NinoSoSupremey

Who are you?

I'm NinoSoSupremey, from Fort Worth, Texas.

Who inspired you to get into music? 

My auntie. She was a musician first. When I was a kid, bro, she used to rap around the house while babysitting me. There are video tapes of me when I was like two or three, rapping with a remote in my hand. Like I can't wait til I get ahold of that. So yeah, my auntie. If we’re talking about musicians, I would  say Wayne, Jeezy, Kendrick. When Wayne dropped Nino Brown Story Pt. 2, a documentary on him, it was the first time a musician that I fucked with was rapping in the studio and showing us what he's doing in the studio. So when I got my hand on that CD, it was just watching him in the studio recording. And he was giving us game and tips throughout the whole documentary. I was like, damn, this is what I want to do. So since that documentary came out, I knew for sure.

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Where do you want to see your career in the next few years?

As far as 2021, I’m trying to get more personal with my fans, man. I started to build that last year because I was really outside. I was promoting my album on cars and I was visiting college campuses. So there was a personal connection with every person I gave that card. So I want to be more on the streets, but more than just Fort Worth and Dallas. I want to travel to LA, Austin, Colorado. Fuck it. I want to be on the streets, not just social media. I really want to touch the people. So I'm gonna see how good I can do that and see where that goes. 

I really just want to make my mark man. There's so much weird shit going on now. There really isn’t a top guy really because there's so many different crowds. So I just want to have my own cult following. A strong cult following that understands me for me, understands those around me and just stays loyal. So I see myself with an enormous fan base with a nice fluid team of people I can trust. That's about it, bro. 

How important is it for you to utilize other artists from the metroplex?

It has to be really natural, bro. It's just, I'm saying I'm real personal, bro. If I get on any track, it’s personal to me. So if I feel like you aren’t on the same track I'm on, it’s a no. This is hitting home for me. This is real life. I can't just put anybody on. I'm not talking about the club. I'm talking about that one night in September. And if you're one night in whatever month, ain't no nowhere close to that, then I don't want you on this song.

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So what are some things within the Dallas Fort worth area that you as an artist or as a creative wish were better? 

I just wished it was just more coexisting. It's weird because there's a lot of like beef shit going on. It's not too many people reaching back. So I feel like if you do get your respect, a lot of people have pride when they finally make it, because it's like everybody got to do it by their damn self. So once everybody gets to that point, ain't nobody really looking back because ain't nobody looked back for them. It shouldn't be viewed like that. But I mean, that's just, that's how I'm looking at it. And if it was bro, oh my God, just imagine if everyone in the city was putting on everyone else from the city. It'd be crazy out here, but I mean it's cool the way it is, bro. It just makes it more priceless, I guess. I'm a competitive dude at the end of the day. l don’t mind being the underdog. I'm not going to be mad at you, but I'm going to make my mark for sure, and you're going to feel it for sure. I think I have more of a feel for that. That's what I live for. So I'm not really asking for shit at the end of the day. If everybody was friendly, it'll take away from the sport. I'm a rap head. I was a fan of rap in the early two thousands. So at some point it got to be some type of competition there. If it was all cool, it'd be cool. But like I said, it's cool the way it is now, bro. I'm there.

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