"Big Homie took me under his wing and exposed me to a different mind frame and perspective to the streets," states the vibrant yet collective young artist dubbed Wrecklezz . This moniker handed down from his mentor depicts the lifestyle once lead before enlightened with the guidance every urban adolescent should be blessed to receive. Using a plethora of verbal linguistic skills accompanied by life experiences, he deftly crafts his art accordingly with a unique concoction of street, swagger, & smarts. Constantly handling his PDA device to either ignore a call, send a text, or give a courtesy "let me hit ya back, bro" his focus and maturity are not that of a kat few years out of his teens. "Experiencing unfortunate situations and being placed in unreceptive environments forced me to man up early" he shares as he rocks his head & mumbles a concept to an energetic and hi hat infested beat. As an artist the intrinsic value you place in your work is a staple of your creativity and approach to the industry.
The journey to success for an independent entertainer is often obstructed by deceitful people, bogus business practices, and hidden pitfalls that set back progress. His declarations sound thorough and passionate, "Boyz out here aren't livin how they say in they raps. Upcoming artists easily conform to sound like and talk about the things everybody else does. Hip Hop ain't dead! It's flooded with spam ass artist with no creativity or grind. That, or their grind doesn't complement their creativity." As a self proclaimed student of the game Sir Wrecklezz prepares to break into the industry with support from his Level 7 Batallion & Perspective Music Inc. His anticipated upcoming projects "Dollar Diplomacy Mixtape" and "Street Scholar" album are sprinkled with his so called "Throwed Espanol" and filled with unconventional delivery, content, and wordplay; not to mention a select few guest appearances.
"There are similarities in both spectrums of rapping and being in the streets. Most importantly I'm pursuing my dreams and fulfilling my destiny. I do my best to stay Hungry and Humble, nawmsayin...Street Scholar is like my valedictorian speech for the School of Hard Knocks....Ya know?" If first impressions speak for themselves, viewers and listeners hear and see a young maverick in the industry using the flourishing Hip Hop culture in Mid-South's Sooner State to rep for day to day Grindaz, Latinos, but most importantly the real "playaz" that stay true and far away from lames. Poised to cause a disturbance in rap game, Wrecklezz say's "It's O City or No City! On mines"