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RnB 16/02/2005

Syncity, Hip-Hop's First Quadruple Threat

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NEW YORK (Syncity) In Hip-Hop, there are numerous barriers for a female who is trying to get in the game, whether it is a lyricist, producer, or even the hardest to accomplish, a DJ. Welcome Hip-Hop's first quadruple threat, enter Syncity. At only 22 years old, she has beaten down the door of limitations to all areas of music; she is a DJ, a producer, a Lyricist, and is one hell of a Break-Dancer. Add to her many accomplishments, she has a hustling spirit, the take-over-anything-in-Hip-Hop attitude, and she works for Bad Boy Entertainment as well as being the official DJ for Nicole Wray of Rocafella Records. In '05 Syncity is poised to make Hip-Hop heads re-evaluate the way they look at women in the game. Not only is she an elite female DJ, but she is an elite DJ period. With ghost producing credits under her belt and a background as a dancer as well as a lyricist, Syncity is determined to do what most females only dream about. Her plan: Take Over the Game in '05.

Like many aspiring stars, Syncity has dealt with her share struggles. Growing up in Montreal, Canada with a single mother, Syncity was left in the homes of other families while her mother worked a full time job. She never knew her Father and in the words of Syncity herself, "that kinda stuff leaves a lot of malfunction in a kid's heart." she found it hard to express her feelings as a child until she found the love for music. At the young age of 17 she made the decision that it was time to make things happen for her by choosing to leave Montreal and head for the glitz of New York. Times were hard for Syncity when she arrived in NY Without a steady job or income. She found herself staying with friends and for part of a year completely homeless. To pay the bills and make ends meet she would break-dance in Times Square, but for Syn that was never enough. She still sought out bigger and better things for herself. Being entrenched in the Hip-Hop crowd lead Syncity to be around lots of DJ's, which introduced her to Christie Z. Paboon. Christine ran the DMC competition and got Syn a job at Cornerstone, since her back up dancing gigs could not consistently pay the bills. During her 2-year stay at Cornerstone Syncity found her love for DJ-ing. On her lunch breaks she would practice on the turntables in the lounge. Surely enough, with help from record spinning greats like Green Lantern and Scrap Dirty she soon mastered her craft. She found great inspiration in Q-Bert, Lazy K, and the X-ecutioners. Ironically, X-ecutioners member Roc Raida would later on bless her with her very first set of turntables.

She began to look for other avenues to express herself, which led her to Herbey Love Bug, the man who started Salt-N-Pepa, and the man who would eventually give her the name "Syncity". Herby wanted to make her a rapper and since she was so desperately looking to find her niche she went with it. While rapping she come across a few other female artists and formed a group called Koyote Uglee. Syncity grew weary of waiting for beats and paying for studio time and engineers. True to her resourceful nature, Syn took matters into her own hands, believing she could learn how to do these things herself instead of waiting on others. She then decided to leave the group and once again was on her own. Syn had been an assistant to Self (producer of DMX's smash "What's My Name" plus other hits) which gave her both insight and credentials. She began to intern at a studio where she would never have to depend on anyone else to make her music. While at Legendary Studios in Manhattan, Syn was able to find another mentor Saga, who taught her about Pro Tools.

She spent most of her time fronting like she knew what she was doing, " Fronting got me everywhere in this world, I fronted my first dance audition with Foxxy Brown and got it, I cheated Foxxy's audition and got it. I feel like if front like you know what you are doing [others] will believe you do also." She told them she was a trained dancer, but they found out she did not know how to follow dance counts. Sky says, "Foxxy kept it gangsta and kept me, I could never [hate] on that broad she took me off the streets." With Syncity mastering different angles in the game in '04, she was finally ready to begin her takeover in '05.

Motivated by success in the DJ scene, in '04 Syn started getting into another endeavor: the mix tape scene. She caught the mix tape bug and soon was featured by one of the biggest Hip-Hop sites on the web: allhiphop.com. With her exclusives posted on the site and DJ-ing gigs in Philly, soon her name was on people's minds. As if that weren't enough, Syn found yet another way to reach the Hip-Hop masses with an online TV show called The Circuit. The Circuit is an entertainment show focusing on anything hot, trends, music, and fashion. The show alone, reaching 7 million viewers all around the world helped her tremendously, and she began to be approached by major players in the industry. One of them just happened to be a representative from Bad Boy Records. With P. Diddy's massive Vote or Die campaign in swing, he wanted to flood the mix tape scene. Although many mix tapes flirted with the theme, only Syn's stuck to the political concept, and as a result of staying true to his theme, P. Diddy hosted her tape. As if that weren't exclusive enough, Syn had her hands on yet another hot track: a rap done by Britney Spears. Her tape became widely successful and showed her mass appeal, further expanding her fan base to include a more diverse crowd. The effect of the mix tape didn't end there; in fact, it helped Syn win a spot on MTV news during the Mix Tape Monday segment. But her television appearances wouldn't cease there. "What really got me big was BET Rap City: Da Basement, that's when everyone was hands down," Syn says. "It's like a big thing for a DJ, if you weren't on it, you are NOT official!"

Since then it's been nothing but one success after another for Syn, who was hired to work at Bad Boy as a director of mixshow national assistant. She's also the official DJ for Rocafella Record's R&B songstress, Nicole Wray. She's made it this far and there's no stopping her. Syn has done some acting work and appeared in the movie "Rollerball" but she plans on making a splash on the big screen later in her career. She wants to put out albums, like DJ Clue, and she also one day plans on writing a book about her life. Of course, she also wants to release more mixtapes and grow as both an artist and a DJ. She truly wants to take over the game and eliminate not only wack DJs but those who release tapes without actually scratching on the 1's and 2's.

With so many projects on the horizon, not to mention many more mixtapes to come, Syn has worked her way up, going from nothing to having a bright future. Her story is a true story of where persistence can take you. Syn's work ethic and determination can only continue to help her career grow. In '05 Syn will not only take over the city, but the Hip-Hop game as well.






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