Luce Cannon - Cook Out (Wack I know Your Bitch Ass Ain't Talking) (WSHH ...
Rolling 60 Affiliate Luce Cannon Speaks On Piru's Wack100 In New Release Titled "CookOut" - 8 Million Views In 5 Days On World Star Hip Hop
Los
Angeles--This Fall, Rolling Sixties Gang Affiliate, Luce Cannon extends
the summer as he serves street heat with “Cookout,” an old
school-styled gangsta rap beat, dictating true street rules as he disses
rapper Wack 100. The lyrics delivered on “Cookout” are raw and
authentic, much like his World Star Hip Hop diss of Wack 100, which
received over eight million views in five days.
“I don’t sugarcoat anything,” said Luce. “I am the streets and just like the streets, I go hard
consistently.
If people don’t like the truth, they won’t like me, but if they respect
the truth, they will love me.” Luce speaks respected truth on
“Cookout,” because his mission was never to be a rapper. He stumbled on
this new career when he decided to send messages through the music that
he loved.
Truthfully,
gangsters rhyming over beats is not a new thing. Although in today’s
crowded rap music market, it’s difficult to tell the difference from the
real gangsters and the studio technicians, who design their music and
lyrics to sound as authentic as possible, without stirring anything up.
Luce stirs the pot and gets everything and everyone boiling.
Luce stirs things up outside of the studio as well.
A
young man was killed in Inglewood, California and both The Game and
Wack 100 were “out of alignment,” according to Luce Cannon, so he
created a World Star Hip Hop post to send direct messages to both
rappers. That post was seen by more than eight million people, who
obviously agreed with Luce and/or supported his statements.
Following
the massive support for those messages, Luce Cannon plans to release
more messages in music over beats that he himself has produced. Luce
Cannon is a self-contained music machine.
“I
produce all of my own tracks,” he said, “so the result is exactly what I
want it to be. I can sing or I can rap, but the point is that I’m a
thinker and I want to make people think when they listen to my truth.”
The
first single, “Cookout” was crafted as a testament and tribute to true
artistry, placing skills over tricky hooks and tracks.
“I
made that single in thirty minutes,” he said. “I had no pen or paper,
and there was no smoke or drink in the studio. I may have had a red bull
because I balance my energy. Everything I put out has to be good
music.” Next up is the single “Ball Out,” featuring Drakeo The Ruler.
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