Terry Wallace Sanchez Jr. was indicted on burglary charges in September of 2015. At age 22, he was sent to Nebraska鈥檚 Tecumseh State Prison to serve his sentence. When the Detroit native was released a year later, he was Tee Grizzley,听a name he earned while imprisoned. His time behind bars lit a laser-like focus within him 鈥 one fixated on turning his dream of becoming a big-time rapper into reality. On the day of his release, he recorded his debut single, aptly titled, 鈥淔irst Day Out.鈥 One month later, he shared the retrospective single on the YouTube channel of 4sho 黑料网, a highbrow urban culture and music digital magazine.听It has garnered more than 81,000,000 views to date. After being signed by New York City-based record label 300 Entertainment in 2017, Tee听Grizzley鈥檚 anthem peaked at No. 48 on the Billboard Hot 100 chart the same year, as part of the release of his first mixtape, My Moment. The album caught the attention of then Cleveland Cavaliers player LeBron James, who took to Instagram with a video of himself dancing to 鈥淔irst Day Out,鈥 inspiring the #LeBronJamesChallenge. Hundreds of hip-hop fans joined in on the hashtag posting videos of themselves dancing to the sounds of Tee Grizzley鈥檚 debut hit. Today, having received both BET Hip-Hop Awards and a MTV Music Video Award nomination, Tee听Grizzley is focusing his attention on spotlighting Detroit rappers and a possible collaboration with Big Sean. We caught up with the Detroit rapper, who was sporting Nike鈥檚 Detroit-centric Home & Away collection, minutes before his performance at Foot Locker鈥檚 Eastpointe store opening.
黑料网 Detroit: Where did the name Tee Grizzley come from?
Tee Grizzley: I鈥檓 a tall dude with dreads and hair all over my arms 鈥 [when I was locked up,] they got to calling me Grizzley. I just put the Tee on it.
Why did you make your debut mixtape, My Moment, in prison?
I was locked up, and I didn鈥檛 have anything else to do. I knew I could rap, so I just wrote it. Everybody in prison听raps, so you鈥檙e gonna write raps in there.
Your YouTube hit-single 鈥淔irst Day Out鈥 focuses on the day you were released from prison. Why did you decide to write about that moment?
I just knew that it was something that I wanted to do. I grew up listening to rappers like Boots Riley. Tiki, he had a [song about his] first听day out. I was like 鈥淚鈥檓 gonna make one, too.鈥
What has this transition听from being a federal prisoner to, now, a successful hip-hop artist been like for you?
It鈥檚 definitely crazy. The only way that I can describe it is that it鈥檚 just a blessing because you don鈥檛 expect this. Once you get a whiff of a different side of life, it just motivates your spirit.
Any truth to the rumors about a collaboration between you and Big Sean?
He鈥檚 busy, I鈥檓 busy. So, we probably haven鈥檛 really had time to bump heads in a studio, but it鈥檒l come together when it needs to.
What was it like to work with Chance the Rapper, Offset, and Lil Pump for your second mixtape, Still My Moment?
It鈥檚 cool because we鈥檙e all on the same page. My best work happens when I have a genuine connection with whomever I鈥檓 collaborating with, before we do a song.
What advice would you give to upcoming rappers听who may be having trouble trying getting into the music scene?
First of all, a lot of rappers make mistakes when they鈥檙e coming up. Don鈥檛 go to another rapper to find your sound because if it鈥檚 sweet, they are gonna try to steal it. A lot of people are stingy with their platforms anyway, so you got to just do you. Drop your music and put it out there for the world to hear. That鈥檚 how you start your fan base. But really, there鈥檚 no certain formula to success.
You even talked about how you had trouble finding someone to plug you, initially, in 鈥淔irst Day Out.鈥
Everybody has dreams, and some people are so blinded by their own happiness. My goal is for us to live our dreams, not my dreams.
Are you helping artists specifically from the Detroit area right now?
One person in particular is an artist named Sada Baby, who I had signed. [Detroit rappers] have it way more rough, so anytime I can help an听artist, I鈥檓 gonna do it.
Who are your favorite Detroit-native artists? Let us know in the comments below.
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