Inglewood Roots
A Voice From the Streets With a Vision for Change.
Coming out of Inglewood, I don’t just make hip hop—I breath it. This city shaped how I see the game, and where I stand in it. My place in hip hop isn’t about fitting in, it’s about representing something real. The sound, the pressure, the hunger—that’s all in me.
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This journey goes deeper than music. It’s about staying authentic in a space that can easily water you down. I’m here to speak from where I come from, not imitate where I’m going. Every verse I write is rooted in the streets that raised me, but aimed at carving out my own lane in the culture.
To me, hip hop ain’t just music—it’s truth, it’s voice, it’s responsibility. It’s the only space where I can say what needs to be said, how it needs to be said, without filters. That’s how I see my place in it.
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My pen is about impact. I come from grit, from real situations, but I bring a certain precision to it—like I’m documenting the times while living in them. It’s raw, but it’s intentional. Every line got purpose.
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I’m not here just to be heard—I’m here to mean something. To leave something behind that hits deeper than the beat. Something that connects where I come from to where the culture needs to go.