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Down-South.com: What
was it like growing up in South Park?
Z-Ro: Shit man, to tell
you the truth I ain’t get to stay out there too long
man. I migrated a lot as a younger with my folks. I
stayed in South Park until I was about four years
old. Then I moved to Hinds Park. I stayed in Hinds
Park until I was about middle school age. My old
lady passed when I was like six years old so I
household to household for a minute. I didn’t really
get to stable. I moved from South Park to Hinds Park
until right after my mama died I moved over to the
east side of town, Edgebrooke and Monroe—that’s when
shit started to get real. A nigga started
experiencing gun shots, stab wounds and all that
other type of shit….al the shit that comes with
being grown. My shit ain’t no different from the
average nigga in this area in his late 20s. I ain’t
no different from the nigga living next door. I was
out there. A nigga couldn’t get no job and shit so I
fuck with the dope for a little while. I went from
selling the weed to dope to the beef shit to what
done came after that. It’s just now getting a little
greater for a nigga, but I ain’t that far away from
going back outside. You know it cost to live so a
nigga gotta keep getting it.
Down-South.com:
Who did you
listen to coming up?
Z-Ro: Man, I listen to
almost every rapper alive. Of course I listened to
Pac, that’s like the first rule to the game. I know
when I was coming up doing my thing I remember
vividly I used to wake up like about 5:30 in the
morning. I used to used to let the muthafucking
fiends know by putting a pair of Chucks across my
burglar bars. That meant come on with it, the
store’s open. I used to walk back and forth from my
Kitchen chopping up dope listening to Scarface’s The
World Is Mine, The Geto Boys’s “Six Feet Deep,” that
old school Willie D solo album, Street Military,
Klondike Kat, K-Rino….shit like that. You know shit
that had four or five ass whipping in a song. I’m
listening to that shit while I’m hustling. That’s
giving and motivation to hustle harder. When
Scareface come singing “Mr. Mr. Scarface was walking
down the block with a pocket full of rocks” and I’m
walking down the block with a pocket full of rocks
for real. I really connected to that because I’m
listening to another nigga spit about something that
I was really doing; from that, I started getting
love for the rap game. To make a long story short I
wasn’t listening to no nice shit.
Down-South.com:
How did you
start rapping?
Z-Ro: Well, you know I
wasn’t really no radio nigga, but every now and then
the radio would come on and they’d be playing a rap
instrumental in background when the DJ started to
talk and I found myself starting to say a little
rhyme to the beat in background. After a while I
said fuck that. I think I sound good as them nigga
so I think that I’m going to try and fuck with it.
That shit just derived from there. It started from
me just being on the block hustling to me doing the
shit as a past time to me trying to make it to me
developing a real skill for myself.
Down-South.com:
When did you
decide to leave the block and go after a rap career
full time?
Z-Ro: Well, shit I’d
say I decided about my 11th grade year.
That was in 93, I decided man, I fixing to try to do
something for real. I really thought back then that
I really had something that the game was missing. So
I said that I was gonna try and do my shit for real.
I started out in different studios. I played with
the shit for about four to five years until the
first muthafuckas that I stumbled up on –one of
those cats on the Northside. I ain’t gonna say they
name because I ain’t gonna try to blow they ass up
because they a bunch of mark ass muthafuckas.
But….you know…I got with them and my shit sounded
alright, but it wasn’t industry standard. All of
they shit was analog so it was like the quality of
the song wasn’t good enough to sell the album. It
was like a Casio keyboard or something. So time went
on…I was writing and stacking up my shit. You know
like making my own little personal library of songs
and shit. You know for when I found the right
muthafucka to do my shit. In 96, I met this cat on
accident. He was coming to the studio and he was
trying to get his artist vinyl pressed up by the cat
I was dealing with. He walked in while I was in the
front room rolling a blunt and freestyling and shit.
He was like damn, nigga you can rap. I was like man
I know that. And one thing led to another and that
lead to my freshman release. My first album was
called Look What You Done to Me on Fisherboy
Entertainment. Like me and everybody else I used to
deal with me and that boy ain’t cool no more but
that’s alright.
Down-South.com:
Tell us about
King of the Ghetto?

Z-Ro: King of the
Ghetto was my third album ….Naw it was Look What You
Done to Me, Z-Ro Vs the World then the first
Guerilla Maab album then came King of the Ghetto
album so it was my 4th album and shit.
The King of the Ghetto album came around 1998…99
right around the start of the millennium. That when
the South was really beginning to get recognition
for what we were doing.
Yeah that King of the Ghetto was what I called my
first grown man album right there. I had three rap
project before that but that was my first grown man
project where I actually put some grown man shit on
every song. It was depressing on some parts, it was
painful on some parts, but I was shedding light on
my life.
Down-South.com:
Pain seems to
be a major theme in all of your work.
Z-Ro: Everybody might
not have 22s on a fancy car, but one thing that
everybody’s gonna have at some point in their lives
is pain. Everybody done felt some kinda pain at some
point in their lives, but everybody’s scared to talk
about it. Me I’m gonna blow it up. The only
difference between them and me is that I’m bold
enough to let the world see my pain.
Down-South.com:
What’s the name
of the new album?
Z-Ro: The album is
entitled Let the Truth Be Told because it time for
the truth to be told. Muthafuckas be sugarcoating
shit because they don’t wanna hurt nobody’s
feelings. Fuck that! I’m steepin’ on toes and all
that shit. If a muthafucka mad at me they can come
see me. I ain’t in the house hiding. I’m the streets
everyday. I’m still in the hood everyday. I’m gonna
let the truth be told on faggot-ass police. I’m let
the truth be told on these faggot-ass CEOs of these
record labels, I let the truth be told on these
faggot-ass niggas in the street, I’m letting the
truth be told on these rappers –that’s one thing
about me is I tell like it is. You can call me a
label muthafucka because I put labels on muthafuckas.
It’s a lotta muthafuckas rapping from the 3rd
person man. They just there to talk about shit in
general. Me, I’m gonna talk about some particular
shit or some particular muthafuckas. If I feel like
a muthafucka’s being less than a G then I’m gonna
say it on my shit. That’s why I called it Let The
Truth be Told. |