Friday, May 2, 2025

WHO IS MISS DRACO

 

Miss Draco Didn’t Wait for a Seat — She Built Her Own Table

From the Bay to the A, and Now Straight Into the Spotlight

Miss Draco is not your average rapper. She’s a movement. A wave. A force reshaping the sound, energy, and face of modern hip hop. Born and raised in the heart of the Bay Area, she carved her name into the culture early — and now, she’s commanding attention in Atlanta’s high-stakes music scene. Her rise from Jessica Rabbit to Miss Draco wasn’t just a rebrand — it was a rebirth. One that turned a name into a brand and a voice into a vision.

From the beginning, Miss Draco stood out. Collaborating with legendary West Coast names like Messy Marv, Keak Da Sneak, and Lil Jon, she quickly earned her stripes in the streets and the studio. That foundation taught her how to hold her own, speak her truth, and deliver bars that hit harder than most. It’s that same energy that now defines her artistry — a bold, unapologetic blend of Bay Area grit and Southern trap innovation.

The TRINA Era — A Bold New Chapter

Her most recent release, “TRINA,” is the perfect introduction to the evolved Miss Draco. It’s not just a track — it’s a declaration. Confident. Loud. Fierce. The kind of song you play when you’re done playing small. With its high-energy delivery, bold production, and fearless tone, TRINA channels the spirit of female legends while claiming its own place in the culture.

The single has already picked up organic momentum on TikTok and Instagram Reels, with fans gravitating toward the “boss talk” bars and contagious hook. It’s that type of song that doesn’t need approval — it demands respect. Miss Draco isn’t just chasing trends — she’s creating the energy people didn’t even know they needed.

Stream TRINA:
Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/album/trina-single/1800063929
Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/track/3RIDHLv9lBZGLxbLdvGqqx
YouTube: https://youtu.be/nxGX_50atT0?si=6mFhVotyn8nEKYKJ

Building Her Sound, One Anthem at a Time

TRINA may be the most talked-about release right now, but Miss Draco’s catalog runs deep. From the raw energy of “Money Counter” to the empowering vibes in “Throw It Back,” she’s been laying the groundwork for a takeover. Every drop is calculated. Every bar means something. Songs like “Voodoo,” “Outside,” and “Call Me Draco” show her range — from seductive flows to street-smart storytelling.

What makes Miss Draco stand out is how she approaches music like a full experience. Her visuals, her bars, her performance — they all hit together. She doesn’t just drop a track; she creates a moment.

Independent, Empowered, and Unapologetically Herself

Miss Draco isn’t waiting on industry approval. She’s already moving like a major. As an independent artist, she’s made her own lane and stuck to it. Her appearances on national platforms like MTV’s Caught in the Act: Unfaithful and collaborations with rising stars like DG Mula have only expanded her presence beyond the music.

But it’s not just about clout — it’s about consistency. She’s showing what it means to build something solid in an industry that often favors quick fame over long-term impact. Her journey proves that real wins come when you protect your vision, stay creative, and move with purpose.

A Presence That Hits Hard On and Off the Stage

When Miss Draco hits the stage, it’s not a performance — it’s a takeover. Her voice cuts through. Her presence commands the room. From aggressive bars to smooth transitions and crowd engagement that feels real, she gives everything. Whether it’s a small venue or a big screen, Miss Draco knows how to leave an imprint.

The Future Is Female — and Draco Is Leading the Way

Miss Draco’s story is still being written, but the message is already clear — you don’t need permission to rise. Her journey is about evolution, ownership, and refusing to be boxed in. She’s living proof that you can honor your roots while creating your own blueprint. That being a woman in hip hop doesn’t mean fitting into a mold — it means breaking it and building your own.

If you’re tired of the same old sound, if you’re looking for music that’s bold, honest, and made with intention — it’s time to tune in. Miss Draco is more than a name. She’s a force.

Follow the Movement:
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/missdracomusic
TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@missdracomusic
YouTube: https://www.youtube.com/@MissDracoMusic



Thursday, May 1, 2025

Trina - Miss Draco

 MISS DRACO JUST DROPPED A HEATER CALLED "TRINA" 




Let’s get straight to it.

MISS DRACO is officially in her bag, and if you ain’t heard her new single “TRINA” yet, you already behind. This ain’t your typical release — this one full of attitude, boss energy, and unapologetic confidence. She came on the track swinging, no soft intros, just raw bars and bad b*tch talk from the jump.

“TRINA” feels like a statement. It’s that walk-in-the-room-and-make-it-freeze type energy. It’s for the women who know they pressure and for the ones who need a reminder. Draco channeled that classic Trina vibe but made it her own — bold, wild, and untouchable.

From the beat to the delivery, MISS DRACO is showing she not only belongs in the conversation but might be about to dominate it.

Let’s talk facts — too often, we wait until artists blow up before we give them their flowers. Don’t do that with Draco. She’s right here, right now, making noise, and this track is just the beginning.

Wanna hear it? Here’s how:

🎧 Stream “TRINA” now on Apple Music:

📺 Watch the official video on YouTube:

📲 Follow her on Instagram for more drops and updates:

Don’t just listen. Share it. Post it. Blast it.
MISS DRACO is next up — and “TRINA” is proof.




Monday, April 21, 2025

DG Mula - Part Ways

 DG MULA PART WAYS - SINGLE



When Loyalty Ain’t Enough: DG Mula Breaks Down the Pain in “Part Ways”

Sometimes, the realest love stories don’t end with a happy ending — they end with silence, space, and two people going their separate ways. That’s the energy DG Mula brought to his latest single “Part Ways” — a brutally honest, pain-laced anthem that hits different when you’ve been through betrayal, heartbreak, or just grew apart from someone you swore was forever.

Coming off his Heartbreak Hotel project, Part Ways ain’t just a song — it’s a reflection. The kind of track you play when you’re tired of explaining yourself. When you gave your all, stayed down, moved different — and still got played. Mula raps like he’s in the middle of that final conversation you never got to have. The one where you don’t sugarcoat shit, you just speak your truth and leave.

What makes this record cold is how personal it feels. The production is stripped back — emotional, melodic — but the bars are sharp, unforgiving. It’s like he’s mourning a love that died slow. No yelling. No chaos. Just distance, pain, and acceptance.

He’s not asking for sympathy — he’s just saying what a lot of us never do out loud: “I had to part ways... not because I wanted to... but because I had to.”

If you’ve ever outgrown somebody you still love, or walked away from someone who couldn’t match your loyalty, this one gon’ speak to your soul. And that’s the beauty of what DG Mula doing with this tape. Every song feel like a chapter in a diary we were never supposed to read. Raw. Unfiltered. Necessary.

Run it up. Sit with it. And if you feel it — you know what he meant when he said, “Sometimes you gotta leave just to save what’s left of you.”





Cold Summer Nights - Trilogy

Cold Summer Nights - A Trilogy That Speaks for the Voiceless By Forrest Bridges



They say music is therapy — but for some of us, music is the only way we ever got to speak. That’s what Cold Summer Nights is. It’s not an album. It’s not a playlist. It’s a trilogy of truth. Three chapters carved from pain, silence, and survival. And it came from me — Forrest Bridges — straight outta Milwaukee, straight off 51st Street, straight from the scars I had to live with.

This will be my first ever project. A real introduction. Not to who I want people to think I am — but to who I really been. This ain’t industry music. This is for the ones who seen too much and said too little. The ones who walk through funerals like routines. The ones who wrote their first verse on a prison bunk with a torn-up Bible page as a bookmark. This is for the ones who flinch when the wind blow too hard 'cause it sound like somethin’ they survived.

Part 1 - Survival. That first chapter? It’s straight from the trenches. Every verse came from nights I didn’t know if I was gonna see the next sunrise. Writin’ pain in a cold house. Sleepin’ with a weapon not because I wanted to — but because I had to. My brother got dropped in front of me. A bullet missed me by inches. I was numb. Hurt. Lost. So I rapped my way through it. That’s all I had left.

Part 2 - Reflection. By the second chapter, I wasn’t tryin’ to be hard no more. I was tryin’ to understand the pain. Why love feel like betrayal. Why I could give so much and still be the one left empty. It’s the cold reality of havin’ a big heart in a city where loyalty gets you killed. I wrote every bar in that one while learnin’ how to forgive the world — and myself — for everything I couldn’t fix.

Part 3 - Armor. Final chapter? That’s when I stopped expectin’ peace and started buildin’ my own. I ain’t bitter. I’m just done pretendin’. Final Freeze was me lettin’ the world know I still feel — I just ain’t showin’ it like I used to. I buried a lot of versions of myself to make it here. And now, I rap for the ones still stuck in the snow.

Every bar in this trilogy got weight. Every line is a piece of my soul that the streets didn’t steal. Ain’t no features. Ain’t no hooks unless they meant somethin’. Just machine-gun flows and truths most people too scared to say out loud.

Cold Summer Nights is for anybody who ever felt invisible in their own city. For anybody who watched love turn cold. For the ones still carryin' the weight of what they couldn’t say. This ain’t just music. It’s a reflection. A warning. And a message.

From 51st Street to the studio mic. From bunk beds to black ice. I lived it. I wrote it. And now I’m givin’ it to the world — raw, unfiltered, and honest.

This is Cold Summer Nights. And this is just the beginning.

Project drops April 30th.

https://www.youtube.com/@forrestbthewriter



 

Monday, February 17, 2025

Had To Walk Away Challenge




 200 DOLLAR CASH PRIZE GIVEAWAY SHOW US YOUR BEST CONTENT

Attention all creatives dancers and content creators Think you got what it takes to make fire content This is your chance to showcase your skills and win 200 dollars in cash

We are launching the Had To Walk Away Challenge and we want to see your best moves most creative skits or straight up viral worthy content using my new song Had to Walk Away Whether you are dancing acting lip syncing freestyling or coming up with something completely unique this is your moment

HOW TO ENTER

Create a video using Had to Walk Away make it a dance a skit a lip sync a freestyle or something out of the box Be creative

Post it on TikTok Instagram or Facebook and tag me iamdgmula and use the hashtag HadToWalkAwayChallenge so we can find your entry

The most creative video with the most engagement likes comments shares wins 200 dollars

CONTEST TIMELINE

Starts February 19 2025

Ends March 5 2025

Winner Announced March 7 2025

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW

You must use my song Had to Walk Away in your video Make sure it is heard loud and clear

Engagement matters Get your friends family and followers to like comment and share your video The more interaction the better your chances of winning

Only original content will be considered No stealing reposting or submitting someone else work

Tag me iamdgmula and use HadToWalkAwayChallenge DGmula ATMEntertainment so we can see your entry If we can not find it you can not win

Spread the word Tag your friends share the challenge and get to work This is your chance to shine and walk away with 200 dollars in cash

Who has got the best content Let us find out

HadToWalkAwayChallenge DGmula ATMEntertainment

"The First Time"

 

"The First Time"

Written By Forrest B
Stream YFE Tooda - The First Time 



 
Introduction

Music has a unique way of capturing emotions, taking listeners on a journey through sound, rhythm, and lyrical storytelling. "The First Time I Seen Her Face" does just that—pulling us into a world of instant attraction, deep admiration, and passionate energy. This track is more than just a song; it's a hypnotic blend of emotions that translate into a love story filled with awe, mystery, and intimacy.

The Power of Repetition & Hypnotic Flow

Right from the start, the song sets a mesmerizing tone. The opening lines—"Yea yea yea yea yea..." and "Wow. Wow. Wow."—create a hypnotic rhythm, drawing the listener into a dreamlike state. This repetition isn't just filler; it's a technique that builds anticipation and sets the mood for what's about to unfold—a deep dive into the moment love first strikes.

When Speaker 1 delivers the line "The first time I seen her face", the repetition reinforces the idea that this moment was unforgettable, almost unreal. By saying it multiple times, the artist expresses how deeply imprinted this memory is in his mind, making it clear that this was no ordinary meeting.

A Love Story of Awe & Desire

The lyrics take us through the speaker's admiration, as he describes how being with this woman is "so amazing." The emotion is raw and genuine—this isn't just physical attraction, but a connection that feels almost otherworldly. He wants to "come back in time" just to relive the moment, highlighting a sense of nostalgia and longing.

The metaphor "Baby you my reefer, cannabis sativa" brings an intoxicating element into the mix. Just like a high, being around her elevates him, making him feel euphoric. This comparison makes the love interest more than just a person—she’s an experience, a sensation that he craves.

Sensuality & Confidence

As the song progresses, the lyrics take on a more intimate and sensual tone. The line "Every time I come around you let a gangster lay you down" signifies trust, passion, and a raw connection between the two. There’s an undeniable chemistry, a fire that ignites whenever they’re together.

The phrase "She my pound cake, eat it like a forge round" is both playful and provocative, emphasizing desire in a way that feels both confident and natural. At the same time, he acknowledges that she keeps him guessing, adding an element of mystery that keeps the attraction alive.

A Vibe-Driven Outro

The song closes out with another round of repetition, with "Tutu. Tutu. Tutu dabba. Doo wop. Wop." and "Wop wop." blending into the instrumental. These lines don’t carry a literal meaning, but they serve as an extension of the song’s rhythm, emphasizing the carefree, almost hypnotic nature of the track. The vibe is just as important as the lyrics—it’s about feeling the music as much as hearing it.

Final Thoughts

"The First Time I Seen Her Face" is a song that thrives on emotion, rhythm, and passion. From the hypnotic repetition to the vivid metaphors, every element works together to create an immersive experience. It’s a track that captures the essence of instant attraction and deep connection, making listeners feel like they’re living the moment right alongside the artist.

Whether it’s the nostalgia of first love, the excitement of new romance, or the intoxicating pull of desire, this song delivers it all—wrapped in smooth melodies and undeniable vibes.

Would you relive the first time you saw your person? Let us know in the comments! 



A Brooklyn Love Story


A Brooklyn Love Story

By Forrest B

Stream A Brooklyn Love Store 

https://music.apple.com/us/album/a-brooklyn-love-story-single/1795512058



Love stories come in many forms, but there's something uniquely special about one that starts in the heart of Brooklyn. This is a story about hustle, fate, and black love—one that began in 2005 and evolved into a lifelong journey of passion, commitment, and family.

The Hustle & The Unexpected Spark

Back in 2005, I was just trying to get by—working retail at Macy’s, stacking my checks, and enjoying the little pleasures in life. Every morning started the same: wake and bake, get fly, and hop on the Iron Horse (NYC’s subway) to 34th Street. Between work and school, life was about making moves and chasing dreams.

But then, fate intervened. A casual day turned into something more when my boy Harry pointed out a shorty across the hall. One look, and I could already see the future—us chilling in gazebos, catching movie previews, sharing moments that felt larger than life. The energy between us was undeniable, magnetic even. I had to see where this would lead.

The Moment That Changed Everything

It started small, like a puzzle falling into place. A misplaced phone led me to her orbit, but it was the way we connected that truly mattered. Just like that, I found myself carving a path straight to her heart.

She wasn’t just any woman—she was a queen, a lioness who made me feel like a king. For her, I would do anything. We built something real, something powerful. It wasn’t perfect—no love story is—but we fought for each other, overcame obstacles, and strengthened our bond.

From Struggles to Black Excellence

Love isn’t just about passion; it’s about resilience. We had our moments—tests that could have broken us—but she stood by me, and I stood by her. In a world that tries to tear black love apart, we built something that thrived.

She became my partner in every sense of the word—the mother of my children, the woman who made my last name something to be proud of. Together, we created a legacy, a family, a love that only grows stronger with time.

Sealing Our Fate

I still remember those early days—Court Street, watching Mr. & Mrs. Smith, sharing meals, sealing our fate with a kiss. Now, we’ve built a life that’s better than anything I could have imagined. We’ve got our kids, our dreams, and a love story that’s as real as it gets.

This isn’t just a story—it’s a testament to what happens when two souls align and refuse to let go. Black love, black excellence, and a future built on something real.

If you ain’t know, now you know—this is based on a true Brooklyn love story.



WHO IS MISS DRACO

  Miss Draco Didn’t Wait for a Seat — She Built Her Own Table From the Bay to the A, and Now Straight Into the Spotlight Miss Draco is not...