Console Component ================= The Console component eases the creation of beautiful and testable command line interfaces. Sponsor ------- The Console component for Symfony 5.4/6.0 is [backed][1] by [Les-Tilleuls.coop][2]. Les-Tilleuls.coop is a team of 50+ Symfony experts who can help you design, develop and fix your projects. We provide a wide range of professional services including development, consulting, coaching, training and audits. We also are highly skilled in JS, Go and DevOps. We are a worker cooperative! Help Symfony by [sponsoring][3] its development! Resources --------- * [Documentation](https://symfony.com/doc/current/components/console.html) * [Contributing](https://symfony.com/doc/current/contributing/index.html) * [Report issues](https://github.com/symfony/symfony/issues) and [send Pull Requests](https://github.com/symfony/symfony/pulls) in the [main Symfony repository](https://github.com/symfony/symfony) Credits ------- `Resources/bin/hiddeninput.exe` is a third party binary provided within this component. Find sources and license at https://github.com/Seldaek/hidden-input. [1]: https://symfony.com/backers [2]: https://les-tilleuls.coop [3]: https://symfony.com/sponsor the break – Page 13 – SuperStarPeezy Official Website
Latest Album

Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Ut rhoncus risus mauris, et commodo lectus hendrerit ac.

[vc_empty_space height="5px"] [edgtf_icon icon_pack="font_awesome" fa_icon="fa-youtube-play" size="edgtf-icon-tiny" custom_size="20" type="normal" icon_animation="" link="https://www.youtube.com" target="_blank" icon_color="#ffffff" hover_icon_color="#ab2eba" margin="0 25px 0 0"][edgtf_icon icon_pack="font_awesome" fa_icon="fa-soundcloud" size="edgtf-icon-tiny" custom_size="20" type="normal" icon_animation="" link="https://soundcloud.com/" target="_blank" icon_color="#d4d4d4" hover_icon_color="#ab2eba" margin="0px 25px 0 0"][edgtf_icon icon_pack="font_awesome" fa_icon="fa-spotify" size="edgtf-icon-tiny" custom_size="20" type="normal" icon_animation="" link="https://www.spotify.com/" target="_blank" icon_color="#d4d4d4" hover_icon_color="#ab2eba" margin="0px 25px 0 0"][edgtf_icon icon_pack="font_awesome" fa_icon="fa-instagram" size="edgtf-icon-tiny" custom_size="20" type="normal" icon_animation="" link="https://instagram.com/" target="_blank" icon_color="#d4d4d4" hover_icon_color="#ab2eba" margin="0"] [vc_empty_space height="33px"] banner
Dora Lewis

the break Tag

The Break Presents: Lakeyah – XXL

[ad_1] Milwaukee rapper Lakeyah had a goal to be signed to Quality Control Music, and that moment came to fruition this year, but she's been putting in plenty of work on the road to get there.Introducing herself to the arts by writing and competing on a poetry slam team in high school, a then-15-year-old Lakeyah had the foundation to become a rapper. Urged by her friends in her hometown of Milwaukee to try out rapping, she submitted a song for Monica's #SoGoneChallenge in 2016 (Lakeyah's freshman year of high school), and quickly went viral on Facebook. Lakeyah accepted this as a sign to continue moving forward with rapping and started dropping freestyles...

The Break Presents: Pooh Shiesty

[ad_1] Some people have a natural gift with their talent, and it's just a matter of time before they put it to use. For Memphis' own Pooh Shiesty, his rap skills were discovered later on in life when the rising artist realized he could go somewhere in hip-hop.Shiesty didn't start making music until 18 years old. Two years ago, his first release was a feature on local Memphis rapper K Carbon's remix of Three 6 Mafia's "Weak Azz Bitch." The song was received well (the audio on YouTube has over 1 million views), and showed Shiesty that he could make noise with his rhymes. He spent the next year putting out new songs, including the 2019 track...

The Break Presents: CJ – XXL

[ad_1] It seems like if you're a fan of hip-hop, it's only a matter of time before you try rapping, making beats or DJaying at some point or another.Inspired by 50 Cent and other artists he loved growing up, CJ was rapping for fun by the age of 16. Once he was 19, he started to take rap seriously, uploading his music to YouTube and SoundCloud. In his own words, he wasn't consistent enough, dropping music then taking long leaves of absence.One day this past July, the Staten Island, N.Y. rapper decided to rap on a BK drill beat for the first time, taking a sharp turn from the more melodic rap he...

The Break Presents: Lil Eazzyy

[ad_1] If an artist has a vision for themself, they have to see it through. Such is the case for Chicago rapper Lil Eazzyy. At 18, he's beginning to live out his dreams, tasting early rap success and garnering national recognition plus major label attention with his song "Onna Come Up."Already streamed over 16 million times on Spotify thanks to its placement on RapCaviar and Most Necessary playlists, the Hugo Black-produced "Onna Come Up" features a no-hook showcase of bars centered on Eazzyy's ride to the top. The track, which was originally a freestyle, and released at the urging of his manager, began making noise online within a month of its arrival in May."Right now, on a...

The Break Presents: Armani Caesar

[ad_1] The old saying goes "It ain't where you're from, it's where you're at" (shout-out to Rakim), but for Armani Caesar, it's both. The first lady of Griselda Records got her start rapping when she was 12 years old. Thanks to a chance meeting at a local studio in her hometown of Buffalo, N.Y. in 2007, she was rhyming alongside Benny The Butcher and Conway The Machine as part of the early-2000s rap collective Buff City.Those relationships are exactly why Westside Gunn signed her to Griselda Records this past March. He already knew she could rhyme, wrote her own verses and could bounce between the sounds of grimy New York rap and bass-heavy...

The Break Presents: KenTheMan – XXL

[ad_1] KenTheMan's road to rap began through trial and error. She was a Houston high school student who tried everything from doing makeup to singing in girl groups as she searched for something she was really serious about. Starting in the 10th grade, Ken got her clue when she began rapping with her friends in cars after school or when they cut class. Outside of an early interest in poetry, back then nothing signaled for Ken that she would turn into a rapper. However, those casual rap sessions turned into a pathway for a potential career.That momentum was halted after she had her heart broken by her rapper boyfriend in 2014. For the...

The Break Presents: LPB Poody

[ad_1] LPB Poody jumped into rap like a lot of young kids do: by freestyling at the lunch table in school. His journey after those fourth grade freestyle sessions was anything but ordinary. The West Orlando, Fla. rapper, now known for his TikTok-fueled streaming hit "Address It," dealt with run-ins with the law and legal trouble while he was still a minor, which interrupted his calling to the booth.After making and releasing his first song when he was 12, Poody, born Robert Lee Perry Jr., was in and out of juvenile detention and jail from 13 to 18 years old, facing charges for breaking and entering to burglary. Since then, he's been arrested for burglary...

The Break Presents: Note Marcato

[ad_1] Rap runs in the family, and Note Marcato is proof of that. The Miami native, born Nasir Dean, always had his headphones on as a child, figuratively swimming in the world of music. When he was in 7th grade, his father, Swizz Beatz, took notice of this and told his son that he shared his father's love of music. Just a kid at the time, young Nasir didn't put much thought into the notion but produced his first five beats the very next year.He took a break from production for two years, then returned to the beats in 2016, when he was in 10th grade. At the time, he was interning for Epic Records as well...

The Break Presents: YN Jay

[ad_1] Michigan rapper YN Jay knew his time was coming. Since he was 10 years old, Jay has been rapping, drawing inspiration from his older brother Gabe. A much younger Jay was performing at rap shows and freestyling in cars all over his hometown of Beecher, Mich. He then recorded eight to 10 songs a day once he hit his teenage years. After Gabe's passing, Jay decided he had to make rapping a career in honor of his brother. He dropped the seven-track project MVP in November of 2019, and ultimately delivered on his promise in 2020, when the hilarious, catchy song "Coochie" blew up on YouTube and social media.Released in April, the track has...

SuperStarPeezy Official Website