"Getting to know Mr. Wallace"
- Maurice Wallace isa 19-year old sophomore at Clark Atlanta University and is currently holding up a major in philosophy. An Atlanta native and the youngest of three, Wallace has found music to be an intricate part of his life. "Music means more than just beats and rhymes for me", stated Wallace.
- Wallace is currently in the process of changing his first name to Kihenaton. He stated, "My name comes from the Egyptian king akhenaton who stood for a new rule, a new way of thinking and change. "Kihenaton" comes from putting the Ki- for king in place of the AK." He credits his influences Malcom X and Dr. Martin Luther King, as one of the reasons why he too would change his name and why he would soon begin a movement that he calls Black Royalty.
"What is Black Royalty?"
- Black royalty is an organization comprised of four different parts which includes music, community service, clothing and schools. In each section of Black Royalty the focus is empowerment. When asked about the meaning behind the name Wallace responded by saying, "All the colors make up the color black... you can have Hispanics, Whites, Blacks whatever...it is not just a pro black group we're trying to bring everyone together." Black Royalty just became official in 2008, but the music has been coming strong long before now.
"Modern Day Speech"
- "Today, you can't get a million people together like the million man march in Washington DC or like how King did... if you sell a million or two million copies it is like you are having a modern day speech", stated Wallace. These one to two million that you sell account for the one to two million lives that you've touched.
- Listen to Wallace's music and you'll see that he is a voice that needs to be heard. Wallace's first single "On my way" scheduled to debut in May 2008, is addressing police brutality, race issues, government issues, drug use prostitution and all in all injustice.
- The first few bars of the single go like this,"It is time to kill and it is a time to a put your guards up, when them guards run up my people put your guards up, they falsly imprison n*****, they trying to get rid of n*****, I'm calling for rebellion in the federal prison, they taking our fathers on the streets killing children, leaving our mothers alone prostitute babies are born with surengis stuck in their lil arms, i can't believe the things that I am seeing what's going on." Wallace realizes that he is at the age where black leaders such as Malcom x and members of black organizations such as the Black Panthers began their struggles for empowerment. "This is why I do what I do... my generation has hip hop music to use as a tool and that is what I am going to use to make sure that my people don't get left behind.