One night at Tree Sound (Studios) he was there and played me some tracks. I had heard some mixtapes from Burn One but I didn't know he was a producer. Rittz: I met Burn-One at a Yelawolf show when he first put out Trunk Music. How did you link up with him, and how did the mixtape project come about? Everybody that comes to Atlanta that says they live here, a lot of them live here in Gwinnett.ĬONCRETE: Your mixtape "White Jesus" has a lot of tracks produced by DJ Burn One. And just letting (North Side) have a voice in Atlanta. That's pretty much where that comes from, just writing about my experiences growing up here. It's a huge population, and it's a big drug area. It's just a lot of shit goes down here, cause it's a lot of people. If you're not from here you'd think it's a great place. I was just trying to represent where I was from and put it on the map a little bit.The thing about Gwinnett is you get to live both sides of life. There's actually a lot of rappers reppin' from the North Side, but nobody really got it to that point yet. You know you got the East Side, the West Side, the South Side and this is the North Side. Now it's gotten to be so many people here, there's a movement from here. When I was growing up rapping, it was just the suburbs of Atlanta. ![]() ![]() Gwinnett County is like a suburb, like a Metropolitan area of Atlanta. ![]() Can you tell us about Gwinnett County, where you're from, and about that record? CONCRETE: Your song "770" was your first regional hit in the Atlanta area.
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