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February 12, 2025 48 mins
Episode 203: In this episode, Mark is joined by Hip Hop artist Louie Sincere. We discuss his new project entitled "Sincero". We also talk about his coming up in Framingham, Massachusetts, the concept for his album, Honda Civics, Asics, musical influences and much more. 

Check out Louie Sincere on Bandcamp-https://louiesincere.bandcamp.com/album/sincero-2

Mark also pays tribute to the passing of his friend and radio show host, Brian "Flyin' B" Stinson. A new song from Musik G and The Underground Army "It's Going Down" featuring Whirlwind D, King Topaz, Danjah Stand Clear and DJ Modesty is featured in the segment, dedicated to Brian and his show "Fusion Radio".

This episode is dedicated to the memory of Brian "Flyin B" Stinson

Check out our sponsor Super 7, for the latest in action figures and merch featuring pop culture icons. Click the link for the latest figures and more- https://super7.com/INFINITEBANTERPODCAST
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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
Yeah, you're tuning into the Infinite Banter podcast. Louis sin
Sid DJ sound Waves.

Speaker 2 (00:37):
Here it is another episode of the Infinite Banter podcast.
What is going on? My name is Mark Charlack aka
DJ Soundwave. Big up for checking out the show. Got
another one here, got my man Luis Sincere, straight out
of Massachusetts, coming on talking about his new album Sincetto
and everybody listening to make sure you go check it out.
It's I'm band Camp and we're gonna play a couple of
tracks in this episode. Definitely stay tuned. Had a lot

(00:57):
of fun talking with him. And also later on in
this episode, I'm gonna play a track from a guest
who has been on the show multiple times. You know
him his music g Underground Army, you know, play a
track from him. It's called It's Going Down And we'll
play that later on in the episode, after the interview
with Louis Sinceres, So stay tuned for that. A lot
going on here, but before we go forward, we always
go back on the last episode we had on Tony

(01:19):
Boy talking about his new album patients Pace. So here's
a clip from that last episode of Tony Boy here
on the Infinite Bench of podcast flashback.

Speaker 3 (01:28):
Make our music less aggressive, you know, because you know,
the Upstate sound is real, right, real, you know, real tough, real,
real dark. So like we we had talked and just
kind of really wanted to go back to our roots,
you know what I'm saying, because we really loved Jay
Diller and you know, try called Quest and you know
all off.

Speaker 4 (01:46):
Starts a rap.

Speaker 3 (01:46):
So that was really just like me trying to follow
my own butt with that, and I was able to
you know, pull some strings and get some really dope
artists on there and really just trying to reformulate my sound.

Speaker 2 (02:00):
Definitely make sure you go back and check out that
episode with Tony Boy talking about Patients Pays, and also
in that episode, I did an Infinite Torture talking about
the movie cyber Zone, or as I'm going to announce
our call it Cyberbone. I think it's also called Droid Gunner.
Has a lot of crazy names because it's a bad
movie and they didn't know how to name it. So
if you want to hear my thoughts on that movie,

(02:20):
go check out that last episode of the Infinite Banter podcast,
which you can hear on all platforms. Rate to review
it on good Pods, Apple Podcasts, places like that. Check
out the Spotify playlist and the poll questions. The latest
poll question is what's your favorite Mark Singer, TV or movie.
It was pretty easy to put the first couple. It
was like V and you Beast Master. But I struggle

(02:42):
to find six or seven things. So I think V
is winning that poll. So go ahead and vote on
there if you get a chance. Find the show on
Facebook and Instagram, Blue Sky at Infinite Banter Podcast. We
don't do Twitter anymore that those days are done, and
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Get yourself some cool toys, some merch. They got a

(03:04):
new eric being rock Him based on the follow the
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There's also the Third Base ones, the Salt and Pepper ones.
They got Bruce Lee, Figures, Rocky Gi Joe, all that.
So definitely go check out superseven dot com slash Infinite
Banter Podcast. And before we get on with the show,
I got to take a second to recognize and unfortunately

(03:25):
I've done two of these kind of episodes recently. Here's
the third one. Had to dedicate this one to my
guy Bryan Stintson aka Flying B. Me and my guy
DJ rear One, who's been on the show multiple times.
Good friend of mine. We know Flying B from back
in the Columbia College era, going back to like the
late nineties, early two thousands, and one of the most gracious,
kindest people you've ever met. I mean, he's definitely one

(03:48):
of the nicest dudes ever. And he was doing a
radio show up until a few days ago, and he
passed away just a couple of days before I'm recording this,
and just really tough because he's I think he's a
couple of years younger than me, and it's you know,
you start to think about morality and stuff like that
when he started losing people that are around your age.

(04:09):
And the cool thing about him was, I can never
I'd have a guest on the show like music g
for instance already mentioned or SB people like that. You know,
they would ask, do you know anybody else who would
want to interview me or play my music? And he
was the first person I always told him about and
I would introduce them to him, and he was more
than gracious putting them on interviewing them music Jeeve and

(04:30):
went to do an you know, his studio interview with him,
and SPI's been with him. I know King Shams has
been on the show, did an interview with him. I
think Penn Game Classic was going to reach out to him.
I mean, I've had a lot of guests recently and
going back a few years that have all cross paths
with Brian Flying B throughout the years, so he definitely
was one of a kind. I saw on Instagram post

(04:52):
Loupei Fiasco did a post about you know hearing you
know Flying B show and his first verse he ever
wrote was to an intro that was on him show
or something like that. So a lot of great tributes
to fly and be also Clumpy College, a lot of
people who went to school with him there know him
from that. Like I said, he was one of the
nicest dudes I've ever met. I remember I used to
go up to a studio time, which is a room

(05:14):
where you'd like runt out equipment to do your project,
and him, in real one would work in there and
I'd come in there complaining about I don't know Uci
Wally or some nonsense or Bulls Rebuild. You know, man
nas is losing it with this Ucci Wally crap. And
he had this thing where he would take his hands.
We called him lobster hands. He would like hould them
up for like, you know, for like a piece like

(05:34):
trying to get peace in what's going on, because he
was taking a class that was teaching him, you know,
how to remain calm and not look at things in
a negative light. And he always would put that positive
spin on things that I like to complain. I'm a
whiner and a complainer, so he definitely was somebody who
bring you down a notch, be like, Okay, it's not
that serious. Flying Bee is telling me to chill out

(05:54):
a little bit. So I want to pay tribute to
him later on in the show by playing a song
from Music g because I think that's what he would do.
He would get a song and he would play it.
So I'm gonna play a song that I got for
Music Gee, maybe a month or so ago, and I
haven't really had a place to put it. I feel
like this is a good time to do it, you know,
an honor Flying b Let's break its song on here
on the Infinite Banter Podcast. And introduce you guys to
Louis Sincere, who'll be our guests coming up shortly, so

(06:16):
stay tuned for that. So got a lot going on,
so we definitely can dedicate this to Flying B Brian Stinton,
true legend in Chicago radio. Definitely definitely will be missed.
All right, let's get into the show. The Infinite Banter
podcast is not begining to the One and Only King
from Queen's DMC says this, and then it starts, Yo, yo,
what's up?

Speaker 4 (06:32):
This is me DMC to K I and G the
greatest MC in history.

Speaker 2 (06:37):
And right now you're listening to.

Speaker 5 (06:39):
Infinite Banter because we will banter on forever because this
is the only place for all of y'all to ever be.

Speaker 4 (06:46):
I be Infinite Banta.

Speaker 2 (06:51):
Before we talk to Louis Sincere, let's play track from
his new album. Scene said all This track right here
is called eighty six that there's a video for you
on YouTube. You go watch the video. We talk about
it in the of you coming up here. So here
we go eighty six that from Louis Sincere for this
new album Sinceretro. And after this, on the other side
of this track, we're gonna talk to the man himself
about this song, the album and Honda Civics and all
kinds of crazy stuff. So stay tuned. Louis sincere eighty six.

(07:13):
That here on the Infinite Banter Podcast. Let's go.

Speaker 4 (07:19):
Rab cast God's secret Walls.

Speaker 6 (07:23):
Yeah yeah, yeah. These rab Cast guys syncut walls.

Speaker 7 (07:41):
They don't got the balls to come after the ones
in charge saw what I faged.

Speaker 6 (07:45):
From the chains off your neck.

Speaker 7 (07:47):
I learn when you'll receive respect, you get the loyalty
to protect the yamhio. I got inspired from the eighties babies.
The ferocity makes for being smooth with the ladies. You
ain't rocking these mixed what now?

Speaker 6 (07:58):
Fuck that?

Speaker 7 (07:59):
Fuck you pay me free? Sat you while you have
an a duct stool daily either salute a shoe, times
up your cruise, minute your backwards gotta support the Jewel
just put you with your grand pursuits. Had the jewel
cops ask my mama, had the stress to the family,
But I received my Comma check through the checks, hoping fences.
Josh your police proms for ten cent found out that

(08:20):
my home is deceased. Doesn't make sense saying cop liquid
it needs the stress, but made me relent.

Speaker 4 (08:25):
Have me sent for hell then, baby, your man ain't shit?

Speaker 7 (08:28):
Eighty six dad, they not worthy to move a sman
j eighty six at their work is weak gaty six
that he made my hope we leave gaty six day. Baby,
your man ain't shit eighty six d They not worthy
to move a sman jady six d old their work
is weave gaty six day. He made my hope me

(08:49):
leave gaty six day. The game you know what comes
with it. Cops arresting asking why I'm skittish, scales ditch
is weak where we made sure to get the those facts.

Speaker 4 (08:59):
We don't care who you wrong with.

Speaker 7 (09:01):
We were told tags pop on that bitch. I com
koldak oo see to your temple life. Can I give
my float backs flow bag thirty to your face, sixty
to your face, ninety to your face.

Speaker 8 (09:13):
That's a close case.

Speaker 7 (09:15):
The order gotta get being no associate, no cozy shit.
As the race is flying high, No team in just
going to get real selective for resids. My perspective, it
is unique, never perplexing. Fuck the flexing as I have.
They got the jackson see me now what nine crack
his head like soida side the power that hit the pot,
I turn reach out that lead to ticket spot as

(09:35):
boom throw Joey.

Speaker 4 (09:37):
Dan Murphy, hoo doo, it's hot speed.

Speaker 7 (09:39):
Maybe your man ain't shit eighty six, that they not
worthy to move a sman Jady six, that their work
is weak, Gaty six, that he made my home we lead.

Speaker 4 (09:49):
Gaty six, that maybe your man ain't shit eighty six.

Speaker 7 (09:53):
That they not worthy to move a sman Jady six,
that their work is weed Katy six, that he mean
my lead gave me six days?

Speaker 4 (10:15):
What up? Y'all?

Speaker 1 (10:15):
This ex acrobatics, you know our Podeskian human capabilities.

Speaker 9 (10:19):
And right now I'm dropping the Infinite Banter with my homeboy,
DJ sound Wave.

Speaker 4 (10:23):
Check them out, y'all.

Speaker 2 (10:26):
You're tuned into the Infinite Banter podcast. I am DJ
Soundwave and I'm really hyped to bring on. My guest
has a new album out now called Sincetto on the
High Speed Network label rep in Massachusetts. The One and
Only Louis Sincere. What's up, Louis?

Speaker 6 (10:38):
Hey? What's going on?

Speaker 10 (10:39):
Man?

Speaker 6 (10:39):
Good? Good?

Speaker 2 (10:40):
I hope I pronounced that right, because my Spanish is
like high school level from back in the days.

Speaker 6 (10:45):
No, Man, that was good that was really good.

Speaker 2 (10:47):
You go, man, I gotta admit, you know, it's like,
you know, I think a lot of us now with
iPhones and such as, we have that translator app on
the phone and I had to pull it out five
or six times playing your album, and I'm like, man,
let me see what he's saying right here. Let me
let me make sure I understan what he's trying to
relate to us. You know, not the greatest at Spanish
speaking cats that are listening, man, So man, no doubt.

(11:10):
So let people know, you know, we're maybe not familiar
with your work. You know, you know how long you've
been in the game and how long you've been doing
this thing.

Speaker 1 (11:16):
So i'vether reference since like two thousand and nine. You know,
I was a part of this group called Dope Product.
It was with me and my boy Jokes rock well
crazy lyricists we like. In the beginning, it was just
us having fun. Of course, that's how everything starts. And
you know, we literally got a foothold on a lot
of the street politics out here.

Speaker 6 (11:38):
People were really gravitating towards our music.

Speaker 1 (11:40):
And for a while now we you know, at that time,
we were you know, we were you know, figuring out
our flows and all that stuff. And I was just
trying to like find an outlet pretty much, because later
on music kind of became my therapy and I was
able to you know, you know, tune self into into

(12:01):
the writing aspect, you know, and you know, later on
is when stuff started getting serious where there was a
lot of people coming to me man like that was
going through hardships man, and like, yo, I was listening
to your stuff, man, like you know, I like what
you're doing and it's getting me through the day. And

(12:21):
I'm like, yo, you know what that's That's when I
really it piqued my interest in trying to like make
this something serious and go and behold. Soon after, my
brother King author, He's the one that was like, hey, man, like,
what are you doing with all this work?

Speaker 6 (12:37):
And at the time I'm like, oh no, I'm just
throwing it out there.

Speaker 1 (12:39):
He goes, yeah, that's not smart, right, yeah, right, So
then he put me on and and that's when everything's
been smooth sailing. And that's when now I've been able
to really experiment with my work and in terms of
putting the Spanish involved and having like just being myself man,
and showing who I am.

Speaker 2 (12:59):
And that's the ultimate compliment you said earlier there that
when someone comes you're like, yeah, this track or this
music really got me through the day. That's huge because
you know that you struck a nerve as somebody.

Speaker 1 (13:08):
Right, yeah, yeah, And it could be a line, it
could be the whole song, it could be you know,
a lot of people say, hey, man, that struck a
call with me like that that I love what you
said there, and then they become fans and they followed
me and like someone would say, I'll follow you to
the depths of hell.

Speaker 6 (13:22):
Man, it's dope. It's dope.

Speaker 2 (13:25):
That's what's up. And you know, to even talk about
what you just mentioned, you know, so you know, someone's
letting you know, like, hey, you're putting out a lot
of good material. Now let's let's make it reach more people.
Let's get it out there in the right way. And
it only takes a little bit of push, right and now.

Speaker 6 (13:38):
Here you are, right, yeah, certainly, yep, man.

Speaker 2 (13:41):
And talk about the area you're from, Massachusetts, were born there,
you raised there? How what's your uh what's the scene
like there from where you're coming up?

Speaker 6 (13:48):
Yeah? Yeah, man, I was, I was born here in Massachusetts.

Speaker 1 (13:51):
I was born in in Framingham, mass to be exact,
A great, great little area here. You know, Puerto Ricans,
you know, all walk to life here. You know, we
have a really big Brazilian population here too. We had
a little bit of everything, and growing up, you know,
very family oriented, you know. Thankfully I was able to

(14:12):
learn the dudes and don'ts in life and also when
the streets matter of fact too because you know, I
had both sides of those type of families, you know
what I mean, So I was able to learn from both.
And the scene here is you know, I'm grateful to
be a part of this place because that's why I do.

Speaker 6 (14:30):
What I do is for here as well.

Speaker 1 (14:31):
All the people I've come across, all the lessons I've learned,
has been here. I mean, we learn as we go
in life. No matter where you go, you're going to
learn something. But I always love what what I've gone
through here the most because I'm able to reflect on
it and to pass it down to my children and
anyone that needs it.

Speaker 2 (14:49):
So, oh yeah, no doubt, man. And I'm over here
in Chicago. I've never been to Boston or Massachusetts. What's
the uh you know, how close are you to Boston?
Is it close? Kind of far away?

Speaker 6 (14:59):
What's twenty minutes?

Speaker 2 (15:00):
Okay, see right around.

Speaker 6 (15:01):
Fifteen minutes if you really want to get there, so.

Speaker 2 (15:06):
Break some loss speed limits you get their little faster.

Speaker 6 (15:08):
I got you right, right. I mean we're known for traffic.
Man were known for being massholes, as people would say.

Speaker 1 (15:15):
So I'll tell you right now. You want to know
a dirty driver, you come over here, you're find out.

Speaker 2 (15:20):
Oh geez, we got our share here. But maybe you
guys are on another level. I don't know. Oh, we
definitely are man massholes. I never heard that before. All right, well,
I will say this, you're you're definitely not breaking any
speed limits with a Honda Civic. And joking with you

(15:40):
before you came on here the cover of the album.
You got the ninety one Honda Civic shirt. And of
course there's a truck on here called Kilos in the
Honda Civic and the joint is sick. I loved it,
the sample, the way they flipped it. Thank you. You
mentioned a six. I think you're the first person ever
heard talk about Everybody talks about shoes in the song,
but I've never hear anybody reference a six before. I'm
giving you props as far as I know, you are
number one in bringing them up. So talk about that track,

(16:03):
and I guess.

Speaker 6 (16:04):
The comfortable shoe many comfortable shoe.

Speaker 2 (16:07):
Dude, I'm in my late forties. I'm wearing them so.

Speaker 6 (16:11):
Right.

Speaker 2 (16:13):
But yeah, talk about that track. It's one of my
favorite songs on the album for sure.

Speaker 1 (16:17):
Man, thank you so that you know that joint is
is it was? It was a rapid fire approach man,
Like I heard that, I heard that beat, and I
just knew that I had to go off. But I
had to come off like like like sounding and smelling
like money. So that's the first The first thing I

(16:37):
thought of saying was that, like every bar.

Speaker 6 (16:40):
Is a gem, it's it's it's dope.

Speaker 1 (16:43):
I don't like to overhide myself, but I think that
joint is like like when it comes to lyricism, like
I really showed out on that joint and that's you know.

Speaker 6 (16:51):
It also doesn't play on the cover of course, you know.

Speaker 1 (16:56):
Yeah, So I grew up around Hona civics, I mean
Puerto Rican after all, so you.

Speaker 6 (17:01):
Know what I mean. Like it was, it was, it
was dope, and that's my birth year. Actually that's on
that shirt. Everything.

Speaker 1 (17:07):
I try to incorporate a little bit of everything that
I'm doing into the images as well, because you know,
and all too and all totally. It's an art piece
at the end of the day. So if you can
grab those little easter eggs, I think that's what's.

Speaker 6 (17:21):
Dope about music.

Speaker 1 (17:23):
Man' We shouldn't only be solely known as he's a
good lyricist.

Speaker 6 (17:27):
He does this, he does that.

Speaker 1 (17:28):
You know, it's got to be an artful people really
got to take, you know, their art to the ultimate heights,
you know.

Speaker 6 (17:34):
And that's what I did with that, with that joint included.

Speaker 2 (17:37):
Man, that just brings it to another level because now
it's not just a shirt on the cover, it's not
just a track on the song that's your birthier. That's
even crazier. I gotta look for some old seventies cars
that supposedly are classics that I got to look up.
Was afraid to see what kind of hoopedie type cards
are going to be in there. But it's crazy, man.

(18:00):
Oh and and that is definitely a track. When I played,
I was like, man, this is this might be my
favorite song on here. I know, this is this is
that kind of joint. It just spoke to me. So
and that sample with the with the soulful feel on
it and everything, Yeah, kudos man.

Speaker 6 (18:12):
And MWP produced that. He's a good dude. Man.

Speaker 2 (18:15):
Yeah, let's shout out the producers. There's a lot of
different producers on here. It sounds like you just have
one and uh, you know, you've got a lot of
people that helped put this together. Was this something in
the works where you had all these different producers in mind?
How did that come about? Where you're you know, like
like the concept of the album and having different producers
for different tracks.

Speaker 1 (18:31):
So yeah, so the whole feel of this album was
to be very to be more worldly with it and
to definitely show off my versatile my versatile flows and
how I can you know, basically it's me being able
to call on any beat for this album. That's basically
why I decided to have bring on you know a
lot of producers because it's just you know, it's it's

(18:55):
it's great having a little bit of everyone in that
art piece, you know what I mean, especially the people
that I've really been rocking with, right and of course
even new people I've met, And it's just like every
every single song on every producer that's been on there,
it's like it's a piece of me as well.

Speaker 6 (19:11):
So it's like we all got to got to have
a piece of this art, you know.

Speaker 2 (19:15):
So yeah, yeah, and it really comes through. And then
even with different producers, and you know, unless I'm checking it,
you know, the it doesn't change like the vibe of
the album, which is I think is a definitely good thing.

Speaker 4 (19:25):
Right.

Speaker 2 (19:25):
It's not like you have like a bunch of like
this it's got a different sound and this guy's come
with something else and the album's like all over the place.
That is not the case.

Speaker 7 (19:31):
Man.

Speaker 2 (19:31):
You guys definitely made very cohesive and and like you said,
it's an art piece, so it's all got to kind
of work together. It's gotta be a little bit of
a challenge, right because you got three or four or
five different producers and you got to make sure that
everything kind of flows together.

Speaker 6 (19:42):
Right.

Speaker 4 (19:43):
Yeah.

Speaker 1 (19:43):
Man, that's that's that's very important because you know, now
I've made projects where they're a little not necessary. I
don't like calling them always, but you know, like definitely
where I can mix a bunch of joints. But even
then I'm always still trying to make it right ohesive project, man,
And that's what I did with this one.

Speaker 6 (20:03):
Man.

Speaker 1 (20:03):
I also had to make sure those sounds blended perfectly
into the next joint.

Speaker 2 (20:07):
Right, it was just an album of Lucy's you know,
sometimes you see people doing that, but that is not
the case with this album. And man, I kind of
joked about the translator app earlier, but what what is it?
Because I've had you know, a lot of artists on
here before, like Kingdom Come and Kratona P and they've
talked about how, you know, they'd to flip something in
Spanish and go back to English and sometimes it's both
and they're like, well, to us, it's like not even

(20:28):
a thing. We do this in our everyday life, like
when we just talk to people. How about for you,
when you when you make a trackre you do you
ever go in with the mindset like I want this
one to be in Spanish or I want this to
be in English? How do you you know wrestle with that?

Speaker 6 (20:39):
No, Man, actually it's a mix of both, to be honest.

Speaker 1 (20:44):
You know, sometimes they'll just come off like that as
I'm right, and I'm like, you know what, I want
to switch it up, like I want to rhyme with this,
but this time I want to try to find it
in Spanish, right, And who knows, maybe for a couple
of bars I'll do it in Spanish and then bring
them back to it.

Speaker 6 (20:58):
But it's a mix of both, man. Honestly, sometimes I'll go.

Speaker 1 (21:01):
With the intention like oh, you know what, I want
to throw some Spanish in there, but it all starts
with an idea.

Speaker 6 (21:06):
Of course, there's obviously a reason behind it.

Speaker 1 (21:09):
When it's just you know, if once the Penish just
keeps going, you know, I have those days where the
pen just keeps going and then I happen to just
speak in Spanish because and it's true, like what they said,
it's like that in real life for me too, Like
you know, definitely, all of a sudden, I'm speaking in Spanish.

Speaker 6 (21:25):
You can ask everybody that knows me. I'll even do
it to people who don't speak in Spanish. I'm oh, yeah,
my bad, you know, And.

Speaker 1 (21:32):
It's like, you know, it's it's that like I've told
people in the past that I do have like a switch, man,
and it's like it's like that, you know, I can
go from English to Spanish any moment and you.

Speaker 2 (21:44):
Know, incredible, Man, I envy that. Yeah, I can't. I
can go from English to Gibberish, but I can't go
like sounded like a moron and then going back to
regular speak. But the languages, man, I can't juggle that.

Speaker 1 (21:57):
So absolute I appreciate that it took a little bit
to perfect that.

Speaker 2 (22:03):
Yeah, man, there's gotta be an art to it. Yeah,
And like you said, it's natural for you. It's just
how you are every day and it comes through in
the songs. And sometimes there's a track where you know,
there's a verse going back and forth, and for you,
it's just that's just how you are. It's not even
like I got to sound. You know, I gotta represent
you know, the Spanish heads, I represent the English heads
on this track, and it's not really like that. That's

(22:23):
cool man, Nope.

Speaker 6 (22:24):
Yeah.

Speaker 2 (22:25):
And of course you know there's a video we got
to talk about for eighty six that one of my
favorite tracks on here talk about filming that. Where was
that shot at? Was that in your neighborhood there?

Speaker 1 (22:32):
Yeah, it was right down the street from where I live.
It's a known park there. So you know, I'll tell
you right now a little little fun fact, it was
blestering cold. If you can see that video, you could
tell I was a little uncomfortable, but it was solely
because of the weather.

Speaker 6 (22:49):
Everything else though, went perfect for that video.

Speaker 1 (22:52):
One of my favorite joints as well, you know, especially
when I'm getting tattooed in that in that video, it's
all plays into what I'm saying. I really did want
a simplistic video for that because I felt like that
joint alone speaks volumes without really having to get all
crazy scenery on people. It kind of like, yo, it

(23:15):
is what it is eighty six that you should know
what that means. And if you don't, now you do
use it in youravigate.

Speaker 6 (23:20):
Language, now you know what I mean. Like, that's where
I was going with that one.

Speaker 2 (23:25):
I'll have to check it again and see if I
see your breath, you know, like from the cold in
the video.

Speaker 6 (23:29):
Right, it's cold man, It's cold.

Speaker 2 (23:32):
Man, I mean definitely, you know, like I said, I'm
in Chicago. It's cold here all the time in the
final years. So yeah, you guys are no different. You've
been dealing with it just like we are, and you're right,
it is. It is simplistic. But this song definitely does.
Maybe right, it does kind of let the song be
the focus, not the video as much, but it definitely
has visuals always help. Man, you already know that. And yeah, yeah,

(23:52):
you're gonna work on any other visuals for this album?
You have anything else in mind that might get a
video for it?

Speaker 6 (23:57):
You know, people who's just gonna have to weigh and see.

Speaker 4 (23:59):
Man.

Speaker 1 (23:59):
I love when people tune in because you know it's
gonna reach the people who are really paying attention, you
know what I mean.

Speaker 6 (24:07):
I can stay it on here. Yeah, we had plans
for this, plans for that, but you know who.

Speaker 1 (24:12):
Knows is all I'm going to keep it at because
I love having having people guessing too and guessing what
join it could be.

Speaker 6 (24:19):
You know.

Speaker 2 (24:20):
There you go, man, And you know, going back to
where you're at in Massachusetts, there was the Boston scene
heavy for you. You know, I think of katsa Guru acrobatic,
mister Liff or those guys influences for you coming up.

Speaker 1 (24:31):
So I know who they are. I wouldn't say they
were my influence. I will say that the New York
scene was.

Speaker 6 (24:36):
Definitely my influence.

Speaker 1 (24:38):
Go, now, I have you know I had an uncle
that He put me on to so much good music
when I.

Speaker 6 (24:44):
Was so young that I'm so grateful for that. So
and of course you know it.

Speaker 1 (24:49):
Was those songs of those times, Mob Deep, you know,
Busta Ron's Kuji rap, you know what I mean, the usuals,
Wu Tang and Onyx, you know, to to say the least.
So yeah, but I do know who they are, and
I definitely, man, it's a big part of me. You
know Gangstar too. I used to listen to Gangstar a lot,
so Guru definitely. Even there's an old song. I did

(25:13):
a freestyle idea where I used a sample.

Speaker 6 (25:16):
From the from one of their joints where he's like
when they say, yo.

Speaker 1 (25:19):
What's up with Google Dog? You'd be act Lankey's from Brooklyn,
He's from Boston. He's like, you know, Premier is like,
you know, we were trying to do our thing out
of Boston, but people were showing us no love. So
I use that sample because you know what it happens
here too unfortunate, and you know I want I want
to change that.

Speaker 6 (25:36):
You know, it's just it is what it is.

Speaker 1 (25:38):
But man, yeah, I salute to that scene as well, man,
because they're my brothers.

Speaker 6 (25:42):
As well.

Speaker 2 (25:43):
Yeah, man, I mean I can't even imagine, you know
how much you know a lot of people in that
area will probably think of them. But obviously if you're younger,
you know Guru and Gang Star and you know ed
og cats like that, maybe you're not ving them as
much because they're from the nineties or place like that.
And if you said, you're born ninety one, so it
makes sense, ye, Bob Deep or Big Pun somebody like
that might be more influence.

Speaker 6 (26:04):
Yeah, yeah, absolutely, man.

Speaker 2 (26:06):
I mean you mentioned Mob Deep. I mean there's a
track on here that you know you definitely paying homage
to them that Yeah. QS three with King Arthur you
talked about earlier, talk about that track and you definitely
faster flow on that one too.

Speaker 1 (26:19):
Yeah, man, we we we did our thing on that, man.
That I definitely I tried to incorporate as much as
I could in this project on a lot of the
things I grew up with that grabbed my attention. Is
you know, certain moments that grabbed me and sucked me
in and hip hop you know that made me who
I am. Now, that's what I wanted to do for

(26:41):
this project. And of course, man, you know who knows
maybe they'll be an extended version one day, but it's
so much more that I wanted to put on there
that didn't make the cut.

Speaker 6 (26:50):
Man.

Speaker 1 (26:51):
But yeah, for the most part, anything sample wise that
is definitely from the past is definitely something that grabbed
my attention as a youth, that put me in this
in this direction to be this artist I am today.

Speaker 2 (27:02):
Yeah, man, no doubt. And everybody listening, makes sure you
check out the album. It's out right now and it's
on all platforms. I saw it on band Camp, right
but is it on all DSPs and everything?

Speaker 6 (27:10):
No, it's only exclusively on band Camp.

Speaker 4 (27:13):
Cool.

Speaker 2 (27:14):
Yeah, And I'm definitely an advocate for band camp because
people listening, if you're not aware of it, all the
proceeds when you buy the music it goes right to
the artist right as far as there. It's one hundred
percent of it correct.

Speaker 6 (27:25):
Not one hundred percent, but a very hot percentage. There
you go. They but you know what it's man.

Speaker 1 (27:32):
Since the release of this project, I've been very grateful
to have some loyal fans that copt it family as well.

Speaker 6 (27:38):
And I'll tell you right now what you know. Even
though money.

Speaker 1 (27:41):
Has never been anything for me with that type of stuff.
It's way more than you would get streaming, you know.
But I mean now I'm not here to knock the
streaming as well, because I feel like there's there's great
opportunities in which streaming is definitely vital, you know, so
to say, for singles getting some stuff popping, and usually

(28:01):
I'll do like after a while, you know, the project
will go on DSPs.

Speaker 6 (28:06):
Yeah, like I was mentioning earlier, it.

Speaker 1 (28:07):
Takes up to the people to tune in with me, man,
to see where my stuff's going, man, because that's really
what it is at this point. You know, if you
dig the music, just follow me and see where it
goes and get to enjoy and enjoy the ride, you know.

Speaker 2 (28:21):
Yeah, without a doubt. And I'm sure it's hard to
juggle that, Like do you put it on this platform?
Do you only make it exclusive here for your true fans?
I'm sure that's something you struggle with, you know, every
time you release something. And as far as I know,
band camp is really one of the at least artist
friendly places you could put music out there to where
the artist doesn't get a profit from it. If you
know and you know the music, the music is definitely

(28:43):
from the artist. They have it there, and as a fan,
it's always better when you know that your money is
going towards the artists as opposed to some guy at
a desk at Spotify or something.

Speaker 6 (28:51):
So yeah, you know it, you know it? Yeah?

Speaker 10 (28:55):
Man.

Speaker 2 (28:56):
Another track I goingted to bring up was Triple Beam
Schemes and I'm not Sox fan. I just mentioned you're
talking about Boston Red Sox, right, you weren't talking about
the White Sox hat. Yeah, so a lot of people
listening be like, ah, Sox had no.

Speaker 1 (29:07):
I was like, you know what, But you know what,
maybe you, as the listener could relate it in that sense, right,
you being from Chicago, you could be like, ah, socks hat,
you know what I mean.

Speaker 6 (29:19):
That's what I try to do too. Man.

Speaker 1 (29:21):
It's like people could could take it how they want.
But yes, I am referencing the Red Sox.

Speaker 2 (29:27):
And it's funny you said that because when I played it,
I don't think I knew you were from Massachusetts yet.
I think I was just playing because that Jerry had
send it over to me. Shout out to Jerry Graham
sets this up for us whenever I do these interviews.
And I was playing the track, and I'm like, soxs hat.
I'm like, okay, you know, we already know. It's a
staple hip hop in the nineties. You know, somewhere we're
no you know, black white sox hat, and I just like,

(29:47):
and as I saw where you were from, Like, he's
probably talking about the Boston Red Sox. He's talking about that.

Speaker 6 (29:54):
Yeah, that's exactly what it was.

Speaker 4 (29:56):
Man.

Speaker 1 (29:56):
I'm glad that you at least you knew, Like right after,
you're like, clearly you know your MLB right right.

Speaker 2 (30:02):
Well, I'm a Cubs fan, so either way it didn't
matter to me. But yeah, yeah, we got issues. But
I give you. I got to give you a props
for mentioning Bishop the Bounty Hunter in that reference. I'm
a comic book nerd. Since I heard that X Men reference,
I knew who you were talking about, so shout out

(30:22):
from there. That probably gets you geeked a little bit too.
When somebody brings a line to you like, oh man,
you said this, so you said that. I'm sure that
gets you every time too.

Speaker 1 (30:30):
Oh man, I'll tell you right now. It encourages me
to keep going, so it hypes me up. It does,
It really does. And sometimes that's all artists is need, man,
that because then we know people paying attention, people clocking in,
people seeing what you got going on. But either way, man, yeah,
it gets me, It gets me, It gets me excited. Man,

(30:51):
it makes me want to go back to the to
the boot man, continue.

Speaker 2 (30:53):
Unloading there you go, man, and talk about the album cover,
and we talked about a little bit. You know, you
got the cigar as well. It must was like it's
a victory for he was at the idea like, look
at I finished this album and lighting up a cigar,
got the ninety one Honda shirt. What was the idea
with the of the cover?

Speaker 1 (31:07):
So yeah, man, just basically being a boss man, you know,
like being your own boss at that. You know, you
know we're behind a jewelry store that's right around.

Speaker 6 (31:16):
Here around the way where we live, and uh, it
basically all ties in together.

Speaker 8 (31:20):
Man.

Speaker 1 (31:21):
It's like that successful feeling you know of you know,
you know, yeah, I am who I am man, and
that's that.

Speaker 6 (31:27):
You know.

Speaker 1 (31:27):
So there's a lot you can interpret from from a
photo along because they say a picture got a thousand
you know.

Speaker 6 (31:33):
That's true, a thousand words in it.

Speaker 1 (31:34):
But yeah, man, I tried my best tubes, cram all
all my ideas in one photo. As simplistic as it is,
it's definitely bold and that's what I was going.

Speaker 2 (31:45):
I don't smoke cigars, but I have to assume it's
a really good one that you if you take a
picture of it. Yeah, you weren't messing around. There wasn't
some little you know, Lucy Philly Blunt or something.

Speaker 6 (31:55):
Hey man, there's some good cigars out there. Don't knock
it to you.

Speaker 2 (32:00):
There you go, there, you go, right, You're probably right, man,
you know, so you know, for everybody listening, you know,
the album is out right now, Cincetto, and uh, what
I love about is like a mix of grime and soul.
Like the samples kind of have like a soul feel,
but the lyrics are definitely gully right. You're definitely talking
about this stuff man. And I don't even know if
I mentioned the skit in there is definitely make sure

(32:22):
you in the car for that one.

Speaker 1 (32:26):
So that skit was you know if people who really
grabbed onto it. And then the song that goes in
after it's a big it's a old to big.

Speaker 6 (32:34):
Pun and yeah and.

Speaker 1 (32:38):
Yeah, so that's that's what it was, and you know,
I thought it would be hilarious to cooperate that, you know,
so you know that's a that's a piece of my
personality in that too. So uh, you know, that's that's
what I was. I was pushing for that one.

Speaker 2 (32:54):
Right, and it goes right into you know, speaking a
big pun. I mean the song that essentially Yeah, when
you hear it, I mean the Puerto Rico shot outs
and everything, the Frankie Cutlass sees, you know, the I mean,
that's it right there. It fits perfectly. We're leading into it.

Speaker 6 (33:06):
So yeah, man, appreciate them. I'm glad that you you could.

Speaker 2 (33:09):
You got that, Yeah, no doubt, man, I'm just glad
I had my headphones on when I played it so
the wife couldn't hear it.

Speaker 6 (33:15):
Hey, I put so you did you did everything?

Speaker 5 (33:19):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (33:19):
Man, you know you did everything you're supposed to do.
It doesn't mean that us idiots here pressing plate. Okay,
don't know what we're doing. But you know you did
what you're supposed to do. You handled it, right. What
do you listening to and there? Oh? Oh man, this
is you on a website. It's for the podcast.

Speaker 6 (33:40):
It's research, right.

Speaker 2 (33:44):
You talk about music on there all right, hold.

Speaker 6 (33:46):
On, yeah, she's making music, all right?

Speaker 1 (33:50):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (33:50):
This song is that crazy?

Speaker 6 (33:55):
Yeah?

Speaker 2 (33:56):
Actually, you know what that that just reminds me of something.
So my wife doesn't really know a whole lot about
hip hop music, to be honest. But we got rocked
the bells in the car and I remember Two Live
Crew Misi Horny popped on and she's like, what the
hell is this? And I had to explain it.

Speaker 1 (34:13):
Hey, man, they were they Hey, they broke, they they came,
they came in full force with that type of style
of music.

Speaker 6 (34:19):
Man, I give it up to Two Live Crew.

Speaker 2 (34:21):
Big Time, big time, and they definitely did their thing,
and they were the first of that kind. And I
don't know if anybody's even touched I mean, too short
people like that have gotten close, but they definitely they
laid the groundwork for that type of style. It was
just funny, yeah, big time. It was just funny. As
we went into a store afterwards, we came back in
and I don't know if you know this song who
d One Love, which is like one hundred and eighty
the other way. It's just that kind of song. So

(34:42):
You'm like, no, this is not that they're actually talking
about heartbreak and you know, getting back together with lost love.
It's a whole different song.

Speaker 6 (34:50):
Yeah, totally different.

Speaker 2 (34:52):
So you know I went off on a tangent there,
you know, based on the skits. You know, make sure
you play this album really loud, but there's like one
part maybe make sure you know everybody's down for.

Speaker 1 (35:03):
It right right track pod track there it is.

Speaker 2 (35:08):
Man, no man big For all the advisors, we definitely
definitely know man. But for those who want to get
the album, like you said, it's on band camp, where
can they find you online?

Speaker 6 (35:17):
Is there?

Speaker 2 (35:18):
You know, merch anything else they should be looking for
for you?

Speaker 1 (35:21):
So merch is always possibilities, man. Like I said, tune in.
You can find me on Instagram at Iceman Louis you
know right there, Instagram, band Camp, Lewis since here, YouTube
as well.

Speaker 6 (35:32):
Type my name l O U I E S I
N C E r E. You know.

Speaker 1 (35:36):
We based out of High Speed Network and big shout
out to my guy King author me and my brother
Man help all this to be possible right now, you
know what I mean, guided me to the right direction.

Speaker 6 (35:47):
That's my mentor right there.

Speaker 7 (35:48):
Man.

Speaker 2 (35:48):
Salute to him. You mentioned him at the beginning too,
and obviously, yeah, it comes through that. He was obviously
a big influence in and definitely how do you keep
this thing moving? And what's next? Speaking of moving forward,
would you got anything you want to promote? Are just
kind of pushing this album for now?

Speaker 6 (36:01):
Or yeah? For right now?

Speaker 1 (36:02):
It's this album, man, she said. The eighty six to
that video is out now on YouTube. Yeah, man, Like
I said, man, tuning in is important, man, especially if
people rock with my vibe, if they want to hear
some stuff that you know, is you know you can
go on a ride man on a journey.

Speaker 6 (36:21):
Man, It's definitely on this side, you know what I mean?

Speaker 2 (36:24):
Yeah, everybody out there, gets your Honda civics, get your cigars,
put on some A six and blast this as loud
as you can and then don't mess around. There you go,
right man. Man louis sincere. The new album Sincero out now.
Check him out on band camp or follow him online. Man,
thanks for coming through on the podcast. Man, was an
honor having you on here and putting up in my

(36:45):
nonsense a little bit there. So thanks so much, man,
And like I said, my translator, app, I've been putting
it to work. With this album. So it's good to
know that that I'm able to catch all the words
you're saying.

Speaker 1 (36:55):
So right, and I'll have more for the future in
the future for you, man, So just keep that no doubt.

Speaker 4 (37:01):
Man.

Speaker 2 (37:02):
Everybody, make sure you check out Louis Sincere the new
album Sincero out now. Man. Big up for coming through.

Speaker 6 (37:06):
I appreciate you, dude, Thank you for having me.

Speaker 2 (37:09):
Big big up to Louis Sincere for coming on the show,
Honor have him come on. And I had to throw
that little story in there about the two live crew
that that actually did happen pretty recently. We were driving
around rock the bells is on all the time and
Elokut does this thing where they call a salute the
sample him and Greg Nice and z Trip and they'll
play that sample. And it was crazy because they were
playing me so horny song, but they're playing where they

(37:32):
got that drop from in the song, which is from
Full Metal Jacket. So, you know, my wife's in the car.
We're hearing this you know, love You Longtime clip and
I'm like, uh oh, they're gonna play that song. I'm
get in trouble here. You know. Usually she doesn't say
anything is just whatever, but of course this one was
on another level, so definitely caught her attention. I had
to explain what it was and to go into a store,

(37:54):
come out and thank you for Houdini saving me because
they one love was on when the car started up,
and I was like, yeah, this is a different kind
of song. This is the other side of that. So
salute to uh Houdidi for cleaning up and uh not
getting me too much trouble. Not all the songs they
play on their are me so horny. So be careful, brother,
because Louis since Here has a skit on his album.

(38:15):
It's definitely everybody listening to it. Make sure track five
you know kids are not around. But otherwise don't worry
about it. The album is dope, it's grimy, it's soulful.
Big shout out to Louis Sincere. Let's play another track
from there. This is called Kilos in the Honda Civic.
We talked a lot about Honda Civics in the interview.
Here's why so here's that track. One of my favorite
songs on the album, Kilos in the Honda Civic here

(38:36):
on the Infinite Banter podcast.

Speaker 6 (38:40):
So show.

Speaker 7 (38:46):
But so so, This sounds like he looks at the
Honda Civic play a psychdelic just don't have about the
fist of bendidos at Pino wall in the shrimp scampy
Carlis shrimp pleats. Don't at me fine women scantily clad.
You'll call him bad day back for the wild. Got
me one that solid, not volatile.

Speaker 4 (39:05):
In this business. They snow piles.

Speaker 6 (39:07):
That's not my style.

Speaker 7 (39:08):
They don't want them out at my ac No, my
bitches ain't basic deliving patience, chasing pussy without the chaser.

Speaker 4 (39:13):
Had the lake shot a las.

Speaker 7 (39:14):
I had to stop the antics across the Atlantic. They
stick with Louis like these white girls do with Spandaga
and Vedextreat's a gun in each hand. Now seize your grams.
Can't puck with the Saultier. Ain't for the talking. For
the profit Margins Columbia, Shorty got a largements I fall
Jans National like part itself for the pens for your
dogget you pitch up with dogging.

Speaker 6 (39:31):
He's in there and they got gainst the wind. They
log in.

Speaker 4 (39:33):
Pitch them all in, pitch your mall in the whips.
Terry is a pallman.

Speaker 7 (39:37):
Don't drop the spalls in Team of s part is
what you want to call it. Don't start with Louis
because I don't have a conscious high speed launching, nonchalant
on the phone, shut the style stickers than the cows
on playing thing the work. I don't condone Captain Kurts
trying to take lead.

Speaker 4 (39:50):
You're not up to speed.

Speaker 7 (39:51):
The Partix await and leave you win that space to
freeze the dope celest You'll leave them more vegetable pussies,
delectable detectable resources.

Speaker 4 (39:58):
We come in canting your.

Speaker 7 (39:59):
Decimal the awareness where it's the fantasy where give them
a head start.

Speaker 6 (40:02):
Flow is fantish. I got to get vantished. Guy with them,
give my thought of that.

Speaker 7 (40:05):
They hand it all preparing folks settle shaped in my settlement.
This is Walter Jeffer coach. It's never willing to chewer
folk with stakes. That's the sabotage in my nature. Y'all
ever in danger. My type is in dangerous, straight out
the major immercer. Guy with the lightning ride CJ's in
the air in this game can pray.

Speaker 6 (40:20):
The ball, You'll get pissed.

Speaker 4 (40:21):
The flow is fish.

Speaker 7 (40:22):
The balls are I'm putting like a knife. Chance to
those days when you overcame or came was easily obtained.
Gotta be the spread, but can't gamble your life. Blasted
my way through radio stations back and said, now laid
this day and have faith in what I had in store.

Speaker 4 (40:35):
Like pofee with the cat on the bread.

Speaker 7 (40:36):
I'm on this like wheezy skating bottle girl giving.

Speaker 4 (40:39):
Me off some had It's in my future, don't mean it.

Speaker 7 (40:41):
Spoke yup, y'all, loose war my mom fire here my
true form, super Saiyan. Catch out the storm now my
jot torn fall.

Speaker 6 (40:46):
Feel the scorn on they.

Speaker 7 (40:48):
Can feel the scorn A few smile man friends.

Speaker 10 (40:54):
Internaci known the Roman Zone. This is the news that
you're wrapped in the underground on me. You're tuned into
at Banta with DJ sound Wave.

Speaker 2 (41:04):
Like I had mentioned at the beginning, we're dedicating this
episode the Flying Bee. Brian Stinson, somebody who did a
lot of great work in Chicago radio and basically giving
local artists a chance and a platform to play their
music and to talk about their music, and he would
actually help mentor them and you know, get them some notoriety.
So big salute to him. It was definitely a rough week,

(41:25):
you know, seeing what happened and that he's passed on.
But I want to kind of do something that would
be in tribute to him. And basically what he would
do is he would he would let artists, you know,
come on the show, and I do the same thing here,
but I'm a little more how do I put it selective?
He would let everybody come on. I'm more like, nah,
I don't think so, I don't think so it's not
for me, not for me, But you know, Flying B
definitely had a style that was more welcoming. So a

(41:47):
big salute to him, and I'm gonna do what he
would do. I'm going to welcome an artist who's been
on here before. So this is not hard for me
to do this at all because music geez my guy,
one of my favorite guests have been on here, someone
I've known for a long time, going back to MySpace
era at all that he's a new track out right
now called It's Going Down music Gene the Underground Army,
and there's a lot of features on here. You got Whirlwind,
d got King Topaz, you got Danger Standing clear cuts

(42:10):
by DJ Modesty. They're called the Underground Army, but they
should be called the International Army because you got UK
repped on here, you got France repping on here. So
big up music G you. We're gonna play that track
right now. It's going down music gen The Underground Army
featuring Rowin d King, Topaz, Danger, Standing Clear and cuts
by DJ Modesty, and play this track and dedicate this
segment here to Flying b But here we go. It's

(42:32):
going down music g here on the Infinite Bancher Podcast.

Speaker 8 (42:55):
One Time for Your Mind, too, Time for the music,
the Elite Crush and Week tells the swords of great feast,
too nice on a mission reentership from the streets, from
the boogie down beatown my town, Your town me a
underground Army. Here with the news sound Sit back as
it's back at the breakdown. Symmetry to cruise. The big
news is chemistry. Lyrically, it's on the cliffnically phonetic with

(43:16):
the first is a sharp passcar fast with a burst
to strike as a warning m C. S. Shun is
stay because you'ring d n G points scoring going to
step up and work up the place. The strong words
music you and well when you hold the title nor
your heard, so you know now and know how a
better say time win the fight. No, never run the
ground with the high.

Speaker 4 (43:39):
Didn't drifted. The race goes to the threat.

Speaker 10 (43:54):
I've left my dear spots up we go. That's the
close you know, the general raiders shop then a razor
talk us like a laser.

Speaker 6 (44:04):
It hits you like a chaser freeze.

Speaker 10 (44:06):
Like foresty suicide. Don't plass have the screen, the simper
screen that called me following the wild of wire on
top of the pile. I be the son of a
gun warm a man in the south. The missile head
the whistle meaning is coming soon. I WoT the drop
on your head and making broom knocking mustool cloud of
proud to allow no doubt. You get no winds with me.

Speaker 4 (44:23):
I'll throw you out for cloud.

Speaker 6 (44:24):
I'll pull you up.

Speaker 4 (44:25):
You lane, we are not the same.

Speaker 10 (44:27):
You're in the back while I'm doing some strange and
jams to care.

Speaker 4 (44:36):
Didn't didn't.

Speaker 11 (44:48):
This is the way and today it's a day for
the U g a warfy just to come out and
play another children's dormy rappers in the field corn he
plugging the my floor meantime to get dorf.

Speaker 2 (44:58):
Don't kip or super nice. It's a few body parts.

Speaker 11 (45:01):
Haven't make it in your grave parm line from between
broadcasts worldwide with all the black crappers that sorry day die,
that's a crush on bones, crying a cocaine shot straight
to your brain and fry the whole thing set does
not fire your brings and the point doggers damn fingerbat me.
I'll snap it off and it's on my necklace chain
increasing the crown there for full off balance Acado BC

(45:21):
for Wizard of barber spelled like bargomel.

Speaker 5 (45:24):
Where it's going down, I'll find y'all in hell.

Speaker 9 (45:44):
It's about the gold down here going on the ground
next to the floor. That's me because up in the
middle of the site you'll fright people in the night.
Text Caddy's pistol, clean, hit dot and put the work
in fight a going savage pet damn it still win.

Speaker 4 (46:03):
He's not damage, rocking rockets, fake with it without a curse.

Speaker 9 (46:06):
My pensike a my laugh with the atract The voice
submerging the duc said, coming sur I'm playing bust on't
prendy because this on again sink just can't play that
both the manage a different spot turning down, He's coming.

Speaker 4 (46:21):
Flow the horn, It's going down there, didn't there.

Speaker 1 (46:50):
Just like that. He is a dagger the of the
g Live with Infinite Band to from Boston and Chicago
and all around the world.

Speaker 4 (46:57):
Man turned it up.

Speaker 2 (46:59):
Time for you to leave, all right? That's Kirk cas
veto tell me it's time to go when that is
exactly what I'm going to do. But before I get
out of here. Once again, big dangs to Louis Sincere
for coming on the show. Check out his new album Sincea.
You can find it on band camp, and definitely check
out his video for eighty six that you heard that
song earlier in the podcast. There's a video for it.
Go on YouTube. Just type in Louis Sincere eighty six

(47:20):
that you'll find the video. And he's got other videos
from other albums and projects he's done, but eighty six
that is definitely the newest one. Will definitely check that out.
And once again dedicating this episode to Fly and b
Ryan Stinson, definitely everybody out there. I think, if anything,
what he left behind was just be nicer to people,
be gracious to people, and you know, don't always shoot
somebody off because maybe you don't like what they're doing,

(47:40):
you know, maybe maybe give a listen to something you
might not listen to. So I'm gonna start to be
better at that if I can, but I'm still gonna hate.
And he knows that too. He would too the lobster
hands if you heard me right now, the come on
Jalla Fido. So anyway, you know, definitely dedicating this to
fly and be salute to him and everything he accomplished
and did, and his legacy will live on. Others will

(48:01):
carry a torch for him, I'm sure. But this is
the Infinite Banter podcast. You can find it on all platforms.
Rate and review the show. Go on YouTube, type in
Infinite Banter for clinstroom past guests, check out the sponsor
superseven dot com slash Infinite Banter Podcast. Find the show
on all platforms at Infinite Bancher Podcasts. All right, that's
it for me once again. Big up to Louis sincere.

(48:21):
Shout out to Music Gene, the Underground Army. That track
featured Whirlwind, d King, Topaz, Danger, Staying Clear, and DJ Modesty.
Big up to them. Go find that track. It's going
down on all platforms and until I do another one
of these, I'm out hey, assoll, get off the road.

Speaker 1 (48:50):
Being on the infinite banner with my man mark has
been a pleasure.
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