wojack
Me! Produced by me writtin by me the hole shit and nobody else
GENERAL WOJACK
OBJECTIVE
To Be Successful and Loved But Respected !
EXPERIENCE
19901994 Criminal Nation Seattle Wa
InterNational Rap Star Increased sales from $5 million to $50 million.
Nasty Mix Records Independent.
Consulted for Sir Mix O Lot on Possy on Bradway and Swass album.
Produced 3 indipendant albums for Cold Rock Records
Over 150 shows preformed in the U.S and Canada
Ditribution Nasty Mix and Ichiban Records
19952000 Just Cash Records and Solar Music Seattle Wa
Wojack Where you going Wo album
Inceraced sales from $20 thousand to 100 thousand
Produced 12 songs for New album
Over 100 shows in 10 western states
Recived award for best album of the year with no radio play from local stations
20002006 GuerillaMusik Tacoma Wa
In creaced sales from $20 to a cool billion
Wojack Corp Representative
. Implemented training course for young expelld students at the Dr Mimms Acadamy
Produced. For Black Ceaser, Krystina Hope , Ellen Devine, Harj Appal, Terry Bath of ARURA ENT, Meech Wells, Thrill Will..
Produced, wrote and recorded my first album singled handedly Global Warning
Hosted over 50 different shows comedy, poetry, and hip hop battles.
Launched our new internet radiostation on live365.com Radiowojack
2007 Global Warning the Album .
EDUCATION
1970 Now Hill Top State University Tacoma Wa
B.A.in street survivle, music production, cooking, child care, spoken word
Graduated Guerilla Hogg
INTERESTS
My true intrest are seeing justis for all including Africa and African Americans, Poetry, my children, Family, Peace
TIPS
Altho my work history includes a lot of music. I have had a tremendous blessing being able to travel and meet all types of people and experience all types of situations. Not to mention I have worked many side jobs such as construction , clothing sales , car sales , school teaching and coaching. Nothing is two hard but the people that we work under seem to be the only problem I have encounterd in a work environment. I am only interested in making a good and outstanding clean living. Hard work and dedication is the key + a generous caring boss and we have success.
Contact ..s Wojack Corp 253- 474 -2595 + FAX
Email www.wojackcorp@msn.com
Web www.myspacemusic .com WOJACK
WWW.WOJACK.COM
General Wojack
Influences
Wojack Corp & Guerilla Musik
Presents
GLOBAL WARNING
From the producers of Criminal Nation, D.C.P Organization and Wojack comes a hard hitting power packed hip hop album with no product placement and ignorant sexual rap. Global Warning is the kind of hip hop album that blends a Common Sense/ Ice Cube/ Malcolm X meets General Wojack with a dose of CNN. What more could you want in a artist in 2007. General Wojack has produced an entire 17 tracks with limited help or funds under highly stressful complicated situation. Now it is time to see a new change in the industry where 2Pac still is the best rap artist out there and he been dead for ten years now. Wojack has charisma, style, charm good looks, intelligent, confidence and most important Gods Favor and with all the death and destruction lies and cheating the entire world this man is one real street soldier with respected stripes so the title General applies with precision. What can General Wojack do for the world? Simple confront the issues and report them as seen and living in America on the front line dodging the devil and his servants it is certain that you’ll get the truth 100% But don’t think that The General wont entertain you to your satisfaction, he is a very articulate artist with a very funny side to him clowning the most and keeping it real he calls it, but the Wojack show is a super history lesson and self defense class all rolled up into one with music that will inspire the next great artist guaranteed. It is my pleasure to re- introduce to the world General Wojack.
World News Report
..
Sounds Like
Date: Tue, 6 Jan 2009 23:44:59 -0800
From: joshuareisberg@yahoo.com
Subject: The Stranger talks about you
To: wojack1111@hotmail.com
If you’re feeling especially spry, Sunday the 11th would also be a good time to also take in some 253 hiphop, right here in Seattle. No less a 253 boss than General Wojack will be rocking at the Rendezvous, with Life Cycle and Josh Rizeberg. Let’s run the numbers a touch on the rapper/producer known as Wojack- dedicated to his craft since “Rapper’s Delight”, Wo was a part of Nastymix’s classic Tac crew Criminal Nation, which caught some good burn for its albums Release The Pressure (1990) and Trouble In The Hood (1992). After the house that Nes & Mix-A-Lot built crumbled, he came out with the hood classic Where Ya Goin Wo? in ’96, the first of a string of solos. Not for nothing, neither- Wo has the authoritative voice and hard West Coast bounce to his flow everyone needs in their diet. Check out an OG and tell a friend- cuz it’s all about a well-connected NW in 2009. Vancouver, where you at?
hiphop@thestranger.com
a href="http://s202. photobucket. com/albums/aa21/WOJACK7/?action=view¤t=concert. jpg" target="_blank">..
New musik Go here with your browser: http://www.wesbay.ca/clients/WOJACKmp3s/ Cheerspeed=20&transitionStyle=b&showCaptions=1&albumID=647709" width="777" height="500" name="slider" align="middle"/>
You might find yourself on I-5 rollin' right through Seattle, the "O" or Tacoma and not think of any Hip Hop artists who laid it down for the Northwest culture back in the day besides Mix-A-Lot. If you are thinking in this limited box, you haven't heard of Wojack.
When you see him you're not trippin' too hard, because "Wo" is one of those brothers who is like your playboy uncle - way laid back and fun to be around. At the same time you might see his sub-zero posture when some fool decides to run his mouth a little too loud. Don't get it twisted. Wo is cool, but the former Criminal Nation pioneer lets it be known that T-Town is represented and to be reckoned, especially when it comes to his new offering - Guerilla Music.
Aside from some shows in Pullman that "Wo" did back in '97, I saw him at the 2001 Summer Jam at the Gorge. Wojack and his homeboy Neil of Kinfolk Productions held it down with the party of the summer. Everybody who was anybody was at camp - Ivory (of Ebony and Ivory), Big Kun Luv, Keek Loc and countless others were wildin' out while Wojack played the navigator and thwarted the scurry security staff who tried to shut the spot down. That's the laid back Wojack.
As cool as he is, Wojack endured many problems after his early career as one of the members of the Def City Rockers took off back in '84. "I started as a deejay," explains Wojack. "I had one of those corny names - Icey Rock. Then I was MC Def." Despite the throwback Hip Hop names, things were getting bigger and deffer for the Tacoma B-boy. Wojack was looking for a moment to shine with his DCR homeboys and all of their wishes would come true in 1985. In '85 Wojack and his crew began to battle another group of Northwest Hip Hop pioneers. High Performance were more on the pop side of Hip Hop, but they were well respected and with the competition of HP and the help of his homeboy QuizSean D, Wojack would be propelled into Tacoma's elite arena of MCs during his sophomore year of high school. The Hill Top is a neighborhood known from Los Angeles to New York, and before Wojack's name would become as familiar as his neighborhood he would have to prove himself in the green and gold confines of Henry Foss High School.
"In '86 I became a rapper. We wasn't athletes, we were beat boxers and rappers and we battled Lincoln, Mt. Tahoma and all other cats who showed up," boasts a proud Wojack. It was after proving his lyrical dominance over his peers that Wo began to garner attention from record companies and respect from his associates Steve O. (current CEO of Ocean Records) and local legend Eugenius. "We were about to sign with Nastymix Records [Nasty Nes's former label] and Eugenius and I came up with the group name of 'Americas Most Wanted", says Wojack. But that was a problem, because like Lee said in Beatstreat, "That's the bitah!!!"
America's Most Wanted was the name of a proven click in Oakland, so they had to change their name. Rule number one in Hip Hop used to be: "Originality or death." Within ten minutes, Wojack came up with the now classic name Criminal Nation.
"We had the message of talkin' about white folks, the flag…we were the artists in the Northwest representin' like PE and NWA," explains Wojack. This very testament was solidified when, years later, Big Gipp and Cee-Lo of The GoodieMOB thanked Wojack for sharing the music that they woke up to for school…in GEORGIA! But the benefits of being heard coast to coast did not decrease the space Criminal Nation's pockets. "We went into the situation blindfolded with no lawyers - signing contracts," shares an introspective Wojack. "Cats were telling me that they saw my records from L.A. to North Carolina, but Nastymix wasn't giving no cheese…and was really keeping me in the dark about my goods."
After four years with Nastymix, Wojack was becoming depressed and stepped out of the music industry in 1995. Wojack, stepped away from music and took some steps to gather himself in the war zone that crack had created in Tacoma during the early to mid-nineties. Seeing friend rest in peace and avoiding the everyday death that once consumed the city Wojack contemplated his situation. Tired of being heard worldwide, but being laughed at in his own city and seeing no parts of the puddin' Wojack went back to the drawing board. In '96, after hooking up with Just Cash Records to promote a project he was working on, he had his second son Keilan. This new birth was accompanied by the soon to follow death of his relationship with Just Cash. "After the album was finished, I had a deal with SOLAR (Sounds of Los Angeles Records) in L.A., but the distribution deal fell through after my album made about $25,000." Seemingly suspecting the label of foul play Wojack adds, "[The owner] acted like he wasn't about getting the money."
After this episode, Wojack - dejected and upset left the arena of Hip Hop again. Feeling used like an old rag, Wojack left the game only to return with a vengeance to reclaim the crown he earned as a high school sophomore. "I started going to Canada and was immediately accepted. It's a different country, we was havin' lunch on Robson St. and hookin' up with the local cats" says Wojack. Canada, commonly recognized by people of color for being more accepting of diverse ethnicities in contrast to the U.S., became Wojack's base for recording his highly anticipated Guerilla Music album, but his stay would no be long. Wojack is not allowed in Canada due to undisclosed legal woes, and was confronted and detained at the border - but not for long.
"I escaped from the holding room at the border by doing some McGuyver type shit," smiles Wojack. "No joke, I got out and ran for a good one hundred yards and haven't been back since." In the time that Wojack did spend in Canada, he created what he considers to be "a blueprint of how this Armageddon is going down" in reference to the recent September 11th New York City trade tower bombings and subsequent attacks on Afghanistan. "I don't expect everyone to feel me, I am speaking prophecy. These are Armageddon days," suggests Wojack. "When they start stereotyping and lockin' [cats] up, the youngsters will need some generals in the streets. I'ma be survivin' - I'm a general."
When asked how he feels about the relevance of his album in 2001, Wojack lights up. "I'm impressed with my album. Look what I've done with a month and three thousand dollars. What if I had twenty-thousand and more time!" Wojack mentions the progress he has made during promotional tours in Los Angeles, but his goals now include his oldest son Mark, his 3 year-old girl Ahsha and his newborn boy Jaylen. As Dead Prez say, 'It's Bigger Than Hip Hop' and Wo knows!
Wojack is busy diversifying his craft with film deals, a project with Harley Davidson in the works and "other shit" as he puts it. In essence, Wojack is happy, but not satisfied and his motivation is to move his family to Africa eventually. However, if this Armageddon he mentioned pops off, you can probably catch him on the beaches of Rio in Brazil. That's real!
willy lynch
Gentlemen:
I greet you here on the bank of the James River in the year of our lord, one thousand seven hundred and twelve. First , I shall thank you, the gentlemen of the of the colony of Virginia, for bringing me here. I am here to help you solve some of your problems with slaves. Your invitation reached me in my modest plantation in the West Indies where I have experimented with some of the newest and still the oldest method for control of slaves. Ancient Rome would envy us if my program is implemented. As our boat sailed south on the James River, named for our illustrious KING JAMES, whose BIBLE we CHERISH, I saw enough to know that our problem is not unique. While Rome used cords or wood as crosses for standing human bodies along the old highways in great numbers, you are here using the tree and the rope on occasion.
I caught the whiff of a dead slave hanging from a tree a couple of miles back. You are losing valuable stock by hangings, you are having uprisings, slaves are running away, your crops are sometimes left in the fields too long for maximum profit, you suffer occasional fires, your animals are killed, Gentleman,...You know what your problems are; I do not need to elaborate. I am not here to enumerate your problems, I am here to introduce you to a method of solving them.
In my bag, I have a fool proof method for controlling your slaves. I guarantee everyone of you that if installed it will control the slaves for at least three hundred years. My method is simple, any member of your family or any OVERSEER can use it.
I have outlined a number of differences among the slaves, and I take these differences and make them bigger. I use FEAR, DISTRUST, and ENVY for control purposes. These methods have worked on my modest plantation in the West Indies, and it will work throughout the SOUTH. Take this simple little list of differences and think about them. On the top of my list is "AGE" but it is only there because it starts with an "A"; The second is"COLOR" or shade; there is INTELLIGENCE, SIZE, SEX, SIZE OF PLANTATION, ATTITUDE of owner, whether the slaves live in the valley, on a hill, east or west, north, south, have fine or coarse hair, or is tall or short. Now that you have a list of differences, I shall give you an outline of action- but before that, I shall assure you that DISTRUST IS STRONGER THAN TRUST, AND ENVY IS STRONGER THAN ADULATION, RESPECT OR ADMIRATION.
The black slave, after receiving this indoctrination, shall carry on and will become self-refueling and self-generating for hundreds of years, maybe thousands.
Don't forget you must pitch the old black VS. the young black males, and the young black male against the old black male. You must use the dark skinned slaves VS. the light skin slaves. You must use the female VS the male, and the male VS, the female. You must always have your servants and OVERSEERS distrust all blacks, but it is necessary that your slaves trust and depend on us.
Gentlemen, these kits are your keys to control, use them. Never miss an opportunity. My plan is guaranteed, and the good thing about this plan is that if used intensely for one year the slave will remain perpetually distrustful.
-WILLIAM LYNCH-1772
Cover | Archives | Section: Mudroom | More News To Us | Print | Email This
Fasten your seatbelts Photo: Joe MalikVIEWS: General Wojack sees lies through those shades.
Share: Other Mudroom Columns
Active News
Numbered Spaces
Election 2008
County Desk
Politics
Outside Tacoma
Mudroom in Print
Soapbox
Cool Things
Exit Polls
Local perspectives on a historic election
by Joe Malik
Oct 30, 2008
American politics in 2008 are defined by an ancient dichotomy, says the Rev. Goonie — fear and hope. At the tail end of a three hour bar binge at SeaTac Airport, a short day away from performing a marriage ceremony in Phoenix, as he puts his seat in a locked and upright position, the good reverend sums up this year’s political climate as clearly as Anderson Cooper on Jesus Juice.
“We are at the greatest American crossroads in 300 years,” he says. “This is the swan song of possibility. We all have to decide: do we vote based on fear, or do we vote on hope?”
Reverend Goonie is a DJ, a musician, a brilliant writer, and he has the most beautiful picture of his Siddhartha-like smiling face spray painted on a wall in Montreal. He is one of several people chosen to speak on the significance of what many consider a tipping point for politics in America. You know what the pundits say. These are perspectives you won’t get on CNN, or even Disinfo.net.
Fasten your seatbelts.
“I don’t know if I understand politics,” says Daniel Blue, Tacoma persona mucho grata, freelance genius, poet, musician and relatively young wise man. “I see politics on a small and personal level.”
Like the framers of American democracy, Blue sees politics as a tool of the people. National movements don’t interest him as much as power he can see being exercised. A member of a swelling group of DIY community builders, Blue wants to see what he — and the rest of us — can do right here at home. That’s where he finds hope.
Blue considers the task of building relationships between people, forgiveness of difference and the perpetual struggle to maintain personal connections every bit as daunting and noble as any megalithic political machination.
“I tend to move where I see results,” he says, adding, “I want to put my energy into good things.”
Mark Womack wants to see what the people can do as well. Womack also goes by General Wojack, front man for Tacoma hip-hop heavies Criminal Nation, a politically-conscious hip-hop crew that made its name during the 1980s and 90s. As a former gang leader turned rap artist, community activist and father, Wojack uses a word popularized by Public Enemy’s Chuck D to describe his feelings toward the current state of politics.
“Politricks,” he says. “I see all sorts of lies. I believe in Barack Obama and the presidency, but think people might be fooled about what happens behinds the presidency. We’re all caught up on the surface if it.”
Wojack says it would be a mistake to entrust all the changes that need to be made to one leader, or to political process in general.
“All of this is going .. our very eyes,” he says. “All of us together need to make the change. We don’t need a leader, but they convince us that (we) do. I want to see the world change, but I want to see what we can do.”
John Mason, whose name has been changed at his request, remembers a time when America faced a similar crossroads. An African-American Born in 1922, Mason was 8 years old when his father came home and said, “The bank’s closed.” That day marked the beginning of the Great Depression. Three years later, the country was in shambles, and Republican incumbent Herbert Hoover lost by a wide margin to New Deal architect Franklin Delano Roosevelt, who promised to rebuild America. Mason’s family, having voted Republican since Lincoln, “switched sides” as Mason puts it, voting for FDR.
“They voted for Roosevelt because he gave people hope,” says Mason
Born January 7, 1970 in Monterey California and raised in Tacoma Washington. Wojack's parents are his earthly advisers and GOD is his spiritual tutor. Wojack's two brothers, Brian and Bobby are an intricate part of his crew and from the beginning have given their older brother their utmost support. Wojack is not only a brilliant rap artist but an inspirational producer, song writer and is an insightful lyricist. Wojack is well known in the Seattle/Tacoma districts for his amazing ability to verbally communicate throughout his music and spoken word. He's likening to a chemist in his laboratory spitting out words and revelations of things to come; like wars and rumors of wars. Wojack's lyrics are laced with apocalyptic revelations of political and revolutionary rhymes. Like most artists, Wojack began singing in the Church. Wojack said “God gave me a gift of song, it is imperative that I give him the glory.” Characteristically, Wojack's gone through a mental and spiritual transformation. Ever since he was born he has felt the essence of music calling him from the depths to express his opinion to whomsoever it will. In 1978, he heard his first Hip Hop song, Rappers Delight, by The Shugar Hill Gang. After repeatedly hearing the song, he was hooked and from that point, rap music captured his soul and little did he know, it would never let go. In '84, he transformed himself from break dancer and Hip Hop DJ, to a master of ceremony for Short MC. He had built himself a work table equipped with two turn tables, a small Korg drum machine and mixer. He gathered all the rap albums he could find. Wojack began by spinning for small parties at Boys and Girls Clubs and went by the name DJ Icy Rock. At the time there were several other crews emerging out of the neighborhood like the Apache Playboys, Casanova Crew, The DCR, and The Def City Rockers. They all brought Hip Hop to Tacoma. Wojack and crew were rugged to the bone. They would put on parties and car washes to raise money for jackets, trips and other expenses. They had to stay on top. One day, there was a block party and all MC's met to battle on the mic. Wojack's crew got blasted, dismantled and crushed by a female MC named Goldie. This was a huge ego crusher yet as a result, it gave Wojack the drive to write his very first rap. It took him four times to get started but he continued to go over and over his rhymes until they were fully memorized to perfection. He was now ready. In 1988, Wojack graduated from Henry Foss High School. At age 18, he began producing music and he continued to write lyrics with his friends and with DJ E., his new partner. He performed at several school events and major community events like The Bite of Tacoma as well as The Black Community Festival. Two years passed and Local DJ Nasty Ness Rodriguez and Sir Mix A Lot along with other partners put Seattle on the map with hit single, Potion Broadway. They later discovered Wojack and DJ E.'s talent at several rap contests and shows around Seattle and Tacoma. They decided to include them in the Nasty Mix family. They settled on naming this new addition, Criminal Nation. The group had an impressive debut. They fed the public with hits like Insane, Black Power Nation and Release the Pressure. They proceeded to make a second album labeled, Trouble in the Hood, with the hit single/video Excuse Me Mr. Officer. All was seemingly well until Nasty Mix Records took a turn for the worst and experienced internal difficulties which left Wojack and fans devastated and disappointed. In 1994, Nasty Mix Records filed for bankruptcy and Criminal Nation came to an end. Wojack stepped out of the music industry and decided to explore his options as a solo artist and in1996 a new album was born. The album was titled “Where ya Going Wo?.” 2500 units were sold the first month the album was released but soon after, Wojack made a distribution deal with SOLAR (Sounds of Los Angeles Records) in L.A. When the company filed bankruptcy, once again, Wojack was left in the same scenario. Wojack , dejected and upset, left the arena of Hip Hop. Feeling used, Wojack left the game only to return with a vengeance to reclaim the crown he earned as a sophomore. Wojack started going to Canada and the people immediately responded with admiration to his music. He decided to compose yet another album while in Canada. He created what he describes as “a blueprint of how this Armageddon is going down” in reference to the September 11th, New York City Trade Center attacks and subsequent attacks on Afghanistan. Wojack quotes, “When they start stereotyping people and locking' cats up, the youngsters will need some generals in the streets. I'm a surviving general.” The album was recorded in Fiasco Bros. Studios in British Columbia, Canada. In 2000 after 3 months of hard work, Guerrilla Music was completed. Wojack brings the heat to Summer Jam 2000 and lights up the stage while performing his hit song Guerrilla Hogs. In 2001, Wojack heads to L.A. on a promotional tour. He continued performing and promoting the album at various clubs throughout the U.S. and Canada. Now is the time to recapture the attention of all Wojack fans. Wojack Corporation has launched www.wojack .com, a site where you can find out more about Wo and discover his music. His latest project is titled, BLACK OPS. This is a very dangerous hour but it is one filled with great opportunity. Music has enabled Wojack to cross barriers, therefore allowing him to reach a world wide audience. Enjoy Wojack.
Dope Emporium Logo: html code:
AIDS EPIDIMIC REVEALED
Dope Emporium Flyer Back for Web: html code:
wact niggs duck down ..
Who is Wojack?
Gen. Wojack
Gen. Wojack
* Share:
* Digg
* del.icio.us
* Reddit
* StumbleUpon
* Technorati
* Google Bookmarks
* YahooMyWeb
* Netscape
* NewsVine
Other Music Columns
* Rockin' The Cradle
* Better Living Through Music
* Tiki Logic
* Don't Miss
* Live From I-5: Hip-Hop in the 25360
* Concert Alert
* Under The Lights
* Music Calendar
* CD Reviews
* Music Vault
* Rock Rhetoric
* Jazz Volante
* Random Acts
* Festival Follies
* Sound Check
Tacoma’s native hip-hop son set to drop two albums in September
by Jose Gutierrez Jr., M.Ed.
Aug 27, 2009
He smiles with a smirk both charming and skeptical. He captures the bulk of attention in any room he walks into — especially that of the ladies, but fellas respect him upon introduction.
His vocals capture the attention and inspire awe of the most critical ears.
He survived the tumultuous ‘80s in the heart of Tacoma’s Hilltop and Eastside neighborhoods at the impetus of their gang and drug-drenched eras.
He rhymes about revolution, conspiracy theories and the New World Order long beyond the era of militant hip-hop’s dominance.
As a co-founder of Criminal Nation, he is a legendary pioneer of hip-hop in the Pacific Northwest if there ever was one. His name belongs in the same sentence as Nasty Nes and Sir Mix-A-Lot as it relates to the region’s hip-hop lore.
He just completed two albums that will debut in September — I Am Mark Womack and War Music, his fifth and sixth respectively. So why is it that you don’t know Mark Womack, aka Wojack? Or better yet, why do you still not know him?
The elusive Wojack is a figure of street lore. From running with the nationally recognized, Tacoma-based Criminal Nation in the ‘90s to flourishing as a respected lyricists (where sales don’t always reflect as much), he has endured the often maze-like music industry and is still standing. Having worked from Canada to California, Wojack has been mulling over the creation of his most recent masterworks for nearly two years — resulting in I Am Mark Womack and War Musik.
I sat down with him to figure out what motivates him and why he thinks you should be listening… closely.
WEEKLY VOLCANO: How do War Music and I Am Mark Womack differ?
MARK WOMACK: I Am Mark Womack is an autobiographical sketch about me — more so than Wojack. War Musik is a vision into survival as a human being in the American streets… How people feel about the war on terrorism, health care… Issues affecting us all.
WV: So who is Mark Womack in your words?
WOMACK: I am a middle-aged American, blue-collar hip-hop artist. …
WV: Is there space for a middle-aged hip-hop artist? Rap is popularly thought to be a young man’s game.
WOMACK: That’s a misconception … Rap is my age. The power of knowledge is what feeds hip-hop. As long as you are saying something significant — you are significant. Everybody wants to rap, but not everyone can rap. I am a professional lyricist.
WV: In less than five words describe Tac-Town.
WOMACK: Tacoma doesn’t raise no punks.
WV: Describe your creative process in developing an album from concept to finish.
WOMACK: I record in studios from California to Canada. I produce music, so I initiate the creative process. After that I match lyrics and beats. I get into a spiritual state of thinking and allow the music to come together — not forcing it. It’s God’s blessing and I go hard!
WV: What have you seen change in hip-hop since the ‘80s?
WOMACK: Hip-hop has transformed into a commercial entity, where before it was a means of communication for black folks and the streets. Now, you can get your hip-hop with a happy meal.
WV: Why is Northwest hip-hop still not on the national map?
WOMACK: We have bred some intelligent artists, even after Mix-A-Lot. After Mix, our revolutionary/conscious artists were strong, but the unity and sense of a movement has disappeared … No connection to a movement between artists. There are small pockets of artists in Seattle, Tacoma and beyond — but it’s disconnected … And we have no radio support on a mainstream level.
WV: Any last words?
WOMACK: I appreciate the respect that people have for my work. One hundred percent! Whether I ‘made it’ or not… My career has been rewarding, because of the reaction and love that I received from people.
For more information check out www.myspace.com/guerillamusik.
What you are watching is a collective effort from the artists who showcased in Season 6, the videographers, photographer, host, editor and stars of the show PIPERSVILLE Live to come out with a selling product that performers and models (the normal Joe) can use to take their selling ability to the next level. Enjoy!
- Sept 12 @ Club Tobago - Charlie Blacks Performing Live!!
- Sept 18th @ Club Tobago Brampton - Toonie Party - $2 Before 11 For Ladies - THIS PARTY IS IN CANADA
- OCT 3rd - Send off Party Oct 3rd To Florida $2,500 Trip in a 5-star hotel for 5days THIS IS REAL TALK it's being given away by Dereck & Kevin with their new company 5 star giveaways
- Oct 30th @ Club Tobago - Halloween Party
Wanna Celebrate Your Birthday @ One Of These Events?
Hit Me Up For More Info
Aim - Kronjah 1718-775-1514 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Club Tobago Queens 147 - 02 Liberty Ave Queens Ny
- Sept 4th @ Club Tobago - All White Affair - Last Day To Wear White For The Year - Everybody Free Before 11
- Sept 18th @ Club Tobago Brampton - Toonie Party - $2 Before 11 For Ladies - THIS PARTY IS IN CANADA
- OCT 3rd - Send off Party Oct 3rd To Florida $2,500 Trip in a 5-star hotel for 5days THIS IS REAL TALK it's being given away by Dereck & Kevin with their new company 5 star giveaways
- Oct 30th @ Club Tobago - Halloween Party
Wanna Celebrate Your Birthday @ One Of These Events?
Hit Me Up For More Info
Aim - Kronjah 1718-775-1514 ^^^^^^^^^^^^^ Club Tobago Queens 147 - 02 Liberty Ave Queens Ny
sept. 2nd at the 54th ave. sports bar in tacoma I-5 Records and E-Mac W/ Young soprano ,Jesse James , Mike & Mar & more ...**Raffel Tickets ** win a bottle of Bubbly to pop !! cover 7$ with raffel ticket and 5$ w/o *drink specials * 5.25 AMF ...& Henny's , 9$ monster's show starts at 8pm
contact me anytime if i can produce any hits for you. I'm a hiphop/rap/r&b producer i'm allways working with artists, and I work in your actual budget. Don't forget to hit my page and check out some beats, read up on me, if your feelin my traxx feel free to comment your name and email address on here, with that info I can get you instant access to pick from some of the best beats in the business. Take care an see you at the top. Traumatic Productions!!! www.myspace.com/Traumaonthetraxx www.soundclick.com/Traumaonthetraxx www.twitter.com/TraumaticProductions If your serious about my company producing music for you my direct line is -1850-339-6202. (Leave a message if u cant reach me and i will return your call as soon as possible.) MAKE SURE TO READ MY PAGE!
Traumatic Productions!! Original Traxx for Original Artists!!
This comment was sent by your friend via the Vegas app. To block this app and all communications from it, click Here.
-------------------------------------------
Hi, come join me in VEGAS. To get you started I have given you $200 from my own pocket :). (click on image below to teleport to vegas)
This comment was sent by your friend via the Vegas app. To block this app and all communications from it, click Here.
-------------------------------------------
Hi, come join me in VEGAS. To get you started I have given you $200 from my own pocket :). (click on image below to teleport to vegas)