Backstage: Street Chronicles

Also by Nikki Turner

NOVELS

Ghetto Superstar
Black Widow
Forever a Hustler’s Wife
Death Before Dishonor
(with 50 Cent)
Riding Dirty on I-95
The Glamorous Life
A Project Chick
A Hustler’s Wife

EDITOR

Street Chronicles: Christmas in the Hood
Street Chronicles: Girls in the Game
Street Chronicles: Tales from da Hood
(contributing author)

CONTRIBUTING AUTHOR

Girls from da Hood
Girls from da Hood 2
The Game: Short Stories About the Life

This book is dedicated to every person
who has ever had a dream to make it big!
Dreams do come true!

DEAR LOYAL READERS

First, I would like to thank you so much for all of the ongoing support that you, my readers, give to all of my Nikki Turner Original novels as well as my Nikki Turner Presents!

It took me a while to decide on a theme for this edition of my Street Chronicles series. Then one day, I got a call from an artist insisting that I come and hang out at his show. I agreed not realizing how much I would be inspired by that night’s events. The show was fantastic, and I enjoyed it from my seat out front before venturing backstage after the show. This wasn’t my first time backstage but it was the first time that I really observed how the front of the stage was the polar opposite of what was going on backstage. Everything is picture perfect (most of the time) from the fans’ point of view, but backstage it is a horse of a different color. It’s like an underworld of some sort. Nothing is too strange or too bizarre. From half dressed, low self-esteemed girls looking to get “wifed” up to aspiring artists looking to get put on and everything in between (feel free to let your imagination run wild). And the most insane part of it all is that the people backstage treat this world as normal, as if nothing strange is going on.

In the days, weeks and months that passed, I got acquainted
with some of the power players and became friends with various people from all aspects of the music industry. I was able to get an inside glimpse into that world and realized that behind-the-scenes of the business was more treacherous than backstage of a concert. This was a side of the business that some of my readers may never get to see. That’s when a light bulb went off: I wanted to try to put together five different short stories, each giving different points of view of some of the things we, the fans, may not get a chance to see: the love, the hate, the struggles, the highs, the lows, the snakes, dreams coming true and dreams being destroyed … all in the blink of an eye.

Now that I had my direction all I had to do was come up with the right combination of authors and/or musicians to complete the task at hand. I began to think …

I wrote “Gun Music” around the time I wrote
A Project Chick
. “Gun Music” is far from my regular style of stories but at the time I felt like I needed something gangsta in my life. When I was given the opportunity to work with 50, I thought it would’ve been the perfect fit, but 50 wanted a female main character, so “Gun Music” was once again tucked away into my files. That was until now; this was the perfect time and place for the story that was waiting to be heard.

K
RISTA
J
OHNS
is a really sweet girl I met at Book Expo of America. She sent me her novel and Young Buck called me up to profess that she was nothing short of the truth and I needed to check out her book right away. I did, and I gave her my vision for her story and she rocked it.

H
AROLD
T
URLEY
II and I have been great friends from the early days of our careers and he was just a phone call away.

L
ANA
A
VE
is a close friend of my homeboy and radio personality, Mike Street. He asked me to mentor her and I agreed, and we
clicked immediately. I shared this project with her and she had a story a week or two later.

A
LLAH
A
DAMS
is a guy that I met at a friend’s birthday party. Once he heard I was going to be there, he was there with two books in hand. Because he is an aspiring rapper, I thought his experience would add flare to the project.

I would like to take this opportunity to thank all of the authors involved in this project for being so patient and easy to work with. And Dana and Styles P for putting your pieces together so quickly for me!

Now the moment you’ve all been waiting for: here is the All-Access, VIP Pass into the entertainment world. Feel free to rub it in your friends’ faces or pass it on so that they can share the experience with you as well.

Enjoy!
Much Love,
Nikki Turner

CONTENTS

Dear Loyal Readers

Introduction: The Day I Signed … |
Dana Dane

I’m Good |
Krista Johns

Chasing the Ring |
Harold L. Turley II

Stolen Legacy |
Allah Adams

Lose to Win |
Lana Ave

Gun Music |
Nikki Turner

Outro |
Styles P

Acknowledgments

Liner Notes

Introduction
THE DAY I SIGNED …

When Nikki asked me to write the intro to this book I was a little reluctant. These stories hit home for me because I know what it’s like to be in the unforgiving world of the music and entertainment business. At first I attempted to write a short story to add to the book, but with the intense preparations for the release of my debut novel,
Numbers
, time slipped away from me. But Nikki and I felt it was my duty to provide some insight into my thoughts as a young aspiring rap artist. In essence, take you backstage.

I vividly remember the day—more than twenty years ago—I signed my first recording contract. It was summer in the mid-1980s. I was barely out of my teens when I went to the lawyer’s office to put my John Hancock on the recording agreement with an independent record label that was as they put it “taking a chance with rap music.” No, I do not remember the lawyer’s name; in fact, he wasn’t my lawyer. He represented the man (we’ll just call him “Sir”) who procured the record deal opportunity for me. I didn’t know much of anything about the music business at that time except for what Sir had taught me, and that was virtually nothing for the most part. I probably could have learned more about the business if I’d done my research and/or if Sir knew
more about the music business, but I didn’t and he didn’t. Or maybe he did and provided me with as much information as he wanted me to have. There are some people in this business who want artists to have only limited knowledge in order to take advantage of them. Even worse, they may not be very knowledgeable themselves and perpetuate ignorance.

The day I signed my recording contract, I was young and naïve and without a doubt eager to make a record. I didn’t understand the price of fame, I didn’t know much about double-talk, and I surely didn’t understand the pitfalls of the music game. All I did know for sure was that I wanted to put out a record, I wanted to hear myself on the radio, and I had my own distinct flow. My naïveté led me to believe that when people said, “Trust me,” they really meant,
Don’t worry; I’ve got your back
. I found out later that “Trust me” in this business of music means,
I’m going to try to exploit you for all you’re worth and give you as little as possible in return
. It also meant,
As long as you don’t know, I can take advantage of you
. The mind-set was “You’re the artist. You’ve got us around to take care of the business aspect of your career. You just take care of the creative side.”

“Hey”—I can still hear their voices in my ear—“we wouldn’t lead you wrong, Dana, we’re in this together …
trust me.”

“Is this a good contract?” I inquired. There were no negotiations; the lawyer and Sir had me believe it was this contract or nothing (which might have been true). They explained that this was the standard contract (remember youngins: There is no such thing as a standard contract). The lawyer went over the contract with me briefly. It took all of ten minutes. Of course, after the very short 600 seconds, I still didn’t understand the magnitude of the paperwork I was about to sign. But it wasn’t too hard to convince me to sign since I was unaware of the value of my name, likeness, and music.

I could never have imagined that after that day my career would
be such a crazy roller-coaster ride. I could never have thought that not long after my song “Nightmares” was the “World Premier” on one of the hottest hip-hop shows in NYC, the “Mr. Magic Show,” with Chuck Chillout and Red Alert, it would become an instant hit and classic. I could never have imagined two years later when my first LP, “Dana Dane with Fame,” was released it would be one of the fastest debuting hip-hop albums of its time—going gold and selling 500,000 units in a little over three months, all without a video.

When I think back to the day I signed my first recording contract almost two decades ago, I would never have thought that I would still be trying to get royalties due to me from that agreement. I could not have fathomed that in the year 2000 other rap artists would be performing covers and remakes of my songs without compensating me. I would be lying if I said I didn’t feel used and betrayed by that record label and my other handlers, but at the same time I’m not wasting my energy holding grudges. I was afforded an opportunity of which most people only dream. I appreciate the good and the bad people who have crossed my path in the past; they’ve helped mold me into the great man I am today. Everything has not always been good, but the experience has been great! Hey, I wouldn’t have been able to share this scenario if it wasn’t for the day I signed my first recording contract.

There’s not much integrity in this business of music. But you can find that out for yourself, you don’t have to trust me.

I hope I’ve shared enough to enlighten someone, but let’s now look to the present … the future … the next installment of Nikki Turner’s
Street Chronicles: Backstage
. It’s time to turn up the volume, time to make it move, time to make it shake. Although the stories depicted in this book are fictional, they do have merit. And it is my sincere belief that you will be thoroughly entertained, but it is also my hope that you will be enlightened as well.
Nikki is a powerful storyteller and has the great ability to locate exceptional writing talent.

So the dressing rooms are stocked with all the rider requirements, the lights are cued, the sound check is complete, and you’ve got your VIP pass. It’s finally time to take you
Backstage
!

—Dana Dane, hip-hop icon and author of the novel,
Numbers

Mic Check … One Two … One Two
Let’s Take It from the Top
Coming to the Stage … Krista Johns

I’M GOOD
by Krista Johns

ou ready to rip it, Yummie?”

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