We are going "Clueless" w/ Milwaukee Film for Women's History Month

CopyWrite is going “Clueless” as community sponsor for

Milwaukee Film’s screening of the movie for Women’s History Month!

It’s giving us fashion honey! It’s the nostalgia of the flip phone, mini skirt two pieces, and a whole lot of money to blow! Come enjoy classic, dress the part, see your /CW Fam indulge in the Clueless vibes, and have a few laughs with Milwaukee Film as they celebrate womanhood in every form.

FILM: Clueless

TIME: Saturday 3/5/22 at 4:00 PM

WHERE: Oriental Theatre, 2230 North Farwell Avenue, Milwaukee, WI 53202

DESCRIPTION: At the height of popularity at her Beverly Hills high school, Cher has never known for things not to go her way. After successfully playing matchmaker with her unsuspecting teachers, she decides to extend her charity to the new girl in town but quickly learns how misguided she can be as if her live-in stepbrother couldn’t point it out enough.

Event Page

HymnWho - “A Glorious Rise” EP

Already 5 months post-release of his Album “Retroactive Phenomenon.”(If you haven't heard it yet, make it a thing), Milwaukee artist HymnWho enters 2022 with “A Glorious Rise.” His style and sonic approach is signature at this point and goes against the grain of what has been popularized as the Milwaukee sound with a mixture of rap verses, melodic choruses, and beats that give us a new feel with sound choices that range from 80’s rock and pop to hip-hop. Even so, HymnWho is not to be so easily defined. He shows off his charisma first on “Sadiq” with a smoove beat drop and the opening line “You gotta treat me like a gangsta it's just human nature…” and soon after, quoting Rick James’ most famous affirmation for himself a few bars later. You can feel the confidence spilling from HymnWho even as he begins to talk about some of his growing pains. “Dangerous Game” gets more intimate; here’s a song about the importance of self acceptance and the consequences of walking blindly from not knowing who it is (within ourselves) that we are really counting…  Man, us 20 something's be goin’ through! After a few funky hard hitters, “Walk in My Glory” gives a powerful ending with a production that gradually gives a triumphant tone and a hook that makes you feel like you're glowing! 

Tell me how YOU feel about “ A Glorious Rise ” Milwaukee. /Naomi-Re’a for CW


CAM WILL- Dance With Me [Video Submission]

How do you do yo’ dance? Are you a “dance with every part of your body” dancer? Or are you a cute two stepper? Not too much movement, just a lil cute sway side to side?

Whichever type of dancer you are, CAM WILL’s newest single, “Dance With Me” will definitely have you doing some type of movement. The vibe is contagious, the beat is magnetizing and the video is fire! It’s giving what it was supposed to give. Not only was CAM WILL working the cam, you can tell he tapped into that smooth groove energy when he created this.

About 2 minutes into the song I was visualizing myself in the car cruising to the chorus, this should surely be added to the playlist that you make for those long car rides or a night out with the gang. Aside from the song, the videography on the video was amazing. The highlights of the 414, the edits and transitions from different parts of the city, came together so melodically. 

If you’ve been looking for a new song to add to your catalog, look no further than Cam Will’s latest single. Check it out and let me know what y’all think!


/Pam from CW 



Corridor & A Little More | An Interview with creative Weléla Mar Kindred on her life & forthcoming local Indie Film “Corridor”

We had the awesome opportunity to virtually sit down with actress, dancer and artist, Weléla Kindred. Weléla wears so many different creative hats and has ample years of experience creating, living, and funding her own dreams. She is also the founder of the Chicago studio, ‘THE LVMB COLLECTIVE’ as you’ll find out in our interview. It was honestly humbling to myself finding out what goes into someone’s creative form simply meaning, finding out what it took [behind the scenes] to understand what she lets us experience today. You guys will get to discover ‘which hat fits when’ in our new exclusive interview with Weléla about her life and her experience in playing ‘Maria Grey’ in the new forthcoming Milwaukee-based indie-film, “Corridor.”

Want to know more about Weléla? Check out her website: https://www.lvmbcollective.com

Want to know about ‘Corridor’? Check it out here:

https://www.corridorfilm.com

Keep it easy,

/Imani for CW


Happy Valentine's Day From Your /CW Fam!

Morning dime pieces! Happy Valentine’s Day!

I know we are all happy to get the cute little bears and flowers, and that chocolate that we never eat (sorry fellas). Celebrate today with ya boo but don’t focus too much on the material love. Take today to appreciate and recognize each others’ unconditional love, respect, support and growth. If you are single, take today to pour into yourself. Go buy yourself some flowers, get cute, take some selfies and love on you! Either way, show love for everything you receive but appreciate the REAL priceless moments, cause real love doesn't cost a thing! 

Alexa, play “I Want” by Devv Lo! 

Pam from your /CW Fam


Meet the our Media & production Intern, Pam Williams

Say what’s up to Pam!

Pam Williams is a cultural organizer born and raised in Milwaukee, WI. She attends Bryant & Stratton College and will be graduating in May 2023 with an Associates in Nursing, with which she plans to pursue holistic nursing and the development of a women’s center to ensure and support the health of Black women. Although her major is nursing, journalism, media, and organizing are her true passions. She has worked diligently with her multifaceted skills hosting open mics, working as an activist for local organizations, and creating a journalistic voice in local media. Pam has a true love for the 414. She plans to expand her resume and continue organizing to improve the state of Black livelihood in the city as well as continue to celebrate the culture.

/CW Team.

Huey V - “After The Deal” [SINGLE + Press Interview w/ CopyWrite Mag]

Milwaukee continues to make its mark in pockets of creative and social niches, whether it be politics or music, our presence is becoming more known to the world. As the wave of the rising talents of Milwaukee continues to flow, more names get added to the list of young people to look out for. Post the drop of his newest single “After The Deal”, Memphis Bleek’s Warehouse Music Group's (WHMG) latest signee Huey V gave us a moment and shared with us his journey leading up to this drop. 

 /CW: What was your upbringing in Milwaukee? What was your family like, where did you go to school?

HV: I'm a North Side baby, low tres, low tres. Most of my family grew up on 32nd and Galena but we spent a whole bunch of time on 33rd too. Outside of that I kinda lowkey moved all around the north side. I lived on 41st and Congress for a good minute, I wanna say like 7 years… I didn’t really fuck with down town until I turned 16. It was just the North Side, the beach and Mayfair.

/CW: So the North Side was just your little world growing up. You didn't know anything outside of that.

HV: …That was my whole world at that time before I got a car: I'm a youngin, youngin still. If I’m not on the city bus I'm walking, if I'm not walkin I’m on the bike..so I was definitely just exploring [the North Side]. That was the biggest shit to me at the time. I was like 13-14, just discovering the world on my own… 

/CW: So anywhere you needed to go you pretty much got there.. What made you get to that point where you're like ‘okay downtown is right there why not just go? Why not see what's over there?’ Was it the music, your artistry? 

HV: ..There was a poetry tournament..if I'm correct it was at The Grand... It was my first year on a poetry team and they ended up taking us down there because we had a [competition] with Ronald Reagan High school. That was my first competition..that was my first time seeing what it looked like; white people in suits and shit like that. That wasn't really a common thing for me.  

/CW: Did you have a lot of mentorship growing up or was it not until you got older and started taking charge of your own life that you decided ‘I need more discipline with whatever I'm doing and need to seek out that mentorship?’

HV: As a youngin you're supposed to have a mentor but the people that you really see as your mentors are just your uncles and older uncles and shit… but if you feel like you can make a path outside of that, if you feel like you can make a path that might take them off of the shit that they are on then you're not gonna take that advice you just gone be raising yourself. I did pretty much raise myself for a point in time. My Pops was there when I was younger but the older I got, I wanna say around 7, he just started to disappear…Moms can only do so much. She did her part to the fullest but you gotta learn how to be a man on your own.

/CW: So do you feel that you can learn as much as you could from someone who has a profession or perspective outside of what you're doing?

HV: I feel that anybody who has a sense of decency has some type of valuable information to give to somebody. I’ll chop it up with a homeless dude on the corner because I might learn something about life. It might not be financial literacy but he sees stuff on a daily basis that I don't see so there's probably things that I can't even comprehend that he sees on a regular basis so I definitely try not to close out every voice because you might miss your blessing but I definitely dont recieve every opinion as a fact because that’s how you fuck your blessing up…you weren’t meant to accomplish what they were supposed to accomplish but they might’ve sparked the idea for you to make it happen and now you get to change the next 30 peoples’ lives..

/CW: That brings me to my next point of that ‘hustler’s phase’; you get to that point where you know what you wanna do, you're willing to be dedicated, go broke for it, all of that, but then a lot of people get to that point of mastering that hustler’s phase but there's a lack of maintenance of it…


Huey V describes the intention that he puts into his artistry and the real life ease that comes with the concept of quality over quantity, while also admitting to sleepless nights for the benefit of meeting deadlines and being thorough with his production.


/CW: You must be really involved in the other elements of making a song or an album; the production…

HV: .. If I can be. I wouldn't say that I'm a producer or anything like that but I record, I mix myself if I can, [Young] Guru masters everything, I can't do that part. That's his bag. But I mix everything, I record everything…I try to be as hands on as possible with absolutely everything..

/CW: The Midwest culture, particularly the Milwaukee culture, is to be so hands-on. Everyone wants to be independent, because most don't understand the true art of collaboration yet, we are starting to but we are not there yet. Is that why [you are hands on] or is it that you do understand that art but you still want to be educated on [the production]?

HV: Imma be honest with you, I like collaboration, I like teamwork; Working with other people and seeing them get their satisfaction out of it and seeing their dreams come true as well as mine means more to me than just seeing my own shit…but at the same time being in Milwaukee, we’re the home of the warehouses so yes of course Imma try to do everything that I can, I don't wanna be a one-trick pony, but I don't wanna be a ‘Jack of all trades and a master of none’ either so I am hyper-focused on music..



With WHMG having had rappers like Casanova on their roster, Huey V feels a sense of pride with the weight of his label. His courage is greatly accredited to the wide range of influence from Kanye West to Amy Winehouse. Growing up, his family, in parallel to living in mIlwaukee as a whole, was a melting pot of musical tastes. Along with having a background in orchestra, the young artist has been fortunate to have an open ear and appreciation for sound. He brings up Frank Ocean as an example of how introducing a new way of approaching music to someone with a more biased ear can leave them in awe.



/CW: Did you always want to be signed? Was that the height, or was it similar to going to a 2 year college, ‘I'll do this for a little while, get the resources, learn the business, and then go back to being in my own lane, independently?’ 

HV: It's a mixture of it all. When I was a kid I thought ‘cool maybe i'll get signed,’ the older that I got the more I understood the importance of independence…I swore I was gonna be independent..and then Corona hit.

/CW: You were signed during the Pandemic right?

HV: Yea, actually during that MF…I left for New York on February 7th and I came back the next day and I think Milwaukee either shut down that same month or in March…after that time passed they flew me out to Miami and that's when we made it happen. But when the Pandemic hit I was like ‘dammmmnn’ because all the jobs were shut down, it was either hustling or signing…

/CW: You speak a lot about Divine Timing using subtle words in your music like ‘divine timing, letting God work,’ even the name of your last EP, “As Above,” and your next one, “So Below.” Those are very spiritual statements…

HV: I call it the Matrix, where I've been able to pinpoint that if certain things didn't happen then other things wouldn't have happened the way that they did. In my head everything is prewritten…

/CW: How has that wisdom played a part in how you've grown as a person? In your song “After The Deal” you spoke a lot about having to leave people behind. That survivor's guilt is very real. How did you handle that ego death? Was it a super low moment or was it gradual?

HV: I am used to it. You lose a lot of people. It's easier when they are still around.. It's by your choice and not by life's timing so it's been a bit easier because I understand the value of having to let certain people go to get to where I gotta get to...

/CW: There was a line in your song where you said “I got the deal after the bill collector called..” Was that a true statement?

HV: Ha ha! Aight so what really happened was the bill collector called..Right after the bill collector called was the first time I spoke to Bleek. I didn't even get the heads up that he was finna be callin. When that  happened he told me “lil nigga you on right now, you just gotta prove to me that you can keep doing this.” That was literally the song that I made after that…it really makes you appreciate the value of your life, the highs and the lows..

Tell me how YOU feel about “ After The Deal ” Milwaukee. And check out his previous works while you're at it:  “As Above” … “So Below” coming soon.

/Naomi-Re’a for CW



Ace Parker - 3:17 [Album]

On January 20th, Ace Parker dropped a full length Album titled “3:17” and it really makes me want to tap into that extroverted energy!  By itself it is the perfect playlist for going through the highs and lows of every emotion that comes with the reality of ‘Flexin.’’ The analogy that comes to mind with this theme is the motions that we go through when preparing for a night out; The anticipation that comes with getting dressed, beating your face and pre-gaming with your crew, hair flipping away because you just know that the flex is real and you deserve it, that super litty car ride all the way to the club, and finally that emotional car ride home after you've confessed your heart to your homies and said ‘forget so-and-so’ about 50’leven times is embodied throughout this entire Album. Bangers like ”Sommer” and ”Boogie” are meant for the whip. The high energy beats combined with the charisma of Parker will keep you moving non-stop. The transparent, yet slightly comedic delivery used in “Down Bad” is the last of that ego boost for the listener to absorb before getting gut punched by the tunes that follow. “Sorry I'm late,” and “Anybody” are just a couple of the more somber bunch of songs that close out the Album. Parker shares what's real about the behind the scenes of ‘leveling up.’ It looks like fun and that you are above everyone and everything but the truth is that It's lonely, dark, and leaves room for uncertainty. It's not even clear what the purpose of leveling up really is at times, nonetheless, it's always the right path. In the words of Ace Parker himself “...There’ll be better days..Feel the pain, you're okay, check the time, roll again...” .

Tell me how YOU feel about “3:17” Milwaukee.

/Naomi-Re’a for CW

Partnership Content - Artist Eats: SistaStrings at Villa Terrace

Partnership Content - Artist Eats

SistaStrings at Villa Terrace


We met in early May 2021 at Villa Terrace. The unusually cold day was even colder as we were situated on Milwaukee’s east side across the street from our lakefront. 

On this particular day, Monique Ross (older by 2 years) and Chauntee Ross are exhausted but ecstatic. Just 2 days prior, they announced their farewell show before moving permanently to Nashville, TN. Their departure is a harsh reminder of the importance of creating and cultivating an arts community that allows artists to flourish and get paid. 

Their farewell show sold out in 72 hours. Another reminder of how incredible their contribution is to Milwaukee’s music scene and how much we’ll miss them. As of today’s writing, they’re doing well in Nashville including recently sharing the stage with Thee Brandi Carlile. 

Not too shabby for the Queens of Strings. Not too shabby at all.

It’s hard to encompass all that is SistaStrings in a 10-minute video. Our conversation over FlourGirl and Flame pizza and drinks from Vibez Creative Arts Space navigated the journey of 2 black women who’ve made a home in classical music with a bit of gospel and a bit of soul. 

Here’s our interview.