Did you miss the article we did on Tory Vee? Make sure to check it out.

Did you miss the article we did on Tory Vee? Make sure to check it out.

Did you miss the article we did on Baegera? Check it out

Interview with VBae
By: Where It Begins
Q. Tell us who VBae is?
A. VBae is a versatile type of chick; multi-personality but not in a crazy way, ha-ha. She’s outgoing & outspoken.
Q. How did you become a Vegan? What challenges have you had becoming one?
A. I became vegan because I got really sick with a tumor a while back. And I just started looking into what was going into my body. I was just becoming more aware, stuff like that. Challenges, I would say are going to the mall and smelling fried chicken, you know anywhere like fast food. When I got into Publix, they’ve got all the hot food, oh my gosh it smells so good. But then I’m like no, it’s not good for you. Period.
Q. If you could go anywhere in the world where would you go?
A. I would probably go to Italy because that’s where my mother’s side of the family is from. And yeah, Italy is beautiful. I would love to go there.
Q. Describe your style and how it is different from others?
A. My style is different because I only f*** like one-on-one s***. I try to find people who are just coming up and show love to independent business owners. That’s pretty much my style. I don’t like wearing what everybody else is wearing, period.
Follow up at @v_b_a_e_
To see full article go to https://issuu.com/cecewibnet/docs/wib_magz_may_2020_06_

Interview with Toon
By: Where It Begins
Q. Tell everyone who Toon is and how you got the name Toon?
A. Well Toon is a humble person who grew up on the southside of Atlanta who always loves sports and music. I love to rhyme….I got my name from my grandma. She passed a year after I was born so we just stuck with Toon because she gave me that name but she got it from my girl cousin whose name was Toon Toon…
Q. What made you want to be a Rapper?
A. I always like to rhyme words together and make a story like a poet. It was just in me from the jump.
Q. What is one of your best experiences or accomplishments?
A. Seeing my family happy about my success and having the best team ever with me period and that’s MMR x CLB 4Life in my best experience coming out of the helicopter for my mixtape release was like a movie straight up.
Q. What or who inspired you to be a Rapper?
A. My lifestyle, the struggle, the pain and my family.
Follow me @toon_clb
To see full article go to https://issuu.com/cecewibnet/docs/wib_magz_may_2020_06_


Interview with Blaque Rose
By: Where It Begins
Quote: “I remember singing a song that I heard on the radio and would change the lyrics to the song that I think that would have been better”.
Q. Tell us more who Blaque Rose the pop artist from New York is?
A. Blaque Rose is a music artist that loves art and music. He has been around the music industry for many years.
Q. Tell us about your EP “Super Natural”?
A. Super Natural EP is truly a masterpiece. It took 2 years to finish it because I wanted to make a classic album with cool 80s artistic vibes and that’s what I did. It is an amazing album. Make sure to listen to all social media platforms.
Q. What advice can you give to other upcoming pop artists?
A. Keep on creating, don’t ever stop learning this business. It is always moving so you have to be ahead of the game!
Q. What is one of your best experiences or accomplishments you’ve had being a pop artist?
A. Meeting so many cool artists and musicians and producers. If I had the chance to do it again I would do it again. My best experience was getting my first 100,000 streams on Spotify. That was one of the best experiences that I can think of.
Follow me at @blaquerose
To see full article go to https://issuu.com/cecewibnet/docs/wib_magz_may_2020_06_



Interview with Introducing Ascended Man: Scott Howard
By: Where It Begins
Q. Tell us more of who Scott Howard is?
A. The Soul Spark known as Scott Howard is a 3D being on a journey of ascension to 5D. About 5 years ago, I went through an awakening of sorts. Source & my Angels felt it was time to take off the training wheels and enlightened me to what was behind the curtain of OZ. I thought I was going crazy, but I discovered that EVERYTHING IS ALIVE… even the air we breathe…we are NEVER alone. I guess I am what you would call a ‘lightworker’ for a lack of a better term. It was made clear to me that I was to bring a new genre of music to the world as it was in great need. This music is called ‘source music’ and is played at 432 Hz. I am one that has seen & been through a lot of pain being a Capricorn. We are the low man on the totem pole and do best at night (most musicians do!), My son Maxx was taken from me 2 years ago which devastated me. I locked myself in my studio for 2 weeks and wrote my next 2 albums. In general, I get very little sleep and write constantly. I feel the music is probably channeled from the Angelic realm. However, I was told by a well-known psychic that my spirit guides are Nickola Tesla and John Lennon…what better company? I guess that is why my new album “The Language of Clouds” would resonate with The Beatles Nickola Tesla enthusiasts given that my music is at 432 Hz which raises the frequency of the listeners. My vibration has gone up and I seem to be more psychic as I see things I have never seen before…some good and some bad… but all in all, I’m ready to help raise the frequency of the world.
Q. What do you consider your best life experience or accomplishment?
A. The birth of my two children: my son who is gone, Maxx, and my daughter Alyx, and meeting my soulmate and wife Debbie, and writing Source music in 432 that seems to resonate with the world.
Q. Where do you see your career in the next 5 years?
A. In the next five years I plan on extensively touring for both live performances and radio throughout the world. I will write, teach, heal, continue to learn from my angels, love my family, and live a fulfilling 5D life… perform and bring light to where there is darkness…Be light!
Q. Is there anything else you’d like to add?
A. What is happening in our world is all about good and evil and economics. The evil that has operated under the public’s general consciousness has stolen more than you can imagine but will reveal itself soon enough… then the healing will need to happen. As the atrocities and crimes are beyond comprehension, I hope my music in 432 Hz will help increase the hope and frequency for as many as possible. Let us be the driving force to bring heaven to earth…be light.
You call follow me at www.ScottHowardMusic.com
To see full article go to https://issuu.com/cecewibnet/docs/wib_magz_may_2020_06_

Interview with M.O Littles
By: Where It Begins
Q. Tell us more about who M.O. Littles the Hip-Hop artist from Toronto is?
A. I am a Toronto based, Hip-Hop artist who has been lucky enough to perform my music in over countries around the world. I’ve also had the opportunity to do shows and be on songs with the likes of Machine Gun Kelly, Bone Thugs N Harmony, Merkules, Madchild and Celph Titled & Apathy, to name a few.
Q. What or who influenced you to get into music?
A. The first time I heard Hip-Hop music was Maestro Fresh Wes’ “Drop the Needle” when I was 10 years old. That was a defining moment in my life and started me on a lifelong pursuit. I’ve had many influences throughout my years of making music, however, Tupac was the biggest during my formative years.
Q. How is the music in Toronto different from the U.S. music?
A. The music, itself, in Toronto isn’t all that much different than the U.S. because of the internet, we all get instant access to new music so things that are trending in the U.S., or anywhere else in the world, are simultaneously happening here as well. That being said, artists who aren’t necessarily following trends and creating music that is more based in their reality, can definitely come up with their own sound.
Q. What are some of your other hobbies?
A. I’ve always been into photography and have been working a lot more on it recently.
Q. What is one of your best experiences or accomplishments you had being an artist?
A. The greatest moments, as an artist, are always receiving messages from fans saying that my music has helped them in some way. Nothing is more rewarding.
Follow me @M.O. Littles
To see full article go to https://issuu.com/cecewibnet/docs/wib_magz_may_2020_06_

Interview with Clay James
By: Where It Begins
Quote from Clay James
“My mom and grandma inspire me. I’ve seen them both pull off miracles having little to no resources.”
Q. Tell us who Clay James the Hip-Hop artist is?
A. I was born in Atlanta and raised in Savannah Ga. I moved from Atlanta when I was a baby then came back here around 2004. Been here ever since. My career started on the campus of Georgia State University while I was enrolled there. I’m a member of Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity Incorporated and was pretty known “Popular” on campus so one of my older frats bruhs Imari Curtis suggested I should rap. So, I tried it out and I started getting a buzz.
Q. What or who inspired you?
A. My mom and grandma inspire me. I’ve seen them both pull off miracles having little to no resources. When I was little, I remember my mom having like 3 jobs at one point. I feel like that’s where I get my grind from. My grandma was one of my first supporters of my music dream. Since she passed away, my mom has taken up the slack in that department.
Q. How was your experience working and being mentored by Big Boi from Outkast?
A. Big Boi is a solid dude. He’s a nonsense type of dude too. It’s always dope when I think about how close we got because he never took anyone from back home (Savannah, GA) under his wing before. I was the first and only so far. I learned a lot of jewels from him just being around and talking that I hold near me today. I give him the credit for discovering me. I had a buzz before I met him, but once he co signed me it took me to another level. People took me way more seriously.
Q. What is one of your best experiences or accomplishments?
A. Getting signed by Snoop and going on tour with him. I’ve never told anybody this before, but I wasn’t really a snoop fan as a kid. I was a Tupac fan when it came to Death Row Records. I always looked at Snoop as a super-duper star and I liked some of his music. To go from watching Snoop every day on TV to being with him learning the game every day was kind of surreal. I don’t respect how it ended and him and his team know why, but I definitely appreciate what he did for me in the time we were together.
Follow me @clayjames
To see Full article go to https://issuu.com/cecewibnet/docs/wib_magz_may_2020_06_
