scotty atl - Hip Hop Enquirer Magazine, LLC https://hiphopenquirer.com Your One Stop for Everything Hip Hop Wed, 13 Jul 2022 17:53:02 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://i0.wp.com/hiphopenquirer.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/06/hhe_logo_web-557938d3v1_site_icon-e1697018948309.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 scotty atl - Hip Hop Enquirer Magazine, LLC https://hiphopenquirer.com 32 32 Album Review: Just Call Me Veto – “Give Me My Flowers” https://hiphopenquirer.com/2022/07/13/just-call-me-veto-give-me-my-flowers-review/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=just-call-me-veto-give-me-my-flowers-review https://hiphopenquirer.com/2022/07/13/just-call-me-veto-give-me-my-flowers-review/?noamp=mobile#respond Wed, 13 Jul 2022 17:52:58 +0000 https://hiphopenquirer.com/?p=102952 Just Call Me Veto recently released his Give Me My Flowers EP as a new signee under Scotty ATL’s label Tha Cool Club. The EP is presented by Veto’s brand Self Driven LLC as well. The 6-song project begins with the title track on which Veto proclaims he’s ready for his “flowers” – one may […]

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Just Call Me Veto recently released his Give Me My Flowers EP as a new signee under Scotty ATL’s label Tha Cool Club. The EP is presented by Veto’s brand Self Driven LLC as well. The 6-song project begins with the title track on which Veto proclaims he’s ready for his “flowers” – one may presume he means rewards for his hard work and dedication.

Veto has a known reputation for his strong performances in Atlanta. He has been performing in the area for years. Over the last year, Veto has kept his game up with back-to-back single releases including the song and video “One of Dem Ones” featuring Neno Calvin and “Bunny Hop” feat. White Cross. Taking it back in history, Veto was a featured guest rapper on Rich Homie Quan’s “Where Were You” (a video Veto directed).  

As he enters a new era in his career, Veto dives deep into his psyche to give listeners a better understanding of who he is, where he’s come from, and the lessons learned along the way. As one might expect from a Cool Club release, the project is vibey and introspective with the right balance of fun and expert lyricism. 

If you want something to hype you up on the way to the club, “Pick It Up” will get you right. The real club banger though is “Whew.” “Whew” is for the real G’s.

Veto even gets screwed up on “Having Motion” feat. TATE228  where he switches to a southern drawl that sounds both true Atlanta and Texas-worthy at the same time. The first half of the EP he maintains a faster lyrical pace with quick wit and a slick tongue, but on “Having Motion” he gets slow and smooth with it.

The album concludes with “My Story” featuring Scotty ATL + the “Break These Chains” interlude with Auni Saxton. “My Story” is a bar-by-bar recap of pains and losses Veto has experienced due to life experiences and “mistakes made on the road to wealth.” His story is echoed by Scotty’s reflections on his own hardships, triumphs, and spiritual development. Scotty recalls what he was going through when he heard Bankroll passed away – Scotty was on stage at the time. The stories are moving, to say the least, and give depth and authentic meaning to Give Me My Flowers

Concluding by adding a feminine touch on “Break These Chains” with the sultry songstress Auni Saxton, Give Me My Flowers is a well-rounded project with minimal filler.

In his Instagram posts Veto expresses, “I love the hustle. I love the grind, that’s why I haven’t stopped grinding since I started making music. I had a lot of fun recording this 2-part project and I’m excited to release this body of work…this is a dope body of work…big s/o to the team for the support! I appreciate all the support and love I’m receiving.”

@justcallmeveto @scottyatl @selfdrivenllc @thacoolclub

https://www.livemixtapes.com/mixtapes/56074/just-call-me-veto-give-me-my-flowers.html

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Artist Feature: Rocka Da Don https://hiphopenquirer.com/2011/02/04/artist-feature-rocka-da-don/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=artist-feature-rocka-da-don https://hiphopenquirer.com/2011/02/04/artist-feature-rocka-da-don/?noamp=mobile#respond Fri, 04 Feb 2011 00:43:24 +0000 http://test.hiphopenquirer.com/?p=9557 For some, the rocky road to success is easy to navigate. Take Atlanta rapper Rocko for instance. After working for years writing, producing and developing major label aritsts, Rocko realized no one was going to take his advice as well as himself. Proving he knew exactly what the rap game needed, just a year after […]

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For some, the rocky road to success is easy to navigate. Take Atlanta rapper Rocko for instance. After working for years writing, producing and developing major label aritsts, Rocko realized no one was going to take his advice as well as himself. Proving he knew exactly what the rap game needed, just a year after becoming an artist himself, Rocko secured a deal with Def Jam Records. Thanks to the overwhelming popularity of his Drumma Boi produced single, “Umma Do Me,” Rocko is now at the forefront of the new Southern movement in hip-hop where business acumen and consumer awareness reign supreme.

Raised with his two sisters in Atlanta, Rocko learned at a young age how to improve upon the not so perfect conditions around him. “I was back and forth between my mother and my grandmother for the majority of my life,” says the rapper born Rodney Hill. “My father wasn’t in the picture so I had to learn from a lot of older people. I saw a lot of things growing up and I decided that I didn’t want to become a statistic. So I stayed focused.”

After graduating from high school, Rocko started working for his cousin who owned and operated multiple businesses in and around Atlanta.

“I was doing all types of things,” says the Georgia MC today. “I was selling T-shirts, working at my cousin’s transportation company. I was just trying to figure out what it was that I wanted to do. I knew I wanted to do entrepreneurial things, but I was still trying to find myself. Then I found music.”

In 2002, Rocko started Rocky Road, a development company that allowed him to play a role in every aspect of budding artists’ growth. “I was infatuated with the way people produced music form scratch, how you go in and make something out of nothing,” says Rocko. “I kinda like feel in love with that whole idea. I wanted to learn how to write and format songs and make beats.” Hitman Sammy Sam was one of Rocko’s first clients, and together the two released “Step Daddy.” The novelty dance song’s popularity lead to Sammy Sam getting signed to Universal and releasing his debut in ’02 which included the Rocky Road logo on the album’s packaging.

Rocko worked with Young Dro next, a middle school friend who would go on to sign with T.I.’s Atlantic Records distributed label Grand Huslte. In the years that followed, Rocko’s production company tracked songs for Dem Franchize Boyz, Lil’ Flip and Pastor Troy, and while the vision for his company had been fulfilled, Rocko still wanted more.

In early 2006, Rocko decided it was time to become the artist he had always hoped to develop. “I knew I had the swagger to pull it off,” he says. “I was seeing all these guys who were not really who they said they were and getting away with it so I was like, ‘Ok, if it’s that easy, lemme do me.’”

Rocko immediately reached out to all the key people who he had built relationships with throughout his years in the music business. He recorded songs with Rick Ross, and Jim Jones and occasionally leaked a song or two to test his product. “Once I realized that people were feeling me I just went out and hit the streets real hard,” says the resourceful MC who recorded his hit “Umma Do Me” in August of ‘06. “I just started emailing the record out and going through different markets and promoting. We would be passing out CDs and posters and going out partying and making sure they played my song. The buzz just started to grow and before I knew it ‘Umma Do Me’ was at like 300 spins.”

In October, Shakir Stewart, the senior vice president of A&R at Def Jam, contacted Rocko and persuaded him to fly to New York City to meet with the head of the famed label. “At that time I was in the process of closing a deal somewhere else but Shakir was like, ‘Roc, you gotta come up here, LA Reid wants to meet with you,’” he remembers. “My first time meeting with Def Jam we closed the deal the same day. There were no negotiations. They had their mind made up. I couldn’t even leave the building.”

Rocko’s debut album Self Made is now slated to drop in the first quarter of 2008. Inspired by his tireless drive and self sufficient know how, Rocko’s LP is filled with tracks that inspire listeners to follow in his footsteps. Songs like the motivational “This Morning” and “Tomorrow” are all about manifesting your own destiny, while another standout cut, “Shoot Me Down” focuses on overcoming whatever obstacles arise along the way. With the majority of the production handled by Drumma Boi (Young Jeezy, Juvenile, Yung Joc, etc.), Self Made is sure to knock heads nationwide.

With a tireless work ethic, Rocko will continue to build a future through his love of creating music. “I’m a workaholic,” says Rocko. “For the next few years I’m going to go hard and I’m gonna keep it turned up to the max until I get to where I feel like I wanna be.” Spoken like a true star.

Follow @Rocko4Real on twitter!

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