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October 8, 2025 34 mins
From Far Rockaway, Queens to the forefront of New York’s underground scene, ScrillyDaGod 🎙🔥 is redefining what it means to make music with frequency, faith, and feeling. A self-taught producer, engineer, and visionary, his sound fuses gospel soul with raw trap emotion — a blend of pain and purpose. His debut project Anti Hero ⚡️ captures the war between who we are and who we’re becoming. From church roots to studio trenches, Scrilly’s story is one of alignment, healing, and truth. Tap in as Coach Dini uncovers how he’s turning struggle into sound — and sound into power.

https://open.spotify.com/album/1Lq2kxv5LSie6769bV5D3G?si=KfptGdS6R7Kpyo7VhQBB0w
https://www.instagram.com/scrillydagod
http://www.tiktok.com/@scrillydagod)

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Episode Credits:
Produced, edited, mixed, and written by Demetrius "Whodini Blak" Reynolds, Sr.
Artwork designed by Demetrius "Whodini Blak" Reynolds, Sr.
Show Introduction by Kate
Segment jingles composed & produced by Demetrius "Whodini Blak" Reynolds, Sr.
Additional music licensed through 7th Sign Recordings

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Transcript

Episode Transcript

Available transcripts are automatically generated. Complete accuracy is not guaranteed.
Speaker 1 (00:00):
You are now listening to Vigilantes Radio, presented by the
only one media group. This is the people's choice but
quality interviews celebrities and special guests, hosted by Demitrius Denny Reynolds.
Call in to join the mix at seven oh one
eighth one, nine eight one three. For the complete archive
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(00:24):
like us on Facebook at Vigilantes Radio.

Speaker 2 (00:27):
We welcome all.

Speaker 1 (00:28):
Enjoy the show. Ladies and gentlemen. Please welcome your host
Demitrius who Demi Black Reynolds. Enjoy the show.

Speaker 3 (00:43):
Yo, yo, yo, what 's up? Guys.

Speaker 4 (00:45):
Welcome to another incredible episode of Vigilantes Radio, live right
here on iHeartRadio and I am your host, Dennie.

Speaker 3 (00:54):
We have another special guest with you.

Speaker 4 (00:56):
Guys, you could definitely want to stick around for that.
As a matter of fact, Tech, your buddies, family members
are even shared on social media.

Speaker 3 (01:04):
Rights now and let.

Speaker 4 (01:06):
Them know that we are about to dive deep into
another interview. Before I bring my guests on, I do
want to say that this is the frequency of the fearless,
so don't lose sight. You know, there is a certain
kind of power that only comes from surviving yourself. That

(01:30):
the kind that can't be taught in schools or churches,
only through fire. When life tries to silence you, some
people crumble, but others learn how to make that silence sing.

Speaker 3 (01:44):
And that's what screallyd God did.

Speaker 4 (01:46):
He took pain, loss, faith and truth and turn them
into frequency. His music doesn't follow ways, it creates them
because he understands what most don't. Energy is eternal and
words are weapons when aimed with purpose. So tonight we're

(02:07):
not just talking about songs. We're talking about alignment, about
what happens when the spirit and the struggle finally meet
the sound. You're not just here for a talk show,
and this isn't just radio. This is revival for your mind, body,
and spirit. This is Vigilantes Radio Life. My name is

(02:29):
Coach Deani, and change is possible.

Speaker 5 (02:33):
Are you ready?

Speaker 6 (02:39):
Are you ready? Are you ready? Are you ready?

Speaker 2 (02:56):
We'll let it go?

Speaker 4 (02:57):
Then go all right, all right again, Welcome to the show.
You're listening to VRL. That's Vigilantes Radio Live right here
on iHeartRadio, and I am your host, Deani.

Speaker 3 (03:09):
Our interviews are designed to go beyond the music.

Speaker 4 (03:12):
News, books, art, acting, films, technology, education, entrepreneurship, entertainment, spirituality,
and sometimes even past that thing that we call the ego.
Our interviews are designed to go behind the scenes into
the minds of these brilliant people, you know, the ones
who are out there giving it.

Speaker 3 (03:31):
They're all for me, for you, and for the world.

Speaker 4 (03:37):
Well, ladies and gentlemen, our guest tonight doesn't just make beats.
He channels energy from far rockaway to the Underground's main stage.
It'sc really to God has built the lane where gospel,
grit and truth collide.

Speaker 3 (03:56):
A self taught.

Speaker 4 (03:57):
Producer, engineer, and artist is music isn't made to fit in.

Speaker 3 (04:02):
It's built to wake you up. With this upcoming.

Speaker 4 (04:05):
Project, Anti Hero, He's proven that being misunderstood doesn't make
you the villain, it makes you necessary. So please join
me in saying welcome friend to the one and only
Scrillium akaas Really the God.

Speaker 3 (04:24):
Yo yo yo, Welcome to the show. Hey, hey, what's
going on?

Speaker 7 (04:28):
Bro?

Speaker 3 (04:28):
And welcome to the show. How's it going.

Speaker 7 (04:31):
I'm good, I'm glad. How you doing it? There's a
pleasure to meeting Alima like I'm beautiful induction. I really
apprecive it.

Speaker 4 (04:40):
Hey man, all honor is due. Yeah, man, we are
excited to have you tonight. Before we just really dive
into everything that's going on in your life and your journey.

Speaker 3 (04:52):
What's been on your heart and mind lately.

Speaker 7 (04:58):
That's a deep question. The exactly what you had mentioned
and in the introduction basically the uh the spirit of music,
you know, and taking a deeper dive into it as
an artist, as a being, as as as human beings

(05:20):
who indulge in and sound. It's sometimes overlooked, and you know,
I just want to highlight the importance of you know,
taking that step back sometimes to just appreciate it and
like taking it all in, yes.

Speaker 4 (05:36):
Sir, Yes, sir man, enjoying the moments too, I would proceed.
So let's start here, man. Frequency you talk about you
talk about it often. How do you define the frequency
and how does it shape the way you make music?

Speaker 7 (05:54):
Coming from an engineer's perspective, frequency For me, it can
be a lot of things, but for the most part,
it's just determining what sonics feels good. So in the moment,
I'm not really thinking of numbers, I'm not really thinking
of the mechanics of it all. I'm really just trying

(06:17):
to find the feeling. And I feel like when you
find the feeling, the frequency is in the right spot.
You know, it's more of a by taste rather than
by numbers.

Speaker 5 (06:33):
I get to that, but it translates in so many
different ways because if I think of it as like
a producer, when I'm making beads, I want to make
something that's going to hit you knowing, maybe like it
hits your soul you feel me, or it'll.

Speaker 7 (06:50):
Be very like loud, you know, something something that gets
you amped up. So I'm going to attack different frequencies
in a different way. I might boost up the very
low end of the issues so you can feel the
rumble in your test. You know. It's like little things
like that. But that's why I say it's not really
according to numbers. It's more according to the vine. When

(07:12):
I'm trying to channel in their room in a sense.

Speaker 3 (07:16):
Yeah, yeah, man.

Speaker 4 (07:18):
You were raised in a musical household surrounded by gospel
and structure.

Speaker 3 (07:24):
I'm kind of similar. I was raised.

Speaker 4 (07:26):
You know, I'm a son of an evangelist, so growing
up my world was pretty much in a bubble.

Speaker 3 (07:32):
You know, it was faith filled.

Speaker 4 (07:33):
It was nothing but Christian or gospel music, no secular music.

Speaker 3 (07:38):
It wasn't until I went to public.

Speaker 4 (07:39):
School and you know, got active in the neighborhood that
I was, you know, explored the world outside the boat.

Speaker 3 (07:45):
It's like, wow, you know, two different worlds here.

Speaker 4 (07:49):
But for you, man, how did that upbringing blend with
the chaos and lessons from the streets.

Speaker 7 (07:57):
I think for me it was seeing the rally here
after all, you know, like being in church with my
family playing because I was a drummer, so I would
literally be there all day, playing all Sunday, all Friday,
all Saturday, and we would literally be sitting there and
then we walk outside and there would be a whole

(08:17):
different commotion going on outside versus what was happening inside
those closed doors. So it was it was kind of
shocking because it's like you're living a dual life because
you know, we have to walk and carry uslf in a
certain ways living in like some of these neighborhoods, but
like you also don't want to be opposer or like

(08:39):
something that you're not, you know, so it's like how
do you navigate between wanting to be a good person
versus you know, stringing You feel me and there's so many,
so many opportunities for you to do it. And so
it's just that's kind of what I try to pull

(09:00):
together when I try to make my music, expe the
walking the fine line of trying to be the best
person I can be but living in reality and whatever
situation that I'm in.

Speaker 4 (09:12):
Absolutely So, when did I know you grew up in
a musical household? But when did music begin to make
sense to you on the level to where you wanted
to create the music yourself.

Speaker 7 (09:31):
Well, I guess in my journey, I started out playing
in church. It evolved to me meeting my friends. My
first band, we were called The Division, so we were
playing in high school. Basically I had a drummer, a keyboardist,
and you know, we did a bunch of music together.

(09:52):
Later on it more.

Speaker 8 (09:54):
Evolved to me creating beats and then like kind of
channeling how I've been feeling into trading beats and then
recording for people because I didn't know how to record yet.
So literally I was making beats and then learning how
to engineer while like recording my friends who are like
some amazing rappers till this day.

Speaker 7 (10:15):
And so this is like my same group of core
people that basically provide me with like these the energy
to like keep going, you know, because I don't do
it just for me. I do it for everyone, you know,
because they're part of my story.

Speaker 3 (10:33):
Definitely of what was your first doll, My first.

Speaker 7 (10:38):
Dough was Reason. Oh Reason, Yeah, it was Reason. And
it's funny because a lot of people give me that
same reaction. But for me, it was just it was
kind of like simplistic enough to use, because I know
all dolls are kind of like it's like reading a
foreign language when you're using an adult But I kind

(11:01):
of dabbled around on other dolls, a little bit of foods,
you know, like Qbase, a little bit of able toons,
but really my main go to was usually like reasons.

Speaker 3 (11:13):
Man, you're right, it is like a foreign language.

Speaker 4 (11:15):
When I was first trying to I was an artist
at one point in time, and you know, we were
paying studio time, and you know, the budget got huge
on that studio time because my crew would write their
songs in the studio, you know, just burning hours. And
I was just looking over the engineer shoulder what he
was doing.

Speaker 3 (11:36):
I was like, I could do this. He just pointed
to me, looking so he was using Reasons.

Speaker 4 (11:42):
I get Reason downloaded, I think I paid for it downloaded,
put it on a PC. I was like, heck no own,
So I ended up going to like office Depot and
buying cool let it Pro and started with that.

Speaker 3 (11:58):
Something a little more simpler than Reason. Mm hmm, yeah,
but yeah, the Reason was a monster.

Speaker 7 (12:07):
No, definitely. You know, sometimes it's kind of it's kind
of daunting to look at. And that's kind of like
what straight people people away from using like different dogs
sometimes because it just it may feel a little out
of their comfort zone. But usually normally once you get
used to it. And that's why I kind of like
I try to encourage people, like, you know, it's cool
to like learn other dogs, because once you get comfortable

(12:29):
with one, you kind of like you're able to figure
your way out around another dog. It becomes like a
little less thing, you know. So like right now when
I'm engineering, I use pro tools. I literally just learned
protols like a year ago, but like the way I'm
moving protols now is super dead, like I'm like flying through.

Speaker 4 (12:44):
Sessions, so it's like it's yeah, yeah, that's how I
am with q base, like cool let it pro set
the apprentises for you know, for what I do now
in Q base, No, you know what it was called
acid pro?

Speaker 7 (12:58):
Yes, yes, yes, yeah yeah, and.

Speaker 4 (13:00):
Somebody end up buying acid Pro but yeah, that's what
it was called back in another acid Pro and I cool,
let it pro. But yeah, So you're making music with
your friends. When did it become serious for you?

Speaker 7 (13:21):
I would say around twenty twenty nineteen, I think I
decided to take it serious as like a producer, just
being someone who was always in the studio because luckily,
thankfully I had like the opportunity to like work with
people on individuals who would like had studio spaces, and

(13:43):
so I was always able to always be in like
a building that had like a studio or if that,
if not, I would turn my laptop with me. So
I was always like kind of working on something. But
then like something clicked in me with like twenty nineteen,
I decided, you know, like maybe this is something I
want to do for the rest of my life. They'd
be like, I want to help other people and myself
just pursue this music passion. And so I think from

(14:08):
then I just basically through through everything I had at it,
you know, like I felt like I couldn't work a
normal nine to five because like the passion for the
music was calling me in such a way that like,
you know, yeah, other people telling me, hey, you need
to do this, you need to do this, but like
in my heart and my soul, I'm telling myself like no,

(14:29):
I have to do like there's nothing else I can
do but this.

Speaker 3 (14:33):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (14:34):
Yeah, And just like me, you were forbidding, forbidden from
listening to rap early on when it finally reached your ears.

Speaker 3 (14:44):
What was the song? Who was the artist?

Speaker 7 (14:50):
I think Young Jock was probably like the first artist
I listened to and it was going down and I
haven't really my favorite song when I was a kid,
and so like I literally like we used to have
lime Wire back then, and you know we'd be able
to get some songs. Yeah, but literally that was like

(15:10):
my first introduction, I believe. But you know, really like
I grew up on a lot of like literally like
a lot of different styles of music because like when
I was in church, you know, I would listen to
music in church, but then when I would come home
my parents my sisters would have on like Z one
hundred or like you know us like pop radio station.

(15:33):
You know, things of that nature. So literally, I'm just
exposed to like everything. And then basically, when I get
a little older and get to explore a little bit
more on my own, like my own musical tastes, than
like I discover different genres, different types of artists, different rappers.
And then basically now, like all I listened to is
mostly rap, but that's because I'm mostly working with like rapping,

(15:55):
rapping artists. But you know, in the grand scheme of things,
you know, hip hop is usually like buildings and I'm listening. Man.

Speaker 4 (16:06):
My first artist was born Thugs and harmony. I think
it was like for the love of money something to
that sort, Like I became a thug instantly overnight.

Speaker 7 (16:19):
That's how it goes though. It's like how it goes man.

Speaker 3 (16:23):
Yeah, music is so influential.

Speaker 7 (16:28):
Coma was like what happened to you boy?

Speaker 3 (16:35):
Yeah? I came back home different, all right.

Speaker 4 (16:38):
So your album The Book of Love was deeply reflective.
Now with Anti Hero, the energy feels darker, sharper, more
self possessed.

Speaker 3 (16:53):
What changed in you between those two seasons, I.

Speaker 7 (16:59):
Think an understanding, like a knowing Uh are getting to
know myself better after going through like whatever I was
going through do at that point, you know, whatever child
to relations. You know that we built through less people,
It like kind of cemented in me. I guess the

(17:19):
perfect who I was, and I don't know what I guess.
I became okay with being myself more versus having to
put an image or like be a people pleaser in
a sense, you know, m hm.

Speaker 4 (17:39):
You know, speaking of people pleasing, you're the micecro You know,
as a self taught producer and engineer, you are controlling
every sound from the start to finish. What advantages or
what challenges do you face and doing it all yourself?

Speaker 7 (17:59):
The challenge I would say, I feel like starting if
I'm starting a song from like top to bottom as
producing and then like laying vocals, I would say it
kind of takes the longer. It kind of takes a
little bit longer for me sometimes to build out that

(18:19):
whole process because I feel like I have to take
a little bit of time between the stages in order
to make sure I'm like making a song going the
direction that I wanted to go in and like convey
the energy that I'm looking for. I feel like sometimes
it gets a little difficult because like I feel like
I exhaust myself finishing maybe like a beat, and then

(18:45):
I have to like now re like concentrate and refocus
on Okay, what lyrics are gonna fit now? That an
accompliment to be versus you know, like me handing a
beat off to an artist and then I don't have
to think about it.

Speaker 4 (19:00):
Yeah, in today's music world, man, you know, everyone's chasing attention.

Speaker 3 (19:09):
And I like to call the hip hop industry WWE.

Speaker 4 (19:12):
It seems like like everyone's a wrestling character, but you
seem to chase alignment. What keeps you grounded when the
industry pushes chaos?

Speaker 7 (19:25):
Honestly, music locking in, focusing, focusing, heading into the studio,
like literally finding that center because it's it's so it's
it's it's funny to me because the way whenever I
like i'm engineering and I'm running a session, it sort
of feels like, uh, like a therapy session, and like

(19:47):
the artist common the event, and you know, sometimes you know,
you leave change, sometimes they leave change, you know, And
that's like for me, the best feeling because you don't
even know like what can happen on a day to
day basis. You don't know how that song may has
changed that person's life for the better or could have
been for the worst. And then I felt worse after
making the song. But at the end of the day,

(20:11):
I feel like getting that emotion out, regardless of what
it is, it helps. It helps people feel and I
feel like that's what's what's missing nowadays. People I feel
like are missing like the empathy and feeling like other
emotions rather just happy than sad, you know.

Speaker 4 (20:31):
Yeah, So, so what does anti hero means to you?
Both as a concept and as a reflection of who
you are right now?

Speaker 7 (20:46):
And it's a hero for me means going against the greens,
being true to yourself, regardless of what anyone hass I
feel like, if you have like a mission and you
have a drive to do something and you're determined to
do it, nothing to stop you, and there's there shouldn't

(21:09):
be anything anyone can say this time. And that's what
I believe the anti hero stands.

Speaker 3 (21:14):
For me, definitely. All right, before we get into the
single I have here, it's called two plus two.

Speaker 4 (21:23):
You've spoken about imposter syndrome and the gap between artist's
image and real life.

Speaker 3 (21:29):
How do you handle that disconnect?

Speaker 7 (21:34):
That's difficult, It is a difficult thing. But it's funny.
It's because I was with some family and as although
my nieces and nephews, and it kind of like darling me.
They were talking to me and they were just they're
asking me the other day. They're like, hey, uncle, like
who's some artists who work with And I'm telling them.
I'm telling them and they're like, oh really, Like they're

(21:56):
like getting excited and like to me on a day
to day level, like it kind of sometimes I guess
when you're in it, you don't you can't see it
because they're too up close. So it kind of takes
taking a step back for you to realize, oh, wow,
like I'm actually doing something that like my family members

(22:16):
care about, like my nieces and nephews, they're like they
look up to me for this. Like it dawned on
me literally in that moment, and I'm like, wow, maybe,
like I am doing something that's worthwhile, you know, like
maybe I'm doing something that can help change their lives
and my life. And that's really what I do for
you at the end of the day. It's for a family,
for the family that I build along the way, the

(22:39):
family that I have you, And so that's what it
means for me nice.

Speaker 4 (22:45):
All right, guys, we're about to jump into two plus
two that we'll.

Speaker 7 (22:50):
Be right back.

Speaker 3 (22:52):
Looks more gilly to God. Stay tuned.

Speaker 2 (23:00):
You we been.

Speaker 9 (23:06):
Can't juice food? Ah, tommies man, man gat up man, man,
can't you see damn you got ustranded. Jem Let me alone.

Speaker 3 (23:28):
I'm gonna pay on my phone.

Speaker 10 (23:29):
He's going on me, baby, and don't ask me what's wrong.

Speaker 5 (23:31):
The truth is the matter.

Speaker 10 (23:32):
We fussing in fame, don't, baby, you don't ask me.
My ship going on. I need some coming space, so
please get the fuck up the bottom of my face.
I ain't got time to chase with all of this
shit on my player. Pin try to like that, like
you really need to fall back because we ain't even
cool like that, Like, yeah, keep testing me. When he's

(23:53):
going back. It sound like a broken track.

Speaker 7 (23:56):
So now I gotta really fall back.

Speaker 10 (23:59):
Been checking my so you call me impossible, Nomerica, go
ahead the show sway.

Speaker 7 (24:03):
You'd be walking the ship.

Speaker 10 (24:04):
You'd be taking your thinking that you really jam your flowers,
you know, ship, But it takes to make a steak
any oilist things.

Speaker 3 (24:13):
Now I got to put you on the bench.

Speaker 10 (24:15):
Glas tess me and you.

Speaker 7 (24:25):
And chooses.

Speaker 9 (24:30):
Time make game?

Speaker 2 (24:35):
Man, use you go last.

Speaker 7 (24:46):
Blas to.

Speaker 3 (24:49):
Me you you.

Speaker 7 (24:53):
We came jus foo.

Speaker 9 (25:01):
Tommy make up? Man, Man, can't you see a damn.

Speaker 7 (25:12):
You go uestanded?

Speaker 3 (25:20):
Alright? All right, welcome back again.

Speaker 4 (25:22):
That was a whole vibe two plus two by screally
to God, square ahead and bring him back.

Speaker 3 (25:32):
Yo yo yo, welcome back, welcome back. That's dope, dope.
I was just trying to look forward on Spotify. Man,
it's not there.

Speaker 7 (25:40):
What gives yeah? That one is an unreleased right now?
That one's not there. I'm not there yet.

Speaker 3 (25:46):
Okay, okay, when is it dropping?

Speaker 7 (25:50):
It's gonna drop an anti Hero drops that's in the works.
It should be, you know, I don't want to put
a date on it, you know, I'm just I'm waiting
for the right moment when it tells me it's gonna
doctors from the drug.

Speaker 3 (26:02):
All right, cool deal? So man, this is our mic
drop moment here. If you could only uh, if our
listeners could uh.

Speaker 4 (26:15):
Hear only one line from Anti Hero, what would it be?
And what doesn't matter to you? I know it's still
an ongoing project, but uh, you're kind of knee deep
in it right now, I think.

Speaker 7 (26:31):
I won't give you a line, but I'll give you
I guess the concept of a line. So there's a
line that I think about lighting the pires on fire,
and basically the tradition of lighting pires on fire basically
guys a funeral process or mourning a loved one or burials.
So basically I use that line because I want people

(26:54):
to take the take the actions of what they've been
through and basically use them to grow from you know,
like like a phoenix rising from the ashes in a sense.
So basically I want people to grow even though they

(27:15):
may be going through the bad things in their life.
That's really that's really the whole point of the project
for me, because that's why I said, if the anxiier,
you're going to go against the green, because you might
do things that people may not like or people may
think are weird or crazy, but if they stay true
to yourself, it's going to make you a better person.

Speaker 3 (27:36):
So, man, what are your plans for the rest of
this year?

Speaker 7 (27:41):
More work, hopefully more work, locking into the studios, getting
in with all my artists, all my friends, literally trying
to get more clients and you know, this work work work, work,
you know, work is it's my hobby and it's my life.
But you know, both to my pastent. So it's like
one of the things I can't live without. So it's

(28:02):
not really working, it's creating. It's it's shaping, it's you know,
it's building its community.

Speaker 3 (28:09):
Yeah.

Speaker 4 (28:11):
Absolutely, And I see your locked in with my homie,
Uh James Q Man, what do you two working?

Speaker 7 (28:17):
Yes, sir James oh Man. I there's just so many
good things like I can say about that brother. Uh. Literally,
like we go to the studio. We work on stuff
all the time, me and him and all this Black
Buddha shout out to Black Buddha, you know, literally, like
we work on tons of projects. And I know he
has a couple of that. He's gonna have a lot

(28:38):
that's gonna be out coming out soon. So I'm really
excited about those. You know, engineered a lot of his
work there. You know, it's beautiful. It's like it's a
very like it's amazing stuff that's coming out.

Speaker 3 (28:50):
I saw, Like, I say, what you got him to
do music again?

Speaker 7 (28:55):
Yeah? Man's that's that's gonna be dope.

Speaker 3 (29:00):
It's crazy, that's going to be dope.

Speaker 4 (29:04):
Did you guys collabse besides just you providing production and engineering.

Speaker 7 (29:10):
On a couple. But you know there's still some stuff
we gotta put in the work. See. You know, I
got to get up my writing skills again. You know,
it's been a little while I've been like creating in
terms of like writing, so you know, I got to
get my pen game back there. So you know, we
just you know, making everybody's there to go.

Speaker 3 (29:28):
Man, what you talking about? Man? Of that line about
not having enough time to shave because you're dealing with stuff, Yo, I.

Speaker 4 (29:40):
Feel that every day when I scrubbed my long beer here,
I'm going to be all scruffy and out of place.

Speaker 3 (29:46):
I ain't got tons of shave.

Speaker 4 (29:48):
Yeah, between a woman and a career and kids and
the pressures of just life, just living.

Speaker 7 (29:55):
You know, you're trying to live, You're trying to get
to it. You know, that's just you know, we all
hope to have a partner that will make it easier,
That's all.

Speaker 3 (30:04):
That was my favorite line.

Speaker 4 (30:05):
That's why I went to Spotify because oh I gotta
I gotta get this one on the personal one.

Speaker 7 (30:12):
Definitely, that one's gonna drop for sure, for sure. It's
gonna have a feature on the too serious side on
my brother, my brother Rose.

Speaker 4 (30:20):
All right, all right, well man, where can our listeners
catch you on the internet and check out more music?

Speaker 7 (30:29):
They can find me on Instagram at skrillly the God
but it's g A W D and on they can
find me on all platforms at scrillium s c R
I L L I U that's Scrillium. But yeah, you know,
it's been a pleasure. Thank you for having me like
I really appreciate it, and.

Speaker 3 (30:51):
Yeah, that no doubt.

Speaker 4 (30:54):
All right, listeners, Just in case you need those links
now I know that you will need them. I put
them in the district of this episode and in the
show notes, So all you guys have to do is
just click those links tonight. Scrially the guy reminded us
that music isn't just heard, it's felt. As I gave
you a demonstration of my own feelings from that just

(31:15):
one line that I felt that in my soul. He's
proof that pain can be recycled into power and that
faith doesn't have.

Speaker 3 (31:24):
To look like a sermon to sound divine.

Speaker 4 (31:27):
His story from church choirs to city street to the
studio shows that the real anti hero isn't the one
the world misunderstands. It's the one who refuses to stop evolving.
To every creator listener listening, you don't have to fit
the mode. You just have to move in your purpose,

(31:48):
keep your frequency high, keep your soul to screally man,
thank you for bringing the energy, the honesty and all
the healing tonight.

Speaker 3 (31:57):
And make sure you guys follow him everywhere.

Speaker 4 (32:00):
Ash really to God and get ready to scream anti
hero when it drops, and for right now, you can
scream the Book of Love while you're waiting for anti Hero.

Speaker 3 (32:10):
And remember that this isn't just radio, this is revival.

Speaker 4 (32:14):
Stay fearless, stay faithful, and stay tuned to Vigilantes Radio Live.

Speaker 3 (32:20):
Thank you, bro, have a good night, so peace to all.

Speaker 2 (32:24):
My name is Dana and I am the host of
Vigilantes Radio Live. I think that we are beyond just
asking cool questions and give them cool responses. I think
that we are here as creatives to provide an example

(32:44):
that you can do things different outside of expectations because
some of us simply were not born into the club.
But there is perhaps a door windows we're back game
that we can leave a clue for you to get
into life. Is short, but there are plenty of moments

(33:07):
to try and get it right. Pursuing your dreams and
learning from mistakes may be tough, or regret is tough.
To book your interview, email us at V radio at
only one Media Group dot com. That's up v as
a victorious or visit only one Media group dot com.

Speaker 3 (33:31):
I'm counting on you, Heaven. We all are counting on.

Speaker 2 (33:35):
You to step into your purpose and your passion. You
are listening to Vigilantes Radio live on iHeartRadio, providing you
with an opportunity to.

Speaker 3 (33:47):
Dive deeper.

Speaker 1 (34:13):
You and now listening to vigil Lances Radio, the people's
choice for quality interviews, art, music and art topics, hosted
by Demetrius Houdini Black Reynolds. All episodes of this podcast
are available for free download at www dot only one
Media group dot com
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