In the middle of a shopping center in College Park, MD, Paul “Young Swagger†Baker
spits more bars than “a million pair of Adidas†-the same amount Canibus proclaimed to
have spit in 1998. The Washington, D.C. native raps and uses his body language long
enough to spark excitement, smirks and serious head-nods from a crowd of hip-hop
lovers and The Famous Firm C.E.O. and past Director of A&R’s at Atlantic Records,
Sickamore.
After the job is done, Sickamore smiles and says with confirmation, “I never
heard somebody go that hard.â€
After years and years of practice, a craft that seems so simple to display, has only
come easy, after hard work and dedication. Short days and long nights were dedicated to
his love for music and Tupac Shakur, Shawn Carter and Christopher Wallace would
become staples of what to look for in an emcee. After studying their sound, deliveries and
rhyme schemes, Young Swagger created the perfect formula at becoming the world’s
greatest emcee.
He would use drugs called, “conviction†and “truth,†to grab the attention of hip-
hop addicts and create a base that would boil into hardcore, honest music. His product
would speak for itself. It would sell and create a buzz.
At 21-years-old, Swagger’s story is similar to a lot of faces on CNN’s Special
“Black in Americaâ€; he grew up in the inner-city, has only memories of his biological father to
make reference to and a had a dream to play in the NBA. It's noteworthy that Swagg's stepfather however, was there along the way to guide him. When reality set in, the emcee
from a place known for Go-go music and popular rappers like Wale and Tabi Bonney,
Swagger would use his drug as a mental escape from his poverty-stricken environment.
As a financial get-a-way, his single parent mother was not aware of her son’s
illegal hustle, but her distraction was her son’s commitment to education. At 14-years-old
in high school, new shoes and materialistic possessions became reason to sell illegal
substances.
From the distribution of illegal drugs into his complete transition to musical
treatments, his optimistic perspectives and knowledge of opportunity, lead him to
Talladega College in Talladega, Alabama. He would later admit that music would give
him this “all time high†and a line from Jay-Z’s 2003 song “Allure†would be a verbal
depiction of what he would come to know.
And I can’t explain why, I just love to get high/ drink life, smoke the blueberry
sky, blink twice.
With those lyrics and his memories of Tupac’s “Ambitionz of a Ridah,†the hard-
spiiting emcee would make the Presidential Honor Roll, but decided to leave school and
chase his dream of making a full-time commitment to music.
These experiences would lead him to his affiliation with The Famous Firm and a
life altering testimonial from Sickamore, in which the 23-year-old ex-DJ would call
Swagger, “The best free-styler that he’s ever seen in person†and that would give Paul
Baker the ambition to follow his dreams.
“That’s where my music comes from. The things that I’ve seen, things that I’ve
been involved in, things I’ve witnessed and different experiences,†says Swagger. “It
wasn’t all rough, I love where I’ve come from. It’s a horrible, beautiful place.â€