Nic Stokes Presents: “NOBody Knows”- A WorldLife Camp event [POST EVENT WRITE UP]
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However, the host of the night won it all! He gave us his portrayal of Chicago's ‘Lil’ Durk’ to a T’, gold locs and all. Everyone else who wasn't with the theatrics decided to simply dress to impress, like 2021 Milwaukee Film Festival winner, independent filmmaker Marquise Mays who gave a smooth Nupe shimmy on the dance floor, or Milwaukee fashion model JuJu Kujjo who dressed up as herself- but ‘made it fashion!’ There wasn't a corner in the room that wasn’t filled with people and the vibes kept going all night; A great mixture of early 2000’s favorites and current summer hits kept us all jammin.’ After having indulged in the vibes of the night long enough, I finally pulled Nic Stokes to the side, into the semi-quietness of the stairwell for a brief interview
CW: …[Lexi] was telling me, “WordLife Camp was a part of our come up...CopyWrite would be nothing without [our] collaborations with [WorldLife Camp]...” Would you tell me what your background with CopyWrite is; what your background is, period- how you got started?
N: Yea, so back in the day, my big brothers from WorldLife Camp built a relationship with CopyWrite. CopyWrite threw a lot of events. I remember one specifically at 88.9 radio, I believe, there was a concert series and they did an event there…
(“So icy” by Gucci Mane started playing in the background during this interview. . . Ha, how player is that?)
N: ...I've always been supportive of CopyWrite; it's Black and woman owned, and I'm all about diversity so that was really it for me. I definitely wanted to have them as a part of this event. For my background, I've been doing parties since I was 9 years old. I've been on the radio- my dad is Earl Stokes from 98.3- people may know me as ‘Jammin Nic’, some people just know me as ‘Nic Stokes’, so that's kinda just my background. I went to Atlanta for school, Morehouse, so I got the chance to get a different perspective on partying, curating events and the possibilities that can happen. I tried to bring that back to Milwaukee.
CW: Is partying something that you simply feel good doing or do you feel that there is a greater purpose for you in bringing people together? What is it about the lane of partying for you that means a lot?
N: Well, I think that the underlying thing about partying is the music. Music brings people together, it takes you back to different times and points in your life where you might have struggled, when you might have had success, when you were just having a good time... I think it's just a good thing that you can do to bring people together….just partying with your friends and family, you might get a chance to network and meet somebody that may be in your same field or endeavor of work; you might get the chance to cross paths with someone that you might not have before. So that's what I try to do. I try to bring diverse crowds- and not necessarily race but it could be different lanes, it could be somebody that's an artist, somebody that's a journalist, somebody that's a construction worker, somebody that does real estate- so that's why it's important to me to create spaces in Milwaukee where people can do that.
CW: What I've noticed about certain individuals, or even certain groups who resonate with one doing things their own way tend to be the “black sheep” of their families or of where they come from...do you feel that you are the black sheep of where you come from- socially, creatively, in your background….?
N: I wouldn't necessarily say that I'm the black sheep, I would just say that I just took my own lane, and I see other people doing that same thing… I don't wanna be self-serving and say ‘oh I'm the only person doing this and the only person doing that’, you know what I mean?
CW: I feel that. As far as the end goal for your impact, is it being a party host, is it doing something more? What is the end goal for your influence of bringing people together and doing things that come naturally to you? Where do you see yourself?
N: That's something that I would wanna do full time because I enjoy it. That's my passion. I wanna make sure that people are good, people are having a good time, making sure that people have a space where they can be themselves and have a great time, so whether that be parties, concerts or networking at social events, things like that are kinda my lane...not kinda, that is my lane.
CW: I see that you have newer faces like DJ Gemini Gilly here-
N: She's awesome.
CW: Yeah, she's great. Do you feel that you have a responsibility to the newer [faces] of creatives in Milwaukee because there are a lot of people who are a part of the older scene of Milwaukee- the influencers, the people who were the go-getters, the initiators, the parties, the bashes, the concerts, the shows. . . Do you feel that you have a responsibility to the up-and-coming [creatives], the youth?
N: I think that you definitely-
(Speaking of Big Gilly, “Ski” by Gunna and Young Thug cuts on and Stokes can't help but to feel it)
N: ... Awww this is my song, I'm sorry….
(He puts on his MC voice and speaks into the mic, still by the stairwell, unseen but still heard)
N: ... Yeah, yeah, yeah! I need yall to hit that dance! Yeah! Yeah! . . . My bad.
CW: It's all good. That was awesome!
N: I've known DJ Gemini Gilly for a long time. We went to ‘King together and when she first got on her D.J. journey I was like ‘yo, I gotta support you. You're Black. You're a woman. You’re independent. You're strong. You're trying to get out here. I have to support you because you have a passion.’ I think that anybody that has a passion for something, anybody that's really honest and really wanting to express themselves and reach their goals and go after their passions, I think the whole city- I think that everybody should support them. It was only right that I had her come here to D.J. tonight.
CW: I appreciate that..the way you just say that, Black man supporting Black woman, Black woman supporting Black men and Black people just supporting each other, genuinely.
N: As a Black man, you gotta support the queens. . . Got to. I just feel like I have that responsibility because I have a Black mom, I have Black sisters, I have a Black niece, you know what I mean? It's only right.
CW: We appreciate that, so thank you. . . It's poppin tonight. It's lit!
You should have been there, but we are sure there will be more.
/Naomi-Re’a for CW
Bee's in Black Cat Alley | an interview with NEW muralist Mi Salgado
/The art in Black Cat Alley on the East side of Milwaukee (E Ivanhoe Pl, Milwaukee, WI 53202) is iconic. From breathtaking imagery, bold colors, creative use, and even moments of controversial application, it is a place in the city like no other. If you have been to Black Cat Alley within the last month, you would have surely noticed that a new cohort of artists were selected to create new murals to become a part of its growing narrative of public art. Excited to see the work in action, CopyWrite visited Mi Salgado as she worked on her piece, Life’s Pollinators.
The original design for Mi’s mural was based off of a painting she curated in 2020 during quarantine. Before Covid happened she had been working on a body of work to submit to a gallery show. However, when the world shut down and those opportunities were no longer an option she decided to redirect her creative focus.
Mi: “I wanted to come up with a piece that defined how working hard can turn into something beautiful and working together can [do the same]. In some way we are all connected.”
She pointed out how the bees pollinate, flowers grow, and we sustain life and beauty through those actions. Her mural shows these components together in a larger than life abstraction of honey combs, flowers, and bee’s together in splashes of orange and yellow warmth.
As a self taught artist who only began to dabble in professional work in 2018, Mi is excited to be a part of the list of names who have blessed Black Cat Alley with their work. Being a professional artist was never really something Mi had considered for herself, but when she had the opportunity to take on a commission it changed her trajectory and pushed her to explore the craft a little more.
Mi: “I started off drawing and doing a lot of pin work. Then that turned into painting. From there I also picked up wood burning. So I have been practicing a lot of different disciplines.
Though the discussion of public art in Milwaukee has only recently become a priority in the city, Black Cat Alley has been making its way in that arena since 2015. New to this side of the creative world we asked Mi what she has learned so far as an up-and-coming talent:
Mi: “It’s not easy!” She laughed. “One thing I think I suck at is creating the statements. It’s a whole process. You really need to know how to write.”
Writing about your work is something many artists neglect, thus they leave others to create the narrative for them. Mi has been using her family and friends as resources to make sure what she is writing is being interpreted in the way she delivers it. It’s something she is still learning and working on.
Creating more public art is something Mi plans on continuing to do. Now that she knows the process she constantly looks at mural calls to see if there is one that might fit. With Black Cat Alley being one of her first murals and the space having so much notoriety, Mi has a jump start into a very niche but competitive field.
CW: “What do you think about the shift in Public art rapidly appearing across Milwaukee in the last few years? Why do you think such a shift is occurring?”
Mi: “I want to say Milwaukee is experiencing a whole new art scene. There are a lot of young professionals and stuff like that. I think that could be a reason. There are so many unknown artists here. I think that’s something Black Cat Alley is trying to do, [give] unknown artists an opportunity. I think it’s also like a new culture.
She also mentioned wanting to experience the public art scenes in other places which may fuel inspiration for more work.
Though this is Mi, first public large scale solo mural she has helped kids create mural work in the past. The difference she notes is having the ability to use your own concept and let it flow freely. Even in her current piece, she modified the way in which the composition wraps the bump out in the alley where her mural is and also the type of flowers the bees will pollinate. These modifications are a part of the process and a part of the story that makes working in public spaces so special.
For any artist thinking about stepping into the public art scene, Mi suggests that practice is everything.
Mi: “Don’t give up. Keep submitting. Your first application will be the crappiest one. Just keep practicing. Try to make that resume and artist statement better. Try to perfect that application.”
And clearly the practice is worth it.
Next time you're “on the East” make sure to stop at Black Cat Alley to see Mi Salgados piece, Life’s Pollinators, and other amazing murals that are sure to inspire.
Lexi S. Brunson /CW
COPYWRITE MAGAZINE OFFICIAL DROP! Issue 18: a Seat at the Table [Place your PRE-ORDER now!]
/When it comes to having a seat at the table there are often force fields that block access to even stepping foot in the room and the idea of scarcity keeps many of us from trying to get through. But the willingness to break bread is the difference between the talkers and the doers. In issue 18 of CopyWrite Magazine we will be serving an undeniable spread of collaboration, innovation, entrepreneurship, community, equity, and many other side dishes that are sure to satisfy.
Interviews with Among The Prime, C&B Creative, Rowan, Eli $tone and Tone Da Man
Bayview’s Fall Festival “Beet Street” [Write Up]
/This year, Cactus Club was bold, bold and decided that not only was the Pandemic not going to stop them from bringing a crowd of people together (masks suggested of course), but they were going to be hosting the 5th annual Bayview Fall Festival “Beet Street”, along with Palomino Bar and Goodkind. The people showed up and filled the entire sidewalk onto Wentworth Ave., vendors and customers alike. I took a stroll straight into Cactus Club to see what form of festivities were happening in the back performance area, having to inch my way past the bar amidst a sea of people. I entered the backroom door and the first thing that I saw was the spectacle that is Felix Ramsey’s video for his 2020 hit “So High” playing on the big screen with an atypical front row audience..! Maneuvering my way back out onto the street, I stopped at many of the vendors’ tables; wherever there was a tent, I went; the ground was so covered in yellow and orange leaves, it was like a scene from ‘CoCo’ and for a second I was Miguel. We literally skipped Autumn last year, yall!
Bay View’s collaborative fall festival, Beet Street, celebrates live music, community building and film with seasonal drinks, foods and an artists market
/*Info provided by Julia Bellair
On Saturday, October 9th, 2021, Cactus Club, Palomino Bar and Goodkind will team up to host the 5th annual Beet Street Fall Festival. This family-friendly event runs noon-6pm with an indoor after-party to follow.
Cactus Club has curated a lineup of rising stars: Chicago's modern disco darling, Ric Wilson, will headline with direct support from LA psych-rockers Frankie & The Witch Fingers. Fantastic Milwaukee artists CREDENTIALS and Clayton will also play. CREDENTIALS is a noisy, math rock 4-piece fronted by Cat Ries (No/No, Rio Turbo, Pleasure Thief) with a debut album coming out this November. Clayton continues to turn up the heat into fall. A distinguished vocalist, Clayton crafts a broad range of stylized R&B with lush harmonies. Intergenerational quintet Mariachi Zomara will kick things off complimented by the DJ stylings of Cozmiika between sets.
This block party celebrates community organizations doing incredible work across the city and state. Teens Grow Greens, Girls Rock Camp, Milwaukee High School of the Arts, Midwest Renewable Energy Association and Bayview Historical Society will all have a presence in addition to several mutual aid groups and health resource centers. Interactive games from our friends at Music Go Round.
The Beet Street Music Video Showcase highlights a wide-range of filmmakers in Milwaukee and beyond through a curated selection of music videos, documentary shorts and more. This showcase will screen on loop in the live room of Cactus Club throughout the day.
Honeypie’s Great Midwestern Pie Championship is a crucial part of the festivities. Bake and enter your favorite pie to win prizes! Outstanding seasonal cocktails will be available from all three establishments in addition to caramel apples, roasted corn and food from Frida’s Cocina Taco Truck, Twisted Plants and more. To round out the party, there will be an artists market that includes book/zine vendors, farmers, local honey purveyors, custom clothing and a punk rock rummage sale.
Beet Street Fall Festival provides a warm and welcoming atmosphere for all to enjoy. The event aims to connect people, communities and causes in a space that enriches all senses. There will be an emphasis on youth participation and activities. As is the case with all Cactus Club events, eclectic music programming will be at the forefront of this fall party.
Learn more
Website: www.cactusclubmilwaukee.com
Back Stage: Summerfest 2021
/Back stage access needed? No problem. We got that!
CopyWrite Magazine took on our September coverage with a twist: on assignment at the “Big Gig”. Yes, that’s right, Summerfest.
With a year of crowd surfing lost and a postponed festival date, we couldn’t wait to step back stage to chat it up with some of our new local favs and some not so far removed midwest creative peeps. Check out these three Snap Shot interviews from our ever growing Summerfest vault.
DJay Mando:
Not a stranger to performing on Summerfest stages, DJay Mando was especially READY for this year’s festival. With this being the first Summerfest since cancelling due to COVID-19, and him doing two sets this year, Mando and his team came prepared to do what they do best - rock a show. The trifecta that is Mando and his dynamic dancing duo Dos and Chris G, put on two memorable shows opening up for Flo Rida and Nelly.
(side note: Likeee, what DJ do you know who brings a whole dancing crew with them at every show? That’s how you do entertainment! They’re DIFFERENT, Okay!)
However, this wouldn’t be Mando’s first show this year, because a pandemic couldn’t stop him from making moves. The “We Outside” concert Mando put together earlier this summer was much needed after being cooped up during quarantine for over a year.
“Everything was pivoting to online and I knew I didn’t want to do that,” Mando said.
The “We Outside” show on June 26th, 2021 was one of the first big concerts back in the city out of the pandemic and it represented the epitome of Milwaukee. With acts such as Chicken P, Gwapo Chapo, Solowke and more opening up for the female goat and Milwaukee’s own Lakeyah, the #414 was ready to once again enjoy their hometown favorites. Yung Bleu was also a headliner on the lineup until he canceled at the last minute and blamed it on “missing a flight.”
“[Yung Bleu] is never getting played by me ever again,” Mando said. “He pretty much ditched our show the day of, went to the Clippers game and they lost in game 7. So that’s what they get..that’s what he gets.”
Even with the last minute adjustments to make the show amazing, Mando and his team exceeded expectations and had a successful show. You can expect more shows from DJay Mando in the future, with more big name artists headlining. For now though, you can catch him spinning in UW-Madison as the official area DJ for their football and basketball games!
“I graduated from UW-Madison so to be the football and basketball arena DJ, it all came full circle, it’s amazing!” Mando said.
DJay Mando 100% knows his audience and is great at catering to them. From his electric astronaut performances with Dos and Chris at Summerfest, his sold out shows at The Miramar, the relationship he has with the Cheba Hut franchise, and now his DJ residency at UW-Madison, EVERY ENTREPRENEUR SHOULD TAKE NOTES! Mando is strategic, always on brand and to top it all off, you can tell he genuinely loves what he does. With a formula like that, you can’t lose.
DJ Gemini Gilly:
When you’re talking about a blend/edit/mashup Queen, it would be disrespectful for DJ Gemini Gilly’s name to not be in the conversation. With her vast catalog of pure music genius, her creative mixes of hip-hop and R&B tracks are always the right vibe. This year was DJ Gemini Gilly’s Summerfest debut, and it was a well-deserved and earned accomplishment after all the hard work she has been putting in the last few years.
(Forreal, if you haven’t heard of her, are you really from Milwaukee? You’ve clearly been sleep!)
“This[Summerfest] is like my official coming out party to Milwaukee, forreal forreal” Gilly said.
Music has always been a big part of Gilly’s life growing up, thanks to her big brother. He introduced her to a lot of styles like down south music from artists such as DJ Screw, Mike Jones, Paul Wall, along with artists from the East coast like Bad Boy, DMX, and The Lox. DJ Gemini Gilly was that friend who you trusted to pass the AUX to because you knew she was going to play some straight-up HEAT. That’s the kind of person who is destined to be a DJ.
DJ Gemini Gilly was a social work major at UW-Madison when she began teaching herself how to DJ over her winter break in 2018. What started as a hobby due to a love of music and a stressful job, quickly became an idea of something much bigger. Her first DJing gig was in 2019 and even despite the pandemic, her DJ career kept flourishing throughout 2020. From her first night at Pourman’s, The Black is Beautiful bike ride after set, debuting as the first female Butler Skateland DJ, and so many more, Gilly’s name was popping up everywhere! It’s only been up and stuck from there.
“I love when I’m on stage and bringing people together with music,” Gilly said. “I’m crossing my fingers and sending blessings that hopefully I will definitely be able to do this full-time. I also want to find a way to merge social work and DJing in a way where I’m able to do both, because I’m still very passionate about social work and just the community in general.”
Until then you can catch her consistently applying pressure on Instagram, consistently spinning gems at events and she recently announced she was selected to be an in-arena DJ for the Milwaukee Bucks! It’s been amazing to witness her journey and watch her dreams come full circle.
Ever since starting in 2018, DJ Gemini Gilly put her foot on the gas and has no intentions of letting up. She should definitely be on your “ones to watch” list. She’s the now. She’s the future and she stands her ground on Webbie having the best verse on “I.N.D.E.P.E.N.D.E.N.T.”
Taylor Bennett:
Summerfest 2021 was a first for Taylor Bennett. It was also his first show back live since the pandemic. So of course, what better place to have his first show than the city that’s home to the NBA Champions!
“Shoutout to the Bucks, We the Champs!” Bennett said. “I feel like I claim it just as a midwest kid.”
Taylor came to a few Milwaukee Bucks Finals games this year, along with his older brother Chance The Rapper, who also performed the same day at Summerfest headlining the American Family Insurance Amphitheatre stage. Shockingly to my knowledge, Taylor says he used to come to Milwaukee all the time when he was younger, and even when he was older would perform at different shows here. When I asked him if he thought Milwaukee is comparable to a little Chicago, like I hear everyone else always say, he agreed.
Carrie: “Is there a favorite place you like to go when you’re here?”
Taylor: “I just went to this new spot and it’s probably my new favorite - Proof Pizza. That sh*t is bomb!”
When Taylor isn't in MKE getting full off of Proof pizza, he’s on the gram showing body-ody-ody! And in the words of BIA, he invested in his body, b*tch he’s done up (or invested his time as Taylor let me know LOL). His fitness journey started after he had his first son, Charlie, in 2019. Taylor says he always envisioned himself being the type of Dad who would throw around the football with his son, and being 23 at the time, he didn’t feel like he was at the fit level he thought he was. Eventually he got addicted to seeing the results from all the time he was putting in and enjoyed the peace of mind it gave him.
Carrie: “If there was one tip you could give somebody who’s thinking about starting but doesn't have that push/motivation to get on their fitness journey, what would you tell them? How did you start?”
Taylor: “The only thing that’s really guaranteed, that you can put your time and resources that are guaranteed results in this world, that nobody can take away from you, is fitness. Once I realized that I felt like it’s like that for a reason.”
In the industry one of the biggest decisions an artist makes is if they want to sign to a record deal or stay independent. Taylor Bennett, is one artist who has remained independent throughout his entire career so far, along with his brother Chance. With so many years in the game running things solo, Taylor would know more than anybody how to successfully be independent.
Carrie: “What’s the biggest tip you know now that you wish you knew back then when you first started independent?”
Taylor: “The biggest thing you gotta know is there’s no amount - no record deal - is worth what you think it is. Once I figured that out, that’s what made me think alright, F*ck that. I can’t ever owe anybody money tryna make money. That’s crazy as hell LOL.”
This summer Taylor dropped “Come Alive,” and more recently he dropped his video “Easy Outside.” Being independent, you have to work harder to push out your own work versus if you have a label to handle most of that for you. So make sure y’all support our boy Taylor like he’s supporting us and go run it up!
/Carrie for CW