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Artist Spotlight

Exclusive Interview With Leroy Booker, A Hip-hop Sensation Who Is On The Rise To The Top Of His Game

Leroy Booker

Music is most enjoyable when you can hear the artist being free. Not being held to any standard or format of what can make a great record, and being daring enough to use their full creativity. Those songs are always fun to enjoy as you get a piece of the mind of the artist on what is a well crafted sound that can only be done by them. That magic is what you will love about Leroy Booker when you listen to his songs.

Leroy Booker is a multi-talented singer and songwriter from Kenosha, WI, who is quickly gaining buzz for his catchy hooks and clever lyrics. His lyrics are often drawn from his personal experiences, but he is careful to strike a balance between reality and exaggeration. His journey as a music artist started after his audition with American Idol. This artist’s come up was not overnight, as Leroy Booker has invested countless hours into his grind on his rise to the top. His career has started to take off to new heights with his breakout single, “Ponder”. Other hits including “No Idol” and his most recent release, “Black Card” have landed him in the palms of his ever growing fan base.

Check out some of his songs on Spotify below:

Hi there, welcome to Honk Magazine! Thank you for taking out time to respond to us. To kick things off, Can you tell our readers about what really inspired you to write music?

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Leroy Booker – I’d say the thing that inspired me to write music was, it was the only way I knew how to express what I was feeling. In a time where I was growing up in the hood and legal family dynamics left me in the middle of two people I deeply carried about. Going to war was the only way I could process that as a kid. Going into my teen years, I started to just love writing poems just like Edgar Allen Poe who are some of my inspirations for what I talk about in some of my music.

When did you realize you were going to make music professionally?

Leroy Booker – The moment I hit my middle school talent show stage, the feeling I got then was that I fit in up there. That’s when I knew it was something I was gonna do for the rest of my life no matter what. It’s the only thing that makes me feel comfortable being me.

Leroy Booker
Tell us what is so unique about you and your music?

Leroy Booker – I just feel it’s raw and real. I don’t just write or create to make hits and money, I create to connect. I wanna show people the mistakes or right decisions I made to get me where I am and where I’m gonna be. Whether it’s the pitfalls of dealing with a break up the wrong way, drug abuse, or having a good time it’s all in the music and it’s there to connect, help and create a safe space for fans to go to in order for them not to feel alone.

Can you share a story about the funniest mistake you made when you were first starting? Can you tell us what lesson you learned from that?

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Leroy Booker – I think it was forgetting my own lyrics at a talent show one year in highschool, I just started making up lyrics at one point. My friends knew but everyone else was like that was great and I was like “really” haha. I think what I learned from that is the importance of being prepared. If people are paying or willing to sit there and connect with you, you owe it to them to be on your P’s and Q’s no matter what.

Can you tell us about your latest releases and what inspired you to create them?

Leroy Booker – Actually my latest single came out of friends getting me out of a writing funk. I had just gone through a break up and I couldn’t stop writing about it. I’m sure you will hear some of those tracks in the future, but I was out with a group of friends one night and we talked about it and it so happened to be my friends birthday so I was broke and instead of buying a gift I told her I’d write a song about her cause why not I needed to write about something else and that’s when the song just flew out. It was one of the first more uplifting kinda independent women attractive tracks I wrote in a while and my producer from Nashville had sent me the arrangement that night so it all kinda happened perfectly.

Can you give us a brief insight into your upcoming projects?

Leroy Booker – My upcoming projects are my best work to date, I really think my fans and new fans will like the route it’s going. The stories that are going to be told. It is probably the most vulnerable I will get with my mental state this past year. Which is hard for most men to even express let alone let strangers in to inspect and digest. But if it helps men and women alike work through and maybe feel it’s okay to feel what they are feeling then that’s what it’s all going to be about.

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What do you wish you were told when you first started making music that you think would help artists just starting out?

Leroy Booker – It doesn’t go as fast as you want it to. What makes you stand out is the willingness to fail and keep failing. Most people give up after the first few months cause their hit song isn’t popping but that’s not how this business works. It’s a trial and tribulation thing where one day you could be on top of the world and the next day plummet back to square one. I’d say I wish I was told that it isn’t rare to work years on this before you see any results. I probably wouldn’t have been as harsh on myself and have those writing blocks I did due to my own thinking.

Which tips would you recommend to your colleagues in your industry to help them to thrive and not “burn out”?

Leroy Booker – When you’re on a hot streak at work, don’t stop. It’s not going go be easy so experience life. What ever you were writing about in the first place, that’s what makes you relatable so go live your life then come back and write about that. Everything else will come when it’s supposed to. Don’t compare work ethic, just sharpen yours. No horse has ever won a race looking at the horse in first or last place at the start, middle or end of the race.

What do you do when you don’t do music (creative or otherwise) and that you are passionate about?

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Leroy Booker – I’m passionate about finding ways to raise money for crohns and colitis foundation as well as the Suicide prevention line. I hang with family and friends and make memories and I enjoy going and supporting other artists on their journey.

Any last piece of advice for those artists who just started making music?

Leroy Booker – Stop trying to be the next and be you. F*** all the noise in your head. You can quiet that by just putting effort in what you desire. Stop saying this will not happen and hope it happens, and most of all just enjoy the beginning stages. That’s when you’re free to create whatever you want but once you find your brand and niche it’s hard to break out of that box so enjoy finding yourself and your sound.

How can our readers follow you online?

Leroy Booker – Feel free to Hit me up on Instagram: @Leroy_Music

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Also don’t forget to follow and save my music on Spotify. You can also add me on SnapChat: @Leroybooker222 where you will hear most of my unreleased snippets.

Artist Spotlight

Nicki Minaj Crowned Hip-Hop Royalty As Billboard Names Her the Greatest Female Rapper of All Time

HonkMagazine

In a moment that seems both historic and long overdue, Billboard has officially bestowed the title of best female rapper of all time upon Nicki Minaj, supplanting the likes of hip-hop titans Missy Elliott, Lauryn Hill, Lil Kim, and other legendary game-changers. For a genre that has often downplayed women’s voices, this honor is a loud celebration of Nicki’s unique influence and talent. Billboard’s ranking wasn’t plucked from thin air. The publication emphasized that this list was based on criteria including chart performance, cultural impact, lyrical skill, flow, and career longevity, and Nicki checked every box with panache.

Whether it’s being the first female rapper to surpass the mark of Billboard Hot 100 hits back in 2018 to the massive success of her Pink Friday 2 World Tour, which is currently the highest-grossing tour of any female rapper of all time for more than a decade now, Minaj has been rewriting everything we thought a rap ideal could or should be. “Fifteen years from the first time she left earth with her godly verse on Kanye West’s ‘Monster,’” Billboard added, “Minaj is still running laps around the competition.” And they’re not wrong. Nicki’s voice has been inescapable since her debut album, Pink Friday, rattled the industry in 2010.

Check out this article: Mariah Carey Crashes Son Roc’s Twitch Stream in Hilariously Viral Moment

Whether she’s rapping as the fierce Chun-Li, the over the top Roman Zolanski, or her unfiltered real self, Onika, no one gets down like Baddie. Nicki’s combination of pop sensibility, fearless flow, and alter-ego creativity made her just as much a rap titan as an architect of modern pop-rap. She kicked down such wide doors, and an entire generation of new rappers, her self-styled “sons,” have walked through them. This is more than a win for Nicki Minaj, this is a victory for every ground-breaking female emcee who ever dared to dream bigger. Nicki’s story is one of defiance, dominance, and destiny, from mixtapes to megahits, from Barbie dreams to Billboard history.

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Artist Spotlight

Johanna Linnea Jakobsson delivers a wake-up call with genre-blending anthem ‘Work’

The-New-Standard

Johanna Linnea Jakobsson’s new single, “Work,” is a tender whisper reverberating big truths. With “Work,” Johanna knows vulnerability can be both a strength and a soundtrack. The song explores that very familiar feeling of being stuck. But instead of dramatizing it, she wraps the emotion in something tender and true.

Curtailing the velvet undertones of jazz with the earthy folk textures and the intimacy of singer/songwriter storytelling, “Work” sounds like a contemplative, honest, and quietly powerful rainy Sunday morning. From the opening note, the track has a lazy ease that calls to mind Norah Jones, its jazzy lilt, and soothing vocals coaxing you into the fold. The instrumentation is subtle but intentional, with acoustic guitar chords softly caressing a jazzy rhythm section, while delicate piano lines add an almost meditative dimension to the song. The production never overwhelms the message, and it adds emotional shading.

But where it works its magic is in the chorus, which is instantly memorable and deeply relatable. It captures the inner dialogue that so many of us know too well, the push to keep moving forward despite emotional exhaustion, and the quiet shame of not knowing how to ask for help. Instead of easy answers, Johanna gives us something better and a shared space of feeling seen.

The power of “Work” is in its restraint. It aspires to be glossy or overproduced. It breathes. It listens. And it gently whispers to the part of us that’s quietly screaming. There’s a healing there, especially when it comes packaged in this lush, genre-fluid arrangement.

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