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Saynave seeks to help hip hop become more mature, more relatable to more people

Relatability, to Bryant Gilliam – Saynave (rhymes with rave) – means music that is about things relating to the lives that most people live daily.

Hence his newest single, “The Cookout,” released from his upcoming EP Stay Connected, scheduled for release on August 4.

“We threw a cookout for ‘The Cookout’ video,” he said. “I mean, it’s like, I go to a strip club here and there, but I’m far less likely to make a song about going to the strip club and spending a bunch of money, right? What do I go to more? I go to a lot more cookouts and barbecues.” Emphasis on “a lot.”

The cookout in the video features a party thrown by Philadelphia-based event group One Jollof. Bryant’s rap scenes were shot in the first hour, before the party arrived, and the rest of the video is of the party.

“It makes a much more easygoing song,” he said.

And that gets to more than just relatability. It also goes to his style, what he wants his music to be and do and how he thinks about it.

Another example is another single that has been released ahead of the EP. Called “Speak the Language,” it’s about many of the languages of daily life – money, time, clothes, favors, cars and boats, life, lies and, of course, love.

On one level, it was inspired by one of his hobbies, learning languages, and his wife, who is from Kenya, so he is learning Swahili, one of the languages of Kenya.

And on yet another level, the cover for the EP Stay Connected will be a wedding photo of Bryant and his wife.

His style is laid back, and his subject matter of daily life and issues in the wider world are all tied in with the intent of his music.

Most of popular music, he says, at least in hip hop, is, “in the commercial space, not interesting. It’s very derivative. It’s easily replicable.”

“When I think of Radiohead, or The Kid Laroi, it’s very interesting. It’s all over the place. It’s weird, but very interesting. Tyler the Creator or Kendrick Lamar is very interesting music, you know? It makes you have an opinion.”

That view of music comes from a widely varied experience. His first real exposure to music was saxophone in middle school-high school band and orchestra. Then came video game music, and he can remember the name, if not, he says, the name’s pronunciation, of the video game composer Nobuo Uematsu.

Top 40 tunes also came before hip hop, introduced to him by a cousin.

“I started listening to a lot of like old Kanye, Jay Z, like a lot of that stuff which got me into the art of it. Nowadays, I’m listening to everything. I’m big into bands, big into just whatever is musically interesting.”

He mostly writes his own music and all his lyrics. In his songs he talks about things in his life and things he thinks about. One of his songs from earlier this year is “Pray for Ye,” about Kanye West and his troubles.

“It’s a quick single I put out because I was praying that Kanye wasn’t going crazy. And I had this beat, and I was like, ‘Oh I have an idea for a song.’”

And thus did a prayer became a song, and the feelings behind it led into another aspect of Saynave’s musical art.

Kanye’s early music, he said, was “thoughtful and relatable.”

“He was very unique in capturing emotions and topics that were really relatable in the hip hop space,” he said. “But now he has become a caricature.”

Expanding on that idea of caricature and pretense, he borrows a wrestling term, “kayfabe,” which is the name for the way the made-up storylines and rivalries of professional wrestling are portrayed as real. A lot of that same kind of pretense has worked its way into hip hop, he says.

Because hip hop is culturally based, he says, an archetype of what rap is and isn’t comes into being, almost like a law.

“Country music is probably the closest analogue,” he said. “It’s a very culture driven genre, and if you don’t pass the smell test, you’re almost not even let in.” He identifies a similar dynamic at work in rap and hip hop and results in a lot of nonsense “that’s just put out there and called art.”

“And I’m like, yes, it passes the smell test, but it’s not good. Or productive.”

As for him, where does he want to go musically? “Personally, I mean, obviously, take me to the Grammys, right?” 

“But,” he said, “without sounding preachy, most people are out here working regular jobs, trying not to get in trouble, and could probably use music that more relates to what they have going on. My main goal would be to help evolve or mature hip pop in a way that makes rap more acceptable in a traditional sense. My goal is to help evolve the art form in a way that I think benefits everyone.”

Stay connected to Saynave to follow his evolution and look for his music, including the upcoming Stay Connected, on all platforms for new music, videos, and social posts.

Website: www.saynave.com

Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/artist/saynave/1489656783

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/1XOE30vdteGiHtuu3tk1QD?si=QBGN2kDkSVSy9acpjq4t2Q

Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/saynave

YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/saynavemusic

Twitter: https://twitter.com/saynave

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/saynave/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/saynave

TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@saynave

Royce DeZorzi meditates on life, love and music in new album Denver

DENVER, CO – A man who has found peace in the acoustic sounds of a guitar and the meditative creation of his music, Royce DeZorzi is truly an interesting musician. Self-taught and connected to the nature around him, DeZorzi’s music has found a home between introspective and expressive. 

DeZorzi’s music career began with a guitar left to him by his late brother. “I’ve always loved music,” he explained. “But I didn’t pick up the guitar until after my brother died.” He learned the basics from a bandmate of his brother, who refused to buy the guitar when DeZorzi attempted to sell it. 

From that point, in the isolation of rural Colorado, DeZorzi fell in love with old records and the orchestral possibilities of the acoustic guitar. Despite turning to a more synth-based sound while living in Los Angeles during the COVID-19 pandemic, DeZorzi returned to Colorado, the comfortable isolation of nature, and the acoustic guitar. It was at that point that he went on to create his latest album, Denver. 

“The album is made up of meditations of the time and experiences that have shaped me in the last few years,” DeZorzi explained. Denver is a collection of tracks created as he meditated on his life, while returning to the comfortable home that is his acoustic guitar. “I would just sit down and play,” he said. “It would all just gradually come together.” 

One of the songs on Denver that DeZorzi found to be the most personally impactful was the track “Reseda”. This song looks back onto the stressful and emotionally exhausting time in which DeZorzi had just relocated to Los Angeles. The point where he was still adjusting to it all. “It took a lot of time to get this to where it is,” he explained. “When listening to this song, I can picture exactly what it feels like to be there again.” 

DeZorzi’s hope with Denver is that his audience is able to listen to the album and get the same experience as he gets with “Reseda”. The project is filled with emotion, honesty and sensitivity and by putting that into the world, he shares a soundtrack to our collective moments of vulnerability. 

Following the release of Denver, DeZorzi is set on continuing to share his music through upcoming live performances, experimentation into new styles and outlets, and future releases of his music. This artist has an incredible future ahead of him and it would truly be a mistake to miss out on the gorgeous work he has coming up.

Make sure to stay tuned in to Royce DeZorzi on various platforms for new music, visuals and social posts. 

Bandcamp: https://roycedezorzi.bandcamp.com/album/denver

Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/album/6zGeZZ5BMF3xOUnOYAPmQW?si=xgjVernQTfa2RbB6bSRsMA

YouTube: https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PLtPaHSuuunO44WchQ6j9mcy1V3f5Ir2H2

Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/album/denver/1638093467?uo=4

Social media links: https://linktr.ee/roycedezorzi 

“Iron Shackle” video link
https://youtu.be/6OebPZNvIl4 

Dr. Kee’s “Sparkle Like 24K Gold” Seeks A Universal language of love

”Sparkle Like 24K Gold,” the latest release from Dr. Jefferey P. Kee, has hints of his Christian faith in it. He is, after all, a Baptist minister, and in a song about love it is natural for him to borrow some lines from St. Paul: “Love is patient, love is kind.”

“That says that love is not just on the good days, but it also encompasses the messed up Mondays and tore-up Tuesdays, the wayward Wednesdays, the tumultuous Thursdays, the frightening Fridays and the set-back Saturdays.”

Musically, he said, some people see it as spiritual, some say it has an R&B feel, and some call it inspirational, but it is a product of his gift and his experience of music.

It reflects, in his words, “a plethora of different genres of music.”

“Love is the universal language and emotion that every culture understands. And this particular song is a universal song.”

He grew up listening to funk, soul, gospel, and, through his father, country. He loves those kinds of music, he loves love songs, “and I tried to integrate that into a particular melodic tone so that others can relate to it.” Music, like love, is a language.

“It’s a story that speaks to people wherever they are in their particular situation. That, that’s what music is to me.”

This particular song came about because a cousin from Los Angeles who was planning a destination wedding in San Lucas, Mexico and wanted Dr. Kee to officiate.

“I called him and I said I have a song that has resonated inside of me that I want to have for your wedding,” and “Sparkle Like 24K Gold” was born.

His music, like his faith, is omni denominational, and he describes himself as The Pastor for the Master. He has been influenced by many interfaith churches, Catholic, Methodist and Baptist and other Protestant churches.

“I have the cross fertilization to be a person that loves God, but not to have boundaries to believe that my particular faith is predicated by a particular denomination or locality.” He has been pastoring in Columbus, Ohio, in the same church, for 30 years.

“Sparkle Like 24K Gold” is part of a larger project he is working on, an album on which people will hear some funk, soul, gospel, love. It will, he says, have “something that will make you feel like you want to clap your hands, stomp your feet,” and things that make you want to lament, “that will take you to a place where you can sort of reflect upon the losses you’ve had, the celebrations of life, your high moments and your low moments.”

He is aiming, in general and with “Sparkle” for an audience “that can understand the language of love,” a universal audience that is not solely anything — Christian, black, white or anything else. In the moment when one person feels love for another, “There’s something about that particular moment, for that individual, that sparkles like 24 karat gold to you.”

“It may not be that way to someone else, but to you, because the illuminating presence of what that person is to you, it sparkles like 24 karat gold, and that’s what I’m trying to get across.”

He graduated from the United Theological Seminary with a doctorate of ministry. He says he graduated “as a preacher for social change because I was more concerned about the mundane, about human existence and a greater level of humanity for all people.”

Faith informs his music but does not bind it. He believes that all people deserve to be loved and appreciated, not to be discriminated against. He seeks to present love musically in a way that transcends those human failings and gives people an appreciation of themselves and for the love of others.

“I am grateful because I don’t just hear the words. I love poetry and I like writing, but if I don’t have the music, it could be like a homily, or a sort of message or a poem, and I’m grateful that I can reach people through music in a message that people can relate to.”

Stay connected to Dr. Jefferey P. Kee on these platforms for new music, videos, and social posts.

Website: pastorforthemaster.com

Amazon Music: 

https://music.amazon.fr/albums/B01DQEAEDE

Apple Music: 

https://music.apple.com/us/album/now-is-the-time/1099246506

Spotify: 

https://open.spotify.com/artist/0tb9nNZSLJzT8qYhpRqlXC

YouTube: 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bg8wPuXEehg

OR BARAK IS WITHOUT A DOUBT ONE OF THE MOST PROMISING UP-COMING ARTISTS, HE’S CREATIVE, MELODIC, COMBINING ALL OF THE GENRES WE LOVE AND YET DIFFERENT FROM ALL THE REST, OH, AND HE’S ALSO FUNNY , OR GOT A BIG SURPRISE FOR US FOR 2022 SO STAY TUNED

Up-coming Musician / Artist “Or Barak” already determined as a Rockstar, Pop star, Actor, Rapper, Model and lots of slashes to his name we would say.. from being nominated and WINNING #1 Offir Prize Award for “ASIA” A movie he was given a main acting role at as “Roy” alongside Israeli fellow and worldwide star “Shira Haas” , And released his well received album “AVANT-GARDE” in 2021. But Now, Or is back with his first single for The New Year 2022 and we couldn’t have any words other than Oh. My. Goodness! His new single “All Alone” really is a masterpiece in terms of energy, delivery, and as always, He keeps at what’s he really great at: Beautiful Atmospheres, Melodies and Euphoric Emotions.

When we asked Or: Why do you think you are the hottest up-coming artist in the music industry, He quickly replied: “I’m always delivering something different, out of the box, that no one have ever heard before but still feels like somehow it’s nostalgic or familiar, Plus I’m a good boy with a good dick too – and started with a little laughter. We on the other hand did not know how to react to the situation but with Or, the music just speaks for itself, and there’s no denying that he is in fact , A precise act with his music style, fashion style and visuals. One of our favorite fresh discoveries to put your ears, eyes, and attention for in 2022 is most definitely: Mr. Or Barak

Here’s his new single “All Alone” that just dropped everywhere for the New Year’s EVE

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=-JLXRNRi2jE

https://fanlink.to/all-alone-ob

‘Traumazine’ by Megan Thee Stallion – Ali Ciwanro shares his thoughts on the album

Megan Thee Stallion has dropped her second album and fans couldn’t be happier. Big names like Alex Petit, Ali Ciwanro, Kiowa Roukema, Malibu Babie and Vaughn Oliver were involved in the lyrics. Together they have created a great work of art, which is sure to be a great success despite some tough lyrics.

Young songwriter Ali Ciwanro calls the album a unique experience, with an impressive sound and strong, thought-provoking lyrics.

Consider Traumazine Megan Thee Stallion’s deconstructed burn book. It’s absent of the cruelty and callousness that’s often fashioned around those created during periods of adolescent uncertainty, uninterested in solely magnifying and mocking the superficial flaws of others. But Traumazine is a public cataloging of the uber-public ways that the Houston rapper’s truth has been turned into farcical amusement. Across 18 tracks, over a dozen of which she underscores her hottie status with reflective and pained revelations, Megan Thee Stallion uses art to cross-examine friends/lovers turned detractors. Each moment of clarity pulses with fury, and after everything has been collated, she holds up the burn book and asks listeners to not only see the horrors she’s lived through, but the ways she’s had to mend and remake her universe. In Meg’s sophomore album, grief is turned into a cleansing ritual; washing off the bullshit, and burning all the fallacies.

On “NDA,” the first track that sees Megan cracking her knuckles before stepping into the spotlight, she takes a metaphorical bat to whatever is in reach and swings her way through insecurity, pettiness, and jealousy, with a line-by-line rundown of her most notable stats. She works harder, seduces easily, and dresses better than anyone who dares to make her feel less than her most polished self. Better yet, her money is both liquid and digital — along with hanging on her neck, wrists, and fingers, it’s also in her mind, and rests in her name. Wealth has kept her company as people fall away, and it’s made escape a temporary but accessible reality. “Goin’ through some shit, so I gotta stay busy/Bought a ‘Rari, I can’t let the shit I’m thinkin’ catch up with me,” she raps. In a Spotify interview shortly before the album was released, Megan shared that on her intention on Traumazine was “ inviting the hotties into her head, to show how she’s really been feeling.” She’s been persistently expected to purvey the euphoric “Hot Girl Summer” persona, but now she’s asking fans to grant a little grace, and sit with her as she moves from sun-drenched ecstasy to spending a little time for contemplation and release.

“Not Nice” is one of the most pointed tracks to come from a star who already refuses to beat about the bush. In recent pop culture history, niceness was packaged by Drake via the catchy but toothless “Nice for What,” which stuck the female empowerment landing with as much weight as cotton candy hitting the tarmac. But on this blistering admonition, over a thumping, steady beat reminiscent of 90s musical and lyrical sensibility, Megan rejects the word that’s so easily tossed around to surveil seemingly “unruly” women — “Fuck it bitch, I’m not nice.” She’s accepted that sometimes, when they go low, the proper remedy is to meet them at their level and match their disdain with a lethality that leaves them reeling enough to never try it again. “You got the roaches in your crib sharin’ snacks with your kids, Delinquent on your payments, ho, go and post this.” For months, the rapper has shared how she was left isolated and heartbroken while countless voices reshaped truth to suit ulterior motives, and so here she makes the punishment fit the crime, making both public so they can exist alongside each other.

There are several featured artists on Traumazine, and acts like Rico Nasty, Jheke Aiko and Latto’s appearances boost their songs while adding layers to their own artistry. But it’s Megan’s presence that fortifies their cameos with verve and confidence. “Without the money, I don’t budge,” Megan starts off on “Budget,” calling to mind the oft-circulated quote from the supermodel heydays when Evangelista, Campbell, and Crawford would not get out of bed for “less than $10,000 a day.” Latto then goes flow for flow with Megan on the brief interlude, adding mischief and audible eye-rolls: “Latto don’t do budgets/Talk shit like Joe Budden/Trips y’all can’t pronounce, big jets to Phuket, I’m like, “Fuck it.” Sliding over to “Consistency,” Megan is as raunchy as blues legend and godmother of hip-hop Lucille Bogan, whose demands for pleasure and boastful assertions of her insatiable sexual prowess — “I got something between my legs to make a dead man come” — quickened hearts in joints across the country. Aiko, whose feathery tone tends to belie the directness of her lust, lends her voice to express desire for loyalty and good sex in equal amounts. “If you can’t give me the time/Then, baby, you can’t be mine,” she insists. “….Miss me with the wishy-washy in and out my life.” The track is a siren call and a demand for a grown love that understands honesty and boundaries. On “Scary,” with a standout assist from Rico Nasty, Megan sharpens the foreboding, shadowy gloom of southern gothicism and leans into the region’s intimate rituals around horror and rebirth, highlighting those who move in silence and strike with purpose. The song sounds like a chant or even an x-rated story to be shared around a fire when remembering all those who tried to do you harm and failed. As you utter their names, you toss their assigned talismans into the flames, reminding others that like Candyman, your own name is both a curse and an avenging spirit. Megan is putting the naysayers on notice and positioning herself as Houston folklore, something to be respected and also feared.

It’s interesting that her lead singles, “Pressurelicious” featuring Future, and the Dua Lipa-assisted “Sweetest Pie,” are the least compelling moments on this album; when held next to the sexy “Ms Nasty” or the hustling “Gift and a Curse,” they come off as grasps at radio play and streaming numbers. They lack the dimension of “Flip Flop,” a sobering acknowledgment of loss that also outlines the limitations of self-care when you’ve lost people close to you. And they fall short alongside “Her,” which makes a reach for the dancefloor and the charts, riding the waves of dance music currently dominating the soundscape. Soon after the release of her debut album, Good News, culture critic and editor Niela Orr described the work as “a baggy collection of songs that are limited in scope, even though they might have unlimited streaming potential.” Megan’s personal disclosures on the record were tentative and opaque, and the project felt over-stuffed with metaphors and swagger —and whether that was a deflection or act of self-preservation, it kept her from truly addressing how the losses she faced consumed her mind. Two years later, with the amalgamation of her creative eye and her emotional state of mind, she has delivered a record that is not only a showcase of her artistic capabilities, but also a mediation on public and personal grief.

Megan Thee Stallion has been ascending while rebuilding, celebrating while mourning, and creating new safety nets while destroying old habits. In this process of shedding, reality morphs into fiction, and stories become the tools we use to stay hopeful and alive. Traumazine is the active forming of a life, and Megan is making sure we see and hear her fight for new beginnings.

 Young DRA blends styles in new single ‘No Rental’

CHICAGO, IL – Young DRA is a passionate rapper with incredible lyricism and a sound that can pull anyone to their feet. This bold artist has recently released a new single to follow his track “Passengers”. This new track, “No Rental” is an energetic piece that melds the best of American and British styles to create something both new and familiar. 

Young DRA’s recent release of “No Rental” comes as a follow up to his previous song “Passengers”. Both tracks have an exciting and unique energy that is sure to catch your attention and have you stuck on his every word. The best part about “No Rental” is that it takes the electricity of “Passenger” and builds on it.

“No Rental” is a song made for the people to enjoy and truly get into. The track takes the energy that Young DRA already laid down in “Passengers” and follows it up with a spin on a sound more commonly found in the UK. Young DRA accredits this idea to his producer, saying “He comes up with these sounds and I take that vibe and just run with it.” 

Leading into the UK style, Young DRA is excited to connect himself to a greater audience and reach even further into the international community of Hip Hop and lovers of Rap music. There is so much to expand on around the world and he is sure to take that advantage and run with it. 

To go alongside the incredible new track, Young DRA has also released a music video. The visual takes the song to a whole new level with a creative spin on the concept and lyricism. It is a unique and must see addition to the experience of “No Rental”. “The song makes you think of big money and expensive cars,” he explains. In reality, the video follows a more relatable kind of rental. It is relatable while still being  a fun kind of fantasy. 

Following the release of “No Rental”, Young DRA is excited to release a few more singles leading up to the release of a full project. “Be ready for a whole new sound,” he explained. “These tracks are going to be attention grabbing and full of my own personal influence.” This upcoming release is surely a project to keep an eye out for in the coming year. 

Make sure to stay tuned in to Young DRA on various platforms for new music, visuals and social posts. 

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/draofficialmusic/?hl=en

Twitter:  https://mobile.twitter.com/draofficial_

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/Draofficialmusic/

Levi Zadoff And Dead Hendrix Team Up For ‘Dead Summer’ Ep, A Fusion Between Pop Punk And Rap Rock

With a career focused strictly on making hip hop music, Levi Zadoff was looking to break out of his shell and create a new sound. He found a willing partner in punk/rap artist Dead Hendrix. 

The duo connected on Snapchat last summer and teamed up to release the Dead Summer EP, a five-song project mashing together Machine Gun Kelly’s pop punk with Lil Peep’s rap rock and their own unique sound thrown in. 

“It’s really sad boy rock and roll,” Zadoff says. 

“If I were that 12-year-old kid again who said you know what, I want to be a rapper; if I heard the music that was on Dead Summer I would be so proud,” Dead Hendrix says. “I’d be like yo, this is the sickest thing I’ve ever heard, I can’t believe I made this.”

Released in June, Dead Summer focuses on the symbolic death of summer during pandemic lockdowns as well as the loss of friends and family to the virus and drug abuse that was exacerbated by the crisis. Zadoff and Dead Hendrix had already recorded “Can’t Be God,” the project’s third track, when Zadoff asked: what are we going to name this thing?

“I was in my home alone, it was hot as fuck, no A/C and nothing to do really and the words Dead Summer just came to me and I think really the whole idea evolved around those two words,” Dead Hendrix says.

“Nothing was happening during the COVID lockdowns,” Zadoff says. “But beyond that, it was the fact that so many people were dying. The name just clicked. To put it blankly, it’s feelings of severe depression and anxiety and heartbreak and loss of loved ones. It’s very extreme emotions and it’s therapy for us to make it and it’s therapy for people to listen to it and relate to it and maybe escape.”

Zadoff himself suffered the loss of two friends to suicide, and a third to an overdose. And Dead Hendrix had also lost a friend to an overdose. 

“I think so many people were feeling all those feelings and I think almost subconsciously Dead Summer came out through those feelings,” Dead Hendrix says. 

The project features their fusion of pop/punk and rock/rap with hypnotic melodies and catchy hooks. It leads off with the sarcastic “Don’t Think It Could Get Much Better” and also features “Alone,” which delves into the pair’s loneliness and confusion and “Can’t Be God,” where they accept the lack of control over their lives. There’s also “Love Game,” a song about heartbreak, and “Teenage Dirtbag,” a bonus track on the EP. 

The EP is available to stream and purchase at https://distrokid.com/hyperfollow/deadhendrixandlevizadoff/dead-summer-ep. 

There’s also more to come from Zadoff and Dead Hendrix together and as solo artists, and they’re already working on a new single. 

“We love our fanbase, which we call the Walking Dead,” Zadoff says. “They mean the world to us.”

“For anybody who’s new to us, stay tuned because there’s going to be a lot coming in the future. This is just the starting point,” Dead Hendrix says. 

About Levi Zadoff

Levi Zadoff is based in Los Angeles, San Francisco and the Pacific northwest. He aims to use his lyrical versatility and life experiences to break into the mainstream public eye, and is a firm believer in freedom of artistry and the idea that music is one of the best ways to communicate. Known for his lyrical puns and metaphors and his use of unique melodies and psychedelic samples, he’s found success in the hip hop community for past singles like, “Watch” and “Runnin’ it up”. His alter ego is Boy Misery. 

About Dead Hendrix

Dead Hendrix is a punk/rap artist from Centretown in Ottawa, Canada. Just 20 years old, he’s already been writing music for more than a decade, often about real life topics like drug abuse, heartbreak, insecurity and trauma. He’s not in it to get rich or famous, but to share his passion with the world. 

Make sure to stay connected to Levi Zadoff and Dead Hendrix on all platforms for new music, videos and social posts. 

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/levizadoff

https://www.instagram.com/talk2thedead/

Twitter: https://twitter.com/talk2thedeadd

Official website: https://www.levizadoffmusic.com

Aspiring Music Mogul K-Tone Stands Out in The Crowd

Miami has a new rising star. Already known for years as a successful local businessman, hip-hop artist K-Tone specializes in artistically creative tracks that fuse intense rhythm with cool vocals and a distinct melodic line. His music speaks a universal language that activates endorphins.

“I’m here to make ‘em dance,” he laughs. But it’s deeper than that. Each track has a message that K-tone delivers with style and slick lyrics that speak volumes with just a few words.

His hit singles “Big Smoke” and “How You Feel” will be available on all platforms by August 1st, 2022, and both are being released to multiple FM radio stations in July 2022. His expanding repertoire is taking over social media. It All Begins With an Idea

tone has already developed a rock-solid reputation in the Brooklyn community where he’s originally from. His first single was “Take You There”, featuring the Global Artist Group recording artist Ray Lavender, as well as acclaimed actor Lil Zane.

Singer, songwriter, model, and actor Ray Lavender has toured with massive stars in the music industry, such as Akon, T-Pain, Lady Gaga, and more. Actor and musician Lil’ Zane has appeared in feature films alongside greats like Sean Connery (Finding Forrester) and Eddie Murphy (Dr. Doolittle 2), and is a true veteran of the music business.

“Take You There” launched K-tone into both local and national exposure. Since then, he has opened and closed for some of the hottest names in music, like Nicki Minaj, Busta Rhymes, Ron Browz, Rick Ross, Jadakiss, and more. He’s collaborated with artists like Maino, Sammie, J.R. Writer, Vado, Murda Mook, Lil Haiti, and has worked extensively with DJ Epps, the official DJ for Montel Williams and an integral part of Miami’s club scene and hip-hop circles. DJ Epps has worked all over the country with 50 Cent and other huge names and has promoted K-tone in clubs across Miami.

A Jack of All Talents

K-tone, real name Kellon Lewis, is a diverse businessman as well as a musical prodigy. He has multiple ventures, including an insurance company specializing in Medicare, and also works as a broker for luxury cars, luxury homes, yachts, and fine art. If you’re in Miami and are looking to garner a particular image, Kellon Lewis is the man with the connections; but he’s also a warm and friendly insurance specialist whose company is committed to finding the perfect plan for every individual and/or family.

This extreme diversity in talents, skills, and abilities sets him apart as a rap and hip-hop artist. As K-tone, he has taken what he learned from the vets in the business and applied that experience to the newest and freshest sounds. Every track is an opportunity to learn and grow, he feels. His sound is constantly evolving as he stays on top of the latest trends but also pays homage to the classics.

About K-Tone: from Brooklyn Streets to Miami Heat

K-tone was born in the Flatbush neighborhood of Brooklyn in NYC. Growing up, young Kellon spent most of his time in various recording studios with his father, who was also a songwriter. He was constantly around musicians, producers, and engineers, and developed his passion for music at an early age.

He attended the now-defunct Canarsie High School and during his early education his family impressed upon him the need to reach for a better life. As immigrants from Grenada raising a large family (K-tone has 3 brothers and 4 sisters), his parents’ greatest desire was to keep their children out of trouble and out of the streets. Music was a way for them to help their family achieve their dreams.

In the summer of 2018, K-tone booked a trip to Miami. Once he hit the Magic City, he found his peace, and never went back to the airport to return to New York. He fell in love with the perfect weather and the hot nightlife and knew he’d found his place.

Setting the Industry on Fire

As an artist, K-tone has become known for his ability to cunningly deliver narratives within his music, rich with insight from his personal experiences and diversified with a rich and varied vocabulary. He is respected as a trendsetter among his peers, and has a talent for utilizing his influences but always applying his own unique sound to his tracks.

With his deep understanding of the industry and passion for music, K-tone is equipped with the necessary drive to reach superstardom. He has been featured in showcases locally and nationally and has committed himself to perpetuating a change in today’s youth culture. “I want to open their eyes,” he says of young people. “I deliver a positive message so they don’t end up going down the wrong path.”

K-tone is truly a force to be reckoned with and the industry will feel the echo of his footsteps.

Website: https://www.ktonemusic.com/

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ktone_/

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R&B/Pop Star Inas X Heats Up the Streets with the New Girl Anthem “Disposition”

Inas X is back with a vengeance in new girl anthem, Disposition! The video is strong, hot and steamy with lots of dancing, Goddess vibes & a whole bunch of empowered sex appeal. Inas X is showing no signs of slowing down or stopping. It’s been quite a year for The Trap Princess Jasmine. We’ve seen her release crazy visuals, give killer looks even slaying at the Grammy’s, take over the tech world and even put together women empowerment events. Her successful Pink Party brought out quite the A-listers and had all the girls dressed to impress in pink fantasies! She has been her living out her “Princess & Goddess dreams,” she says.

“I’ve been loving this journey of tapping into my true essence and my Divine Goddess Feminine energy lately. I’ve been enjoying learning these new sides of myself. “Disposition” is an anthem for the girls. It’s all about owning your power, being in your divine feminine & being unapologetically who you are! Why are you the way that you are people ask me. You like to show your body and be sexy and be free? How are you that confident?! I mean that’s my disposition. It’s who I am. I am empowered in my skin, and I own that. I own my issues and insecurities it makes me human. I’m a woman I have so many sides. My Disposition is who I am, and I’ve been really learning to love who I am and all elements of myself. I’m super firey, super earthy, super flowy, super airy and I added all of those elements to the video. I felt like the last air bender in the desert with my girls! It was awesome! I love just owning that power. I love seeing girls own their power. It’s our time. The more we own our bodies, minds, souls, the more empowered we become, the stronger we are. That’s my disposition!”

Goddess of Love
“I want to make sure all my new music and new releases reflect how much I am about love and positivity. The world needs it more than ever and that’s why I’m here, so I want the messaging to be clear. Love yourself more love others more be more about love.”
Middle Eastern Goddess
“I incorporated a lot of culture in the ending break down. It was important for me to own my Middle Eastern flare. I’m from New York and you gonna hear more of that in what’s coming too but a lot of my culture inspirations because it’s important for me to own who I am and all of myself now more than ever. I feel like it’s beautiful to own your culture and I want people like me to feel me more than ever and for everyone to feel that!”

MAJOR DEBUT FROM SINGER AND SONGWRITER ALYZE ELYSE TOPS THE BILLBOARD CHARTS!

Holding 8 weeks strong, Alyze Elyse’s debut single” Breathe “has become a Top 25 Hit on the R&B Billboard Airplay charts. Being no stranger to success, the beautiful and multi- talented Alyze Elyse has dominated in various fields of entertainment from films


with millions of streams on major platforms to other chart topping singles from her movie soundtracks. The new single “Breathe” defines the true emotion that many women go through within their journey in finding out who they really are and the purpose they are suppose to serve as they transition into becoming a whole and complete woman they inspire to be. Being among many great musical talents, Alyze Elyse’s songwriting always seem to possess the truth that is relevant to the everyday woman’s life from their struggles to their accomplishments. Alyze Elyse’s song “Breathe” gives you that moment to listen, think, and refocus your thoughts to start over in the right direction.

IG: https://www.instagram.com/alyzeelyse/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/AlyzeElyse

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