Field Dispatch
Matt Connarton Unleashed 11-22-25 hour 1
Game Plan
Speaker 1: You're listening to Matt Connorton Unleashed on WM and H
Speaker 1: ninety five point three.
Speaker 2: And now the world radio premiere of the new single
Speaker 2: from Rivia, Something in the Water.
Speaker 3: See me now fated out of mate, you proud tell
Speaker 3: you so far from Mama yesterday.
Speaker 4: One thing still not clear? How the hell are we
Speaker 4: get here? The lasting years? I'm sun and suehe.
Speaker 2: N oh, there's nothing for me the soul.
Speaker 5: I don't want to.
Speaker 6: Tie frick, gotta go train?
Speaker 5: What you want to the free? Just a cry.
Speaker 4: Something. It's not always chasing something. You got to something
Speaker 4: in of you And I'm going on my way.
Speaker 6: Not want to hear the awful look that you never
Speaker 6: thought that you.
Speaker 5: I am lunch to you and all you'll my games.
Speaker 3: Mean all.
Speaker 4: There's nothing for me.
Speaker 5: So I don't wanna tell.
Speaker 4: Frick gotta got the train, go to the free?
Speaker 5: Just a cry?
Speaker 4: The Sultan.
Speaker 3: Not.
Speaker 5: I don't want to talk.
Speaker 4: I got about that train away?
Speaker 5: You want to do free?
Speaker 4: It's just a dot of cry, The Sultan.
Speaker 5: Not, I don't want it.
Speaker 4: This this something.
Speaker 2: Here's another exclusive, the new single by the Forensics. This
Speaker 2: is called not giving Up.
Speaker 3: This is nothing near from the old storing breaches is
Speaker 3: not a thing that they could try to see us. Well,
Speaker 3: the will this changed, chasy.
Speaker 4: Go we this something.
Speaker 3: I stay on her, he said.
Speaker 4: We've always meet me, so never lend gay shais him
Speaker 4: say he decide honestly then.
Speaker 3: Si no one not you think us take your mind
Speaker 3: chance day it's my head and some model never comes
Speaker 3: at least to stay up tonight.
Speaker 4: And John fas thing.
Speaker 3: It's not even though I sin to see the one
Speaker 3: I never figure out, saying to mother never comes the
Speaker 3: last to stands.
Speaker 4: Out tonight.
Speaker 7: S oh no, why DoD if the uh say, I
Speaker 7: said something that's funding about it.
Speaker 3: Some monther cobs the muster stay out around tonight.
Speaker 5: Way know best.
Speaker 4: It's not a guys don't walk sit you.
Speaker 5: It's some mode on other.
Speaker 4: Times then used to stay out.
Speaker 5: Out to dine.
Speaker 3: Knows it's the dogs.
Speaker 4: The kid said, some ls the stays that the stays.
Speaker 4: That's some of.
Speaker 2: Here's another exclusive premiere for you this week, the new
Speaker 2: single from Paul nasal Nebu Cadnezzar.
Speaker 4: Wounded Forever. Like member Canza, I know that wherever you go.
Speaker 6: That is the distance, and you find the difference so
Speaker 6: much less than you know.
Speaker 4: I said the dunda the cognation under.
Speaker 2: Sir, and that you are in stead.
Speaker 6: And my life father, break the ships that I still
Speaker 6: sing the thoughts left to say. It's let me read
Speaker 6: of distance between us and still I cannot let you go.
Speaker 4: Drops making notions.
Speaker 5: And sicklical motions. See how the waters got move.
Speaker 6: Mean my love on the shop home, all to answer
Speaker 6: the cold days of confusion, the love the us quidest
Speaker 6: to push on through from my desitation to see revelation
Speaker 6: the bat it is open to you.
Speaker 8: I want to live a life so full blah love,
Speaker 8: and life's so full of righteous fight so well I die,
Speaker 8: y'all have no regrets?
Speaker 5: Why because I tried my best. Don't right? Just hang
Speaker 5: out and my president live.
Speaker 1: I want to drinks, guys, taking the industry over with decency,
Speaker 1: cleaning up, seeing through the drenking be cealy streaming while
Speaker 1: shaking up thieves of complacency, change and the way that
Speaker 1: we see the whole coderie from spirit.
Speaker 5: Just start just through corn O, the conscience of longer consciousness.
Speaker 1: Like they had a conference had and with the plan
Speaker 1: that was handed up on us, but we took it
Speaker 1: for never can in this contest, o, sa.
Speaker 9: We cant live forever and oo say we can't live
Speaker 9: life better.
Speaker 1: Or making the difference in this world diseasey creating influence
Speaker 1: the harm THO wistlazy, don't need to be greedy, you're sneaky,
Speaker 1: You're basically just three people. They will then be with
Speaker 1: their needing. Believe in your reasons and screaming them a lot.
Speaker 1: Don't deceive your respective beseechy about keep keeping the ailing,
Speaker 1: be feeling.
Speaker 5: As proud as I'm feeling right now with my head
Speaker 5: in the clouds.
Speaker 8: Let's come together and make a place that is forever
Speaker 8: never advertiser left birch life will win the issue together
Speaker 8: where there will be basically they just plant to see
Speaker 8: the ideas the life will never bet their people grab
Speaker 8: their brains and maybe it would be my pleasure.
Speaker 1: Let's just so win down up bits will take a
Speaker 1: break from all this.
Speaker 5: We'll have oh mint with kids, so you have some
Speaker 5: one good night kiss. So let's not okay, hold on
Speaker 5: this path. The whole reason four this that's the present
Speaker 5: is a gift to half of the work we put
Speaker 5: in the good.
Speaker 8: In the path that and with the nothing and crying
Speaker 8: because the guest. Thing is buying the trying to see
Speaker 8: you and be seen, bedave with something till.
Speaker 5: The day you were dying. Breaking the boundary set up
Speaker 5: by somebody sell up to selling ups. It's nobody's business.
Speaker 1: It's simple and difference. It's making no difference. In fact,
Speaker 1: it's like physics, gravity versus somebody. If we stack them up,
Speaker 1: flatten doutter, stick them in bases. I'm good with those
Speaker 1: placements on one and in case me that you can
Speaker 1: look into one down through the age and just treats
Speaker 1: me you and placed on my throne turning pages.
Speaker 2: I love it. That is brand new from six Minds Combined.
Speaker 2: And he is here with us in studio. We're gonna
Speaker 2: talk with him in just a moment. Welcome everybody, Here
Speaker 2: we go. It is that time again, Matt Connorton Unleashed
Speaker 2: and we are live from the studios of w M
Speaker 2: n H ninety five point three f M and Glorious Manchester,
Speaker 2: New Hampshire. Of course, you can stream the show from anywhere.
Speaker 2: I go to Matt connorton dot com slash live for
Speaker 2: all you're live streaming options, social media links, contact Infosho, archives,
Speaker 2: et cetera, et cetera. Today is Saturday, November twenty second,
Speaker 2: two thousand and twenty five. Let me get that mic on.
Speaker 2: Rick Everhard is here and he is a six Minds
Speaker 2: combined Welcome sir, Hello, Hello, Hello, It's good to have
Speaker 2: you back on the show. It's been a little while. Yeah,
Speaker 2: it has been been a little while. You've been busy.
Speaker 2: That track, of course, the sixth sonata great.
Speaker 7: I love that, thank you, thank you so much.
Speaker 2: I got a question about that right off the top. So,
Speaker 2: and I've noticed this was some of your other songs too,
Speaker 2: like is it is it difficult to cause your your
Speaker 2: flow your style is so like how do you have
Speaker 2: time to breathe while you're you know, especially like like
Speaker 2: the song starts and that first verse comes in and
Speaker 2: it's like, oh my god, like how does he even
Speaker 2: do that?
Speaker 7: Yep.
Speaker 1: So, so first I have to write the songs, obviously,
Speaker 1: and I try to I try to write it as
Speaker 1: like a single a single burse at like the first
Speaker 1: set of time or course at a time, and I
Speaker 1: try to try to make that as complicated as I
Speaker 1: can a.
Speaker 7: Lyrically.
Speaker 1: And then I'll practice it over and over and over again,
Speaker 1: find where to put the breaths. So I take a
Speaker 1: lot of really fast, sharp breaths. Yeah, if you listen
Speaker 1: really closely, sometimes you can hear them.
Speaker 2: Ok. Yeah, yeah, No, it's impressive when you're writing these,
Speaker 2: because I mean that song is just one example I've noticed.
Speaker 2: I mean, that's your style and a lot of these,
Speaker 2: like I said, when you're writing them, do you ever
Speaker 2: do you ever think this might be too much? I
Speaker 2: don't know, or do you just write it and then
Speaker 2: it's like, Okay, now now I have to live up
Speaker 2: to the challenge that I've created for myself and I
Speaker 2: wrote it. Now I got to do it.
Speaker 7: That's that's exactly it.
Speaker 2: Yeah.
Speaker 1: I love to challenge myself. I love to to push
Speaker 1: myself past my boundaries. And I mean that's that's the
Speaker 1: reason that I've gotten this far in my musical career
Speaker 1: is because of that pushing and pushing.
Speaker 2: Yeah. Yeah. Another thing too, I've noticed about a lot
Speaker 2: of your songs is you know, there seems to be
Speaker 2: a theme. You know, there's a lot of empowerment positivity,
Speaker 2: but but without being preachy, which is cool because you can,
Speaker 2: you know, you can beat somebody over the head with
Speaker 2: it and then and actually push them away with that
Speaker 2: stuff too, but but you present it in a way
Speaker 2: that is fun, for lack of a better word, I mean,
Speaker 2: it's just kind of fun to The songs are fun,
Speaker 2: they're fun to listen to, but also but they're not preachy.
Speaker 2: They're just more like kind of encouraging and and and
Speaker 2: unity too. That seems to be a theme too. There's
Speaker 2: a lot of you know, like in that track, in
Speaker 2: the lyrics, there's a lot of you know, we're in
Speaker 2: this together, you know.
Speaker 7: Yeah.
Speaker 1: I mean so there's there's just so much negativity and
Speaker 1: and like segregation and division, and there's just there's so
Speaker 1: much of that apparent in every industry, and I just
Speaker 1: want to, you know, I want to bring a different message,
Speaker 1: you know, that's that we don't have to versus each other.
Speaker 1: You know, we can we can work together and work
Speaker 1: off of each other. And and I mean obviously I
Speaker 1: feel really strongly about those ideals. So it it's it
Speaker 1: comes through I wouldn't say easily, but but it flows
Speaker 1: into the musical creation.
Speaker 2: Yeah.
Speaker 1: You know, like I'll get I'll get a basic idea
Speaker 1: and then like I try to, I try to give
Speaker 1: myself a subject and then along with that that subject
Speaker 1: I like to keep that, you know, the togetherness and
Speaker 1: the community and the positivity and try to wrap it
Speaker 1: all up into to one, you know, nice little package.
Speaker 2: Yeah. So since the last time we talked, it sounds like,
Speaker 2: you know, we talked a little bit off air. It
Speaker 2: sounds like you've been pretty busy.
Speaker 7: Oh yeah, yeah, super super busy.
Speaker 1: I've done I've done at least two shows a month
Speaker 1: since since the since the last radio show. Yeah, and uh,
Speaker 1: I still host an open mic once a month. Excellent
Speaker 1: through Positive street Art. Okay, we talked about them before. Yeah, Yeah,
Speaker 1: they're they're still going super strong too. Yeah, we got
Speaker 1: we got big moves we're making this year excellent.
Speaker 2: Well, that's a lot there. Can you actually, can you
Speaker 2: tell us a little bit more about Positive Street Art?
Speaker 2: And I know we've talked about it before, but for
Speaker 2: newer listeners who right now know because this is a
Speaker 2: this is a great thing that a lot of people
Speaker 2: probably aren't aware, so.
Speaker 1: That it's a it's a nonprofit based out of nash,
Speaker 1: New Hampshire. We've we've kind of spread our wings a
Speaker 1: bit and we do a bunch of stuff in Manchester. Yeah,
Speaker 1: and Excellent and and a few other places too. But
Speaker 1: it's our mission is to inspire passion for the the
Speaker 1: urban arts in a productive way through community workshops, artistic
Speaker 1: services and and community events. And we had we had
Speaker 1: this the Summer Stroll that we Nashville in Newmpshire that
Speaker 1: we teamed up over over the summer.
Speaker 7: Yeah, and and it's was the second year we did it,
Speaker 7: and it was it was a big hit.
Speaker 2: Nice.
Speaker 1: I think eventually it might but it'll keep expanding, you know,
Speaker 1: kind of like the Winter Stroll in in in Nashua.
Speaker 1: It you know, it started out as as whatever and
Speaker 1: now it's grown too. You know, ten thousand or more
Speaker 1: people show up every year for it. So I'm we're
Speaker 1: we're hoping that the Summer Stroll, you know, kind of
Speaker 1: it builds momentum and we can grow every year. But
Speaker 1: it's you know, it's a it's a great it's a
Speaker 1: great organization to get into not only for just you know,
Speaker 1: to get a mural painted on your wall or whatever,
Speaker 1: but we have tons of programs for for different communities,
Speaker 1: you know, for for painting and for for uplifting and
Speaker 1: you know, the whole community thing. I also run the
Speaker 1: I host open mics through Positive Street art, and and
Speaker 1: that's you know that that part of it is it's
Speaker 1: it was you know, part of it was was a
Speaker 1: way for me to to expand my my ability to
Speaker 1: get on the mic or get on the stage. I was,
Speaker 1: I was at the beginning of the of the of
Speaker 1: the the whole music thing that I've been doing. Yeah,
Speaker 1: and uh, and I you know, I kind of decided,
Speaker 1: you know, if I don't just have random places, you know,
Speaker 1: a lot of times I went to a few open
Speaker 1: mics over the years and stuff, and and I I
Speaker 1: like the I like the feel of it and everything,
Speaker 1: and and I was like, you know, I could I
Speaker 1: could probably do something myself like this through positive street art,
Speaker 1: you know, because it's you know, it's a music is
Speaker 1: is intertwined and and and and everything, right, you know,
Speaker 1: it's just as much part of the the urban culture.
Speaker 7: As anything else.
Speaker 1: Absolutely so, so yeah, you know, I felt I wanted
Speaker 1: a place where I could you know, improve my craft, yeah,
Speaker 1: and build up my stage presence.
Speaker 2: Yeah, and smart smart way to go about it, yeah.
Speaker 7: Yeah, exactly yea.
Speaker 1: And then and then at the same time, it's giving
Speaker 1: a place for other people with the same mindset as me,
Speaker 1: where where they don't. They're not ready for a big
Speaker 1: crowd or something like that, and they want to start,
Speaker 1: you know, honing their craft. So you know, you get
Speaker 1: on the mic in front of a very very limited crowd.
Speaker 1: You know, not a lot of people show up to it.
Speaker 1: So so a lot of times it's just, uh, it's
Speaker 1: just a six Minds Combined jam session.
Speaker 2: Okay, okay, where does this happen? Where do you do?
Speaker 1: It's at a Positive shoot Out headquarters Okay in nash, Newmpshire.
Speaker 7: It's at forty eight Bridge Street, third floor.
Speaker 2: Okay, Oh, very cool.
Speaker 7: Yeah.
Speaker 1: If you look us a Positive Shootout dot org, we're
Speaker 1: always posting different things that we're doing, and we we curate.
Speaker 7: A bunch of.
Speaker 1: Like artists and uh, not just at our headquarters, but
Speaker 1: at different places. I know there's a couple of places
Speaker 1: in Manchester that wee things that I don't I don't
Speaker 1: know all the names of the program. There's so much
Speaker 1: which is that's good.
Speaker 2: There's a lot going on there that's excellent.
Speaker 7: Yeah, yeah, exactly.
Speaker 2: So So was that was positive street art before? Like,
Speaker 2: in other words, were you doing that before Six Minds
Speaker 2: Combined became?
Speaker 7: Yeah? So I've been I've been doing.
Speaker 1: I've been making music and I had the whole six
Speaker 1: minds combined Moniker for years and years and years. Okay,
Speaker 1: but I wasn't doing anything. I just made music for
Speaker 1: fun for myself, yeah, and uh and friends or whatever.
Speaker 1: And you know, I I I always had the hope that,
Speaker 1: you know, someday it would become something, but but it wasn't.
Speaker 1: It wasn't the drive, okay, you know. And then I
Speaker 1: had I had gotten into some trouble and I had
Speaker 1: to do community service. Yeah, my friend Gillian Anderson pointed
Speaker 1: me towards positive street art and and at the time
Speaker 1: my very good friend to this day, Tom Lopez, he
Speaker 1: was the vice president and he kind of took me
Speaker 1: under his wing, and and uh, and I screamed through
Speaker 1: all the community service hours, and they were like, hey,
Speaker 1: you know you you're you've been doing this. You want
Speaker 1: to continue to do this. And then shortly after that
Speaker 1: I was like, of course I do. And then shortly
Speaker 1: after that They're like, hey, well you want to join
Speaker 1: our board, and so I've been. I've been on their
Speaker 1: board of directors for for a bunch of years now.
Speaker 1: I think it's fantastic. I think it's you know, coming
Speaker 1: on ten years part of that organization.
Speaker 7: Yeah, oh wow.
Speaker 2: And so.
Speaker 7: You know, we've we've had dance.
Speaker 1: Programs, we've had we've had all sorts of stuff, and
Speaker 1: I was, you know, just hit me at one point,
Speaker 1: I was like, you know what, why don't I Why
Speaker 1: don't I, you know, introduced the musical side of this
Speaker 1: to to the to you know what, because there was
Speaker 1: dancing and you know, things like that, and I was
Speaker 1: I was like, you know, but like like at Core,
Speaker 1: I'm a musician and and I felt like that needed
Speaker 1: to be a part of the whole positive street art thing.
Speaker 1: So yeah, So that I came up with the idea
Speaker 1: for the the open mic and and the rest of
Speaker 1: the board loved it. Yeah, and they they jumped on it,
Speaker 1: and and we've been doing it ever since.
Speaker 2: So when you started doing the open mics, was that
Speaker 2: what kind of like did you already have the idea
Speaker 2: that if if these open mics go well and I
Speaker 2: feel confident in front of an audience, maybe I'll kind
Speaker 2: of start to do more with six Minds.
Speaker 1: That's yeah, it was basically hand in hand, you know.
Speaker 1: I I I had the idea for for the open mic. Yeah,
Speaker 1: and then it was, you know, facilitating the equipment to
Speaker 1: do that. Originally they were thinking about buying the stuff,
Speaker 1: and I was then I I I had a conversation
Speaker 1: with the person I was making music with at the time.
Speaker 1: They wanted to go off and do a different project
Speaker 1: and sat down with me and was like, hey, you know,
Speaker 1: we've been making all this stuff together. He's like, I don't.
Speaker 1: I don't expect anything out of it, you know, I don't.
Speaker 1: I don't need to get paid. I don't need royalties
Speaker 1: or anything like that. He's like, he's like, you take
Speaker 1: this and do whatever you want with it.
Speaker 7: Do something with it.
Speaker 1: I was like, you know, that's a great idea. I
Speaker 1: should do something with it. And so I made that
Speaker 1: decision that I was going to start working on music.
Speaker 1: Then I met Eleanor and it just it just cascaded
Speaker 1: from there, and but it kind of happened at the
Speaker 1: same time, you know, I made that decision.
Speaker 7: After deciding.
Speaker 1: So it was so the open mic decision came first,
Speaker 1: and then I decided to do the six Minds thing
Speaker 1: well to start pushing it. Yeah, and then I was like, well,
Speaker 1: I'm going to need equipment for this to do my performances.
Speaker 1: So why don't I just get the equipment for the
Speaker 1: open mic and then that'll start me right on my path,
Speaker 1: right' I'll have no excuse not to move forward.
Speaker 2: There you go, There you go, exactly. Yeah, which is
Speaker 2: a great way to motivate yourself, right, I put yourself
Speaker 2: in a position where you got to do it.
Speaker 7: Yeah. I mean I spent I spent a few thousand
Speaker 7: dollars on the on the performance equipment.
Speaker 2: Yeah. Yeah, so once to spend that kind of money, yeah,
Speaker 2: you gotta do it.
Speaker 7: Yeah, exactly.
Speaker 1: It's like, look looking at a big hole in my waile, like, well,
Speaker 1: did I just shoot a hole in my pocket? Or
Speaker 1: am I going to do something with this? And and uh,
Speaker 1: it's been it's been so worth it. Yeah, you know, I've,
Speaker 1: like I said, I've I've I've performed at least two
Speaker 1: shows a month since I've started, so it's been over
Speaker 1: a year now.
Speaker 7: Yeah, and just pushing and pushing.
Speaker 1: I got the released the first album with the seven
Speaker 1: songs last year September ish I think it was, and
Speaker 1: then I have uh three three songs released singles since then.
Speaker 2: Yeah.
Speaker 1: One I just released last last week or the week before.
Speaker 1: It was very very recently. It just it just jumped
Speaker 1: on the platforms a couple of days ago. Okay, okay, yeah,
Speaker 1: so yeah the sixth Sonata. Yeah, have tongueswire.
Speaker 2: Yeah, we were talking off air. I can't say I've
Speaker 2: never been able to say anything with an x th
Speaker 2: at the end sixth. I guess I can kind of
Speaker 2: do it, but I have to slow it down, like
Speaker 2: I can't say it fast. But I think a lot
Speaker 2: of people are like that, Like if I say it fast,
Speaker 2: I'm just gonna say the sixth Sonata. So I'm literally
Speaker 2: just saying six. If I slaw it down, I can
Speaker 2: do it the sixth Sonata. But even that, that sounds
Speaker 2: very awkward. I sound like I'm listening. Yeah, that sounds
Speaker 2: very awkward. But yeah, I've always had trouble with that.
Speaker 2: But no, that's that's that's great. I'm curious too when
Speaker 2: you started performing live, because you write, you write these songs.
Speaker 2: You know, as we talked about a few minutes ago,
Speaker 2: the lyrics are complex. And you know, something I've always
Speaker 2: said to something that rappers never get enough credit for
Speaker 2: is the memory skills needed for that. Because any rock song,
Speaker 2: you know, unless it's something extremely wordy like I don't
Speaker 2: know one week by Bare Naked Ladies, right, But but
Speaker 2: almost any rock song, you know, it's pretty easy to
Speaker 2: learn the words, right, you know, but but something like
Speaker 2: especially like what you're doing, there's some pretty serious memory
Speaker 2: skills involved there, right to remember all of that. Oh yeah,
Speaker 2: Like when you started performing live, was that a challenge
Speaker 2: at all?
Speaker 1: It was definitely and it still is now. You know,
Speaker 1: I'm every every show if you pay close attention. I
Speaker 1: don't want to say every show, but ye, but very
Speaker 1: often you'll find that I'll pause for a couple of seconds. Yeah,
Speaker 1: and that'll be me completely forgetting Oh no, yeah, yeah.
Speaker 1: It happens more often than anybody notices, right, right, because
Speaker 1: when you're right, when you're writing during the performance and
Speaker 1: you just keep going, you know, uh, nobody Noticebody knows
Speaker 1: unless they really really know the songs. My close friends
Speaker 1: that come to every single show, they're like, they give
Speaker 1: me the look like, oh you messed up. Yeah, but yes,
Speaker 1: it's it's it's very very difficult to remember the lyrics.
Speaker 1: I've always had memory issues ever since I was a
Speaker 1: little kid. It's really hard for me to memorize things.
Speaker 10: So so.
Speaker 1: When I was a kid, I found that the easiest
Speaker 1: way for me to remember something is have a jingle
Speaker 1: to it. Okay, you know so, so no matter what
Speaker 1: it was, you know, like if if I had.
Speaker 7: To remember.
Speaker 1: Two plus two is four, you know, things like that,
Speaker 1: it just it made it so much easier for me
Speaker 1: to retain interesting knowledge. Yeah, it's it's almost like like
Speaker 1: a sound pattern, and I practice in order in order
Speaker 1: to to can to remember them. I practice, I won't
Speaker 1: say every single day, but pretty close to every day.
Speaker 1: I listen to my music every day. Yeah, and I
Speaker 1: try to perform them even whether I'm in my car
Speaker 1: or at work. I try to perform them every time
Speaker 1: I listen to them, and so so that helps.
Speaker 7: But I have to I do.
Speaker 1: I have to practice every every single day. Every couple
Speaker 1: of days, if I have a show coming up, I'll
Speaker 1: practice two or three times a day, just just to
Speaker 1: to create the habit. And you know what's funny is
Speaker 1: I actually find I'll be driving in my car, I'll
Speaker 1: be I'll be playing the performance track so it doesn't
Speaker 1: have all the words on it. Yeah, I'll be singing
Speaker 1: along with it, and then I'll start daydreaming and I'll
Speaker 1: start thinking about something else, and then I'll remember that
Speaker 1: I was singing and I sang every single word. Because
Speaker 1: it's it's become a habit net, right, So, so muscle memory,
Speaker 1: vocal memory, and breathing memory. It's so it's so embedded
Speaker 1: in my habits now that I can do it without
Speaker 1: even thinking about it sometimes.
Speaker 2: Yeah, and your memory has probably improved over time because
Speaker 2: of what you're doing. I just saw it too, a study,
Speaker 2: a little bit of a side street, but it does
Speaker 2: relate to what we're talking about somewhat. Is about how
Speaker 2: if you make creating music, whether even if you're just
Speaker 2: practicing scales on a guitar or whatever you're doing, as
Speaker 2: you get older, it actually helps to stave off things
Speaker 2: like dementia and such.
Speaker 1: Yeah, yeah, yep that there's been studies that that prove that. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
Speaker 1: it's amazing. Another thing I do to to help myself
Speaker 1: with my my alertness and quick thinking, and it really
Speaker 1: helps for me waking up fully in the morning too.
Speaker 1: I have the alarms on my phone. I have to
Speaker 1: solve a math problem to turn off the alarm. Interesting,
Speaker 1: So the first couple of weeks I did it, I
Speaker 1: would wake up super groggy and I would get I
Speaker 1: would get heated because I couldn't think straight enough to
Speaker 1: do four plus sixteen.
Speaker 9: You know.
Speaker 7: Wow, it wasn't computing.
Speaker 1: But after those first couple of weeks, it started getting
Speaker 1: easier and easier and easier. And now years into it,
Speaker 1: my alarm goes off. I'm instantly wide awake. Oh wow,
Speaker 1: And I can solve complicated math problems.
Speaker 2: That's cool.
Speaker 7: I can.
Speaker 1: I can make the decision to get up and do
Speaker 1: my thing or go back to sleep and get a
Speaker 1: little bit more sleep.
Speaker 7: Yeah.
Speaker 1: But but there's no like groggy wake up period now,
Speaker 1: so I'm either asleep or I'm awake.
Speaker 2: Oh that's interesting.
Speaker 7: Wow, Yeah it is.
Speaker 1: It is, And I recommend it to people all the time. Yeah,
Speaker 1: if you if you can, if you can deal with
Speaker 1: it for that first part of it, because like I said,
Speaker 1: like I was waking up and I was getting so mad, right,
Speaker 1: But yeah, that that and and and the the the
Speaker 1: trying to remember the songs practicing them all the time.
Speaker 1: It's also that that is, uh, given me motivation to
Speaker 1: do everythings. Like I'm really I'm really bad at remembering
Speaker 1: people's names, So I do another vocal practice when I
Speaker 1: meet somebody and they say their name, repeat it right away,
Speaker 1: and then I try to repeat it one more time
Speaker 1: so that I'm hearing it once and then saying it twice. Yeah,
Speaker 1: and it's it's been helping, Yeah, but mostly with people
Speaker 1: that I already know, Like Matt is an easy one
Speaker 1: to remember because I know thirty thousand maths.
Speaker 2: Yeah, very common.
Speaker 1: Yeah, yeah, but yeah, it's uh, it is a memory.
Speaker 1: It is a memory task, and I gotta constantly be
Speaker 1: on top of it or or or off all behind.
Speaker 1: I notice, like if I go three or four days
Speaker 1: without practicing my songs, yeah, and I go to practice,
Speaker 1: I'm stumbling over the like the first couple of words,
Speaker 1: or I'm getting to the complicated part of the song, yeah,
Speaker 1: and then like getting all tongue twisted.
Speaker 7: Yeah. So it's it's it's.
Speaker 1: Really and not only remembering the words, but being able
Speaker 1: to say them in in in a speedy fashion, you know,
Speaker 1: because and like the breathing and everything, I have to
Speaker 1: I have to remember where all my breaths are. I
Speaker 1: have to take them at exactly the same time, exactly
Speaker 1: the same speed.
Speaker 2: Oh that's interesting, Okay, so you commit that to memory
Speaker 2: as well, exactly where you're taking. Oh interesting, Okay.
Speaker 1: I do a lot of cadence change with with my
Speaker 1: lyrics as well, so I have to memorize all that
Speaker 1: as well.
Speaker 2: How long does it take you to like, after you've
Speaker 2: written it and you're and then you have to learn it,
Speaker 2: you have to to be able to perform it, Like,
Speaker 2: how long does that take? I mean I must take
Speaker 2: some time, right.
Speaker 7: Oh yeah, yep.
Speaker 1: So I'm I have a song completely written and I've
Speaker 1: practiced it, you know, one hundred two hundred times before
Speaker 1: I even perform it in front of somebody at an
Speaker 1: open mic. Okay, yeah, so I'm And one thing I
Speaker 1: like to do as well is I'll make the song. I'll,
Speaker 1: I'll record it and then I'll listen to it and
Speaker 1: I'll read the lyrics and and that that seems to
Speaker 1: help train me to remember them. But then once I
Speaker 1: get to the point where it's memorized, if I pull
Speaker 1: out those lyrics, I just it messes me up stumbling
Speaker 1: over it.
Speaker 7: Yeah.
Speaker 1: So there's like there's like a period of time where
Speaker 1: I have to stop with the note. So so I'll i'll,
Speaker 1: I'll practice for a couple of weeks, I'll write the song,
Speaker 1: practice for a couple of weeks, I'll record it and
Speaker 1: then and then, like I said, I'll sing along with
Speaker 1: it and then and then I just have to put
Speaker 1: the notebook aside and try to remember the lyrics as
Speaker 1: I'm going, and then, like if I get stuck at
Speaker 1: a point, you pull it out real quick, look at it.
Speaker 7: And then I tend to my my mind tends to
Speaker 7: create like patterns.
Speaker 1: So if you if you asked me to sing any
Speaker 1: part of my song right now, like like even the
Speaker 1: start of a verse, if I didn't start at the beginning, okay,
Speaker 1: I'll have a hard time remembering. I have to start
Speaker 1: from the beginning of the song and then sing through
Speaker 1: it like ABC's you know.
Speaker 2: If you don't start from the beginning, it's hard to
Speaker 2: just pick up in the middle of the alphabet and
Speaker 2: got right, yes.
Speaker 7: Exactly, yep, yep, yep. So it's like that with my lyrics. Yeah, oh,
Speaker 7: what did you say?
Speaker 1: You're on your third verse in in halfway through you
Speaker 1: talked about this, this, this, I I have to think
Speaker 1: about it and I have to go, what did I
Speaker 1: talk about that?
Speaker 2: Yeah?
Speaker 1: And then and then reread it and then remember what
Speaker 1: the what the metaphor meant? To me at the time,
Speaker 1: or or or what I was trying to portray with
Speaker 1: the with the the selection of words that I use.
Speaker 7: Yeap, yeah, yeah, so it is.
Speaker 2: That makes sense. That makes sense if you're just joining us,
Speaker 2: we're talking with six Minds Combined. Give you your real name?
Speaker 2: Of course is Rike Everheart. Where does the name six
Speaker 2: Minds Combined come from?
Speaker 7: So that was that was the story.
Speaker 1: You know, so way back in the day when I
Speaker 1: first started making music, I started when I was eighteen.
Speaker 1: I listened to eminem second album and and lost my mind.
Speaker 1: I was like this, this, this thirty year old white
Speaker 1: dude from Detroit can do this. I was like, I'll
Speaker 1: give it a try. So I tried it, and you know,
Speaker 1: and now we're here today. But repeat the question real quick.
Speaker 2: Well the name where where does the name?
Speaker 7: Okay?
Speaker 2: Okay?
Speaker 1: So, so I started out, I was like, oh, well,
Speaker 1: what kind of name can I use? And I was
Speaker 1: super into ICP at the time. Okay, and the whole
Speaker 1: Psychopathic Records thing, so so, and I really liked the
Speaker 1: I'm gonna give you one of the names.
Speaker 8: It was.
Speaker 1: So the first name I picked was Psycho Dragon. I
Speaker 1: really like the the aspect of the dragon, the powerful,
Speaker 1: you know, like the mythological power behind it. Yeah, and
Speaker 1: then and now I'm a little psycho, you know, And
Speaker 1: I was listening to that that, you know, like crazy
Speaker 1: killing Spree, all sorts of awesome, great, great music. But
Speaker 1: it's all for fun, you know, of course. And so
Speaker 1: that was a way for me to get all my
Speaker 1: aggressions out without doing things actually aggressive.
Speaker 7: I can.
Speaker 1: I can put my thoughts and my feelings and way
Speaker 1: over exaggerate them and then put them into a song
Speaker 1: and have fun with it. So I realized in while
Speaker 1: I was making that music that that's not all I
Speaker 1: wanted to do. I wanted to make other kinds of music.
Speaker 1: And I was like, the name psycho dragon doesn't really
Speaker 1: work with all the stuff that I'm doing. So so
Speaker 1: I've had a couple of nicknames given to me people
Speaker 1: from people over the years. So so I pulled one
Speaker 1: of those nicknames in and I was like, oh, this
Speaker 1: can be this can be like the the younger, happier,
Speaker 1: funnier version of me.
Speaker 2: And then.
Speaker 1: And then it just it just went from there, you know,
Speaker 1: And and eventually it became six different characters that I've
Speaker 1: created based on certain aspects of my personality and and
Speaker 1: and what I want to put out there. And the
Speaker 1: the really fun thing with this is I'm pushing this
Speaker 1: style and the type of music that I'm making. Now
Speaker 1: this is it's not all I make. I'm all over
Speaker 1: the board. And eventually, you know, those other characters are
Speaker 1: going to start popping up and the fans will get
Speaker 1: to see other sides of of the whole Six Minds combined.
Speaker 1: A universe really will put it there. So so I
Speaker 1: don't wanna. I don't want to say like I'm biting
Speaker 1: off of I c. P. And there's six Jokers cards
Speaker 1: or anything like that, but but that that sparked the
Speaker 1: idea it's not Six Minds combined because of the Six
Speaker 1: Jokers cards, that it's not related. It just I just
Speaker 1: happened to come up with the six different names and
Speaker 1: actually went with Schizo for a little while, you know,
Speaker 1: like schizophrenic schitzo. I was like, that's easier than trying
Speaker 1: to tell everybody all my names. And oh, because my
Speaker 1: friend that I was working at the time, Lunchbox, He's like,
Speaker 1: I'm sick of trying to remember all these names, dude,
Speaker 1: I'm just going to call you schizo. But at the
Speaker 1: time there was somebody else that was going by that
Speaker 1: same name.
Speaker 2: That's it. That's the exact thought I had when he
Speaker 2: said that. It's like somebody else is already probably usn't
Speaker 2: it anyway? I mean, it's too obviously exactly exactly.
Speaker 1: So I had Actually I wrote a song and I
Speaker 1: was I was singing through the lyrics, and in the
Speaker 1: lyrics it said with these six minds combined, and it
Speaker 1: clicked right there. So I wrote the name before I
Speaker 1: ever even decided that that was going to be my
Speaker 1: new name. Interesting, and then and then it all just
Speaker 1: it all just fell together, you know, like the whole
Speaker 1: six MC thing, six minds combined. But then I'm an
Speaker 1: m C and oh yeah, yeah, So it's so it's
Speaker 1: all you know, it's I love multiple meanings, yes, multiple
Speaker 1: layer meanings of things, and I do that a lot
Speaker 1: with my lyrics to they they call them like double
Speaker 1: entendres or whatever. You take in the same word and
Speaker 1: you're using two different meanings, but you're putting it together
Speaker 1: and it sounds it sounds good together, it sounds smooth.
Speaker 7: Yeah.
Speaker 2: The great thing about it my name like six minds combined,
Speaker 2: as as opposed to something like schizo is. You know,
Speaker 2: the the chances are are probably infinitesimally small that you're
Speaker 2: gonna come across somebody else who says, hey, I've already
Speaker 2: got that name six minds combined, you.
Speaker 1: Know exactly nobody, nobody has that name. Yeah, and I
Speaker 1: actually I get complimented on it all the time. They're like, wow,
Speaker 1: that is that's a really interesting name. How'd you come
Speaker 1: up with it? Yeah, you know, and and it's it's
Speaker 1: it's so great to say that, like it just came
Speaker 1: up with itself, you know, like I didn't choose that name.
Speaker 7: It chose me, you know.
Speaker 1: So it's it's really like one of those serendipitous things
Speaker 1: that you know, it was it was if you believe
Speaker 1: in fate or whatever, it was meant to be. Everything
Speaker 1: just just kind of happened the way it did, you know.
Speaker 1: And uh, the same thing with the music doing something
Speaker 1: with it.
Speaker 10: You know.
Speaker 1: I met Eleanor at the perfect time when I was
Speaker 1: ready to do this, and and she was like I
Speaker 1: need to do this with you, you know, and it's
Speaker 1: we've we've we've got a great partnership. She often asks me,
Speaker 1: are you getting your money's worth?
Speaker 7: Because I pay.
Speaker 1: I pay a subscription to to New Hampshire Underground for
Speaker 1: the services, and I definitely at this moment I pay
Speaker 1: in more then I get financially out of it. Like
Speaker 1: I don't book enough shows to to get paid enough
Speaker 1: to cover that. But but that's the immediate go. You're building, right,
Speaker 1: You're building a career. And and you know, once I,
Speaker 1: once I get past that that thing where I'm where
Speaker 1: I'm getting paid for every show as opposed to doing
Speaker 1: free shows often because I tend to do a lot
Speaker 1: of free shows, Yeah, then that'll pay for itself.
Speaker 10: You know.
Speaker 1: I spend one hundred and sixty bucks a month for
Speaker 1: the the VIP membership, and I get I get a
Speaker 1: weekly meetings. We meet for an hour or two hour,
Speaker 1: three hours. Sometimes we go over our plans, our goals.
Speaker 1: We we decide, you know, what's the next step we
Speaker 1: want to take. And and then while we're doing all
Speaker 1: that stuff, she's she's reaching out and she's booking me shows.
Speaker 1: And like I said, I've done two shows a month
Speaker 1: if not more since I started working with her. And
Speaker 1: and I've gotten so much exposure. I've met so many,
Speaker 1: so many other artists and and uh, it's just it's
Speaker 1: it's like a steady wave, dude. It keeps growing and
Speaker 1: growing and that's excellent. So I'm I'm leaps and bounds
Speaker 1: farther than I expected to be a year into into
Speaker 1: this career. And if it keeps going the way it's going,
Speaker 1: I'm gonna be You're gonna be fighting with with with
Speaker 1: like uh like Fox News on who's on Who's going
Speaker 1: to interview six? But h But it's like I said,
Speaker 1: it's all about the community. It's all about you know,
Speaker 1: bringing the people that we we have in our circle
Speaker 1: up with us. You know, if if I make it,
Speaker 1: I'm not the only one making it. It's it's everybody
Speaker 1: who's had a part in in this in my life.
Speaker 1: And you know, it's it's and you notice I do
Speaker 1: that all the time. I'm always plugging my friends. Yeah,
Speaker 1: So it's it's, uh, it's an experience and going places excellent.
Speaker 2: Absolutely, let's play another track. We're gonna play let's see
Speaker 2: intense intense. Yeah, this is good, This is good.
Speaker 7: I actually I got something to say about this.
Speaker 4: Yeah.
Speaker 1: My sister who lives in Wisconsin, she wanted to do
Speaker 1: a song with me. Yeah, she's she's my younger, younger sister.
Speaker 1: I was twelve years old when she was born, and
Speaker 1: I was really into music throughout most of my adolescents
Speaker 1: and everything. So she kind of picked that up from me,
Speaker 1: and she really really got into like chorus and singing
Speaker 1: and everything like that. And she I think she's a
Speaker 1: in a professional chorus right now, Oh okay, and she's
Speaker 1: I forgot how. It's like twenty four to twenty five.
Speaker 7: Something like that.
Speaker 2: Okay, but she.
Speaker 1: Actually she might be older than that now I don't know. Anyways,
Speaker 1: she is featured on this now song.
Speaker 2: Oh nice, all right, check this out. This is six
Speaker 2: minds combined and the track is intense.
Speaker 1: What I'm well aware, I'm barely there. I'm scared, but
Speaker 1: I can't be the bearer fairly wearing you about what
Speaker 1: I'm sharing, which there went back into the past to
Speaker 1: the facts that I've been trying to change elected truth
Speaker 1: is this on this but you won't see me, but
Speaker 1: I won't see the danger change yourself, which if appears
Speaker 1: and sees this stuff before religious here. I need to
Speaker 1: be the fearless, be the leader that the experience they
Speaker 1: bring us into the future, futures fading into memory. My
Speaker 1: enemies are me believing I'm just sleeping. Dreams are within reach,
Speaker 1: but reaching that will mean no, that will be the reason.
Speaker 1: But the seam that's bringing these unseemly demons to the
Speaker 1: fraik and change it faith. This made the state of
Speaker 1: state the stakes a verson, no decision made, but it's
Speaker 1: a given.
Speaker 5: T consensus. Answering my questions, You just claiming the same thing, perfection,
Speaker 5: breaking waves in great lakes and break into.
Speaker 1: Change nothing guys and racing sailing new seas to please
Speaker 1: the senses.
Speaker 5: Soon we too may be doomed to trenches. So we
Speaker 5: do what we do to wend this head This violence,
Speaker 5: it's senseless.
Speaker 4: Why can't wait? Just read those to change it?
Speaker 1: Intensify the estify the lens to find defense against the
Speaker 1: sensitive that sentence, the sentences insensitive to what they need
Speaker 1: their supper bring that suffocate those best to ring and downing,
Speaker 1: crownding up the rabbl grappling with how to get a
Speaker 1: gripping This existence in this instant it's assistanced by your
Speaker 1: sisters and our brothers, holding us up by the courts,
Speaker 1: connected enough, select enough to maybe start erecting collective bove
Speaker 1: E collected clubs invested in the next above.
Speaker 5: We're gonna make the world a better place. We're not
Speaker 5: a waste of time.
Speaker 4: We're gonna make gold the better place. We'll not a
Speaker 4: waste of time.
Speaker 10: Take insenses, answering my questions, and you just streaming the
Speaker 10: same thing.
Speaker 8: Perfection makes waves and great lakes and breaking you chains,
Speaker 8: offing gas and racing, sailing new seas too.
Speaker 5: Please. The sense is soon we too. It may be
Speaker 5: June to trenches.
Speaker 4: So we do we do to wend this and this violence?
Speaker 3: It sends this.
Speaker 4: Why can't we just be the ones June change?
Speaker 2: I love it. That is intense six minds combined with
Speaker 2: his sister very cool. That is so cool. Yeah, I
Speaker 2: love that track.
Speaker 4: Hey by the Way too.
Speaker 2: Something I wanted to ask you and almost frolling about
Speaker 2: this and then but I was singing about it the
Speaker 2: other night when I was listening to these Are you
Speaker 2: a fan of Nate Dog? Yes, yea, because sometimes when
Speaker 2: you're singing, when you're not rapping but you're doing more singing,
Speaker 2: remind me of him his case, because he had a
Speaker 2: unique way of singing. So for people who don't remember
Speaker 2: Nate Dog, because I think he's passed away, I think
Speaker 2: a while ago. Maybe I don't know, but they're like
Speaker 2: like in the nineties and early two thousands, he would
Speaker 2: he would sing the hook on a lot of hip
Speaker 2: hop songs, a lot of big hip hop songs. So
Speaker 2: even if you don't know who Nate Dog is, if
Speaker 2: you're a fan of hip hop at all, trust me
Speaker 2: you've heard him. He's on a lot of those tracks.
Speaker 2: And uh, but your your cadence when you sing reminds
Speaker 2: me of him.
Speaker 7: That's cool. I appreciate that.
Speaker 2: Yeah, yeah, your voice isn't as deep as his, because
Speaker 2: nobody's voice was as deep as as But yeah, I
Speaker 2: was thinking about that the other night. Yeah, yeah, absolutely absolutely.
Speaker 2: So you know, the time does go quickly, and we
Speaker 2: do have one more track to play in a couple
Speaker 2: of minutes. But I want to make sure too that
Speaker 2: everybody knows, well, first of all, when's your next show?
Speaker 1: So my next show is going to be in downtown
Speaker 1: Nashua during the Winter Stroll. Okay, I am taking over
Speaker 1: Poties Restaurant. Okay, and I think that time slot is
Speaker 1: five forty five to nine.
Speaker 2: Okay.
Speaker 1: I was gonna be performing with a couple other acts,
Speaker 1: but uh, they they backed out for some reason or
Speaker 1: they couldn't make it or whatever. So so I was
Speaker 1: asked by the director h executive, the director of the
Speaker 1: the Winter Stroll, yeah if I could fill the time,
Speaker 1: and I was like, yeah, I'll figure it out. So
Speaker 1: so I'm gonna, I'm gonna get a couple other artists
Speaker 1: and I'm gonna we're gonna, we're gonna be there at
Speaker 1: uh at the Winter Stroll excellent at photies from five
Speaker 1: forty five till nine.
Speaker 2: Okay, and w when when is that again?
Speaker 7: That is November twenty ninth.
Speaker 2: November twenty ninth, okay, yeah, excellent, excellent, And uh oh
Speaker 2: you should remind people too about the open mic because
Speaker 2: that happens every week, right.
Speaker 1: Uh no, it's once a month, once a month, yes, sorry,
Speaker 1: one once a month a positive street art Okay. I
Speaker 1: usually try to post something about it, but yeah, usually
Speaker 1: the the middle of the month on a Friday. Yeah,
Speaker 1: from six to nine pm. I'm really looking for for
Speaker 1: audience for for and for uh So, if if you
Speaker 1: do perform things, yes, I would love to have you,
Speaker 1: but I also want your friends, yes, and your family
Speaker 1: and everything, and you know, bring everybody. It's it's it's
Speaker 1: really laid back experience. You know, there's no pressure. You know,
Speaker 1: I make mistakes all the time, and that's that's the
Speaker 1: best place to do it because because you're there with
Speaker 1: your friends exactly, you know, and and and and everybody
Speaker 1: is going to make mistakes, and and that's how we learn,
Speaker 1: that's how we grow exactly.
Speaker 7: Yeah.
Speaker 1: So I I would really love for for anybody, uh
Speaker 1: any age. You know, it's an all ages thing. So
Speaker 1: and we we try to be uh age appropriate with
Speaker 1: with our content as well. So yeah, so if you
Speaker 1: if you are a gangster rapper and you're talking about
Speaker 1: killing people and all that kind of stuff, let's let's
Speaker 1: leave those those songs at home and we'll bring the
Speaker 1: family friendly songs. But yeah, yeah, so Positive Street Art
Speaker 1: forty eight Bridge Street, third floor. Once a month we
Speaker 1: do we do the open mic there. It's called vicas Fox.
Speaker 2: Okay, very good, very good. And where should people go
Speaker 2: to find out more about about you? About six minds combined?
Speaker 2: Where's the best place to go?
Speaker 1: You can hit up Facebook, you can hit up Instagram.
Speaker 1: I have an Instagram, I have my music is on
Speaker 1: all the platforms. I go through the distributor CD Baby
Speaker 1: and so there's over two hundred platforms that they uploaded to.
Speaker 7: You can use my music on reels, on tiktoks, on
Speaker 7: Facebook reels.
Speaker 2: Yeah, so excellent, excellent, what else? What else?
Speaker 7: Yeah?
Speaker 1: I have a six Minds combined Facebook, but I also
Speaker 1: have a Rick everheard Facebook?
Speaker 2: Okay, and.
Speaker 1: You can follow both of them. You can follow them.
Speaker 1: Reach out to me, you know, talk to me. I
Speaker 1: love I love collaborating with people. If if somebody would
Speaker 1: like to do some work with me or book me,
Speaker 1: they can contact eleanor Luna at New Hampshire Underground.
Speaker 2: Yep, New Hampshire Underground dot org. This is the website. Yeah, yeah, yeah,
Speaker 2: and also too, you know, if you're a musician, obviously
Speaker 2: a lot of people, a lot of musicians, a lot
Speaker 2: of people in the industry listen to the show. Yeah,
Speaker 2: check out New Hampshire Underground yep.
Speaker 1: Oh definitely, yeah, absolutely, they're yeah, they're they're pushing great
Speaker 1: bands all the time. They have they have a venue
Speaker 1: called Terminus.
Speaker 2: Oh yeah, Terminus.
Speaker 1: It's it's so great and they're expanding their their space
Speaker 1: this coming year. So so yeah, yeah, Jack, definitely check
Speaker 1: out New Hampshire Underground. Check out Terminous. Yeah, and uh,
Speaker 1: and you can find me everywhere.
Speaker 2: So yeah, absolutely, your name is very googleable. Six mind
Speaker 2: is combined, which is like we talked about earlier, it's
Speaker 2: important to have a name like that.
Speaker 7: Yep.
Speaker 2: Very good, very good. Well, thank you so much in
Speaker 2: a moment. So we're gonna play this track flow with
Speaker 2: who I Am?
Speaker 7: Who I Am?
Speaker 2: Friend lazy, Yeah, what can you tell us about this collaboration?
Speaker 1: So I actually I made the song. I wrote the
Speaker 1: song and there was some open spots in it, and
Speaker 1: I was thinking. I was like, I was like, who
Speaker 1: would sound the best in these places?
Speaker 7: It just it just hit me.
Speaker 1: I was like I was at a show or something
Speaker 1: listening to to Lacey perform ye, and I was like,
Speaker 1: just the sound in the groove, it would just sound
Speaker 1: so good in the song flow.
Speaker 2: Yeah.
Speaker 1: So so I I hit her up and she she
Speaker 1: jumped on it. She's like, yeah, I'll have some I
Speaker 1: have some keys for you and all some lyrics. Within
Speaker 1: days she came back with with with that, and then
Speaker 1: we hooked up. She she came over. I recorded her
Speaker 1: stuff on my my home studio and then and then
Speaker 1: brought it to mister Goodbars at Toy Box Studios and
Speaker 1: and he worked as magic and excellent and uh and
Speaker 1: we created we created Flow.
Speaker 7: Yeah, who I Am?
Speaker 2: Love it, love it. So we will end the segment
Speaker 2: with this. But if you are listening live on Saturday,
Speaker 2: stick around. We've got plenty more show to come. Jamie
Speaker 2: Higgs is going to be joining us at the top
Speaker 2: of the hour. Uh, and we're gonna be talking with
Speaker 2: with him, and uh. We we've got a We've got
Speaker 2: a lot of a lot a lot to the show today,
Speaker 2: so stick around. But we're gonna end this hour with
Speaker 2: this again. This is Flow. This says six Minds combined
Speaker 2: featuring Who I Am. I love this a lot and Reck.
Speaker 2: Thank you again so much, Thanks so much for having me.
Speaker 2: Man absolutely.
Speaker 5: Breaking down my mood, faith to crowd round, my food
Speaker 5: in place found in my home. I'm getting stones so
Speaker 5: I can.
Speaker 1: Breathe, so I can see you around the smoke. I
Speaker 1: focus on the best and let the world flow. Sometimes
Speaker 1: I feel like I'm waiting for life, kneeling, freaking patience
Speaker 1: poll inside my mind is breaking, my it's waning, fading greatness.
Speaker 10: Mistakes were made, chances a wasted.
Speaker 5: Has sticks were.
Speaker 10: Wasted, chances clay Man, Oh, the game was staged I
Speaker 10: had to play.
Speaker 4: Yeah, hope's worth the pain. You might have to waigh yet, Yeah, we.
Speaker 11: Flow through life through strife, through pain, We go through
Speaker 11: thinking we can fight the rain in spite. The rain
Speaker 11: washes all away, the water streams down the street and
Speaker 11: into the drain. But where does it go from there?
Speaker 11: And where do we go from here?
Speaker 5: And who is it that will care if we become
Speaker 5: something unclear?
Speaker 1: Who is really on the sad when the tram comes,
Speaker 1: when our arm comes to.
Speaker 5: The end, who will send it with us?
Speaker 12: Sinner, she's flowing, They're showing us there, and Dean is
Speaker 12: growing with no lights to fight back the darkness and
Speaker 12: golfing us whole as the bricks stack these.
Speaker 5: Walls that we built with no seals for the knickknacks.
Speaker 13: Sit back, listen to the sick track with the metal
Speaker 13: kid knap the sinners out, you give back, don't let
Speaker 13: them without you beIN met them with that bird trap,
Speaker 13: that power flowing in attack, the metal bit of cake
Speaker 13: back a kid that.
Speaker 1: Look inside and try to see the lab with Pinner's
Speaker 1: like a seed that Biden's up and the right's the
Speaker 1: tough enough to take the lead. I agree to believe
Speaker 1: that we can be the greatest team. The way the
Speaker 1: seams all tighter, dreams of feats.
Speaker 5: Compete with master Jeep, that we fall.
Speaker 1: The deeper creeping sneaks inside your mind, depleting yourself worth,
Speaker 1: increasing fortunes for the fearless.
Speaker 5: Be fearless, steer us towards a more conclusive future. Suit
Speaker 5: you up like melan haa haa than the.
Speaker 1: Double no Hell's kitchen, dismissing paths, the fact that violence
Speaker 1: the active side, thats won't stall the tyrants, won't halt
Speaker 1: the virus behind the eyelids. Try this for the side,
Speaker 1: the difference assistance between the sides. For instance, your instinct
Speaker 1: sorts always in synct's distinct, thinking like and they this link,
Speaker 1: don't sink to depths that.
Speaker 5: Tests the break, don't drink they're COOLID.
Speaker 1: But with the deep dist think but whether the deep
Speaker 1: distinct don't drink they're cool aid, But with the dentist think, well,
Speaker 1: whether the distink you are.
Speaker 4: Let's take a lot with success.
Speaker 1: Coming up with nothing, I aim to become something, telling
Speaker 1: myself I'm not enough, just take what c Z coming.
Speaker 5: But nothing was easy coming.
Speaker 1: I had to work to just be someone getting vibe
Speaker 1: by dealing pies and dreaming out the dungeons. Bleeding of
Speaker 1: my thumbs when I should be pumping and elbows draining up.
Speaker 1: My funds went up nothing but a swelled nose from
Speaker 1: walking into walls that stole in.
Speaker 5: So my dead grows, my bank rolls non existent. I
Speaker 5: almost just let go. My chest throws.
Speaker 1: I couldn't breathe. I needed to run, I needed to flee.
Speaker 1: I needed to see my family. I needed to be
Speaker 1: disseminately immediately, I ceased to be, and we became what
Speaker 1: you all see, six minds alike but not just right,
Speaker 1: combined eternal lead. We won the fight by changing the rules.
Speaker 1: The duels become a draw. We own the night by
Speaker 1: being the light, the brightest of them all.
Speaker 5: If we scream.
Speaker 1: Aloud the strawbell failed, we can be that piece of straw.
Speaker 1: The camel begs us for a break. Who are reached
Speaker 1: and either call.
Speaker 5: You?
Speaker 2: You came to fire?
Speaker 4: Do you hear you? Get me? Go ahead, said yourself
Speaker 4: free
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