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P.Mills is currently in the works of his album. In and out of the studio and in and out of town for the album and for work. Yeah, he's not a millionaire yet with his empire he's bulding from scratch. Soon though, he will be, or should I say, WE WILL BE?

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::P.Mills::


Have you heard of P.Mills before?
Have you ever heard his musiq before?

Well if the answer to both of these is "Yes!" then, you will get more of P.Mills & LDRi in the year of 2005. If your answer to both of the ?'s was, "No!" then, you will get the opportunity to hear his clean-cut, down to earth, true, nothin' but real musiq Once And For All (R). For, P.Mills and LDRi (Lethal Dose Records, Inc.) will be hitting full force in the year of 2005, and the years on. 2005, is no longer, just another year to celebrate, it has be now tittled, "The Year Of The Don".

How can a whiteboy from the streets of Akron, Ohio do something like this?

Well, it's simple if you want to know his story. Instead of us letting you in on the starting of, "P.Mills", why not let you hear it from the man himself. We did a full interview of questions we asked and recorded his answers. They are all found below. Lethal Dose is back and full running, with full on brute force.

Q: How did you start out with rap music as a whiteboy?

A: I started out listening to 2-Pac, Bone~Thugs~N~Harmony, B.I.G., etc. So, naturally I had a good taste of rap. I started learning more and more in rap. I let myself eduldge in it all. I surrounded myself with it, loved it, cherished it.

Q: How did you come about rapping?

A: I moved into my dad's house, and he got a new job and was gone about five days a week. When I didn't have friends over, I was all alone in the house, listening to all types of music. Well, I started to listen to some tight new beats and raps from unsigned rap artists. I then within a week started writting my own rhymes, but would never try to rap them. I would just think to myself, wow, this flow would be tight if he sang it, or this person, or this group. Within a week, I started asking myself, "Why can't I rap? There's been white rappers... vanilla ice, beastie boys, etc. Ok, maybe not that great of sucess. Then again, there's Eminem, if he can do it, can't I?" After that I swooped up some recording software and started flowing to some royalty-free beats, and instrumentals. I was horrible as fuck, never showing my work to any friends or any soul for that matter. As I went on, I made a little freestyle and did pretty good, started showing my friends some of my work, and the rest is history. I just evolved from a listener, to a writter, to a performer. I get better each day I go on. I can now do multiple voices while rapping. To change-up my flows and art of style. I got my typical P.Mills voice, my funny voice, my Don voice, etc.


Interview Continued

Q: What is your set goal for this music industry?

A: Well, there's many goals for the music industry and to the people out of it. I have set goals to do something new in the fututre to the industry. I plan to sign a record deal and take that nationwide money and put a big amount to the side to use towards my record label, "Lethal Dose Records, Inc." I will make a whole gameplan and have a meeting with the record label I'm signed with and see if I can branch my record label with theirs. Basically what Aftermath is to Interscope and Shady Records is to Aftermath. The same idea, but my label will focus on talent more than anything. I will sign any artists for any type of music that they are good at. Hence, not only rap, I wont stay with one genere or music. I'll sign country artists, rap artists, pop artists, punk rock artists, etc. Just as long as I see the talent and their heart into it.

The other goal for me to accomplish is; Give back money to the communities that need it. Especially in Akron, Ohio and Cleveland, I've seen the pooriest of the poor. I want to try to change a few things. Show these wrong-doing kids that packin' a gun and sellin' drugs ain't a life to have. It's not worth it at all, I want to give kids that need and crave a good life, exactly what they want... a good life. Even now when I have money or just got paid, I usually tip and handout money, I don't know it's just like it's a part of me. I can't explain it, it's just ME.

Q: If you got signed tomorrow to a major label, let's say Interscope, since you got a chance there. Who would you like to collab with on a song?

A: Wow, there's so many anwers to that, but let me see if I can think of a good few.
Producers:
Dr. Dre, Kanye West, Jazzy Pha, Lil Jon, Eminem, Manie Fresh
Artists:
Eminem, Manie Fresh, Jazzy Pha, Dr. Dre, Kanye West, Lil Jon of couse, AND... 50 Cent, Lloyd Banks, Young Buck, Lil Flip, David Banner, Bone~Thugs~N~Harmony, P.Diddy, Juvenile, Lil Wayne, anybody from the Dirty South, Ludacris, T.I., even Nelly, Murphey Lee, Twista, and so many more.

Local/Underground Artists:
V-Camp, Renown, Young Money, Streetz-N-Yung Dueces, Konflict, Xcursion, B.D.G.'s, and so many more that you guys will prolly be like who?



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