“Every song ain’t gonna be for you,” Trick added about the album. “There will be at least one song for you because I’m not in the struggle alone. That’s what my music is about, the struggle.”
The street scorcher “This Tha Life That I Live” is the album’s setup cut and features T Double D wielding vintage aggression.
“I’ll shoot up your whole little set./ Wet up your ‘04 Maybach,” Trick says with blissful belligerence. “No flaws, if it’s a problem./ Miami Gardens, they gon’ hear that./ None of that click clack, you taking them pot shots with.”
“I had to go in and address a few things on that record,” Trick described. “It’s a cut throat game, cut throat world for that matter, but I’m going to keep riding. I also have another song on there called ‘Bitch Ass Niggas.’ I’m sure there are a lot of bitch niggas that you know. Everybody has had some type of encounters with a bitch ass nigga. These guys have no morals, no values, practice no type of ethics. Another favorite song on my album is “That’s How We Do It,” with Betty Wright singing on that. That’s like my Godmother. She’s so talented and down to earth.
Elsewhere, Trick speaks to females who persevere through tough times.
“’Strong Woman,’” he reveals of another record off his album, “is gonna be big with the ladies, big with the ring tones. Throughout my career, I have rapped about experiences with scandalous women, but I’ve always tried to show a balance as well. ‘Strong Woman,’ I just wanted to make about the ladies out there that keep there households together, teach their kids, keep their mates on point. There are definitely a lot of strong women out there that need to be recognized.”
Trick doesn’t have to look too far for his own strong woman. He and his wife AJ have been married for over five years and the two have a very special project outside of music to help he kids in the community.
“We really want to try and get into Foster Care and find a way to help these children out that don’t have homes. We’re looking to starting a agency to that can lend a hand to this cause.”
Trick still works tirelessly in the community, constantly giving back through his foundation Trick Loves The Kids. He’s working to become a spokesperson for research to combat Lupus, a disease he was stricken with over a decade ago. Elsewhere in entertainment, Trick recently shot his first ever film, it’s a drama called “Just Another Day.”
“It’s got a lot of the actors that’s gonna be big time starring in it,” he says. “It features a lot of the guys from ‘The Wire.’ It’s an intricate movie based around hip-hop and it deals with Miami too. It’s going to be a good movie. What attracted me to being in the film was the challenge of starting another phase in my career. I’ve consistently made hit records, I’ve made records that are hood classic without any radio play, but I’ve always wanted to try my hand at acting. I received a quality script with a great opportunity to play an interesting character, so why not?”
2009 promises to be a very busy year from Trick as he endeavors to make his mark as an entrepreneur. Backed by MTV Books, Trick will release an autobiography later this year, entitled: “Magic City: Trials Of a Native Son,” that will detail Trick’s personal life and rise to iconic rap figure. Next, he will also try his hand at a graphic novel series called “Nann”, which features Trick as a super hero, tackling issues in the community that range from poverty to homelessness to saving the music industry from fraudulent rappers and finally, we can also look forward to the Trick Daddy bobble head as a collector’s item.
“The album is actually the soundtrack for the book,” he says. “I’m telling you from discovering my first love of music to the first time I saw somebody use cocaine. I tell you everything I ever have been arrested for, I speak about going to prison. I tell you the first time I heard the words ‘free base,’ the first crack baby I remember seeing. You’ll get my accounts of surviving three major hurricanes, two major riots. But we’re not getting anybody indicted, I’m not violating any street codes when telling my story.”
Trick Daddy’s first breakthrough in music came in the mid 90’s on Luther Campbell’s club anthem “Scarred.” From there, Trick parlayed the notoriety he received on the guest appearance with his 1997 debut Based on a True Story, which was followed up the next year by one of his favorite LP WWW.Thug.Com. Trick got his first introduction to mainstream success via the album timeless banger “Nann Ni**a” with the rap Bonnie to His Clyde, Trina. From there, Trick flourished with a series of hit records and classic albums including “Shut Up,” “America,” “Thug Holiday,” “Play No Games,” “Sugar (Gimme Some),” “Let’s Go” and “In Da Wind” where his coined phrase “Trick Loves The Kids” came to prominence.
“I’m so proud that I’ve been able to have wonderful longevity in my career without ever having to comprise my messages or my sound,” Trick says. “Now that I am a CEO, I’ll drop jewels on my artist so that that they can carve their way with their own, distinct styles of making music.”
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