The big names like Jay-Z, Eminem, Nelly, 50 Cent and Snoop Dog have dominated the rap game for a minute, but things are about to change. A new rapper is about to go front and center and its time to focus all your attention on him. JR, born and bred in St, Louis, Missouri is making waves in the Midwest and repping his city to the fullest. The kid doesn’t play and his lyrical content is off the hook. When JR spits, he doesn’t pull any punches and gives it to listeners raw, real and in your face.
With his new hit single I’m Just Sayin and a dope video for the song, JR is ready to take over the air and video waves. His music is on regular rotation on youtube and the industry is taking notice. And since we are the original street bible you know we got the exclusive with JR as he gets ready to tear down the walls of the rap game and make his presence felt. If you don’t know about JR then wake up and smell the chronic, because the lyricist has something for you.
“If you done woke up and felt like damn shits all fucked up today, I got a record for you.” JR tells Don Diva. “If you out and about and trying to go do something with your main lady I got a record for you. If you in the streets trying to get your money I got a record for you. If you out here on some static shit with some other niggas I got a record for you.” JR is as versatile as he is talented and when you hear his music you will agree, but he keeps it all the way one hundred too.
“I am really around this shit, I really live this shit.” JR says. “I come from a spot where niggas don’t make it to my age. I come from a spot where niggas don’t got hope like that. I’m speaking from the streets for where I’m from. I want to give people that perspective because I feel like nobody ever really got the perspective of St. Louis. I want to give them the full effect.” And with Ferguson dominating national headlines for the past year St. Louis has been in the spotlight. But as things die down JR is ready to take his place as the next big thing out of St. Louis. But he wants everyone to know that at the end of the day he is an artist, the streets aren’t all he is about.
“At the same time thats not exactly what I’m out to do either.” JR tells Don Diva. “I’m an artist and I want to be the best artist I can be. If I’m gonna make a record with Madonna tomorrow I’m gonna make it the best muthafucking record. I’m not gonna talk about selling bricks and holding onto my pistol, I’m gonna talk about what the song pertains to. I’m an artist. I’m out here to make the hottest record I can.” Because JR knows about the struggle in the streets and he’s not taking his opportunity for granted. He wants everyone to know the truth about coming up in St. Louis. He reps his city, but he recognizes the reality of it also, and that perspective comes through in his music.
“If somebody ain’t from here I just want them to know that there are a bunch of things televised around the country that you heard about, places being rough, to being this and being that.” JR says. “You might not hear about St. Louis like that, it might be low key, but you know when you get here its a struggle.” JR knows that life is hard and he epitomizes the essence and culture of his city. Its something ingrained in him and something he wants to show the world.
“People call it Hustle City, but on the other hand it can be Struggle City.” JR says. “Because you’re going to struggle if you don’t want to change nothing. You fitting to be right here for the rest of your life because this muthafucka right here will trap you, you know what I’m saying? This muthafucka will lock you in for the rest of your muthafucking life. You won’t leave, you can spend your whole life downtown and never leave this muthafucka, because of a petty ass case.” Life is St. Louis is real and JR represents that realness in the way he carries himself, his lyrics and his music.
“The muthafuckas crooked and it’s hard to make it.” JR says. “There’s no support here, so I just want the rest of the world to understand that when somebody makes it from where I’m from I paid them niggas homage, because I feel like it take a lot more. I’m not downplaying anybody else’s struggle, from where they’re from, I just know where I’m from and how things go.” And one of the artists that JR always paid homage to was his homeboy, Nelly.
“I grew up listening to Nelly. He was always a big inspiration to me as a kid. He was one of the main people that made me wanna start rapping.” JR says. “Like really start rapping, like I might have fucked around with it and played around with it. Then I’m looking like damn, this nigga is where I’m from and he’s out here poppin. He’s getting it and I’m like why can’t I?” And after JR laid down his single, I’m Just Sayin, Nelly took notice.
“It was some humbug for real how we ended up doing the record with Nelly.” JR says. “AG and him had a relationship and he came down to listen to the record and he was like damn that’s you, but people had heard the record. The record was out in the city. Nelly was like, yeah that’s you and I was like yeah, and he was like, it’s cool if we open up a verse? Damn right it’s cool. Open a verse up for this nigga. He recorded it right there for me. It was love.” And with that the remix of I’m Just Sayin was born featuring Nelly and blowing up JR’s profile even more.
“It was like something I dreamed about when I was a kid.” JR says on recording with his homeboy. “It’s bigger than that now. We got a personal relationship now. But at the moment, I’m never gonna forget it. That was something huge to me. Doing that, doing the record, and shooting my first video, those things, I’m not ever going to forget.” And JR is doing his best to make sure rap fans don’t forget him with his new video for I’m Just Sayin, check it out.
The post Repping St. Louis- The New Style- JR appeared first on Don Diva Magazine.