Straight Outta Bompton

“Still Brazy” – Why make this the album title? Will you ever live the calm life, the chill life, or you think that you’ll always life the fast life?

Yeah, nah, I’ve been living the fast life before this music shit. Now it’s just a lot faster.

The album title was Still Krazy as first. But, my first album was going to be called Bompton, and my team was like you don’t need to do that because, certain people won’t buy your album, and this is your first album, you got to come out with some sh*t everyone can f*ck with. So I changed it to My Krazy Life with a ‘K’. On this album that sh*t was just basically me being on my YG tip, not trying to listen to what mothaf*ckas trying to tell me what to do because of some bullshit reasons. Yeah like fuck that. This how I talk. It’s a part of me so, f*ck em’.

“FDT” – Have you always been into politics? Do you think the government will change, wise up, get better?

That’s a question we all ask, dawg. We just got to keep fighting and hopefully this shit we do, our messages, the line we press, hopefully, this shit’s start changing things but you know, the more motherf*kas speak up and the more mother*kas coming together, the more chances we have for shit to change. And that’s just what it is. I ain’t never been at with all the politics, I don’t really know so much about politics and all that sh*t. But like there’s just been too much going on lately and it just got everybody like hold on, like y’all really got it f*cked up. You ain’t just about to be killing us and doing all this wild shit, and think these motherf*kas just gonna sit here and be quiet and scared, don’t say nothing, don’t react. You feel me, it ain’t what it is, not at all.

“Blacks and Browns” – What is this song all about?

“Black and Browns” is about bridging the gap; the perceptions about the relationships of Hispanics and Blacks. What’s been put out to the world is, I feel like, it is that Blacks and Hispanics don’t get along, and in certain situations, that’s true and in like prison, motherf*kas will be beefing with each other, and on the streets because its gang infested out here. Black and Hispanics, we are at war with each other, but there’s Black and Hispanic hoods that are cool with each other too at the same time, but don’t nobody talk about that, don’t put that out there. So I wanted to put the light on that. Let them know about the good relationship we got with Hispanics because out here, we share a lot of the same parts of the culture. We share a lot of sh*t and we go through a lot of the same things. We grow up with each other, we are next door neighbors with each other, we go to the same school with each other, we f*ck with they sisters, they f*ck with our sisters. You feeling me like, all that’s going on ain’t nobody ever really got it out there, and really press the line. Like nah bro, we really together, feel me? I think Pac was on that, he was doing some sh*t a long time ago. But I don’t know how hard he went with that, and then on top of that it’s a new generation, so yeah, that was everything behind that song.

“Police Get Away With Murder” – Why do you feel the need to comment on social issues like these? Do you think your album will educate people? Enact change?

It was just a lot, you know, just a lot. Everything kept happening, and I was just like damn hold on. That’s too much. Yeah, I was just really telling my story for the majority of the album. And at the end. I was just opening them mothaf*ckas eyes up, and trying to get my attention, trying to get young mothaf*ckas involved into what’s going on today. Being proactive not reactive about this shit. That’s the goal for the last three records of the album.

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