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After a little under two years, Gary was forced to move back to
Ohio when his mother developed colon cancer, and she moved in
with her sister. Gary could only see his mother on the weekends
because his Aunt lived in Indiana, and he lived in Ohio, and the trip
was too far to make after school every day. Sadly, the trips stopped
in September of 1994 when his mother passed away. He was
devastated by this, but he had to move on and get a job to help
support his family. At the age of only 15 years old, he got a job
working at McDonald's, and played high school basketball at the
same time. It was a very trying time for him, and took so much out of
him, that he had thoughts of suicide. His love for the rest of his
family kept him alive though. Through the entire time, he still had
dreams of being a professional rap artist.
Gary survived that time, and went on to college the next
school year, at the age of just 16. He attended Miami University in
Oxford, Ohio, and still goes there now. The summer after his
freshman year, he stayed with his friends, the Keene family and Eric
Kingsley, for 3 and a half weeks. While he was there, his brother
came down, and because of his brother, Gary decided to start a
record company to get his music out. He wrote fourteen songs over
the next few weeks and recorded 13 of them in Liberty, Kentucky at
Apple Barn Studios. Gary had recorded his first professional album,
under the name Mission Man. The album is called "Intro to my
mind." It is the first project recorded under Wakefire Records, and is
scheduled for release sometime in late October. In the album,
Mission Man raps about many things, including safe sex, working
hard, lifting weights, playing basketball, and just being yourself.
Gary chose the name Mission Man because he is on a mission to
change things in this country and this world by rapping about real
life, and how to get through many of it's problems. Gary got sick of
hard core rap because he decided that people needed to be
educated on how to change things and not just be educated that
something was wrong. Gary is hoping people will listen to what he
has to say, and not just to his beats and his rap style. Mission Man
wants to make a difference with his music, and isn't in the rap game
just for the money. That's why he is keeping the price on his album
down. He doesn't feel a CD should cost $16 dollars, especially if the
CD has a message behind it and it's main goal is to educate people.
To order the album, call (513)524-4425 or
click here for the order form. The album is $8 plus tax,
plus shipping and handling, for a total of $9. The album is not in stores
yet, but it is finished, and you can order it here. I have to get
UPC stuff straightened out before I can put it in stores.
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