’s what I do.

Does rhyming help your production?


Believe it or not, that’s why I’ve been successful for so many years. If I didn’t know how to rap, I wouldn’t know how to give another artist a beat that would fit right. If you can’t rap to your own shit, how the fuck can you expect anyone else to? I always knew how to format songs and all of that.

You feature your group the Lennox Ave Boyz throughout Goon Musik. What has the group been up to lately?

I’ve been branding the name for years and the funny thing is that the Lennox Ave Boyz, we’re all together as one. There’s me and Meeno. Everyone knows Meeno from his confrontation with Jay-Z. He’s known already. You got Tony Wink and Bigga Threat. Different guys have different fanbases, but when we’re all together, you get the collective sound and it couldn’t sound better.

Has it been hard to keep the group focused without having a major deal?

Actually, nah. This is what it is. We’re crew. There’s probably about 15 of us altogether. If we’re not making music, we’re hanging out and getting money. It’s not more of a rap thing. We’re the Lennox Ave Boyz.

I haven’t heard Goon Muzik yet, so I can’t ask any specific questions on the production. What kind of vibe did you want to create with your production on Goon Muzik?

I kept it to a theme. I’m not showing off too much versatility on this. This album is more of a straight street, gutter album. On my Sour Diesel album, my next one, I’m going to show off my versatility. I didn’t go crazy on this one like I did on Sour Diesel.

You’ve always been a producer who doesn’t have to rely on samples. How important is that in 2008?

I sample about 25% of the time and I don’t 75%. I’m not going to ever get completely away from sampling because that’s a part of hip-hop. The thing is, with me, if I do sample, I always play my own music to it. I’ll have to chop it and make it so different that the original version is still respected. That’s why I play a lot of my own stuff. You have to think of the artist you’re using and respect them. On a DMX album, I had the Phil Collins’ joint “Feel It In The Air”. Phil had never cleared anything in hip-hop before. I put some ghetto funk on it and some bass and he liked it. He said it was hot and he cleared it.

That sample has been used a lot of times, from Nas to Joe Budden to Young Buck to others. What do you think of the other beats that sampled “Feel It In The Air”?

It’s cool, man. If you think about it, I can’t take all the credit for it because it’s Phil Collins’ song. Let’s be real. But I’m the first person to really use it and it’s an honor to be the first.

To help promote Goon Muzik, you’re giving out a free beat which your press release says is worth $30,000. Can you really get that kind of money for beats in today’s climate?

First off, I’m going to put the beat on a site where everybody can download it for free and then I’ll check them out. They’ll get a spot on my series of mixtapes coming out and they can come to my studio, so it’s almost like you’re getting signed. The last one I did, there were a lot of good artists that came out for it. I got guys from Germany, the Bay Area, London, Japan and all other places. It’s worldwide and there are hot joints everywhere.

And as far as it being worth $30,000, it’s getting got. Let’s not get it twisted. (laughs) The good thing is that for producers like myself, Pharell, Kanye and Swizz, we have our sounds. As I came back after being gone, I started noticing that the sound I had was for the whole Northeast region. It’s the vibe and sound of this whole Northeast region including Boston and Connecticut all the way down to Maryland and even VA.

Do you use the internet more today to promote yourself?

Yeah, man. I love the internet, man. With the first contest I did, it was the first tool that I had done and I just watched how that spread like wildfire. It re-buzzed me. I coulda jumped on BET and other networks and other publications. Where I come from in the underground, the internet is great. It’s a big part and I love it. I gotta keep my cable modem running!

You’ve had a lot of hits, both recently with songs like DJ Drama’s “Feds Takin’ Pictures” and in the past with DMX, The Lox and others. Do you get the respect you deserve today?

I do get the respect. I had a couple of bumps in the road and certain situations, but now, with my good friend the internet, my people who always stood by me or supported me in the streets, I can keep in touch with them and the industry people.

You made your mark working with DMX. Will you ever work with him again?

Well, I did a couple joints with him on his new album. But, I mean, he’s dealing with all the stuff that’s going on. The cops just raided his crib and there’s all this crazy shit going on. Things are just different from when we were trying to make history from my basement. When the right time comes we’ll work more.

Are surprised by DMX’s legal problems and recklessness or did you always see that in him?

This is from my heart. DMX is a beautiful person. And despite everything that’s been said on the internet, he’s his own man. He do what he do. He’s a super-beautiful person. If you are an intense person and under the microscope, people are going to look at everything you do and make it look like big shit. The man walked out the precinct and went home with no charges. Once you’re a person of great magnitude and you have a strong personality, they’re going to go after you. They do it to everyone. They do it to actors. They do it to everyone.

You’re also working on Donny Goines’ album Minutes After Midnite. What made you want to work with him?

Some funny shit...Bigga Threat, who’s down with the team, knew Donny. Bigga’s got stacks and stacks of verses and he would just sit there with his walkman and Donny would be like, ‘What the hell are you doing?’ He was like, ‘I’m writing. I’m getting it in. I’m getting it in.’ Bigga got caught up with a case and got locked up. At that time, Donny really sat back and he just picked it up. As Donny started developing, me, I watched. I watch. I always hear a lot of guys who say they want to rap. I always hear all this bullshit, but when I see a person do it, that means more. Donny picked up that pen and started going and going and going. Even though we all started back in the hustling shit, Donny chose to keep his content more lyrical and more than the drug dealing and the gun slinging. He had his own identity and I told him I supported him. That’s how he picked it up.

It seems like you’re pretty open to working with young artists who have the talent.

Yeah. You have to have the talent. There are a lot of people who have the drive with no talent. You have to have talent and drive.

There’s been confusion on the internet recently over whether you and Swizz Beats have problems. Can you clear that up?

I’m gonna let it go. There is no beef with me and Swizz Beats. There is no beef with me and Kaseem Dean. It’s funny. In an interview, I was speaking my mind on what it is and they asked me why I haven’t worked with Mashonda or Cassidy. I told them it’s because Swizz ain’t cutting checks over there. He took that and flipped it around and magnified it, saying that we had beef. It’s funny, the first person to call me about that and tell me about that was Swizz. I was in the studio and I picked up my phone and we talked about it. He was telling me it was all over the internet. It’s funny because I didn’t even know shit. I didn’t know nothing at the time. I hadn’t read it or heard it or anything. He was the first person to let me know. I know I talk a lot of shit. That’s what it is, but I don’t sidetalk. If we got beef, then fuck you. That’s what it is. I told him what I said, that he wasn’t cutting no checks with Cassidy or Mashonda. It’s nothing. And I say the same thing whenever I see him.

And to tell the truth, that’s how we all talk because we’ve all known each other since day one. Are you cutting checks over there? That’s what it is. That’s what we say. It’s all good. I didn’t mean that as no diss and he didn’t take it as no diss but the people took it a different way.

Do you think the media and fans just want to see beef sometimes?

The thing is, man, everybody knows the story. Everybody knows DMX, The Lox, Grease. Everybody knows the Ruff Ryders. Everybody knows Grease has some blackballing going on and that Swizz is the next hottest producer. Everybody knows that the Ruff Ryders sent all the jobs to Swizz. I’m a man and I’m a hustler. You’re not going to stop my cheese. The streets don’t feel what went down. Motherfuckers want to talk the truth about who Dame Grease is. There are things we all did collectively to help all of our careers. But once some people got in the spotlight, some people never spoke to me again and they knew that I was a key element in igniting all this shit. If anyone, Lyor Cohen knows. The Sean’s know. That’s my name. That’s the Billionaire Friends Club. That’s Sean Combs and Shawn Carter. (laughs) Everybody knows I played a part in popping artists off. That’s what I do.

Will you work with The Lox on their new album Live, Suffer, Celebrate?

Hell yeah. I just worked with Styles P on his album. I’m working with ‘Kiss. I’m doing some joints for the D-Block compilation. I got a joint with The Lox and T-Pain that’s fire. It’s all in the family, man. It’s all in the family.

What’s the next move for Dame Grease?

Goon Muzik is coming and that’s going to be done in volumes. I didn’t even think about the radio on this one. It’s all hard shit. Sour Diesel is coming out next. That’s my whole star-studded album. I got my man Meeno who’s about to come out and I got my R&B artist coming. I got about 500-600 spins in the last year with the freestyles and all of that. When you hear the new shit, it’s crazy.

Now as far as Grease the producer, I’m about to go in full, super-duper hit overload. It’s going down. It’s going down. A lot of people have been hating and now the motherfuckers will know what the real deal is. The streets know what’s popping. It’s these industry niggas. I’m going to blow their fucking heads off and turn this shit up. I’ve been in the studio and when I come out, Lord knows. I’m going to do it again like I’ve done it once before.

And I’m going to point out when I change the game. I want everybody to pay attention. The Biggie and 2Pac war. Boom, everybody kills each other. The Lox popped off. They had “If You Think I’m Jiggy”, the last song of the jiggy era. I brought the streets right back on their whole next album and now there’s a blueprint. Here we go. So we’re in an age right now where we need that help, so that’s why I’m dropping all of this. This is only the startup. This is only the startup. After that, it’s going down. I’m in the studio right now with crack on the boards.

The streets have been my savior. They support me. I’m doing what I do. I’m still young and the bitches love me and the kids are doing fine.

DAME GREASE ALLHIPHOP INTERVIEW!!!

By Dynasty Williams
When Dame Grease interviewed with AllHipHop.com a couple years ago, he was in the process of demolishing his own empire. After a phase where he felt "blackballed" by the powers that be, he was forced to change his mind set and begin drawing up plans for a much stronger network.

Today, the fruits of his labor have paid off. Dame has strengthened his own market value by focusing on his own music and his maturation as a business man. With two albums on horizon, multiple placements, and several multi-media deals in the works, Dame has used his new foundation as a springboard to an amazing future.

On May 27th Dame will release Goon Musik, and follow up with the highly anticipated Sour Diesel. Dame took time out with AllHipHop.com to discuss his new projects, why he decided to start rhyming, and what he thinks of Ruff Ryders Records today.

AllHipHop.com: Tell me about the line up and the particulars on your new album.

Dame Grease: The album is crazy. The line up is crazy. Goon Musik actually was a mixtape, but I made it into an album. It's like a whole movie into one.

AllHipHop.com: Who do you have on it? Primarily your Vacant Lot Records artists?

Dame Grease: Yeah I just kept this one simple because I have another album coming out right after this. I got my Sour Diesel album coming out so kept this one simple and put my Vacant Lot artists on there. Actually, I'm rhyming on most of the joints on this album. That's a different twist on it, but I'm not rhyming to be a rapper or an artist. I'm just rhyming like I'm the hood narrator.

AllHipHop.com: Well, tell me what made you want to get into the rapping aspect of Hip-Hop?

Dame Grease: The thing is , real talk, I was rapping before I was making beats. With the sound and music people know me for as far as the big sound, big movies, big music. We actually wanted to do an album like that with myself rapping because a lot of artist don't really do theatrical rap. Everybody is kind of one dimensional now. So I wanted to display a little more artistry and make a couple joints that are more like movies instead of ring tone joints.

AllHipHop.com: So the Sour Diesel is the album with more notable rappers?

Dame Grease: Yeah, Sour Diesel, I call it prime time. A lot of people know I leaked the "Sour Diesel" song last year. It's a song that's so monumental, it's still spinning across the globe right now. It actually has a life of it's own. So the song became everybody's favorite weed song. I'm displaying more of my family in the business. I got Styles P., Sheek Louch, Pusha T. from the Clipse, Freeway, DMX, Drag-On, John Doe, and my n***a Meeno from my label. I really wanted to get all the artists that people know and bring them into my world and give them a breath of fresh air. For example with the original song with Nore and Styles, they were able to bring a different vibe without being the traditional character they usually are. So I wanted to keep the vibe. All of [my]albums, I try to keep the main vibe, like a comic book.

AllHipHop.com: The last time you interviewed with me you expressed interest in working with Jay-Z, despite his past riff with one of your artists. How did it feel when he got on the "Big Spender" song?

Dame Grease: The s**t felt beautiful. Last time I was talking about it, I was just building a plan. Me being an adult, and being in this business, I wanted the longevity. We actually broke all that foul air that was there. Me and Free (Freeway) are cool, me and Jay are cool. When Freeway took him the track, he (Freeway) called me and said , "Yo Jay's about to get on that." Then my man Shalik from Def Jam said, "Jay told me to tell you to beef it up a little to make it bang." Right there let me know that all the air is completely clear and we are all here as business men to make hits, hot s**t, and keep it pumping.

AllHipHop.com: Also, last time we spoke, you seemed like you were starting over.

Dame Grease: Yeah, I had to do the whole s**t over. It's good that you're doing the interview because you're the one that did it before. You can actually feel me and where I'm coming from. It's beautiful. The one thing that I've always known is from money, to black balling, to any hating on me, or me being young and ignorant, nothing can stop my mind and my music. Once I know that, it's my job to fix everything and rebuild it to what I know it is. The sound and the music that I have is monumental and stretched out in the rap game. Grease has a Vacant Lot sound, that you can try to duplicate, but you cannot replace who we are. So, it was my job to go back, destroy everything, get my little bucket of concrete and bricks, and start fixing the building back up.

AllHipHop.com: How do you view what happened to you and what's happened to Ruff Ryder Records since then?

Dame Grease: I'm gonna keep it real, I'm a street dude. All this is spiritual. God works in all of us. I actually had to do a spiritual cleansing. Even after that, my mother passed away and that was just a knockout blow. She knows the man that I am so I just had to come back stronger and use that to be more focused and do this thing that I'm here to do.

As far as the owners of Ruff Ryders, I don't want to say nothing bad on them because I don't know if they're all watching what I'm saying. (laughs) It's cool for me and I always try to keep it positive. I'm not going to use no negative energy to get up ahead.

AllHipHop.com: Most producers do beats and leave it at that. You've used your music to put you in different businesses. How important is that to you?

Dame Grease: It's real important. People just want you to be a producer, but I'm a business man. I've been a hustler since from the streets. Actually this music business is the only legal job I've had in my f**kin' life. It's no way in the world I'm gonna ever sit still and wait for one thing to happen. A lot of great people from the streets have the ability to be millionaires or billionaires. It's no way in the world we can't do it just because of where we are from. You just have to learn knowledge and how to apply it to get it done. Even before I broke into the game as a producer, I had like six f**kin' groups that was making a lot of records. I actually was a record label without being a record label. Until I got into the business [I didn't realize I already had one]. It was just something that was going down already just based on the business knowledge, and that talent knowledge. Now, I have more good people with me and a lot more knowledge. We're in a new era and a new age and I want to be one of the kings of this new era. All the giants are knocked the f**k out, the major labels.

AllHipHop.com: What's up with DMX? Are you still working with him?

Dame Grease: We're still cool, we're going to be cool forever. That's my blood and my brother. I didn't see him in a couple months, I'm not going to lie. We spoke a little while ago and I got two joints on his new album. I sent some joints in for his project but I didn't actually see him.

AllHipHop.com: Who's someone out now that you'd like to work with?

Dame Grease: I like Shawty Lo. I f**k with Shawty Lo. That's my n***a, he be spittin' that s**t. See the thing is that I like hearing music but I can feel him. That's the whole thing is that you don't have to have the best rhyme skills or quality. If you can be felt, you can be heard.

AllHipHop.com: Any last words for the community?

Dame Grease: I'd like to thank everybody. I'd like to thank you, all the websites, all the magazines, and everybody that believes in this real music. It is music from the heart.

GOON MUSIK ALBUM RELEASE PARTY!!!!