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  • FP Relly releases one-two punch of hip-hop songs in “Enjoy the Life/Fast Money” off his newest album Perseverance Vol. 1.

FP Relly releases one-two punch of hip-hop songs in “Enjoy the Life/Fast Money” off his newest album Perseverance Vol. 1.

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Atlanta based rapper FP Relly has just dropped a brand new one-two punch of songs, complete with a music video, that will show how he enjoys life and strives to get that bag.

“Enjoy The Life/Fast Money” is a two-for-one track release that shows “you can really invest only how much you put in,” FP Relly said. “You really need money to elevate.”

The “Fast Money” segment of the release was a freestyle and the beat was up-tempo, so he was thinking about how he was making money quickly and letting loose on the vocals. He is incredibly proud of the tracks, saying that the flow was amazing and the production quality was as good as it gets.

“I really put a lot of feeling into it, and that’s where I put out my best,” he said. “It got a lot of people’s attention. I can say that, for sure.”

The video depicts him on a beach, enjoying life and all that it has to offer. It has a wide range, from hanging in front of a gas station to shooting hoops or blasting around in a flashy car at night. Life and money both move fast.

His music is inspired by what is going on in the moment. When something pops up, he can make a song out of it. He said if something upsets him or makes him happy, he can think about what he wants to talk about over a beat. He started off writing but it wasn’t until he moved from St. Louis to Atlanta, in 2020, that he started really getting serious about rapping and freestyling.

“If I’m in the studio and we pull up a beat, I can just freestyle on the fly,” he said. “But when I can sit down and write, I stay on the subject and produce a better song.”

This two-track combo is all part of his third mixtape, called “Perseverance Vol. 1,” which speaks to what he is all about.

“I think I am the definition of perseverance,” he said. “I was from St. Louis, which is really an unknown place. Nelly made it out, but it’s really hard to make it out of there. Nobody’s doing what I’m doing that is from St. Louis. I overcame a lot of stuff, survived a lot of stuff, and I’m only 22. I’m still persevering as we speak, accomplishing while still overcoming obstacles.”

He said St. Louis is very confined to its own area, unlike , where he could network, meet people and spread his wings. FP Relly said it’s not only a much friendlier environment, but also that the move to Georgia has been more conducive to his style as it has been a move to the “home of hip-hop.”

“There’s a lot of money flowing in the streets of the city for people who just want to network,” FP Relly said. “They want to make it out as well. I got a good clean face here, and it’s all about business. I want everyone to know I’m a businessman and I’m all about my money. I’m a cool dude with a kind heart, and I’ve got good intentions. Let’s get some more money.”

“Perseverance Vol. 1” is 14 tracks spanning 34 minutes, and FP Relly recommends people listen to every song and vibe with him. It is one of those albums to listen to from top to bottom to find some gold.

Music runs in FP Relly’s blood. He says he is influenced by his pops and his brother, who have also been in the rap game. Much of the circle he surrounds himself with are musicians. The 22-year-old started getting into rapping after being part of a rap video shoot, and he has just gone for it since.

“I had it naturally in me, but basically I just started writing,” he said. “And I had the voice for it. I’ve got a nice flow and I can bounce on the beat. I really just be talking about what I see, or what I see happening in the future.”

FP Relly said he is always the first one to wake up and get to it, and this drive continues in his musical career. He’s happy with the production and says it is something that jumps out as some of his best work to date.

“My flow has gotten much better,” FP Relly said. “ I just keep getting better at my craft.”

Be sure to check out FP Relly’s music on all major platforms, including “Enjoy the Life/Fast Money.” https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tsW90F9WOD8

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  • Norman Collins revamps 4 decade old track in a catchy new rock single “I Wanna Rule Somebody” off the LP Front Porch Philosopher

Norman Collins revamps 4 decade old track in a catchy new rock single “I Wanna Rule Somebody” off the LP Front Porch Philosopher

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Norman Collins has put out a new potent rock track titled “I Wanna Rule Somebody,” which has been long in the works and now ready for the masses to hear on the new record Front Porch Philosopher.

“I wrote this song in 1981, believe it or not,” Collins said. “It’s like 40 years old. I’ve been playing it in various bands all this time, and we changed up the chorus a little bit, but I wrote the rhythm all the way back. I hadn’t heard it in any other songs, so I got a verse and some words, and the put bridge together. All my songs basically start with rhythm guitar.”

The LP has 10 tracks that range from straight ahead rock, to melancholic folky ballads, some funk with horns, and even a little bit of calypso style music to show the diversity that Collins beholds.

“There’s a nice mixture of rhythm and a change of pace from song to song,” he said. “If you listen to the song ‘That’s the Way It’s Got to Be’ and ‘I Wanna Rule Somebody’ you’d think it was two different people.”

Collins said the melody always comes first and sometimes it takes a while for the words to get to the end result. He will often spit out nonsense into a tape recorder, or jot it down on paper, without really thinking about the song and where it is heading.

“This one just kind of popped up,” Collins said of the new single. “I had this idea about trying to have power over people. It could be your annoying office worker, or a political dictator. Anyone really. But in a way it was a little bit about Jim Jones and the Peoples Temple. People who just wanted to have power to have people follow them. It just shows how insecure people can be to feel good about themselves.”

“I wanna rule somebody,
I don’t care about who it is”

Collins wants to make it clear that there’s no need to try to be powerful all the time. It’s important to just be happy the way you are, and not force people into your world.

“‘I don’t care who I use, it’s all the same to me’ is one of those powerful lyrics in the song,” he said. “That’s pretty much what these cults turn into. You know, I can choose who I want. I can let you in. You see it all over the world, really. That love of power.”

Collins has been playing music with countless bands, dabbling in all different styles, since he was a teenager. He moved from St. Louis to Nashville to play music when he was 19, and lived there for about three years touring with various top 40 bands. In 1971, Collins went on the road playing guitar with Rock and Roll Hall of Famer Hank Ballard, and wrote a funky track with him called “I’m a Junkie for My Baby’s Love.” At that time, you couldn’t say anything like junkie on the radio, and while Collins thought it would be a big hit, no radio station would play it.

From Nashville, he moved to Warrensville, N.J. to play with several well accomplished saxophone players before moving to Los Angeles. He played with various groups, but mostly worked at a gas station, he admitted. This was 1975, and Collins didn’t think there were enough places to play in the city. He moved up to San Francisco to play country guitar for a band called Hickory Switch and then one called Kingdom Come, and has lived there ever since.

“I was a pawn broker, and a school bus driver at one point,” he said. “All these jobs allowed me to play music during the week and on weekends. I wasn’t constricted by any jobs, but I was always in a band. I’ve been in a band since I was about 17.”

Collins met an arranger in Grass Valley, California named Paul Kraushaar, who can play just about any instrument. The two got to work and put out what Collins feels is an incredible album that was finished up this past May. Kraushaar plays everything except guitar (drums, piano, bass and keys) on the record.

Collins has been with his band, the Tumblers, for about five years, and all the songs on the new LP have been played tried and true for some time now.

While the LP features Collins and Kraushaar, the Tumblers in a live setting includes Ed McClary on drums and Tom McManus on bass. He said all their gigs are a little different, going from background music to a full on concert. Collins prides in the band being super tight and really bringing the songs to life.

“It’s a lot of fun with rhythm” Collins said. “I also have some new songs that I’m working on that I play with the band. It’s a little different and folky. I don’t like having two songs sound alike.”

Be sure to check out the music of Norman Collins, including the new LP Front Porch Philosopher, featuring “I Wanna Rule Somebody.”

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