Noadvisory Podcast

From Mississippi Melodies to Atlanta Beats: J.Lock's Musical Triumph

January 17, 2024 J.Lockofficial Season 5 Episode 6
Noadvisory Podcast
From Mississippi Melodies to Atlanta Beats: J.Lock's Musical Triumph
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Show Notes Transcript Chapter Markers

Every so often, we cross paths with a story that sticks—a tale of ambition, rhythm, and the raw grit it takes to sculpt a dream into reality. Enter J.Lock, Mississippi's quiet powerhouse, who's stirring up Atlanta's music scene with his melodic genius. From crafting his first set of lyrics at a tender age to the relentless grind that's shaping his current project, J.Lock's narrative is a testament to the transformative power of authenticity and perseverance in music. Sit back as we unveil the ingredients of his unique sound, the blend of his beginnings, and the pulse of his new stomping grounds.

J.Lock's story is as much a celebration of roots as it is a nod to growth and reinvention. Mississippi's hidden gems and the soulful sway of its culture have left an indelible mark on his artistry. At the same time, Atlanta's eclectic beats have infused his music with a fresh, rhythmic flavor. Our chat with him isn't just surface-level; it's a deep dive into the creative synergy, like his collaboration with Finesse2tymes, and the striving to craft tracks that leave a lasting imprint on the soul rather than fleeting chart-toppers. When we discuss artistic influence, we don't stop at the surface—we explore the profound impact of hip-hop titans and the personal journey of stepping out of comfort zones to achieve greatness.

As the conversation unwinds, we grapple with the tough choices that define us, like the intriguing prospect of choosing mentorship over immediate wealth. J.Lock shares his blueprint for the future, a project that promises to weave a rich tapestry from his past, present, and the dreams he's hustling to fulfill. His story, underscored by prayer and ambition, is a clarion call to anyone on the cusp of chasing their own dreams. It's about more than just making it—it's about making a mark, with a vision that's laser-focused on reaching the apex. Join us as we celebrate J.Lock's journey, one that's marked by the relentless pursuit of success and the heartbeat of a dreamer in full stride.

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Speaker 2:

Yeah, shard's most dangerous crew. No rising podcast your boys see on McLean.

Speaker 3:

It's your girl trap. See it's stairs. Unscripted.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, you know the fucking vibes. It's your boy, muhammad Ali. What's cracking?

Speaker 2:

Together cuz god damn it Shopper made DJ Polo back there on the boards holding us down. You know I'm saying but show me, we got a very special guest in the motherfucking building all the way from ATL To the CLT. You know I'm saying we ain't gonna, I ain't gonna introduce them, bring them in the new about the way trap.

Speaker 3:

Okay, hey, how you doing feeling good today I'm feeling great. All right, so listen here in New York. I see we asked artists or guests three simple questions. Just three to bring them in, you ready, let's do it.

Speaker 2:

Who you are you are where you from, you from and what the fuck you do.

Speaker 1:

Okay why. I am just a quiet kid from Mississippi, just happen to be the best of what he do. When you know, just dope at music when I'm from from? I'm from farce, mississippi, scott County, born and raised. That's my hometown. I'm always have love for them. You know I made music. You know I Inspire. You know I motivate, I do what I can.

Speaker 2:

Okay, we had a, we had a debate, was it last week? Right where you from and where you adding and shit like that so not last week.

Speaker 3:

Wasn't a month. Yes, it was throwing rice at bitches.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, we talk about that. Oh shit, that was like, but yo you said from Mississippi right, so we currently residing.

Speaker 1:

I'm in Atlanta right now. I'm basing the line.

Speaker 2:

How long you been in Atlanta.

Speaker 1:

I've been in Atlanta for like almost three years, okay. Okay, so there's a plight of you.

Speaker 2:

Okay, okay, okay we had a debate like we, from where you adding shit like that?

Speaker 5:

So okay, I mean carry on, you can apply. So what you say, you from Mississippi, right, you're not from, is you?

Speaker 1:

know I'm not from Atlanta.

Speaker 5:

Okay. So if you was, only if you was only living in Mississippi for like a year, but raising Atlanta, you would say Thank you Okay, thank you, thank you, okay, I can be born in Mississippi.

Speaker 1:

But if I was raising a lot of my whole life, yeah cuz you don't understand that, apparently, what you mean.

Speaker 2:

Well.

Speaker 5:

I know it don't know a part of you, but we talking about the niggas that move to Charlotte. They lived in New York like four weeks now. You was from Charlotte, you from Huntersville, to be exact. So stop playing with me like the birds get out of here.

Speaker 2:

So let's get it to Jaylock man. So let's win it a name to ride from Jaylock.

Speaker 1:

I mean, it was to it's two things my biological name, jaden Lockett you know, I just wanted to shorten that up. Us keep it short and sweet. And the other one is a one of my favorite artists Growing a list to his J Cole.

Speaker 2:

I wanted something similar to his name, so it was just those two reasons and everything. That's my son's name. Well, my middle son, jaden. Shout out to Jaden, yeah, shout out to Jaden. Shout out to Jaden.

Speaker 3:

So I was reading your EPK shout out to you for having the EPK Electronic press kid if you are real professional, you really take this shit serious. You should have one of those In that. I saw that you have been making music since 14 most definitely. So do you remember? Like the sound that you was making at 14 versus the sound that you make now?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, most definitely. I remember every single day. I remember the first song I wrote. Oh wow, I remember I and I got I still got my notebooks because you know I write all my lyrics. So I got a like 20 notebooks at the crib since I was 14. I know exactly what year it was. I know exactly what mindset or headspace I was at that time and, yeah, I know that. I know the growth, I know the difference.

Speaker 3:

Okay, that's crazy.

Speaker 2:

So we're like, what got you're starting to music. I know it's at 14, but when did you realize like yo, I'm doing this music shit? Because a lot of people do music and they trash.

Speaker 7:

Fuck. So when did?

Speaker 2:

you realize, like y'all, I'm doing music and it's like you nasty, and you like I'm gonna take this shit to another level right.

Speaker 1:

I think I was around 15 to 16 when I wanted like, yeah, okay, I'm committed now for to take it serious, like this, this what I want, just seeing how the people react to it, how to make me feel, you know, just this it was my way to express myself, the put my voice out there. Would know people wouldn't hear me outside of music, you know. So it's like this, this was the one and just to see how the people react, especially my hometown and everything, just to see how they react to my music was just, you know, it was dope and you know.

Speaker 2:

I won't know about Mississippi, I know about Atlanta.

Speaker 7:

Yeah, I got a question about that too.

Speaker 2:

We don't get a lot of people from Mississippi. The music scene. What's the food out there? Coach, out there, mississippi, and my double S, I, ssi, ppi.

Speaker 4:

I'm saying, that's what I'm saying.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, you got it right oh.

Speaker 5:

Watcher of P value. Just piss me off the way you said that shit.

Speaker 1:

The answer your question, though you know the food out there is great.

Speaker 7:

You know, you said that's one of the best soul, food and everything nest in the world is cuz you know it's right there.

Speaker 1:

It's like next door neighbors. Louisiana, Mississippi as far as I the see the music scene out there. To answer your question, it's a lot of talent in Mississippi, but we don't have like big you just laugh. Not, it's a lot of talent, but we don't have like big marketing platforms like Atlanta or New York or LA or even Miffy's Getting a bigger scene out there and everything. We don't have that, and soon as we had that, then you definitely see the talent out there.

Speaker 3:

I feel like in recent years, though, there have been a lot of like emerging artists from Horizon is kind of like now, eyes is on, like Mississippi, alabama.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, but you right though, it's a lot of talent, this immersion, like we got a keen Ali, a big walk dog.

Speaker 2:

That's my. Me Better say you, you.

Speaker 1:

But it's still not. It's not like Atlanta, it's still not like Memphis, it's still not like New York, but we getting there, though. It's definitely showcasing and everything.

Speaker 4:

Alright. So I got a question. I got a question Basically to piggyback off that. So how would you say like the transition from Mississippi to Atlanta, how would you say that's influenced your style as an artist or like your creativity? In regards to Like it influenced, my style.

Speaker 1:

It made me more open-minded because you know I didn't, you know I wasn't because I was listening to like Conscious Rap. You know J Cole Kendrick, you know that type of rap. But I went, I went and like I ain't paying no money, like I want to listen to Thugman and Future Art Wood-Wood Bob. My producer Chevy put me on that Atlanta Musing and everything I'm like let me be open-minded and that every since then it influenced my sound a lot. It's part of melodic sound, melodic rap, just the cadence and everything and the pockets they choose on. I don't know if that makes sense.

Speaker 6:

But, yeah, it influenced that Atlanta scene.

Speaker 1:

Atlanta music influenced my sound a lot.

Speaker 2:

Now I know you said one of your influences is J Cole and like where you know, we celebrating the 50's of hip hop and where, like, hip hop is transcending, now it's like really away from content, bars, lyrics and shit like that, to just niggas going in the booth and say ha, ha, ha and shit is it. You know what I'm saying. So, being that those are one of your influences, like, how do you feel, one, you feel you're going to take that influence and bring your style into the game? And two, how do you feel that influence is going to carry the next generation of artists coming into the game?

Speaker 1:

Uh, answer the first one. Hold on, what was the first question?

Speaker 2:

I forgot myself, shit. How do you feel like that? I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know, I don't know. How do you feel like that influenced? And influenced all like, yeah, how do you feel like you, being J Cole, your style is going to influence in this game now and then. How it's going to affect the other people that's coming into the game. How you want that effect other people coming to the game.

Speaker 1:

I want to. I want to bring back like substance and music. You know a lot of people don't have substance, no more than music. No, it only lasts for like two or three weeks. They don't dance with it. You dance to your song and take talk for like two weeks, three days, and then it's over, then it's done. I want songs that's going to last long, timeless songs that can, like you could play 10 years from now and everything. So that's, that's all I want to influence and everything.

Speaker 4:

So I got a pretty interesting question. I have to cut you off, bro. I want to know, like, what was the walk us through the process, like from start to finish of how you ended up landing the feature with Finesse two times on yours single money.

Speaker 2:

Finesse two times.

Speaker 1:

My manager, Big Block from Block Entertainment and my CEO. Hubey, we just had Pash Royce Studios. We was looking for a club banger summer anthem and everything. We need a song that was going to hit, you know, like not even just for this summer, for every single summer, and everything. So we you know I made money, we're just in the studio recording money, and everything. Finesse just happened to walk by he was like that's, that's the one.

Speaker 7:

That's the one. That's the one I need to get on right there.

Speaker 1:

He came in laid his verse down. His writing process is crazy too, you know. He just got a whole bunch of just just rhymes, and it's no, but I don't know, I don't know what it was, a suitcase or whatever it was, suitcase or rhymes I don't know what it was. Yeah, I don't know, but he pulled it out, you know, went in there and laid it in the rest of his history.

Speaker 5:

Okay, so since we talking about the studio, sorry, how are you approaching this creative process and like what is inspiring you?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I need like I can cuss on it. Yeah, I need like what does it?

Speaker 4:

know about.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, I need like five bad bitches in the studio. Oh my God, I need a stripper. Pole Shit, we're gonna have money. I'm gonna like candles and everything.

Speaker 5:

I respect you. We're gonna change the room. I respect you. You don't want no bad energy in there.

Speaker 4:

Okay.

Speaker 1:

Now I'm just playing, but all I need is a producer, audio engineer and my pen and noob. But that's all I need in the studio. You know I'm very I like to stress my songs, I like to take my time with it, just like anything else in life. Yeah, you know, I just like the, I like to be by myself most of the time and just that's that's how. That's that's how I create my. You know I'm usually that's how I do it so what inspires you?

Speaker 1:

life itself. You know whether it's a beautiful woman. Sadness, anger.

Speaker 7:

I think life itself, you know it's, it's, it's.

Speaker 1:

I'm easy to be inspired, like even if I have a conversation with a random person where they homeless, white, black and just any, I think life itself inspired me to.

Speaker 4:

Keep. I have a question, kind of doubling back to the Finesse situation. So this is no advisory, so sometimes we do ask them questions. Yeah, we asked them once, so I'm gonna get a little deep with that. So after the, after the, you know, he walked by and all that stuff. So obviously it was kind of like his idea. It wasn't like a thing where you reached out to him to get on the song. He kind of heard the song and no, no, no, you heard the song.

Speaker 1:

You know it was a goat, since he heard it and everything you know.

Speaker 4:

So did he come afterwards and did he try to charge you for the future, or oh I?

Speaker 1:

mean it's out right now.

Speaker 5:

Okay, you had to laugh that off a little bit like I can't out right now it makes a 11 songs. That is great PR I would like.

Speaker 3:

Media train.

Speaker 2:

I love it, see, I like that, so I'm a switch up the vibe a little bit?

Speaker 3:

I love to ask this question to artists. I feel like it makes him think a little bit. If you had to set up a concert, okay which you was the headliner. Choose one person to open and one person to close and they could be underground, they could be son. Yeah a local artist that you know that's a good question right there.

Speaker 1:

So I'm basically in the middle like that.

Speaker 7:

I want to open it for me.

Speaker 6:

You to add.

Speaker 1:

Right once closing, I'm definitely having Beyonce open in the color. I'm not sure.

Speaker 5:

Not, not, not that's a compliment. That's a compliment, I mean.

Speaker 7:

I definitely have one of my.

Speaker 3:

You know I like, I like to show love to my city and everything.

Speaker 1:

So I definitely have one of my. My homeboys are one of my bros. Open up for me, shout out JB quick Rye Creek. I really rock with a keen. I leave you know him being from the sip to and everything Real dope, lyricist and everything as far as closing, who gonna close for me?

Speaker 4:

who, who I?

Speaker 1:

see who. I see dope. You know I ain't really been to that many concerts. I ain't never went to a concert. I went to the first one this year I think it was not rolling loud. Was it rolling loud? That's a good first one. That's a hell of an experience.

Speaker 6:

It was dope.

Speaker 3:

It was dope. I'm probably how Travis Scott close it out.

Speaker 4:

I think they'll be dope. I hope everybody you know still alive.

Speaker 7:

Listen to me when it is, and everything.

Speaker 4:

He gonna bring it back, though that's an interesting lineup.

Speaker 5:

We gonna talk that into fruition you know you know we should do what we did last week with the questions. I got some Um.

Speaker 3:

Hey.

Speaker 4:

I love it.

Speaker 3:

I got some hidden or quitting questions Okay shout out to Jake Okay, so this game is called hit it or quit it.

Speaker 1:

Okay.

Speaker 3:

We're gonna ask you uncomfortable questions. That's cool that you have to either answer which is hitting it or you quit it, which is plead to fifth. All right, first question.

Speaker 2:

What's the?

Speaker 3:

wildest DM you ever got from a female.

Speaker 1:

Wildest DM. I'm some female, she takes me. I don't know who this was. I never met her a day in my life, I don't know. It was one of the tours. She said can I give you hair from the from back? I don't know.

Speaker 2:

I didn't reply. I don't know what to say to that. Did you say that I don't even know? You just look at it Like hold on what.

Speaker 5:

I don't know, I don't know how to reply to stuff like that. I don't know, should have put a Kanye emoji. I mean.

Speaker 6:

So, there's a no, I don't know what she has to mean.

Speaker 7:

So, you know you undecided.

Speaker 5:

if you're gonna get the air tonight, that's not me, it's just like I'm screaming.

Speaker 1:

That was right there, you know. But shout out to her, you know whoever she is.

Speaker 5:

Shout out to her. There's a why.

Speaker 4:

Shout out to you, miss ma'am.

Speaker 1:

Shout out to you, miss ma'am.

Speaker 3:

What's the first name only Of your first heartbreak, oh?

Speaker 2:

First heartbreak.

Speaker 1:

I know that song was playing better.

Speaker 6:

I know the reggae.

Speaker 1:

Don't act like you don't know. We were sitting home.

Speaker 2:

Said she got a nigga singing Sweet.

Speaker 5:

That right up it's even as fuck. It was like.

Speaker 1:

Lockhead mix tape out right now.

Speaker 6:

Miss, you go get it. I'll say I give a high school one.

Speaker 1:

You know, I don't really count, I don't really count. You know, I'm gonna say uh, shout out to Linaya.

Speaker 2:

Shout out to Linaya. That's the one that had me singing. That's why you know crazy.

Speaker 5:

He just said it don't mean nothing. But if you seen that reggae shit, it means something, because that nigga was in a rain If I had. Yeah, come on man, he was reenacting himself.

Speaker 2:

Okay.

Speaker 1:

What's her name? Linaya. High school heartbreak.

Speaker 5:

High school heartbreak.

Speaker 3:

Damn Alright, I'm gonna say this next question for. Linaya, I'm gonna ask her easy question next.

Speaker 4:

Okay.

Speaker 3:

Does size?

Speaker 1:

Matter.

Speaker 3:

Thank you.

Speaker 1:

I mean, I'm not a girl, so I would for a certain size.

Speaker 3:

Feel like you would be like, yeah, I'm good, or I'd definitely be good. Okay.

Speaker 1:

I'd definitely be good.

Speaker 4:

I'm not a girl, so I don't know right, I don't know if it matters or not Okay, can you explain the question a little bit?

Speaker 5:

more. Yes, thank you. Thank you, a short segment of cocktails with tea. So, listen, the size really matter. Let me tell you why it matters. Because I want you to understand it. Size does matter because that motion in the ocean shit Is bullshit. Okay, there is no motion in the ocean if there is no boat in the ocean. So this is my topic the other week. The size really matter because this Because if there's no boat in the ocean, where is the motion at? Okay, you know, I'm saying so.

Speaker 2:

I ain't never go back to this question. You better put the tape out again, yeah.

Speaker 1:

I don't need to bring the tape out. On this side it's size really matter. I Don't.

Speaker 5:

I still don't, like, I don't know size, I don't know what it feels like for a girl. So I went, I went so for you, like she said for you, if, if just say thumbs up a thumbs down for you.

Speaker 2:

I said thumbs up, for sure we gotta call it.

Speaker 3:

What was that?

Speaker 6:

four questions you got one. Okay, this is my last question.

Speaker 3:

First name only of the ugly you ever hit, oh.

Speaker 6:

Ugliest girl I ever hit.

Speaker 1:

I'm a quitted, I can't know.

Speaker 5:

I thought he was gonna hit quit on the other question, not this one, not saying she was ugly yeah.

Speaker 4:

My last question which is kind of like a would you rather, since you are artists, I'm gonna ask you this question? It's the. It went viral. So, since you are artists, yeah, I don't know if it was 500,000 or 5 million, whatever- or dinner with Jay-Z.

Speaker 1:

I'm taking the 500,000.

Speaker 6:

Hold on, look at me crazy at the other side of the dinner table.

Speaker 1:

He gonna look at me crazy.

Speaker 2:

See what you do is you take that bread, you flip that bread and then end up on the table with Jay-Z for free. I'm like when I'm taking dinner with Jay-Z, I'm like Get you crazy.

Speaker 4:

That's a show how much respect you got.

Speaker 2:

Let's talk about the tape for a minute, man.

Speaker 1:

Who's?

Speaker 2:

gonna take. What features is on there, like what's the vibe that you want, yeah, people to get out of when they sit down like I? Is it? No skips, do you feel? Is any skips like break it down?

Speaker 1:

bring no, take that yes, a lot of talent on the tape. We got dope production from a Chevy AJ. What you cooking shout out artists like do money a jetty, die hard waves or finesse two times. You know it's a lot, a lot of talent on that, on that project and everything. And as far as uh, what I want people to get from the project, you know I'm speaking from the present, past and future. You know. I got songs that you know. That let's get you, get to know me a little bit, you know where who I am and why I am the way I am, and everything.

Speaker 1:

As far as a President, you know just the lifestyle I'm living, whether it's the club scenes, uh, jury cars, money, girls, whatever, whatever the case is, and everything in the future, what's, what's yet to come, and everything. So that's, that's what I want people to get out of there as facts man.

Speaker 2:

So I like to ask this question who are your top three artists of all time?

Speaker 1:

All time. I said for J Cole, I'm gonna say you better have cold, you gotta have cold Kendra Lamar.

Speaker 2:

Okay, shot the Kendrick cold.

Speaker 1:

This is not a no-der, by the way. This is not a no-der. I'm gonna put Drake right there, though. Those are three that made me felt, they made me fall in love with rap music.

Speaker 5:

Okay, we love that. So let me ask my last question. I know you were talking about present, past and future early. What would pass self say to the present self now?

Speaker 1:

I say it's okay to take, else it's okay to uh, uh, get kicked down and you know and everything. As long as you get back up, as long as you keep you know, keep trying everything, it's okay to get out your comfort zone. You know it's no growth being in your comfort zone, that's that's. That's that's I see now you just music, just life period.

Speaker 2:

You know it's no growth being in your comfort zone All right, so it's one of the best pieces of advice someone has ever told you that stuck with you, and then you had to use it In your life today.

Speaker 1:

I says it was short. It was short, sweet and strong. You know, uh, pray. You know my Nana, nana told me to pray, my mom's told me to pray you know a lot of a lot of Love, one of these things they just told me to pray. Whether you're happy, sad, mad, it just just just. You know gotta gotta have a relationship, guy, that's that's. That's what I do.

Speaker 2:

That's. I love that aim on a Sunday.

Speaker 5:

Oh, it is Sunday. Yeah, it is, it is, it, is it?

Speaker 2:

was in the Savannah Wasn't a Savannah.

Speaker 3:

No never, mind lucky.

Speaker 6:

I'm not right Like it now, right now, missy.

Speaker 3:

Okay my last question is a two-part question. Okay, off your new project, what is your personal favorite song? And the second part of that question is what do you feel like is your fans favorite song?

Speaker 1:

That's a good question. My favorite off my favorite offer that project. It's like picking your favorite kid, but we all got a favorite. I think all y'all parents got a favorite. Now, my favorite I see my most personal one on there Victoria High's drive. You know that. Let the people get a. You know a glimpse, you know my life and everything. And I say the people's favorites. I'll say jet speed for sure. Hmm, jet speed is a people's favorite. They really rock with that song. It's not even just in the US talking about the country everything out of this. They rockin with that for sure.

Speaker 2:

But my final question is we'll do, because you know I hate that other cliches question. They say we see yourself the next 10 years. Yeah, that's a fucking decade. Oh no, but next year, yeah, we do. You see yourself today, there's time next year. It's gonna put pressure on you. Like I did that interview. I said next I'm gonna be here.

Speaker 1:

So yeah, I get it next year this time we're gonna be with next year. You see, y'all pan me next time to come up here. We're not nature, you know, nature, I'm definitely, definitely you. You gonna be seeing me a lot, lot more. You, I'm definitely be Be everywhere, like we working man, that's, that's one thing I can say for sure. Stone, a road music, we working. You gonna be seeing me a lot, a lot, lot.

Speaker 5:

So yeah, that's that's far.

Speaker 2:

We should find the word where they could find the mix tape, where they could find you out of all human platforms.

Speaker 1:

Let these puns fuckers, no yeah, yeah, my main source, my Instagram J I like official, J Dot like official on every single platform. Make sure you check out my lock in mixtape on every single platform and stay tuned For my project coming out next year 30-side playboy. R&b Projects gonna be dope, the ladies gonna love it and everything. And yeah, yeah, and I got a performance tonight at the tour. I'm on tour with jacqueline. Everything got a performance in Charlotte. So make sure you pop out. Yeah, everything's gonna be dope and everything.

Speaker 2:

Yeah, yeah, sir, now you got the song still cute in money. No, okay, we're gonna cure it in. I want you to introduce a song, cuz we're gonna ride out. You want you to bring the single in? Yeah, you're gonna ride it to the song we're gonna put. Can they see that? I can see that. Right, we're gonna get a thing on. This is dope. I like this. Who came up with this?

Speaker 1:

Iside, iside, iside, iside, iside shot your people. The star, I got, nobody can see you ain't, nobody can see you. Yeah, what I start right now?

Speaker 2:

Yeah, who did shout him out?

Speaker 1:

Yeah, shout out. I want to shout out my producer, chevy, and everything. He did a lot and putting that project together and everything. Shout out my boy. I've, you know, been working in everything on the team to East side D Legendary from the ATL. Shout out, ice. You know, I mean one of the best curies out right now. He gonna a don't you touch, don't touch.

Speaker 1:

He might run over here, he might run up a ice I just gonna get ice so I'm a black walk up the rock, one up since high school. Yeah, you're, you right, you right, you right. Shout out Guapo, you know the rock music is high school, supporting my music and everything. So I charge and everything you know. Yeah, yeah, I do how we doing it.

Speaker 6:

Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 1:

Well, I'm in shot. A spike on the camera.

Speaker 5:

I can't wait to make you, cuz I'm shot y'all out to, I'm a shot y'all out, shut up, ceo, best security.

Speaker 4:

Yeah, secure what.

Speaker 2:

Right but you know where this bad's my man J Lock is your boy.

Speaker 4:

See, I'm a claim.

Speaker 5:

It's your girl Trapsie. It's here as I scripted.

Speaker 4:

It's your boy, muhammad Lalli man Peace.

Speaker 5:

Oh, we're gonna bring it like and subscribe.

Speaker 2:

Please. I subscribe, I forgot subscribe and we're gonna bring in a single. Bringing that single right quick. I should hold on hold, on, hold, on, hold on. Let them bring it right.

Speaker 6:

Let me bring it in.

Speaker 1:

Yeah, yeah, this is money feature for next two times. If you ain't got none, go get you some. Yeah, yeah.

Speaker 6:

More music. Fuck shot. He wanna cut all this shit Holds. All you know I'm ducking the shit. Still, shit can come and suck on this shit. Told her, please make it fast and quick. She said why you in the rush of shit. You know what it is. Money, money, money, money, money woo. Money, money, money, money, woo. Get to the get to the bag of shit. Get to the bag of shit. Get to the get to the bag of shit. Get to the get to the bag. Need that money, money, money, money, woo. Money, money, money, money, money, money, woo. Get to the get to the bag of shit. Get to the bag of shit. Get to the get to the bag of shit. Get to the get to the bag. Need that money woo.

Speaker 7:

Now I ain't gon' say I'm the goat but I'm dope, canned me on a boat, had meal on my neck. I'm a soap anti-social made of millions. I ain't talkin' that. It's this bad. Some money, fuck beef, cause he need a bologna. I pray to God. I don't see the up, cause Lord knows, i'ma shoot the whole hundred. Check that reaction, subliminal catharsis, crazy Cause now I'm a target. A year ago they hung me up like a hanger and left me inside of the closet. I teach the jits how to come up from nothin'. They don't wanna listen. They clenching their butts and these niggas ain't comin' up in my discussion. For every action it's a reaper cause. You know what I'm doin' Money, money money, money woo.

Speaker 6:

Money, money, money, money woo. Get to the get to the bag of shit. Get to the bag of shit. Get to the get to the bag of shit. Get to the get to the bag. Need that. Money, money, money woo. Money, money, money, money, money woo. Get to the get to the bag of shit. Get to the bag of shit. Get to the get to the bag of shit. Get to the get to the bag. Need that.

Speaker 6:

Homies, I been really on the scene brilliant on my back feet, dr Seuss on mine, everything green Cause on the hell come with cheese. I came from nothin' man. I had to leave Posse with drunk hands down on his feet. Man, it was tough, couldn't get sleep. My first class gettin' Z's man, god damn, catch a nigga from the sim side, not a boy sliding like damn. Now, I'm hotter than the fish fry. You're the boy sliding like damn. That's why I'm not going badly, don't a mad big or low bound. Only thing on my mind really all the time is that Money, money, money, money woo. Money, money, money, money woo. Get to the get to the bag of shit. Get to the bag of shit. Get to the get to the bag of shit. Get to the get to the bag. Need that money, money, money woo Money, money, money, money, money woo. Get to the get to the bag of shit. Get to the bag of shit. Get to the get to the bag of shit. Get to the get to the paining.

Interview With Jaden Lockett
Mississippi Music Scene and Artistic Influences
Discussion on Music and Future Plans
Pursuit of Money and Success

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