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The new yo gotti
The new yo gotti








the new yo gotti

“I did that song at Young Avenue Studio with Drumma Boy,” Gotti remembers. One of these tracks is the aforementioned single “We Can Get It On,” the title implication ranging from a backseat lunch-break assignation to something more long-lasting: “I know the pain and all the you been through/I just want to see your dreams come true,” Gotti raps.Īrguably the album’s strongest track, the song’s existence is almost accidental. (Despite his so-called “gangsta rapper” reputation, Gotti estimates that women make up 65 to 75 percent of the audience at his shows.) The album gives a pretty good sense of Gotti’s range, from aggressive tracks like “Harder” (with Miami-based star Rick Ross) and “Cases” to more soulful material - singles where Gotti ably plays the roughneck Romeo. "I know the pain and all the you been through/I just want to see your dreams come true" - Yo Gotti from "We Can Get It On"

the new yo gotti

“They put the album out without a lot of promotion, I think,” Gotti says of RCA, “but from the perspective of the fans actually getting to get it, I’m good with that.”

the new yo gotti

“We’re just about getting good music to the people however we need to go about that, whether it’s an album or mixtape or single.”Įven on Live From the Kitchen’s life-story opener “Testimony,” Gotti admits that he doesn’t trust record labels. “It’s just more product out there to me,” Gotti says of the Live From the Kitchen release. And he released several high-profile singles: “Five Star” (Fall 2009), Lil Wayne duet “Women Lie, Men Lie” (Spring 2010), “We Can Get it On” (Summer 2011), and the current “Single.” He’s released innumerable self-released “mixtape” collections - usually recorded in two- to four-day sessions. Gotti - who’s reached a wider audience in his hometown via regular appearances at the University of Memphis basketball’s annual “Memphis Madness” event - wasn’t exactly without product in the multiyear wait for Live From the Kitchen. Swapping the songs out is not a thing to me.” But that’s not a problem with me because I record so much. That sent me back to the drawing board again. “The first set of songs I turned in leaked out, and that sent us back to the drawing board. “The first reason, I turned in the album maybe three times,” Gotti says, explaining the rolling delays. And, for Gotti, Live From the Kitchen arrives after literally years of delays.

the new yo gotti

But being on a major label is, for most artists, not what it used to be. You might think this would be a life-changing event for Gotti, who has ascended to the top of the Memphis rap scene in the years between official albums. Released by RCA, it’s Gotti’s first label-released album since 2006’s Back 2 Da Basics, for prominent national indie TVT. In January, Memphis rapper Yo Gotti - born Mario Mims - witnessed the release of his major-label debut, Live From the Kitchen.










The new yo gotti