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    YELLA BEEZY RISING ARTIST JOSE BODEGA RELEASES THE OFFICIAL VIDEO FOR HIS BREAKOUT SINGLE “TOOL ON YA” FT. YELLA BEEZY

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    Dallas, Texas native and Profit Music Group rising recording artist Jose Bodega , has announced the release of an official music video for his highly anticipated breakout record “Tool On Ya” featuring Yella Beezy. The fire single made its debut on Yella Beezy and Trap Boy Freddy’s collab mixtape “My Brothers Keeper” but will also be making a cameo on Bodega’s forthcoming album Mr. Bodega releasing early January.

    In this visual, shot by Jeff Adair , you will see Jose Bodega in his raw element, as he shows the world why he is up next with his rhythmic bars, cartiers, and foreign cars. Produced by Blame It On Monstah , the booming beat helps showcase the Dallas based rapper’s storytelling abilities like never before. Some notable lyrics from this record includes: “ I could sell the same Apple back to Adam and Eve…” And with his southern, trap-style flow and 808 heavy beats he is shifting into position to create a tidal wave of fans. Stepping outside of the box with his “groovy, trap-rap,” offering listeners his own personal style of rap that is both catchy and hustle encouraging.

    Yella Beezy’s appearance on “Tool On Ya” was just the co sign bodega needed. He is moving his way up to the top and has no intentions on slowing down.

    Pilot Flyin’ taking off with the release of fire first album titled “Pre-Boarding”

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    The end of a stressful and eventful year is upon us and what better than a good tape to ride out the year with. Rising artist Pilot Flyin’ recently delivered some insanely chill vibes with his new project titled “Pre-Boarding.”Currently based in Phoenix Arizona, this is Pilot’s first project and a promising start for his career in music. 

    7 tracks running 17 minutes of the most mellow vibes anyone mood could ask for. The tape opens up with “Red Eyes” introducing his listeners to raw lyricism,  808’s and soothing sounds of planes taking off just like his music. His track “Ride with Me” gifted a catchy chorus over lax piano keys. Pilot a lot pulled in other rising artists Orama and Cam Laurent for “Counted Out,” featuring 3 separate flows preaching playing your positions and getting to the money. 

    Pilot’s release of “Pre-Boarding” is more than an impressionable introduction to what this rising artist has to offer. With 2020 being his first year in music, the artist released two singles and a wavy visual shot by Ryan O’Boyle for his track “Cloud 9.” The artist clearly values quality over quantity giving his listeners just a cast of what he has to bring to the table.

    Feenyx elevating vibes with motivational Hip-Hop tracks

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    Artists from across all genres are shaking up the music industry, especially in Atlanta. Hip-Hop artist Feenyx is standing apart from the rest with motivating and relatable hits. His mellow flow aligns entirely with his energy. As an artist he is setting a standard for grinding hard to excel as an unsigned artist. From his music to his content Feenyx shows his fans both old and new that anything is achievable. 2020 has been a year filled with life altering events from COVID-19 to the Black Lives Matter movement and Feenyx has used this time to not only evaluate his outlook on things like smoking which can be viewed via his YouTube, but do what he does best in the center of the protests in Atlanta…and that is transmit positive energy through his music. I had the opportunity of catching up with Feenyx to talk about his career and the visual for his track “Get 2 It.”

     You share a lot of free game for aspiring creatives, what got you into making videos that would help others?

     Being from West Virginia, that’s where I grew up, it wasn’t too much people able to teach you how to do that stuff, so I know how important it was to learn that stuff on my own and just try to apply it, and just show people how to do it by just… You have to learn, and go and visiting different places, learning more, coming back. So the best thing I know to do, what they always say… I know I sound whack, but they always say you have to give back, and you have to. But you can really help some people that way, if you just like show them like, “Hey, if you get the camera, do it… ” Or if you can just get your own studio and learn, and you struggle for the next 30 days, it’s better than… With that knowledge that I learned on YouTube University.

     Did you start music out in West or when you came to Atlanta?

    Nah, I started out there, fourth grade, that was my first time I got in the studio. And then my first time performing, was a sixth-grade talent show. We did some things like Hip-Hop Bootcamp, but overall, the market wasn’t there. It’s a real country place. Don’t too much rappers go through Charleston. At least the capital. They’ll go to Morgantown, where the college folks at, the 21-and-up crowd at. But as far as where we were, they were shutting our clubs down. I mean, we were fighting, acting up. Just my age group and all that, they would just shut it down, man. Shootings. So as far as music goes, it’s so small it’s like these people can’t see you sometimes as what you’re trying to be and what you see yourself as, because they saw you in… They know what had happened to you in second grade, and it was embarrassing, and it… You know what I’m saying? It’s a good and a bad thing, but I think it’s dope, regardless, whether they do or not. You at least get to see the show, regardless.

    How long after coming to Atlanta did you become Feenyx & was there anything specific that sparked the change?

     So yeah, I was going by my name for a long time, BB Thomas, and I was just doing a whole lot of work under that. But I tell you, when I did move down to Atlanta, I was working at this T-Mobile, I was working there for probably two and a half years. And even before… And that’s when the idea dinged on me like, “Man, you should change your name.” And I’d been thinking about it. I’m like, “Man, I don’t know what name I would really want to go for.” You know what I’m saying? So then, I’m like timeless, I’m the only animal that rhymes, that goes with timeless, is a phoenix, because it is, it’s a timeless animal. I’m like, “That’s our mascot. I want to embrace that name more.” And then it turns out, what I found out is, a customer had walked in, and this is like, oh, maybe a week after I changed my name. Customer walk in, he’s like, “Oh, I stay right across the street at the Phoenix.” I’m like, “At the what?” she’s like, “at the Phoenix” is… ” She was like, “Literally walk outside your front door and walk, and look straight across from that door. That’s the Phoenix on Pete Street.” And I was working here for two and a half years. I’m like, “Wow, for me to know nothing about this being directly across from where I go to work,” It’s just crazy, because it was Young Thug who lived in that tower. It was like, yeah. But he was like, “Hey, thank you, bro, thank you,” he said he, “Excited for that next one, man. Hey, thank you.”

    And shout-out DJ Act right now, man. He really spins, breaks records and is… That’s one dude I would say that, we didn’t have too much of an outlet, but what he would, literally, when they all got their shows… And had their show, they put local talent on there, man, waking up to real local music in Charleston. And I’m in Atlanta, so that’s just great, but even the Phoenix thing, it just all manifested, once I kept saying Phoenix, they like, “Phoenix? I like that.” Everybody like, “I like that, I like that. I love this.” “Okay.” So I’m like, “It wouldn’t be too many.” You know what I’m saying?

     Talk to me about you’re Black Lives Matter freestyle in the streets of the protest. What was that experience and the energy like for you in the moment? 

    Yeah, that did. Right when we were doing it. We were down there, and I guess they were just looking for something to happen or something. I had just seen them… We’re trying to get our footage, me and Duffelbag. Shout out Duffelbag. He out there. He my producer, camera man. He does it all, man. But he out there trying to get the footage. And then once they seen what we were doing, I just see everybody start gathering around, like. And then CNN comes, Telemundo comes. Photographers are snapping they pictures. And then I’m just like, the whole time, I’m like, “I just wrote this shit yesterday. I just recorded it yesterday. I do not know the words. I don’t know the… ” It’s a two-minute freestyle. I didn’t know the words, so I’m just like trying my best. And I got, I would say maybe 60% to 70%, but the other 30$, I think, well they were just like… I think they saw like, “Oh, this dude doesn’t know the words. Or either he’s nervous or something.” I just didn’t know the words. I’m like… And I couldn’t hear because it was getting so loud, and at the same time, like you can see, as soon as I got done, they were pushing me, with their shield, me and my boy, they punching me in the back, like, with the riot shield. It just was crazy. I was like, “We was right there.” And then even after that, we fucking around, we parked to the right, we fucked around and went left, and our car’s right here, right at curfew, and at 8:50, and 9:00 o’clock is curfew, 8:50 they got the whole city blocked off. So even you stayed down there that long just to try to play around and try to leave, you still were going to get caught. But luckily, we were just walking with one little army dude, and he was like, “No, they have to walk around the park,” and then we just kept going from each little army, from the one to the next. And they like, “What they doing out? It’s 9:40.” We still walking around Piedmont Park trying to find the car, so that was awesome. I just feel like it was a once in a lifetime thing, everybody has to do something like that, man, get out there. But everybody has to get out there and march with their people, they were playing Biggie. Everybody had free stuff. I have never seen anything like it, free drinks, free food, free masks, free this, free that, and it was just so uplifting to see everybody. That’s Atlanta at its finest.

     As an artist where do you get your support from?

    Definitely my family, most supportive, they always on everything. But everybody I met down here is just solid, they’ll support you, they share your stuff, it’s crazy, but it’s true, everybody, they always say everybody, strangers support you more. And I think that just goes back to, because people know you and they trying to, they got they own, but I feel like just supporting is… Having social media is a big factor in this day and age, so I’m like, “I’m glad I can stay more active on it and just produce more content because that’s what I’m best at. And I have been slacking, quarantine, coronavirus slowed everything down, but since we revving it back up, were going to see… We trying to turn up, at least from my demographics, I’m seeing I’m getting a lot of different views from everywhere, I’m trying to find that key to my own fans, man, so they can find me, I can find them, and they can get entertained, man, and listen to some music.

    Talk to me about Tymeless Music. What are your goals for that brand and are you working with any artists?

     My main artist on here is John$on, and I got a couple of more guys who been with us, it’s a whole group all in itself, Tymeless is just a collective of, there’s someone out there, I don’t care if you was washing dishes, man, make sure they say you the fastest, quickest, best one, you know what I’m saying? I don’t care if you are a janitor or… It doesn’t matter what you do, just make sure you are remembered, and what you are remembered by, make sure they say something about you, man, try out the whole thing. And it started off just people, Kobe, that we thought was timeless, Michael Jordan, the two of these people are timeless, and it’s a lot more people, but that’s what we try to push, and activism, from what we believe to our music too. And now it’s just turning into more of a brand, because a lot of people just are finding out about Tymeless and they like, “What is it? What is it?” And I’m like… And a lot of people will wear the shirts. So that’s, like I said, for me, the best way I’d put it is a lifestyle, so it’s just a lifestyle, how we live, how we represent ourselves, there’s not anything that isn’t going to be remembered. Everything that we putting out there is the best, like We Just “Get 2 It” is a… That’s been out a whole year, you know what I’m saying? So that just how we want it to age and we want it that they don’t matter when you listen to it, man, and you’re going to be like, “Oh, when did this come out?” “A year, two years ago.” You know what I’m saying, yeah.

    I want to touch on your last project “Flock With Me.” You had some dope collaborations on there, how did all that come together and what was your overall message with that project?

     Yeah, “Flock With Me” was my first project where it was just a lot of, I want to say, not random songs, but it wasn’t… I didn’t want there to be a clear theme to this, because usually that’s what I’m about, I theme out every single project, so it all makes sense. But with this one I wanted it to just to be bangers, I just wanted… Yo, you know what I’m saying? Just something you could ride to, work out to, because…For the day we had B La B out, and… Look, I’m tripping, I can’t remember, I’m trying to think on that now. I had Gandhii, I had John$on in there, man. I had Danax. Super Freaky on there, man. It was crazy. Yeah, it was a good project. I do, I love that one. But this next one, we still don’t know what we’re going to call it, but from every… It’s been done. We just getting it mastered now and then mixed down and everybody that’s listening to what it’s like. Yeah. So it’s good that it’s so much artists out here, and I think the fans think like you have to stick with one, you can’t rock with the other, which is always the wrong… It’s like I can listen to 50 songs in a day and they can be by 50 different people and I can show them all of it, knowing that I just helped put money in each safe, so I just don’t understand why it’s like, I think a barrel for their shine, but this music is definitely like it’s… Yeah, I hope they put it, I hope it gets right up there beside what… Who I want, and you can’t deny it, man. You will notice after this after this is going to go.

    Talk to me about your “Get 2 It” video shoot, you mentioned in your live you did everything yourself the set up and everything. How was that and as an independent artist what challenges do you face when it comes to doing things yourself?  

    The main challenges I face is having and finding people to hold the camera and/or know how to use a camera or something like that, because if you can get me in focus and pretty much get what I want, I can work with it. You know what I’m saying? I’ve been editing videos, I went to college to learn how to edit videos and maybe I’m doing some video editing classes. They had script-writing classes and all of that. I’m just trying to just bring it all together. I’m an engineering intern for damn near a year, for 12-hour shifts, I didn’t get paid anything, just met hella rappers and hella engineers, hella label people. It was just an experience. Like I said, last year, this time, man, I was broke, broke. I probably was facing my car repo, getting kicked out my… I’m like, “Listen, and it’s all just chasing this music, just trying to learn and get to that next level.” Now, I’m like… It was selfish of me, because I’m having to work so hard seven, eight years but… And now I’m down there digging myself a hole right back to where this whole thing started and that shit is like, it’s crazy the coronavirus happened, because it’s just… That’s all someone like me needs, is time. I just need time. And if everybody else has to wait too, if you say time out, everybody got a time out, you’ll catch up, I promise you. So that’s what I was just working on, kept working through, worked through the whole pandemic. And then just ended up getting my credit score, paying everything off, invested in better equipment, this and this. So eventually, I’m like, “Alright, now I got my camera and I have to shoot,” so now I’m back to it, I got out of it. I didn’t want to shoot my videos anymore. I wanted to pay… Whatever to shoot great videos. And I just be an artist, but it’s too hard. You don’t get nothing done, I guess, so I’m like, “I know what I’m doing.” So, man, I’ll… From the lights to this that, the other, editing, if we just can hold the camera, that’s the only challenge I face, man. If you can just hold the camera and make sure my sun is straight while I’m doing it.

     

     Lastly, are you working on any new projects do you have any new music coming for fans?

     So we’re just trying to make sure we get everything right with our engineers, and get that quality, make sure for every single we got the four pack, the instrumental, the beat, the whole, the clean and dirty. The whole four pack, getting in marketing, blogging, it’s press and press and press, we want more press. New customer acquisition, new fan base acquisition. Find out who is the demographic? And now I’m just starting to listen to what people are telling me, I’m shutting my mouth and listening, and people are like, “Bro, you sound like you’re from Cali or something. You act like you’re from… ” “You sound like this.” Y’all are too… ” You know what I’m saying? Like, “What you talk about and this and that”. Then over here… You know what I’m saying? So I’m like, “Okay, who can we target?” So if they say I sound like that, we’re going to focus over here on that, focus over here on that. Because there’s some people like, “Oh, bro, that’s them Drake vibes.” “Okay, well let’s try to start a campaign, create these campaigns for only Canada, maybe. Let’s see if we can take some of Drake’s fans or something, man.”

    We’re just really trying to figure out our own way, because with this next music, I have… The one in the past, I’ve learned, I’ve just been putting music out and not promoting it the right way, and it’s so wrong for me, even though I got all these songs, and everybody like, “Man, if you don’t put them out… ” You’ve got one rapper saying, “Put ’em out every week. Just go, go, go.” Then there are people saying, “Stop doing that. Fix it,” you know what I’m saying? So it’s like… I’m just like, “Alright.” You have to find out what work best for you at the end of the day. And I’m like, what’s going to work best for me is, since I shoot my videos, I engineer them myself, I record myself, I’m literally… This is my studio, I been this. We shot the video in that garage. I put newspapers up all in that garage and did all that and made the whole scene and edited and all that, so it’s just like if I can do all of that, all the… I don’t know, I just like, I just can’t make that mistake. Let me do it one by one. Let me do the video, the promo, do another one. Once we get three, four, and get that steam going, then we’ll drop the project when they’re ready for it.

    Feenyx’s lyrics encourage and motivate his listeners to hustle and grind until dreams become a reality. As an unsigned artist he continues to put in the work needed to provide his fans with hits and visuals that keep them wanting more. He has recently release another video for his track “Pull Up,” produced by Yung Spank.

    PaidDro tops off his new project with visual for “Ok Being Sad Is Boring”

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    PaidDro is an upcoming artist based in Virginia who is delivering mood-changing vibes and eye-catching visuals for his growing fan base. Born in Peru, PaidDro came to the states at a young age… he always had big dreams but it would be until 2013 that PaidDro would start experimenting with writing music. Something clicked and after the release of several singles, PaidDro decided to release his first EP titled “Universe,” in 2019. From there, fans patiently awaited more hits from PaidDro, and were gifted just one single for the year 2020 until his second EP titled “Life.” The six-track EP is fifteen minutes of harmonic trap beats, love, and heartbreak. The bilingual artist also gave his listeners a taste of his culture with the reggae track titled “KOD (Kiss of Death). The rising artist surely delivered quality tracks and topped off the project’s release with a new visual for the closer, “Ok Being Sad is Boring.” The visual, shot by Infamou$ G, released exclusively on The Clout Cloud, giving PaidDro the support from the DMV’s top Hip-Hop platform.

    When did you start writing music?

    I started writing music in my freshman year of high school, so that was like 2013. But this was just like for group chats, we were doing… We were just writing music and recording voice memos. And we were just writing for fun. And I didn’t really start to get serious with the music, and I didn’t actually start writing-writing till my senior year of high school, which was three years after that, so 2016 actually. And that’s when I first I really started writing down some real raps and stuff, and I was recording with my man, just with my two friends, two best friends, Joe and Alger. We were a part of this group called Young Sensei, and we just started recording for fun, uploading it on SoundCloud, because that’s when SoundCloud was popping like that so… That’s when we did it.

    Who are some of the artists that inspire you?

    When I first started out in music, I was always going for the bars and stuff because I was inspired by Lil Wayne, because Lil Wayne was the first musical artist that I started… He introduced me to rap, so I was really inspired by this man and his wordplay which is crazy. So every time I’d try to write some rhymes I had to go with the crazy-ass wordplay and stuff. But nowadays like I am a big Lil Uzi Vert fan. He’s taught me how to do all the melodies and stuff, he dropped “Luv Is Rage 2” and I have basically just studied that whole album and just like… I just really soaked in all the knowledge from that album, all the cadences, all the different melodies he did, the voices he did, I learned all that stuff, and that’s where I really get my inspiration from nowadays from Lil Uzi Vert.

    You were just featured on an artist from Russia’s song. How did you get plugged in with an overseas artist and what was that process like working with them?

    This kid DM’d like a while… It was like the last year, and he was like, “Yo, I have this one friend, I’m from Russia, I really fuck with your music, I have this one friend that can go really crazy with your sound,” and I was like, “Okay, send me his profile or whatever.” And he sent it to me and we just chopped it up, and then he sent it to me, like two songs, he did two songs. And the one that he put out today was one of them. He is still having another one in the vault but he just sent me them, I don’t even know what the hell he is saying, I just liked the sound of it, it sounds cool. I was like, “Yeah. I’ll get on this,” and I just got my thing on and that’s how it came about.

    You released your EP Life back in April what was the vibe you were going for with that project and how was it releasing something during the pandemic?

    Yeah, it was kind of like when it started. Because I was in there kind of when it started. But what the vibes were, were just straight heartbreak, sad, melodic music. I was just trying to go for the theme of life, about how life has its ups and downs. It’s not where no ups, you’re always going to face that downfall and it’s okay. You start off the first song, is Doomsday, you find out you get your heartbroken by this one girl and the next is just the ride up to that like that is how it just keeps going. And at the end, this last song is “Ok, Being Sad Is Boring”, and that song is basically because it symbolizes that we shouldn’t be sad for, it’s time to turn up, it’s time to enjoy life. Things happen, shit happens. It’s all a part of life. That’s what that last song was, and to be honest, that’s what all my music really sounds like. It sounds like okay, being sad is boring. I’m not really into… I didn’t want people to think I’m the low, sad artist or whatever, emotional rapper, whatever. So that’s why I put that last one in there, to remind them how I came in the game or that’s how I’m going to leave out, this super geeked-up person type of rap that I like.

    The visual for “Okay Being Sad Is Boring,” just dropped recently. Talk to me about the visual, how was the shoot and who shot it?

    That’s my boy Infamou$ G. He’s also from VA. He did the “Life” music video too. And when we shot it, the type of… because I direct my videos, I’m the one who comes with the ideas for it and all that. I just wanted to go with the vibe that… I wanted to be in a chair with handcuffs. And I wanted to have a girl behind me, and that symbolizes just breaking free out of this little sad state that I was in in the “Life” music video. So if you watch the Life music video and you watch the “OK, Being Sad” music video right after, you will see there’s a bunch of ties to each video, to both of the videos. I wanted that to be like the sequel to that video. And the video shoot was just fun. I had my friend, Megan in it and my friend Nickait, and that’s it. We just shot… We shot half of it in Northern Virginia and half of it in Richmond, and we just had fun doing it. Joe was in the video too. He was driving the car.

    What are some of your near future goals as an artist?

    The pandemic has actually helped me to be honest because I’ve just been in the studio. I’m one of those people that just live in the studio, you can ask Joe, he gets all the emails from the studio, from all the songs that get sent back. I probably got 30 songs right now just I’m releasing, ready to go. And they’re just hard. All hard hits like just… We don’t go to mess around in the studio, because of that shit… It costs money to get in the studio, so time is money. When you go in there, you already know we are not messing around and stuff.

    But as far as goals, I want to do more performances but that’s a little bit on hold off for now, but other than that, I want to just build a bigger fan base, get more people involved from all parts of the world, and everything. They just are tuned in. When we go really crazy, I just want them to be right there, seeing the journey throughout. I want them to be in-tune while I’m here, still like, not my low, but kind of in my middle, I guess. And then once we’re on the top, we can all turn up together.

    The visual is currently sitting at over 7K views, which could be explained by the eye catching angles, colors, and of course PaidDro’s vocals. As a rising artist, he is busy with more moves to make as he expands his brand and transfers his vibe to fans through his music.

    985 Goldie creating tracks to keep his fans going Koo Koo

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    Atlanta based artist 985 Goldie carries a southern swag and melodic flow that’s a testament to his roots and hustling ways. Originally from Louisiana, he moved to Atlanta at a young age and it has since become the stomping ground for his growing music career. Mr. “If I Said It, I Meant It,” holds nothing back in his lyrics, and while he delivers raw rap over heavy 808’s… don’t let him fool you he can harmonize too. I had the opportunity of catching up with him to talk all things Goldie, new music, and his love for Summer Walker.

    When did you start writing music and when did you start taking it seriously as an artist?

     It’s funny, I actually started really thinking that I could rap in the shower, so I started free styling in the shower… I’m serious. So I used to free style in the shower. I feel like I was talking about something, so I started freestyling at school, you know what I’m saying?  Everybody started being like, “Oh… ” You know what I’m saying, so… I got a mic, maybe my 16th birthday, I got a mic and I started flowing and doing it myself. Not really knowing what I was doing, but I could make it sound good, so I could put it out.

    Your from Louisiana right? Talk to me about growing up there and how did you end up in Atlanta?

    Well, Hurricane Katrina came, so it really wasn’t… It really wasn’t something I did out there. I was young when it actually started 2005, so that’s like 15 years ago, so… But Louisiana is more of where my family is, so… When I think about it, it’s really just family out there.

    You were young when you came to Atlanta but how have you been escalating your music career, since being here?

    I just really just made it all about music, you know what I’m saying? The background I come from is really crazy and music just always been a part of it, so I just started going… I just started really focusing, eat, sleep… You know what I’m saying? Nothing but music, everything music. You know what I’m saying?

    Okay so talk to me about Koo Koo first. You resend a video on your IG so how was the video shoot and when’s it coming out?

     The video shoot, the first one was a sneak peek we werent even supposed to do a video. You know what I’m saying? And it just kind of happened when it happened and it’s just when I posted it, I didn’t expect it to go the way it did. I didn’t expect it to go like that.

    It’s called Koo Koo you should have expected it to go crazy.

    Yeah, that’s what I… You’re right though, you definitely right, you definitely right. But I didn’t really… I didn’t have any idea but next week we should be shooting a video for it and I need a bunch of milfs in it so that’s what’s the hold on.

     You rap but I heard some harmonies in the music you sent me so Who are some of the artists you’re inspired by and if you have someone who would be a dream to work with who would that be?

    I know I rap crazy and I talk crazy crazy, but you would never believe my vibe is more of… What I like… Like Session 32, Summer Walker, that’s what I might listen to all day. You know what I’m saying?  I listen to Summer Walker, I listen to… I really just listen to all of that type of stuff, Jhené Aiko. I really like that type of… You know what I’m saying?

     When did you become involved with Goddess Entertainment and BlackiNation and what role do they play in your current career?

     Well, I actually been with them for a while. I’ve been with them for five years. They actually pushed me, they pushed me… They give me… I’ve learned a lot from Monk, patient Monk, big shoutout to him. I learned a lot from him musically, because I used to only… I used to be like a freestyle rapper, you know what I’m saying, I got a bunch of bars for you. He helped me put my songs together in actual songs, you know what I’m saying.

     What are some of the goals you have for your brand?

     My goals, because I’m everywhere, you might hear me sing or you might hear me on some trap stuff, you might hear me on some pop type flavor, so I would say my goal is to just not be put in a box. You know what I’m saying? That’s my goal, not to be put in any box, period, don’t just say I’m a rapper because I’m a artist. I was in chorus for four years, that’s why I might come on a song and sing. I really love music, really sing sing, not like R&B sing but more like bass tenor, stuff like that.

     Talk to me about new music. Are you in tape mode, are you working on a EP, what are you working on?

    Music is just whatever comes to me. The songs that you’ve heard, I probably made the songs in maybe an hour or like 45 minutes. So, and that’s the real thing. That’s a really real thing. It’s just however it happens; however, it comes, I think about a EP, but I have so much music, I maybe have 15 songs that I recorded in the last maybe three months. I really like all levels, so that’s kind of hard but it’s different vibes. It’s like, I don’t want to put, you heard me, this song while I’m singing, and then this song while I’m talking about, you heard me with your baby momma on this.

    I know you don’t have a tape out yet. But what do you want everyone to know about Goldie when you do drop a tape?

    I know the name’s going to be, “If I Said It I Meant It.” That’s really… Anything I say, we really doing that, we really like that, you know what I’m saying? Every single, every single thing. You heard me?  I just, I want to give them that, you know what I’m saying, I’m not in no box. I might be rapping and riding the beat and then I might sing to your old lady on the next track, you know what I’m saying? So… You heard me, that’s how I’m coming.

    So how did you get the name Goldie? When did you come up with that?

    My daddy name… My dad is infamous in Louisiana and his name is Goldie, and I got his first name so it kind of just made sense. You know what I’m saying?

     

    Goldie’s track “Perfext n’ Shit” is on all streaming platforms and definitely worth the add to your playlist. He has been busy creating new music and content to release to his fans very soon!

    Lil Sodi talks new music, Afroman collaboration and more

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    The west coast has turned out several Hip-Hop artists who have heavily influenced the style of Hip-Hop’s diverse spectrum. Lil Sodi is now staking his claim in the genre of Hip-Hop, reviving an old school flavor and flow that has been shy to the mainstream. Among his discography contains features from and with some notorious names in the industry including: Afroman, Freddie Gibbs, and Jeezy. His recent releases include a laid-back visual for his track “Poppin My Shit.” Sodi’s journey through the industry is filled with not only unimaginable connections but lessons and tribulations that have formulated him into the artist that he is today… It is Lil Sodi’s time now, and he is letting the world know. I had the opportunity of catching up with Lil Sodi to talk about his music and insane collaborations with some of Hip Hop’s legends… and we had a special visit from Wildlyfe100 to talk about their recent video shoot.

    Photos: BigWork Magazine

    When I first spoke to you you mentioned you are Yung Jeezy’s LA artist, how did you get linked up with him & what has it been like working with him?

     Actually, I was signed to Jeezy… I got signed with Jeezy about 2016, ’15, I would say ’15. Rocking with CTE. So, you know what I’m saying, it was just all love, and he just showed me the way in the music industry on how to promote myself, my stage performance, and how to get my money in the independent way.

     Yeah, for sure is that how you got linked with Freddie Gibbs?

    Yeah. That’s my friend.

     ESGN was fire… Your intro and your feature was super motivational and powerful, so what went into that? And what was it like working with Freddie?

    That’s my brother. It was like when Jeezy put us together, he was putting two monsters together. One from Indiana and one from LA, you know what I’m saying. He’s seen the talent that we both have, our chemistry together, as far as Freddie Gibbs, his whole style was different from others. My style was different from others. I sing also, you feel me, a lot of people don’t know that I sing. I tried to blend all of that in there and it was just a pleasure to work with Freddie Gibbs, you know what I’m saying. As you can see, us right now as being independent artists, and stepping away from Jeezy, flying from the bird’s nest, doing our own thing, you see how we progress, you know what I’m saying, just by the mistakes you learn and the certain deals and contracts that we go through that we don’t be understanding as being young men, you know what I’m saying, we have to grow up into the business part of the industry instead of just all about music and putting videos and shit out, but yeah, shout out to Freddie Gibbs, that’s my brother, he already know it’s love.

     What has been what has been like one of the biggest lessons that you’ve learned so far coming up?

    As far as my biggest lesson, being more open instead of like being centered in like being to myself, being more open to people, smiling more, you know what I’m saying? It helps people to come and fuck with you even more, you know what I’m saying, instead of always being to yourself, and I look mean because I keep the fake people away from me, that’s how I feel, you know what I’m saying, like…

    You just look like you don’t play, but you’re not mean.

    Yeah, I just be trying to keep the fake people away from me. But approaching me, I’m approachable, I’m respectful, you know what I’m saying, I’m a real gangster Crip, on my set, on my section, shoutout to my city. I’m in Atlanta right now. I’m out here with WildLyfe 1Hunnud, my little brother from the days. We got a video today, so that’s what we’re preparing ourselves for right now. He going to come and join on the live too.

    So how has it been on the West Coast because you’ve really been surrounded by a lot of really notable people, especially just in hip hop in general and have had such a stronghold on West Coast hip hop. How has that really influenced your style and how you are as an artist?

    I work hard. It was something that I wanted to do when I was little, when I first watched Ice Cube video There Goes The Neighborhood. It’s just something that… Those are the guys that I said I want to be around. I have to be around them, I have to do a song with them, you know what I’m saying. Me staying focused and my son, having my son leave me at 9 years old, a year ago, it just gave me extra drive, you know what I’m saying, to become the man that I’m supposed to be. So that’s where all of that came from, you know what I’m saying, to even be around Snoop and all of those guys, Afroman, Warren G, Suga Free. It was just…

     Joe Moses, you’ve been around everybody.

     Yeah, it’s just a blessing.

    You brought that to yourself by really dreaming it and now it’s becoming a reality, you were at Puff Puff Pass Tour too right?  How was that for you? And how was that just being surrounded by greatness?

     Me being myself, not trying to improve others, that’s what attracted them to my character. They already knew that I’m one of their little homies from the West Side that’s really with the business, ain’t with the bullshit. You know what I’m saying? I was never commercial, so it was hard for me to get radio play and all of that. But it’s my turn now, but like I was saying, they just knew how I was, my character. I’m a very lovable person, you know what I’m saying? I have a good spirit, good heart. Just don’t fuck with me.

    You have some big collaborations with Afroman was there anything that you learned from him, that you hadn’t learned from anybody else?

    Loyalty, loyalty… A man of his word. Being able to show you how to come back and give back, you know what I’m saying, and push somebody on, like when I got out of jail, I was in jail for a while, so you know when you go to jail for a while your buzz kind of dies. When I got out and got on tour with Afroman and he just helped me rise back to where I was, you know what I’m saying? My followers never stopped, now they going up even more, so I learned a lot from Afroman, he’s a lovable person, he’s a funny guy. He’s from my neighborhood, you know what I’m saying? A lot of those that don’t know, now you know. Fatboy SSE, he’s from my hood…

    I did watch your Big Talk magazine interview… That actually was dope, I really liked what you had said about how you wanted to bring back the Nate Dogg flavor that’s missing. And I was wondering if you could just talk about that a little bit, like what do you feel like is missing from hip hop? And what do you feel like you’re about to like… Not add to it, because you’re adding to it already, but as you grow even bigger, what do you feel like you’re about to add?

     Rhythm and funk. Rhythm and funk. Warren G and Nate Dogg had the G-funk. And ever since Nate been gone it’s died down, like the G-funk of the West Coast, you know what I’m saying, that harmony, that harmonizing, that rapping and harmonizing, that gangsta love, you know what I’m saying? That gangsta shit that them girls can dance to, or that singing, or that nigga that’s a gangsta, a real nigga but he’s singing, you know what I’m saying?  I want to go back to the West Coast, like that funk, that harmonize, you know what I’m saying, that Nate… I ain’t saying I’m Nate Dogg, never did say I was Nate. I would love to bring back the sound of the big homey, the spirit of Nate Dogg, you know what I’m saying? So, that’s where you get back to the ’80s and your soul originals and the sound of Nate Dogg that I bring back. Bread Up featuring Freddie Gibbs, you know what I’m saying, shit like that, that’s what keeps my harmonizing and that funk, that came from church, you know what I’m saying? That shit that comes from the inside. So that’s…

     So, talk to me about LA Gumbo out, that’s your last project that you just put out?

    Yeah, it’s not an album it’s like a street mix-tape, street album you could say. I had put it out right before I went to jail, so I really didn’t have no marketing or no push behind it. I just wanted to leave my fans something, you know what I’m saying, while I was gone. You know what I mean? Shout out to all the collaborations on there, Glasses Malone, Freddie Gibbs. I had a lot of people… Uncle Rob Tee, the guy that helped mix and master it, you know what I’m saying? I had a lot of folks that, you know what I’m saying, work… Worked with me on that shit.

    So how has music changed your life, I know you mentioned going away for a little bit, what has music really done for you?

    It changed my life tremendously. From having nothing to do, always being in the hood, you know what I’m saying? It idles you, it… You allow yourself to be available at all times, let me tell you that. When you’re doing music, you’re travelling, you’re stuck in the studio, you’re meeting new people, people that want to see you elevate, you know what I’m saying? So, music has changed my life tremendously. I love music, I’ve been doing it since I was a child. I’ve been singing and playing the drums in church. It just never left my life and the situation that I’m in now with me losing my son, it’s like, music is all I have to keep me… Sanity, keep me… You know what I’m saying? I don’t know, but I know my son… He loved my music, he loved what I do. You know what I’m saying. And I always missing him, keep him around me in everything I do, you know what I’m saying…

    I’m so sorry about that, that’s really hard, I’ve always come to believe that, you know, God gives his hardest battles to his strongest warriors. When you’re left in a place where it’s nowhere but up that you can go. So, for sure. And then also I wanted to talk to you about, WildLyfe 1Hunnud. You have some music out with him, so how did you get linked with him? How did that happen?

    Baby Jay! I’ll let Cuz tell you. Today, today is his video day, so he’s…we’re about to go shoot this video today at 4:00 and, you know what I’m saying, he’s just been a blessing to me, you know what I mean. Me… It’s like a rebirth to me to Atlanta from when I was with Young Jeezy to when I met WildLyfe, look… But I call him Baby J, you know what I’m saying, and that’s my little brother. But he just been moving up, you know what I’m saying, every time I come to Atlanta, I’m at his house. His home, this is my home. You know what I’m saying? His refrigerator mine’s, his couch, all is mine. I love Cuz, we got hits though. We got Live a Lie, Live a Lie out right now. Video we just dropped, his single, featuring me, Lil Sodi. We got Playa Shit on the way, the new video Playa Shit on the way. But yeah, we just been working man and I love his whole camp, WildLyfe Family. They are part of my camp, you know what I’m say. Risk Takerz, Eight Tray Gangsters, we all one, yeah know what I’m saying, so… Here he is.

    Hey, what’s up, how are you?

    Wildlyfe: Yeah, it’s all gangster. How are you doing?

    So y’all are about to go shoot a video, how did you get linked up with Lil Sodi?

     Wildlyfe: Well, he from the hood. [chuckle] You know what I’m saying?

    Nah, we linked up on some music though. I caught him on live, he was doing the Jodeci track or something. I said damn this nigga do music for real, you know what I’m saying, so I linked up with him. I love him.

    Talk to me about you a little bit, you’re a songwriter and everything, so what are you working on with your music? Is this video the biggest thing y’all working on right now?

    Wildlyfe: Yeah, it’s one of the biggest things that we working on right now. Our main priority for the most part is the LA to GA thing we got going on. You know that’s kind of like an independent tour we been doing from LA to GA and everywhere in between, you know what I’m saying? Letting people know what we got going on. But yeah, the video I’m shooting today is Trap Me, that’s one of my singles. We got Trap Me, Live a Lie, and Playa Shit, right now, that we pushing.

    You two are really crossing barriers with your music. You moving your stuff to the West Coast and he moving his stuff over here so that’s a dope motive y’all got going on.

    Wildlyfe: Straight up, and it only makes sense.

    You know what I mean? It only makes sense…

    It makes sense if it brings all the money.

    Wildlyfe: Exactly, it only makes sense going from LA to GA. That’s how we do it.

    If it don’t make money, it don’t make sense.

    Wildlyfe: That’s what I’m talking about.

    So Lil Sodi, didn’t you just drop something new?

    I dropped a song called Bag Back featuring Shaymylove. I dropped… She in Love With a Gangster featuring Joe Moses… Those are my two newest ones. Oh, I’m about to drop Poppin’ Shit. You probably seen some clips of it.

    Wildlyfe: That one’s hard.

    Lil Sodi: Poppin’ Shit. I filmed that…Out here in Atlanta, in Macon, Georgia. Shout out to MacTown Gangsters. That’s Jeezy hood, Jeezy homies. Duncan Blocks, shout out to Billy Joe. But yeah, I’m about to drop. I’m right now, I’m holding my shit, because we pushing Trap Me.

    Lil Sodi: So I’m helping him push his music out, you know what I’m saying and keep the momentum going. You know how we do it.

    I was about to ask you, were you going to drop a project anytime soon?

    I got this, we got some shit going. We got a mix-tape coming.

    Wildlyfe: LA to GA might be a movie. Might be a show…

    Lil Sodi: Yeah, you never know.

    You know what I’m saying?

    I know y’all probably sitting over there on a whole plan that’s going to make y’all all the money.

     See, look, not only music, but I just did a film, The Real LA Street Kings. I just did this for the director Van and my homie Stevie J the Comedian. It’s a lot of good guys in there, you know what I’m saying, big stars. I’m in the screening too now and we got our family doing out here. Called Set it Up. Not… It’s like set it off but it’s called Set It Up. Atlanta style, you feel me?

    You’re trying to make money from every angle, so what other avenues are you trying to go into other than music, like how are you trying to branch into other streams of money?

    Clothing, legal marijuana, you know what I’m saying? In Cali, opening up a dispensary and we want to do this, I got some kids that I’m working with it, that’s with this Stop the Violence Program. We want to do a lot…That’s one of my main goals, especially in my career.

     Talk about that for a little minute.

    Like a graffiti, it’s like a graffiti arts school. It’s what I’ve been writing on. So, where like kids can come and have somewhere to write on, write on the wall in the inside, instead of hitting up on the walls on the street, you know what I’m saying? Come in here…Get a wall, you know what I’m saying? Create, we could put that shit on shirts, you know what I’m saying, and help them make their own clothing line instead of just wasting time, you know what I’m saying.

    Lil Sodi is staking his claim in Hip-Hop, reviving a style that laid the foundation for many legend’s who have come before him. With several notable collaborations, he as an artist has solidified relationships and connections to push his career to the next level.

     

     

     

    Tyte releases new visual for “Real Love” featuring Billboard artist Vedo

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    Tyte has been growing a dedicated fan base, and since his signing to Island Prolific the artist has been on fire having fans craving more. Now Florida’s Hot Boy is at it again, this time with an insane visual for his track “Real Love” featuring Billboard artist Vedo. The pair teamed up for the track on his newest album Sincerely 3 Pt 2 … And now they’ve dropped an on top of the world video to set it off! 

    Tyte recently released part 2 of a duo of albums that are “Sincerely” him in every way. Sincerely 3 Pt 2 , is nine tracks of bass banging hits covering love, the streets, and everything in between. Tyte secured some heavy features from rap legend Juvenile, KGodd, and multi-platinum songwriter Vedo. It was only right the artist followed up with a visual and who better than Vedo to collaborate with! Shot from a perspective that puts both artists on top of the world, the visual is raw and organic just like the feelings communicated in the track.

    “Working with vedo was genuine, real stand up dude”

    The Island Prolific artist’s deep southern flow and versatility have been a catalyst for his success thus far, and he continues to rise. He has also blessed his fans with the dropping of his merchandise line Murder Gang Apparel, featuring some dope shirts and hats that have been selling out since the release. What’s next for Tyte will be a surprise, but for now enjoy the visual for “Real Love!”

     

    DJ Fourteen talks Rod Wave tour and Palm Beach Mixtape

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    Florida has become a hub for turning out artists with insanely dope music. DJ Fourteen is not only one of Palm Beach’s hottest DJ’s, but he’s bringing artists from across the area together. He hit the club scene at an early age and started throwing parties that would eventually land a spotlight on WPTV 5. But Fourteen is not just a DJ. He is a producer as well, which he started only a few years ago. As a vibe creator, he has set the tone for countless parties and celebrity performances, including Rod Wave’s Ghetto Gospel Tour. I had the opportunity of catching up with DJFourtneen to talk with him about his career as a DJ and his recently released Palm Beach Mixtape.

    You started DJ’ing first, so how did that start out?

    My mom has a club, and she doesn’t really hand money like that. So if I want to get my own money, I have to throw my own party, I started throwing my own parties, then after the party, I have to break DJ off like 300 and I ain’t like that, so I was like I’m going to become my own DJ, so I started DJ-ing at my own parties.

    Your parties are huge, I saw one of them made the news

    Yeah. It made the news. It was at a Airbnb, it says on the news article about a thousand people that was there… The first hour, a thousand people, like 200 cars in the neighborhood. So a lot of people.
    After that that’s when I started going on tour. I started getting booked right after that, literally.

    What was your first big name show?

    My first big one, it was with a friend of my mine, his name Soldier Kid, he’s a rapper. It was in Texas, It was South by South West. It was a big event…  Future was there and everything, and he had an open mic show, and I just rocked out for a quick 30 minutes…

    How did you get on with Rod Wave then and the Ghetto Gospel Tour?

    Rod Wave, The person that was a part of that tour that was setting it up, they needed an extra DJ and how my name got brought up, his daughter, I went to school with his daughter, and she brought my name up, so it just gave me a shot.

    Talk to me about how you got into producing then, if that came after Dj’ing

     Producing, it was about two years ago, because I had a friend, his name is Soldier kid, he blew up off the biggest clout move when X died… I don’t know if you remember, but X had died. Everybody thought it was him. So since then he was like make me beats, bro just keep going up and I started to making beats since then. So the X situation happened. I was like, “I’m going to make some beats for you.” And that’s how I started.

     In what ways we’re you effected by the pandemic if any and has anything changed for you going back into shows?

    For me, I was doing tours. So they said ain’t no tours till to 2021 in March, so I can’t be doing… I’m still DJ-ing at clubs, but tours is like… The big pay days.

    I really wanted to know how that was for you since you were still on tour in the beginning of the pandemic.

    . Stuff like that they just run in the pockets, like the tour, they pay 200-300 a day and you do it 30 days straight. So it’s like, that’s the big money plays right there, but I’m still fine, I’m DJ-ing at local clubs, stuff like that.

    Do you have any favorite shows that you’ve done?

    My favorite one was in South Carolina with Rod Wave, that was the best, I’d never seen nothing… The atmosphere was too crazy, and that was at my first big show, that was my first time I actually getting a groove, I did great.

    Do you prefer being on tour and the concert vibe or the parties and clubs

    I prefer the concert vibe, it’s different people pay more money and they bring a whole different attitude. Because they pay 80 bucks to get in. So they’re going be already…They’re already lit without playing no music.

     So talk to me about the Palm beach mix tape, how did that come together?

    This is the first mix tape we ever had. I come from both sides of the city, I’m from the north side, I’m from the south side, a lot of people can’t put two different guys on one tape without being problems, but with me I know these guys personally. By me making moves, they’re going to respect the movement, so I just got literally everybody on the mix tape, not one person missing.

    As an executive producer DJ Fourteen released the Palm Beach Mixtape… A culmination of the hottest artists across Palm Beach with over 30 hits to take a vibe from 0 to 100.

    C’haii Summers delivering R&B hits to Atlanta and beyond!

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    Hypnotizing harmonies and smooth vocals have left C’haii Summers’s fans craving more of his soulful bops. Born in Mobile, Alabama, he’s from a place that’s also birthed creatives such as Flo Milli and No Cap. Living his life between Atlanta, LA, and Alabama has given him a style that is uniquely his own. C’haii Summers is more than just a singer; he is an all-around artist. With a voice and flow reminiscent of Eric Bellinger, accompanied by a dope style cultivated by pieces made himself, he is a creator in all areas.

    Photo: Zarah Coker

    When did you start writing music?

    So I started making music… I want to say 2015. That’s when I really dove in and really start taking music seriously, so around the time I graduated high school. Everybody, all of my siblings, my mom, and my dad, are musicians so…It was fun growing up in a house full of musicians, because I always wanted to compete… It was like a big competition. I always wanted to be the best.

     Who are some of the artists that inspire you?

     So my mom listened to Brian McKnight. My mom… I listened to Destiny’s Child, Beyoncé, Dru Hill, Boyz II Men, a lot of Boyz II Men. And then, when I started listening to my own music, I started listening to Ty Dolla $ign, Usher, D’Angelo. I love D’Angelo on my own, I love D’Angelo. Yeah, that’s pretty much it.

     Where does your sense of style come from and what are some of your favorite things to wear?

    I’m into… I like vintage. I like recreating vintage, vintage things that I find. I’m not really… I’m into the high fashion designer and I have a few pieces, but I’m not big on brands. I’m much bigger on just finding something and transforming it into something that no one else has. It’s weird. It really started from me literally not having clothes and me wanting to… I was always going somewhere and I never wanted to wear the same thing. And so, the clothes that I had, I just started cutting shit up. I was like, “We’re about to make something happen.” That’s where my style came from.

     

     

    “I used to watch high fashion runways all the time, and it kind of gave me the swag with it.”

    As a growing artist what are some of the upcoming plans you have for your brand?

     Well, I’m getting ready to drop a project soon. I don’t want to drop any dates on it yet, but I’m getting ready to drop a project. And I think I want to… My biggest thing for my brand is I just want to inspire the youth to be out of the box and don’t be afraid to be an alternative. I was just talking about, with my friends, the other day, how we have to be more accepting of alternative Black male and female people, because it just has to happen. So I feel like that’s what my brand represents, just appreciation of alternative Black people.

    Okay, so you’re getting ready to drop music. I know you don’t want to release a date, but what’s the vibe you’re going for and what are you about to show your listeners with the project?

    I think I’m showing my listeners… Definitely, what I’ve been working on, the project that I’m working on, is just songs and stories from me growing up in my hometown, in Mobile, Alabama. I was back and forth between Mobile, Alabama and Los Angeles. When I grew up in Alabama, Alabama was way more lit than Los Angeles. I don’t care what nobody say. And it was… I just had a lot of… The vibe is I’m just… It’s just me coming into my own as a musician. It doesn’t sound like anything I’ve heard and I’m so confident in it, so I’m really excited for everybody to hear it, because I’ve been working really hard on it. I’ve been working really hard on it.

    He paired up with Xay Astro to deliver a vibe with their track “Tranquility…” A smooth love track that is undeniably relatable. Check it out and keep up with C’haii for his new project!

    Vita Plug has become Miami’s oasis for celebrity recovery!

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    Miami is known for beautiful beach weather and the people. Being not only a vacation hot spot… but a hot spot for the top plastic surgeons. Women travel from all over the world for an array of different procedures… but where do they go when they cannot fly home post operation? Located in Ft. Lauderdale, Vita Plug is raising the bar for recovery homes across Florida.

    Owner and founder Andrea Alorro is a powerhouse in the realms of both beauty and business. As both the manager of her family’s salon Tease, and the VIP manager of several night clubs, Andrea that would become the beginning foundations of Vita Plug. After graduating valedictorian, Andrea became an RN and pre-op nurse cultivating an impeccable rapport with Miami’s Top Surgeons. This evolved into the booking of private post-op care, rounding out all of the skills she would need to create the most caring and luxurious recovery retreats in Florida. I had the opportunity of catching up with a client who received care from Andrea and her team, and her reputation continues to go unmatched.

    “Glam Haüs treated me like extended family. It was affordable and the staff was there for me around the clock”

    Some of the biggest names in the industry including Sukihana, Tokyo Jetz, and Alexis Skyy, are amongst the few that had their recovery experiences in the care of Vita Plug and the Glam Haüs. IV therapy, massages, prepared meals for patients, and the top nurses for post-op care…is only the beginning of what Vita Plug offers women. Stay in the beautiful condos in Brickell or the breath taking Glam Haüs it is a loving oasis filled with people ready to help women’s recovery feel like a vacation.

    “The aftercare gummies literally saved me! i was having trouble sleeping post-op but these changed everything for my recovery!”

    Vita Plug is a brand covering all aspects of beauty and care. Vita Plug is taking over, with Vita Infusions patients can receive pre-op testing and now COVID testing from the comfort of their own location. At Salon Tease all the desired med spa services can be found, and Andrea has even created CBD gummies to further assist in post op care. Andrea and her staff have made sure that there are no worries left for women pre or post op.