Last month, radio station WGCI ran a music competition in partnership with AT&T ahead of its music summit this Saturday, inviting aspiring artists to submit their songs. From these submissions, the contest judges will select four artists to perform at the summit, which will also feature appearances by Fat Joe, G Herbo, and Doja Cat, as well as panels on how to break into the music industry. Two of the four finalists will be selected to receive personal meetings with Roc Nation and 300 Entertainment.Ā
Over the past four Saturdays, WGCI has been hosting music submission events at different AT&T stores around Chicagoland. Last Saturday, October 26th, artists gathered at the AT&T store on 95th and Western, waiting to submit their music for a chance at these opportunities.
At the store, WGCIās DJ Kyle played top ten rap songs over the speakers, periodically plugging phone plans. It had been raining since morning and the strip mall parking lot was slick with water and gasoline. A contestant wearing pristine Air Jordans shook his head with dismay after stepping in an oil slick. The other contestants had to shake off their beautiful clothing upon entering the storeātheir shoes decorated in leopard print and spikes and loose strings, their sweatshirts printed with sharks and tigers, and their jeweled pendants of angel wings and marijuana leaves. They waited in line to hand off their USBs to DJ Kyle, listening to his advice with deference and distracted excitement. Afterward, on the storeās pleather couch, artists chatted and planned future collaborations together. Their friends and relatives waited while they decided where to meet and which open mics to attend.
I spoke with contestants Rock Sway, Big Mouth Bo, Holli D. Barzz, MANSION, SteveO Stoner, Ivori Skye, and JKatana about their music. Interviews have been condensed and edited for clarity.
The artist MANSION wore a tank top, matching brown wristbands, and a white angel wing pendant on a gold chain. He filmed the store and both of us during our interview. His artist name stands for āMaking A New Start In Our Neighborhood,ā and he runs an organization called HOPE, or Helping Other People Eat, of which he is the founder and sole member.
I been rapping for thirty years. I grew up in Englewood all my life. Iām from the projects, man. A lot of problems right now is, they takin entertainment, and trying to make it into real life. You go into the studio and say something about somebody. These guys actually gonna come and get you for that. Artists today, man, violence is all they see.
They wake up in the morning, step out the door, and see guns and drugs. You come right now to 79th and Halsted, I could show you an eight-year-old with a banger, weed, and everything. Itās getting younger and younger. But a lot of the incidents that happen is just cause people hungry out there, and just trying to get people to hear that in their music. Thatās the reason why you donāt hear nobody mention āOh, I woke up and had a good dayā¦ā You not gonna hear that.
Lemme tell you the biggest problem. You canāt have these radio stations playing stuff, āgo pop a pill,ā āpop this,ā āpop that,ā and have that playing on the charts, number one. You gotta slow your promotion down and start doing real good music. Cause guess what? The devil was who? He was the god of music. He loves it!
You gotta look at it and say āGod gave you a gift, you gotta use it in a good way.ā I got a song called āBlue Skies.ā Thatās a song about being grateful every day, waking up and seeing blue skies. āShow me heaven,ā āFlip through the pages of life,ā all my songs got meaning behind it thatās not only gonna touch the Black person. Thatās why I donāt like Farrakhan. If you dealing with one color, you the devil, I canāt mess with you. If you dealing with one color, you aināt of God.
Another song, “Show out.ā Meaning every time you step out, I want you to show out. āEvery time I step out itās a blowout, Imāa show out, shinin when I go out, drippin diamonds when I roll out, every show is sold out coast to coast so get yo dough out. Iām about to show out, show out.ā Nice song, āShow out.ā Let the world know who you are. Show out.
Holli D. Barzz wore a blue vest lined with faux-fur, sparkles in her hair, a spangled fanny pack, and a heart-shaped jeweled pendant. In a recent freestyle video, she wears an EBAY shirt, a chain that reads āBOSSā in capital letters, and a dense green afro. Her live performance videos are enthralling. She met fellow artist Ivori Skye at the AT&T store and promptly decided to collaborate with her on a music video.
My basketball coach gave me the name āHollywoodā cause I used to dress up before basketball games, and he would say, āOh you think you Hollywood.ā As I got older, I just shortened it to Holli D, then I added Barzz when I started rapping. I been rapping for six to seven years, but I been doing poetry since I was eight. My friends at school used to tap on my desk and ask me to spit my poem, faster and faster.
I donāt sound the same on nothing I do. Iām versatile, which is great cause itās easy marketing. I never look the same. I never want to be bored. I wear six-inch heels on the stage and jump up and down. I have to get your attention and if I donāt have it, Iāll grab it. And if I donāt grab it, Iāll take it. I will make you put up your phone towards me. If I get a person not paying attention, Iām just gonna stand right next to āem and rap. Every open mic I can get my hands on.
But at the same time, itās a lot of janky promoters that promise you a lot of stuff and they get your money, and theyāre bad with promoting and the shows donāt be packed, or your set is cut, you only get two minutes of performing when youāre supposed to get five or seven. They use famous artists on the flyer, so they make you really think youāre opening up for famous people, but the whole time theyāre on tour somewhere. Or they pop in at the end of the night and they donāt take your CD. The free open mics have better energy.
Who do you like in rap right now?
I donāt listen to other artists on the radio, so I wonāt mimic them. I just listen to myself. I could listen to myself all day. Not to sound weird, but I do. I listen to how I was breathing, how I spaced my rhymes. I normally come up with a song when Iām driving. I come up with a hook, saying it over and over again until I stop at a red light. Or during my lunch break. Then I write down the hook. I want to be a professional. I wanna use that, actually, as a platform to invest in other stuff. I wanna leave something behind for my kids thatās way bigger than me.
Cause my nine-year-old is my biggest fan. Heāll light a candle and get my laptop set up for me, like, āAre you ready to rap now? Can I listen?ā And heāll say, āI like that.ā Right now, Iām working on a hit single. Iām gonna try to be everywhere with that single. You gonna see me standing at the red light with a sign made, with my Youtube, all of that. Iām gonna be out here doing it myself. Iām also pretty sure my new friend is gonna help me too.
I just came to drop off music, but I met some incredible people. I met her (Ivori Skye) first. I always got charged so much for music videos, I couldnāt afford them, but she charges in my price range. So, we gonna link up, and sheās gonna do my editing for me.
What are you all doing together?
Ivori Skye: I donāt know, cause when she just said that, that was the first I had heard of it (laughter). She didnāt even mention that in the car when she was listening to my music, but Iām down.
Holli: I gotta do a song thatās like āSheās so free-spirited, and sheās talented.ā I got talent, she got talent. Why not put it together?
Holli then won a raffle ticket to attend the music summit and wandered off to retrieve it.
What about you Ivori, whatās your music background?
Iām working towards my second degree in the entertainment business. Iām certified in social media marketing too. I rap, I sing, I act, I make films, I do photos, and Iām starting a business called From the Ash Media.Ā I want my name up there so people see it on the music video and they say, āOh they made it for how much?ā Iāve done music videos, and done PA work, and worked as an actor. Anything I get to help further my brand, and get me out there and help other people.Ā
With my knowledge, I donāt believe in keeping it in. Even with my classes in school, I always tell all my friends what I learn, entertainment law, all that. Thereās too many people in the music industry trying to be selfish, holding onto information, keeping all the wealth to themselves. Which is crazy, considering that most hip hop culture is Black, which is always our problem anyway, which is we donāt come together. I try to help in any way I can. Thatās why I would hop on a song with Holli. I donāt mind at all. Iām working on an EP called Angelic Demons that hopefully will be ready by end of November. Ivori Skye all across the board.Ā
Royal approached me while I was talking to another artist, saying that I should meet her brother. She then seated me next to her brother, artist name JKatana, and the three of us chatted for a long time. By the end of our interview, the posters had been taken down, and everyone had left.
JKatana: Iām here just hoping to have a good time, see what the opportunities is all about, hoping we get chosen. I got nineteen tracks in total. I got a mixtape out on all platforms, itās called ADHD. I have ADHD. I donāt wanna say I grew out of it, but I did a little bit. School was a little bit different for me. I kinda felt isolated from other students. This is something I always wanted to do, but I was insecure about it for a while.Ā I wanted to be an independent artist. I wanted to be in control. I wanna create my own destiny, my own legacy.
Royal: Then one day he just came to me and he was like, āSis I want you to be my manager.ā Cause Iāve been in the music industry for a very long time, doing music promotions for different artists, but I never really managed anyone. So weāre actually going through this journey together. I really want the world to know who he is. The first project I wasnāt really involved, he just did his own thing. But then we started doing the videos. Ever since then, itās been takin off. Once he did āOvalooked,ā thatās when I knew, āOk, we really in this.ā
Seeing what heās doing, it pushes me further in the things Iāve been doing for years. Cause I donāt always get the credit I deserve. I donāt look for that. Even when we somewhere, I always push him to the front.Ā Heās always pushing me to the front too. Iām learning to not always be in hiding, or be in the cut, cause thatās what Iām used to, cause thatās my comfort zone. We just gotta do this. This is for you, I donāt care if I go broke. At the end of the day, I know I did it for you. And you know that somebody believed in you. I hate talking about him cause I get emotional, I get emotional all the time when I talk about him. Iāve always wanted somebody to believe in me as much I believe in him. We didnāt come together for no reason. As soon as we came together, it was click. After that, itās been magic. I really want the world to know who he is.
The 107.5 WGCI Music Summit presented by AT&T, Harold Washington Cultural Center, 4701 S. Martin Luther King Dr. Saturday, November 9, 8amā4pm. General admission $55, V.I.P. Artist (panel discussion, play your music and get feedback) $99. bit.ly/wgcisummit2019Ā
Morley Musick is a writer from Chicago.