
SALLY BIZZLE
11,633 plays
11,031 views
11,031 views
Regardless of how many drugs they claim to sell, murders they allege to commit or cars they profess to jack, most rappers are nothing more than actors pretending to play hard. Inside the booth, they recite made-up tales of being cold-hearted career criminals, but in reality, they have never done a days worth of dirt in their lives. Jackson, Miss. native Sally Bizzle recognized the flagrant falsehoods in hip hop from a mile away and came to the rap game to save the industry from a surplus of wanna-be thugs and pretty boy pretenders. So when he unleashed his hood rich debut single We Clean to the Mississippi streets, it caught on like wildfire and shot sparks like a domino effect through neighboring Alabama, Louisiana, Texas, Florida and Georgia. In a calm, conversational delivery, Sally stacks green backs atop high-pitched synthesizers, swift gangsta snares and a mid-tempo drum track. This is real street music. Theres no sugar coating nothing at all, explains Bizzle. Its not like any other artist. I bring my own style to the table. Its my life, and its a hell of a story. That awe-inspiring story to which Bizzle refers begins in Jacktowns Shady Oaks community on the citys notorious north side. Young Sally jumped off his mommas front porch head first into the streets when he was just eight years old. Running with his older brother and other boys twice his age, Sally had to be as tough as nails to gain respect. Going toe to toe in brutal fist fights almost every day with a different defender, Sally earned his neighborhood stripes the hard way. The respect rose from way back when I was 10 years old. I aint big and bad. Everybody respected me because I always respected everybody, he insists. I always had a crew, and I always been a leader. I never followed nobody. By the time Sally got out of elementary school, his mother had packed up the family and relocated to another part of the city in Christian Brotherhood apartment complex. Relieved to leave the impoverished, ghetto life of Shady Oaks behind, Sally only found out that the world was one big ghetto. Not only was he still living below the poverty level in his new surroundings, but he had landed in the toughest apartment complex in the entire city. This was around the same time that crack cocaine had hit the city like a typhoon, making an already bad situation worse. You had to know somebody, Sally pauses to correct himself. No, you had to know somebody and somebody else to even ride through the complex at that time. It was rough back then. People was getting robbed, shot, stabbed every night. All of the time that he spent back in Shady Oaks making a name for himself didnt mean a hill of beans in his new home. Every stitch of respect that he had gained was lost in one day, and Sally had to start all over again. Before he knew it, Sally was back at it again- fighting everyday. I was the new guy, so you know what that means, Sally explains. I got all the girls, and they didnt like it. Music became a part of Sallys life when he met Sucker Free Records CEO Calvin Humpty Hump Hobbs from Houston. Hump had been in town looking for new talent and happened to bump into Sally. While the furthest thing from Sallys mind was rapping, Hump to an instant liking to Sally and offered him a promotions job for his company to promote their debut artist Lil Flip. Sally even lived with Hump as he soaked up every drip of information that Hump would give. I learned a lot from Hump. He showed me how to make money in so many ways with this music, Sally admits. I will always be grateful for that. Upon returning to Jackson a few years later, Sally applied that same knowledge at home that he had attained back in the Lone Star State. He started his own company and brought many of the souths brightest stars to perform in various clubs in and around Jackson. At the same time, Sallys cousin was making a name for his label Monetary Records with volumes of mix tapes of a roster of artists floating around the city. While the CDs got love from the hometown, He didnt have a breakthrough artist to stand out. That was until Sally stopped by the studio and recorded a verse that he had swimming in his head. Cous was so shocked that he fell out of his chair. He sounded like nothing else I had ever heard. I cant even explain his voice and delivery, says Cous. I had been trying to get him to rap for years because I knew he had something to say. Sally recorded three more songs, and the Survival of the Fittest mix tape which debut Sallys verses was the hottest music on the streets of Jackson for 2006. They served the streets with more dope with mix tape Straight Drop a year later. Now that Sally officially has the streets fiending, he is about to give them what they crave with his own mix tape hosted by Core DJs president DJ Finesse Hip Hop Chop Shop which will hit the streets the first week of February. Directly following the mix tape, Sally is set to control the streets with his Monetary Records independent debut A New Day A New Hustle on February 27. And with one-hitter-quitters like King of the Kitchen featuring regional phenomenon Jewman, the laidback, Kamikaze-assited testimony My Life and money-making dope boy anthem Still Hustling, Sally will gain his respect in the rap game the hard way- he earns it.
Your musical influences
50 CENT,JAY-Z, SCARFACE, MASTER P, DR. DRE
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AY MAN I'M LIKIN THE MUSIC FOR REAL, YOU GOT TALENT
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All comments (15)
11,633 plays
11,031 views
11,031 views
I like this track...one of my soundclick favorites.