Hey, Hey, y'all this episode of Queue Points may
Jay Ray:contain explicit language.
Jay Ray:Listener discretion is advised.
Jay Ray:Hey, what's up good people.
Jay Ray:It's Jay Ray, the co host of QPoints.
Jay Ray:And I wanted to come to you because there are two really important
Jay Ray:ways that you can support our show.
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Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: Greetings and welcome back to another episode
Jay Ray:of Queue Points podcast.
Jay Ray:I am DJ Sir Daniel.
Jay Ray:And my name is Jay Ray, sometimes known by my government as Johnny Ray
Jay Ray:Cornegay, the third what's happening.
Jay Ray:Good people.
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: As you know, Queue Points podcast is the podcast dropping
Jay Ray:the needle on black music history.
Jay Ray:And this episode is going to be like no other.
Jay Ray:And you are pre you are in for a treat because we have
Jay Ray:a special guest this evening.
Jay Ray:But before we do that, Jay Ray, please, please let the people know.
Jay Ray:Well, no, before we do we.
Jay Ray:Do that.
Jay Ray:Let the people know how they can get ahold of that really dope
Jay Ray:sweatshirt that you have more because you saw what I had last week.
Jay Ray:I was rocking mine last week.
Jay Ray:I was rocking a t shirt, but you got the hoodie and the hoodie is flip fly
Jay Ray:and you can still get away with hoodies now, even though we're in spring.
Jay Ray:Yes.
Jay Ray:So weirdly.
Jay Ray:Okay.
Jay Ray:Before I get into that.
Jay Ray:So up here, up North, it suddenly went back to winter.
Jay Ray:I don't know what happened in the last couple of days, but it's certainly
Jay Ray:like third in the thirties again.
Jay Ray:So this hoodie is real, real important, but yo, check it out.
Jay Ray:For those.
Jay Ray:Those of you that are watching, y'all see the freshness, right?
Jay Ray:This is our Slow Jams Can Heal Us hoodie.
Jay Ray:And the conversation that we're going to have tonight, right, is part
Jay Ray:of this line of conversations that we'll be having all year about the
Jay Ray:importance of slow jams and black music.
Jay Ray:And you can get yourself a hoodie, the t shirt like Sir Daniel had on during the
Jay Ray:last show, mugs, bags, check out the bag.
Jay Ray:The bags is so fresh.
Jay Ray:You see this?
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: The bags, posters, buttons.
Jay Ray:There's posters back here in the cut.
Jay Ray:You could get all of that.
Jay Ray:If you go to store.
Jay Ray:cuepoints.
Jay Ray:com.
Jay Ray:And here's the other plus of doing that.
Jay Ray:Like we talked about at the top of the show, where you can subscribe
Jay Ray:and you can leave us a review and you can do all of that stuff.
Jay Ray:Amazing.
Jay Ray:That is all completely free and we would love it.
Jay Ray:If you did all of those things, if you want to keep these, these lights on, you
Jay Ray:see these red lights back here in front behind the Sade and behind the Sir Daniel
Jay Ray:there, you can go to our store and shop.
Jay Ray:It helps us to be able to do all the things that we do with Queue Points.
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: Amazing.
Jay Ray:Again, thank you listener for joining us again for another um,
Jay Ray:episode of Queue Points podcast.
Jay Ray:Um, unfortunately we do have to say goodbye to another legend.
Jay Ray:We want to pay homage to the, to an iconic force in the music of gospel.
Jay Ray:Sandra Crouch passed away not too long ago.
Jay Ray:Sandra Crouch is of course the twin sister to gospel giant.
Jay Ray:Andre Crouch, twin sister.
Jay Ray:And she recently passed away.
Jay Ray:Um, you know, sending much love to our friend Kipper Jones.
Jay Ray:Cause that was, um, his aunt and uncle.
Jay Ray:And now, you know, I spoke to him and he was like, you know, now my aunt
Jay Ray:and uncle are back together again.
Jay Ray:So sending much love to uncle Kipper and all the members of the Crouch family.
Jay Ray:But J Ray, Sandra and Andre really changed the face of gospel music.
Jay Ray:Sandra Crouch.
Jay Ray:Was an enormous singer of in her own right musician.
Jay Ray:People don't know that she played tambourine on the Jackson five
Jay Ray:records on some Jackson five records.
Jay Ray:And she sang, she brought all of, she brought a lot of her
Jay Ray:brother's songs to life, but.
Jay Ray:They have such a legacy and part of that legacy is this, is it
Jay Ray:within the songwriting and lyrics?
Jay Ray:And that's what we're going to talk about on this episode of Queue Points.
Jay Ray:We are discussing lyrics and specifically Lyrics and intimacy, um, because
Jay Ray:as Jay Ray mentioned, we are on, we are on a Slow Jams can heal us kick.
Jay Ray:And part of that, that campaign is to rediscover what we're not saying to each
Jay Ray:other or why we're not able to say to each other through the music anymore.
Jay Ray:The music was a way for people to, to put.
Jay Ray:Words to how they were feeling when they couldn't do it.
Jay Ray:So there might've been a song that you could use to express
Jay Ray:your feelings to someone.
Jay Ray:And it's not necessarily as nice anymore.
Jay Ray:So we're going to, it's not.
Jay Ray:So we're exploring that and helping us tonight is a very special guest, Jerry.
Jay Ray:Okay, guys, we've been really, really, really excited about having this guest
Jay Ray:on because she is so accomplished.
Jay Ray:Mm hmm.
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: And Jerry is actually going to run down like her resume and run
Jay Ray:down the pedigree because we are super honored by who we're being joined tonight.
Jay Ray:Jerry, take it away.
Jay Ray:Absolutely.
Jay Ray:Um, as Sir Daniel said, we, uh, Met this person actually a couple of
Jay Ray:years ago now and have been really excited to have her on the show.
Jay Ray:But I want to read the bio of Latrice Sampson Richards.
Jay Ray:Latrice is an award winning podcast producer, host, and speaker with
Jay Ray:a 14 year background as a dual licensed mental health counselor.
Jay Ray:With an in depth understanding of the human experience, Latrice creates
Jay Ray:content that blends thoughtfulness, healing, and entertainment,
Jay Ray:resonating deeply with audience.
Jay Ray:Latrice has elevated the podcasting landscape by creating opportunities
Jay Ray:for podcasters and brands to connect with their audiences via immersive
Jay Ray:live events and shows through her production company, PodMelanin.
Jay Ray:Her work is marked by a collaboration with renowned brands, such as Afros and
Jay Ray:Audio, Black Podcasters Association, Black Podcasting Awards, Women in
Jay Ray:Color Podcasters, Black Women's Stitch, ShePodcasts, Lipsyn, Acast, and more.
Jay Ray:And the cube, she has curated live podcasting events and shows nationwide
Jay Ray:serving as a catalyst for authentic connection and community building.
Jay Ray:So listen, if we was in person, we would say get on your feet, stand up.
Jay Ray:Welcome to Queue Points Latrice.
Jay Ray:Samson Richards,
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: Put your hands together.
Jay Ray:Come on now.
Jay Ray:Y'all can do better than that.
Jay Ray:You can
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: Yeah.
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: than that.
Jay Ray:Come on now.
Jay Ray:What's happening in the
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: Y'all sure know how to make a
Jay Ray:girl feel good about herself.
Jay Ray:I was listening to that resume and I was like, damn, who that girl is?
Jay Ray:And I wrote the damn thing.
Jay Ray:Listen.
Jay Ray:it's you
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: Okay.
Jay Ray:I'm so excited to be here with y'all tonight.
Jay Ray:This has been a long time coming.
Jay Ray:Uh, and so I'm, I'm just super duper excited to be here with y'all.
Jay Ray:Um,
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: The feeling is mutual.
Jay Ray:We're so happy to have you here Latrice to discuss this, um, to discuss this
Jay Ray:topic about lyrics and how they affect us.
Jay Ray:And, Why are people apparently so afraid of intimacy anymore?
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: I think Most people, there's a
Jay Ray:lot of different reasons, right?
Jay Ray:Everybody has a different reason as to why they may struggle with intimacy.
Jay Ray:But I think that if we really took a step back and looked at the total sum
Jay Ray:of those reasons, it really comes down to the fact that intimacy has not been
Jay Ray:a positive experience in their lives.
Jay Ray:Right.
Jay Ray:So the intimacy that they have experienced has been difficult for them.
Jay Ray:It has hurt physically, spiritually, emotionally.
Jay Ray:Um, they, the, the people that they thought they could trust, the people
Jay Ray:that they thought were supposed to take care of them did not.
Jay Ray:Um, the people that they loved, that they trusted.
Jay Ray:Whether they chose to love or they were just, you know, supposed to love
Jay Ray:just cause that's what it, that's what it is, um, ended up failing them
Jay Ray:in some way, shape, form or fashion.
Jay Ray:Um, and so people struggle with intimacy because their experience
Jay Ray:of intimacy has been negative in some way, shape, form or fashion.
Jay Ray:Right.
Jay Ray:And so in order for us to, to get on the other side of that, we, we have to
Jay Ray:one speak it, we have to acknowledge it.
Jay Ray:We have to say, you know, that person that, that I was, I
Jay Ray:thought that I could trust.
Jay Ray:I put my trust in that person.
Jay Ray:I stepped out on a limb and I took a chance on on loving that person or,
Jay Ray:you know, This, my family, this, my blood, the people who were divinely
Jay Ray:charged with the responsibility of taking care of me, they failed me.
Jay Ray:And that's fucked up
Jay Ray:Mm-Hmm?
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: is fucked up that I had to go through that, right?
Jay Ray:Like just call it out and acknowledge that this is why I am struggling
Jay Ray:with intimacy because you cannot address the thing until you.
Jay Ray:Or can first acknowledge that it is a thing that needs to be addressed.
Jay Ray:Wow.
Jay Ray:Latrice, yes to all of that and what's, what I love about your response is
Jay Ray:it also explains why , having songs that feed us these lessons are really
Jay Ray:important because here's the thing.
Jay Ray:I can, I know for a fact that I learned lessons in love and life.
Jay Ray:Because of the music I was listening to it wasn't I was too young to know
Jay Ray:what it all meant in some cases, right?
Jay Ray:But when I got there, I was able to put like, Oh, that's what that feeling is that
Jay Ray:that's what that song was talking about.
Jay Ray:And.
Jay Ray:Even those moments in songs where you just like, no, I played
Jay Ray:this song because I need to.
Jay Ray:It takes me back to a point in time where this song is the
Jay Ray:thing that comforts me when I go through a situation like X, right?
Jay Ray:Nerd out
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: That is biologic.
Jay Ray:That is how human beings function, right?
Jay Ray:So, I, I'm not going to nerd out completely on y'all.
Jay Ray:I mean,
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: No, please, please, please give it to us.
Jay Ray:Come on.
Jay Ray:Why we got you here?
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: Okay.
Jay Ray:I'll be
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: Why are you?
Jay Ray:Why we got you here?
Jay Ray:You got to do it.
Jay Ray:Come on.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: Listen, but the, the long and short of it is that
Jay Ray:in the, in the study of memory, right, because there's an entire study of human
Jay Ray:memory and how do we form memories?
Jay Ray:How do we decide what memories need to be kept and what memory?
Jay Ray:Because think about.
Jay Ray:You experience millions of stimuli a day
Jay Ray:Mm.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: from touch, feel, smell, sight, taste,
Jay Ray:Mm hmm.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: at all times, you are taking in
Jay Ray:information, at all times, okay?
Jay Ray:That's a lot of shit to process.
Jay Ray:You can't remember all of it.
Jay Ray:You know what I'm saying?
Jay Ray:It is just not, it's, it's, it's not logical.
Jay Ray:It's not feasible.
Jay Ray:The brain is not built.
Jay Ray:Like that, right?
Jay Ray:And so what our brains do for us is they essentially Categorize the things that
Jay Ray:we're taking in, and they categorize in order of importance, and that order is
Jay Ray:based on first and foremost survival,
Jay Ray:Mhm.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: right?
Jay Ray:What are the memories that I need to pull up immediately in a
Jay Ray:life or death situation, right?
Jay Ray:So that's what we call instincts.
Jay Ray:Yes.
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: Yes.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: Then, you know, love and belonging,
Jay Ray:relationships, connection.
Jay Ray:And then we look at, you know, self actualization and, you know, the higher,
Jay Ray:it's Maslow's hierarchy of needs.
Jay Ray:Look it up.
Jay Ray:Okay.
Jay Ray:It's foundational.
Jay Ray:Okay.
Jay Ray:Um, and it, it really, people need to know it, people, we need to understand
Jay Ray:it so we can give ourselves a break.
Jay Ray:I mean, let's just be real.
Jay Ray:So the memory research shows that.
Jay Ray:Memory can be altered with the addition of sound, right?
Jay Ray:So memory can be altered.
Jay Ray:So what can, you can be conditioned to react a certain way, to respond
Jay Ray:a certain way, to recall a certain message by hearing a certain sound.
Jay Ray:That can be a song, that can be a bell, that can be, you know, yelling,
Jay Ray:Mhm.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: Because over time we start to generalize.
Jay Ray:these things, right?
Jay Ray:So that's the, you know, that's the nuts and bolts of it.
Jay Ray:That is like the ridiculously simplified version of that.
Jay Ray:Right.
Jay Ray:But I share that to say that
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: I'm sorry,
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: come on, because black folks is having a
Jay Ray:hard time letting go of the aura,
Jay Ray:are ha Baby, it is a sh The kids is out here struggling.
Jay Ray:They like, I wanna step in the name
Jay Ray:of
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: a
Jay Ray:I'm like, Don't play
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: a part of our lives.
Jay Ray:He done been at our weddings.
Jay Ray:He done been at our funerals.
Jay Ray:You know, he done been at our, we graduated to the aura.
Jay Ray:You know, all of, all of the major moments of our lives.
Jay Ray:He was
Jay Ray:Right!
Jay Ray:Mmm.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: to get rid of him is is it almost feels like getting
Jay Ray:rid of all of our happy memories, all of the things that bring us joy, all
Jay Ray:of the things that bring us peace.
Jay Ray:You get what I'm saying?
Jay Ray:Because in our minds, those, the lyrics, the songs, the vibrations, the
Jay Ray:tunes, the tones, it is intertwined.
Jay Ray:Like there is no separation in that memory.
Jay Ray:Does that make sense?
Jay Ray:It really does and that gets to the complexity of even the conversation
Jay Ray:that we're having here because The lyrics are one thing and then you have
Jay Ray:all the stuff that surrounds it, right?
Jay Ray:I know for a fact that the songs that mean the most to me the first note Is
Jay Ray:going to be like nope, that's it and You kind of know even when you hear something
Jay Ray:new that you've never heard before That when it's going to do that to you, right?
Jay Ray:Because there is something in that vibration In that tone that you like,
Jay Ray:I don't know what they about to do but that that first bar just Sent me in so
Jay Ray:I'm a wait and see what's next.
Jay Ray:And sir, Daniel, that actually brings up an interesting point for you as a DJ.
Jay Ray:I'm sure that's part of it, right?
Jay Ray:Cause you know, pretty quickly, how quickly do you know if a song is about
Jay Ray:to, to, to hit for you as a DJ or not?
Jay Ray:How quickly do you
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: Like within the first four counts, like you just,
Jay Ray:there's just certain things you can, well, I'll speak for me.
Jay Ray:Like I can pick, I pick up on a vibration of a song and I can already tell, okay,
Jay Ray:this is going to make me happy, or this is going to make me want to take a beer
Jay Ray:bottle and smash it over somebody's head.
Jay Ray:And there are.
Jay Ray:Much more songs now that lead to the latter of what I said, you know,
Jay Ray:that make you want to, uh, crack bottles over people's heads more
Jay Ray:than to kiss and hug on somebody.
Jay Ray:And, you know, I think, I don't know.
Jay Ray:It's that vibration, uh, within the intentions of what people,
Jay Ray:how people create their music now.
Jay Ray:And Latrice, you actually, you backed that up just now by,
Jay Ray:by speaking about, um, how.
Jay Ray:How sounds can, can bring up memories and whatnot.
Jay Ray:And I think what's happening is a lot of, maybe a lot of musicians are trying to
Jay Ray:process, trying to process through their music and they're making music that we,
Jay Ray:and maybe we just have a whole generation that is trying to process the traumas that
Jay Ray:they've experienced through their music.
Jay Ray:And we're, and they're just hitting us like with all the
Jay Ray:trauma and none of the joy.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: Yeah.
Jay Ray:Well, and we, but we've seen that throughout history.
Jay Ray:You know, we have seen that throughout history.
Jay Ray:Look how well documented the civil rights movement is.
Jay Ray:The civil rights movement is very well documented.
Jay Ray:It's in the music.
Jay Ray:It's in the movies.
Jay Ray:It's in the television shows.
Jay Ray:It's in the pictures, the fashion, right?
Jay Ray:It's, it's in.
Jay Ray:Every single aspect of creativity, there is some aspect of the
Jay Ray:civil rights movement and I would even say the 70s as a whole.
Jay Ray:The 70s is one of my favorite generations.
Jay Ray:I feel like, yeah, like I just, I just, it speaks to me.
Jay Ray:You know what I'm saying?
Jay Ray:Um, but the, what was being created at the time is a direct
Jay Ray:reflection of the sentiment of the people who were creating it.
Jay Ray:That's what the people was going through at the time, right?
Jay Ray:This goal was about trying to find joy.
Jay Ray:Because everything was so fucked up and it was so much tension and it was so much.
Jay Ray:So the disco people was like, fuck all that.
Jay Ray:I'm just going to live.
Jay Ray:I'm just going to be in joy and peace.
Jay Ray:And I'm just going to be like, yeah, let's do this.
Jay Ray:Right.
Jay Ray:But then you also have.
Jay Ray:You know, you got that, you know, power to the people kind of music as well.
Jay Ray:You know what I'm saying?
Jay Ray:Like you got the, the tracks like Nina Simone, who, you
Jay Ray:know, is like Mississippi.
Jay Ray:God damn.
Jay Ray:I don't even know if that was the sixties or the seventies,
Jay Ray:but you get what I'm saying?
Jay Ray:Like the, it is chronicled in the music, what the people were.
Jay Ray:Expressing at the time.
Jay Ray:And so it kind of becomes like a time capsule in its, in its own way.
Jay Ray:And I think that's what we're seeing right now.
Jay Ray:You know, The world is on fire.
Jay Ray:People are struggling.
Jay Ray:People are struggling emotionally.
Jay Ray:People are tired.
Jay Ray:People are burnt out.
Jay Ray:out that everybody's on edge.
Jay Ray:Everybody's scared.
Jay Ray:We rubbing pennies together.
Jay Ray:Rob and Peter trying to pay pal, you know, it's, it's a hard time right now.
Jay Ray:And we're seeing that I think come out in the music, but
Jay Ray:we're also seeing let's heal.
Jay Ray:Let's love less, you know, we the shit, you know, like a, like, don't
Jay Ray:let's let us not forget who we are.
Jay Ray:Keep your head up.
Jay Ray:You know, like we getting both sides of that.
Jay Ray:And.
Jay Ray:I think it's, it's also a time capsule of what's going on right now.
Jay Ray:I feel like this is a good time to talk about, what do you
Jay Ray:think to talk about some lyrics.
Jay Ray:To talk about songs?
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: Like, I am very curious.
Jay Ray:I'm very curious to hear from both of you about a lyric that just
Jay Ray:shot an arrow through your heart and just never, never left you.
Jay Ray:Like, it doesn't, it doesn't necessarily have to be a ballad or slow jam, but it's
Jay Ray:something when you, when you, when you.
Jay Ray:When you faded out the music and you filtered out the music, there
Jay Ray:was something about that lyric that just stuck with you and whoever
Jay Ray:wants to go first, go first, matter of fact, ladies first, Latrice.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: I have two.
Jay Ray:So what are we going to do?
Jay Ray:Like a little round table.
Jay Ray:Y'all want me to give y'all mine right now?
Jay Ray:You can give me If I do one and you do one?
Jay Ray:How's that How's that feel?
Jay Ray:Okay.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: Well, okay.
Jay Ray:First of all, it's not fair.
Jay Ray:I know we're asking you to To do the impossible.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: It's not fair because I was just like, what
Jay Ray:are they even talking about one song?
Jay Ray:Like, what are you serious right now?
Jay Ray:Like, are you serious for real?
Jay Ray:But it did send me down the rabbit hole because I'm like, okay, if I
Jay Ray:have to, if I can only choose one song, then it, you know, obviously
Jay Ray:it needs to be the song that.
Jay Ray:I think has had the biggest impact on my life and I am very
Jay Ray:clear on what song that is.
Jay Ray:So I'm going to share my one song.
Jay Ray:How long is a lyric?
Jay Ray:You can You want to give us the first The first The first verse?
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: No, not the first verse.
Jay Ray:I want to give the last verse and the chorus.
Jay Ray:do Do your thing.
Jay Ray:That's
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: Okay.
Jay Ray:All right.
Jay Ray:So the, my song choice.
Jay Ray:is I Choose by Thee, India Iree.
Jay Ray:Mhm.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: hits on my top list, okay?
Jay Ray:But this is actually my, like, favorite song of all time.
Jay Ray:Um, and, you know, I'll, I'll do the lyric first and then I'll talk about
Jay Ray:a little bit of briefly about why.
Jay Ray:So this is, I want to say this is the last verse.
Jay Ray:Yes, this is the last verse of the song and then it closes out with the chorus.
Jay Ray:So she says, From this day forward, I'm going to be exactly who I am.
Jay Ray:I don't need to change the way that I live just to get a man.
Jay Ray:No.
Jay Ray:I even had a talk with my mama and I, and I told her today,
Jay Ray:I'm grown from this day forward.
Jay Ray:Every decision that I make will be my own.
Jay Ray:And hey, I choose to be the best that I can be.
Jay Ray:This is the chorus now.
Jay Ray:I choose to be courageous in everything I do.
Jay Ray:My past don't dictate who I am.
Jay Ray:I choose because you never know where life is going to take you and
Jay Ray:you can't change where you've been.
Jay Ray:But today I have the opportunity to choose.
Jay Ray:I used to have guilt about the way things, about why things happen the way they did,
Jay Ray:because life is going to do what it do.
Jay Ray:And every day I have the opportunity to choose.
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: Mic drop, mic drop right there.
Jay Ray:And you know, India has always been prolific, but talk about why I think,
Jay Ray:I think it's pretty self explanatory why that means a lot to you, but
Jay Ray:please break it down for us, for the
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: It means a lot to me because
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: Okay.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: a life lesson that you get to choose to, you
Jay Ray:get to choose no matter what it is.
Jay Ray:If it's relationship, you don't have to wait for somebody to choose you.
Jay Ray:You get to choose to, if it's a career decision, you don't have
Jay Ray:to wait for them to choose you.
Jay Ray:You get to.
Jay Ray:Two, you get to choose to say, I am not engaging in this and you get to choose
Jay Ray:to say, I am going to engage in this.
Jay Ray:It is a choice.
Jay Ray:And I think a lot of times myself, you know, I'm a very emotional person.
Jay Ray:I mean, I don't already dropped a tear tonight.
Jay Ray:Y'all crying.
Jay Ray:Okay.
Jay Ray:I'll be crying.
Jay Ray:It is what it is.
Jay Ray:Okay.
Jay Ray:it took me a long time.
Jay Ray:To be okay with that, the fact that that's who I am and to not feel shame or guilt
Jay Ray:around that and feeling like I had to be who other people needed me to be in order
Jay Ray:to be in relationship, in order to be loved, in order to be accepted, in order
Jay Ray:to be understood, et cetera, et cetera, et cetera, in order to just not be alone.
Jay Ray:You know?
Jay Ray:And And this song came to me in a time in my life where I was for the first time in
Jay Ray:my life on an intentional healing journey, you know, like intentionally trying to
Jay Ray:take the reins of my life and heal myself.
Jay Ray:And so hearing that message that I get to choose.
Jay Ray:It was just, you know, it was, it was profound.
Jay Ray:And so it is, uh, you know, it's kind of like my motto is how I live my life.
Jay Ray:And it's, um, I tell it to people all the time, like you get to choose to,
Jay Ray:Yeah.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: you don't, you don't have to just let life do
Jay Ray:whatever they want to do to you.
Jay Ray:You get to choose how you feel about it.
Jay Ray:You get to choose how you respond to it.
Jay Ray:You get to choose whether or not it, it gets to exist in your life.
Jay Ray:Wow.
Jay Ray:Wow, wow, wow.
Jay Ray:Thank you.
Jay Ray:Latrice for sharing that, um,
Jay Ray:listen.
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Jay Ray:You can find Radio BSOTS wherever you listen to podcasts.
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Jay Ray:That's B S O T S dot com.
Jay Ray:So the song I picked, uh, two songs and I could have picked more, but
Jay Ray:I'm like, I'm going to pick these two.
Jay Ray:And the way I selected my songs was I went to my last FM profile.
Jay Ray:So for at least for probably almost the last decade, I've been on
Jay Ray:occasion tracking what I listened to.
Jay Ray:So I've had like 20, 000 tracks of songs.
Jay Ray:Um, Over time.
Jay Ray:And so what it, what it did, what it does is it tells you like, okay,
Jay Ray:here's who you have listened to, like the most, or here's what you play.
Jay Ray:So anyway, uh, my most listened to artist, I think I may have mentioned this
Jay Ray:on the show when we talked about this artist, but it's the foreign exchange.
Jay Ray:So I was like, I do listen to a lot of foreign exchange.
Jay Ray:So I went back into the catalog and the first song I selected.
Jay Ray:It's such a beautiful piece.
Jay Ray:It's called the city ain't the same without you.
Jay Ray:It was written by Fante.
Jay Ray:Um, the lyrics are by Fante and it was produced by Nicolay.
Jay Ray:So the duo, the song was actually sung by Yaza Ra.
Jay Ray:Shout out to Yaza Ra for her brilliance.
Jay Ray:Um, but I'm going to read this beautiful first verse that Fante wrote.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: Mm-Hmm.
Jay Ray:It was cold outside so I thought I'd get away To the one place
Jay Ray:where I'd be warm Spent my last few dollars on a ticket to fly Oh, I'ma
Jay Ray:take a jet plane to carry me straight to your arms And when the wheels touched
Jay Ray:down, I called for you Said, baby, I'm here all for you And you let me know
Jay Ray:that you were with her And it made me wonder, baby, are we still in love?
Jay Ray:And then I thought to myself, maybe we never were.
Jay Ray:This song like that, that, that, that's the opening of the song.
Jay Ray:There's, and the music bed is just kind of, Yazzara's voice and the keyboards.
Jay Ray:There's no rhythm section yet.
Jay Ray:So she's singing these words.
Jay Ray:Almost like she's talking them and then it goes into and I've got my and I've
Jay Ray:only got myself to And I've only got myself to blame for painting these skies
Jay Ray:with your name and it's a cry and shame The city ain't the same without you and
Jay Ray:This song I love a good Um love song This is about heartbreak, but it's also this
Jay Ray:person having this realization about the, the, the experience they were having.
Jay Ray:And they're reminiscing about this love lost.
Jay Ray:this love gone.
Jay Ray:And, um, and that's okay.
Jay Ray:Like there's no positive resolution to this.
Jay Ray:This person's in a city to see someone that is not seeing them.
Jay Ray:And, um, I am always moved.
Jay Ray:Every time I hear it, um, it gave me some more language, you know, these
Jay Ray:songs we go through things in life and you're like, Oh my God, I know.
Jay Ray:I don't know this feeling, but I know what this would feel
Jay Ray:like, you know what I'm saying?
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: emotion is universal and that
Jay Ray:is another basic human truth.
Jay Ray:Emotion is universal.
Jay Ray:A smile is a smile.
Jay Ray:In America, it's a smile.
Jay Ray:In Japan, it's a smile In Afghanistan, it's a smile.
Jay Ray:Anywhere, Antarctica, wherever, wherever you go in the world,
Jay Ray:okay, anywhere on this planet, a smile means the same thing, right?
Jay Ray:So emotion is universal.
Jay Ray:We may not have the same experiences, but we understand the emotion of it all.
Jay Ray:Mm-Hmm.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: And I think that's why music allows us to come
Jay Ray:together, because it communicates.
Jay Ray:Emotion, and we all understand emotion.
Jay Ray:Mm-Hmm.
Jay Ray:? Latrice Sampson Richards: Yeah.
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: Y'all got it.
Jay Ray:Ooh.
Jay Ray:Y'all doing it.
Jay Ray:Let me tell you something.
Jay Ray:Everybody we're ministering on this episode of Queue Points.
Jay Ray:You see how quiet it got?
Jay Ray:Everybody's just processing everything.
Jay Ray:And no, but, and that's what a good lyric will do to you.
Jay Ray:It will resonate with something within you.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: Mm
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: so, um, I'm going to go to the seventies.
Jay Ray:Um for my lyric and It's from the voices of east harlem
Jay Ray:Mm-Hmm.
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: and it's a song called right on be free And i'm just
Jay Ray:going to read to you the the first.
Jay Ray:Um the first bar Um, I want to go where the north wind blows.
Jay Ray:I want to know what the falcon knows I want to go where the wild goose goes High
Jay Ray:flying bird, high flying bird, fly on.
Jay Ray:I want the clouds over my head.
Jay Ray:I don't want no store bought bed.
Jay Ray:I'm going to live until I'm dead.
Jay Ray:Mother, mother, mother, mother, save your child.
Jay Ray:Ride on, be free.
Jay Ray:Ride on, be free.
Jay Ray:I don't want no store bed right on I want the clouds over my head, be free.
Jay Ray:And it's, it's really simple what that song is about.
Jay Ray:Of course, it was, um, recorded in the early seventies.
Jay Ray:And of course, you know, we were coming, you know, Like in truth,
Jay Ray:you talked about the, um, the, the black power movements of that time.
Jay Ray:And of course, but the, the world specifically our country was struggling,
Jay Ray:was being strangled by the Vietnam war was strangled by poverty, um, unemployment,
Jay Ray:all the things that you can think of that we're still dealing with here.
Jay Ray:We're not dealing with that now, but there's something about
Jay Ray:that lyric that speaks to my.
Jay Ray:Desire for escapism or, and my desire for change and transformation.
Jay Ray:And so that spoke to me and it spoke to my, um, just my capacity to dream
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: Mm
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: to, to, to, to, to, to want more.
Jay Ray:And that's why that, that speaks to me.
Jay Ray:And it, you know, things like those, and those are the types of song
Jay Ray:lyrics that really speak to me.
Jay Ray:And if somebody is really like singing it.
Jay Ray:And really doing it like the vocalist was doing it.
Jay Ray:If you look, there's a live performance by the voices of East Harlem.
Jay Ray:They went to a prison
Jay Ray:to, to perform this song.
Jay Ray:These are kids.
Jay Ray:And when I tell you, they were singing their faces off and they were
Jay Ray:singing light, they were singing, like the rent was past due and like
Jay Ray:they hadn't eaten in two weeks.
Jay Ray:I mean, they were singing.
Jay Ray:And so
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: They was sangin
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: it and the, and there's, there's something about
Jay Ray:that that's just undeniable to me and will always resonate with me.
Jay Ray:And so that's just, that's a lyric that I wanted to share with you and
Jay Ray:the listeners, just to get a little insight into Sir Daniel a little
Jay Ray:bit, because, and, and I love that about how all of all three of us came
Jay Ray:with something completely different.
Jay Ray:You know, we got unrequited love.
Jay Ray:We've got, um, self love.
Jay Ray:And then we have imagination, imagination, and wanted to be free.
Jay Ray:And all of them coincide with each other.
Jay Ray:Right.
Jay Ray:If I take control, I choose, I can choose to take those steps to help me be free.
Jay Ray:Yeah.
Jay Ray:Mm-Hmm.
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: And you know, unrequited love.
Jay Ray:Let's not even talk about it.
Jay Ray:I don't even want to go down that route because that's the thing.
Jay Ray:That is definitely a thing.
Jay Ray:But Jerry, we're.
Jay Ray:Let, let's get Latrice to do one more because she is our guest and we go
Jay Ray:and we go close it out after Latrice hits us with her next favorite lyric.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: OK, so, since I can only do one more,
Jay Ray:But here's the thing, Latrice, so we can include your other ones in
Jay Ray:our newsletter, so then our folks who are part of our newsletter can get it.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: you know what I was thinking, too?
Jay Ray:I was thinking that maybe we could do a Spotify playlist.
Jay Ray:Of course.
Jay Ray:Absolutely.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: We can do a Spotify
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: in our language.
Jay Ray:Yes.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: and y'all can go and add that playlist to your
Jay Ray:list and you can see what lyrics Treece has gained lessons from.
Jay Ray:Absolutely.
Jay Ray:Yes.
Jay Ray:Mm-Hmm.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: this one I'm throwing in here, right, is not, not
Jay Ray:necessarily like in my top 10 list, but I, I genuinely believe, I genuinely believe
Jay Ray:that we Can and should stretch ourselves musically because I think it helps us
Jay Ray:to understand and or discover new parts and pieces of ourselves, of who we are.
Jay Ray:Nobody is all one thing.
Jay Ray:Nobody is all, you know, a certain kind of way.
Jay Ray:The reality is that we are multifaceted individuals.
Jay Ray:That is who we are as humans.
Jay Ray:And so we have to have some diversity in our musical selection that
Jay Ray:feeds the different parts of us.
Jay Ray:Yes,
Jay Ray:Oh, I want to know what this is
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: all in agreement with that.
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: I'm ready for it
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: That being said,
Jay Ray:I want to know what Latrice about to
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: my second song choice is Love Me by Lil Wayne.
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: didn't see that one coming hit us with it.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: I think this is the chorus.
Jay Ray:This is the first chorus, or it's just the chorus.
Jay Ray:Whatever.
Jay Ray:Lil Wayne says, Yeah, long as my bitches love me.
Jay Ray:I could give a fuck about no hater, long as my bitches love me.
Jay Ray:Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.
Jay Ray:Eardrummers.
Jay Ray:Yeah, I could give a fuck about no nigga, long as my bitches love me.
Jay Ray:Love me.
Jay Ray:Listen, that's a word.
Jay Ray:Okay?
Jay Ray:That's a word.
Jay Ray:Because, and I'm being for real, we laughing, but I'm being for real.
Jay Ray:I get a physical reaction every time I hear Lil Wayne say that line.
Jay Ray:Long as my bitches love me.
Jay Ray:Because at the end of the day, it don't matter who else fuck with you.
Jay Ray:If the people you fuck with, fuck with you.
Jay Ray:Don't matter what nobody else got to say, long as my bitches love me,
Jay Ray:Mhm.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: I give a fuck about what you gotta say, I give a fuck
Jay Ray:about how you feel because the people who know me, the people who appreciate me, the
Jay Ray:people who love me, as long as they fuck with me, then I'm going to be all right.
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: Silence.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: And I think it's important for us.
Jay Ray:To be reminded of that, because we spend a lot of time trying
Jay Ray:to get people to choose us.
Jay Ray:We spend a lot of time trying to convince people, and I'm talking to myself as
Jay Ray:much as I'm talking to anybody else.
Jay Ray:We, I spend a lot of time, right?
Jay Ray:Well, I can't say a lot because I be learning the lesson, but I used to
Jay Ray:spend a lot of time trying to get people to just accept me for who I am and to
Jay Ray:be okay with the reality of who I am.
Jay Ray:And this song reminds me that it don't matter if they do or they
Jay Ray:don't, because the ones who fuck with me, they fuck with me for real.
Jay Ray:And as long as I got them, I don't need none of that other stuff.
Jay Ray:I'm going to be okay.
Jay Ray:I have my community.
Jay Ray:It's small, but it is mighty.
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: Um,
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: And that's all that I need to live.
Jay Ray:This life, you know, so Lil Wayne is a prophet
Jay Ray:Yes.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: out here in these streets
Jay Ray:long as my
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: you took me, you took me back to, there was a spot I used to DJ
Jay Ray:and, and there were dancers and they used to like, they liked to dance to that song.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: Yes,
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: I hadn't thought about that song since
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: other thing though, right?
Jay Ray:Cause on top of all of that, like Jill Scott did the interview.
Jay Ray:We was talking about Jill Scott interview earlier.
Jay Ray:Jill Scott did the interview with Jemele Hill.
Jay Ray:I haven't watched the full interview, but on Jamel Hill's unbothered podcast,
Jay Ray:she just did an interview with Jill Scott and Jill Scott is saying,
Jay Ray:talking about intimacy and stuff.
Jay Ray:And she's saying like, yes, I am the woo woo girl.
Jay Ray:You know, like I am definitely the woo woo and the crystals
Jay Ray:and you know, I'm the, you know, natural girl, mother, mother to the
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: God is all
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: shit.
Jay Ray:But also sometimes I just want to fuck.
Jay Ray:Yeah, right.
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: And I felt
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: Sometimes I just want to be a nasty bitch, okay?
Jay Ray:Sometimes I just want, my, my line sister sent me a meme one time that said I just
Jay Ray:want to do hood shit with my friends.
Jay Ray:And I mean, it's a thing.
Jay Ray:It's a thing.
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: we, we are multifaceted people.
Jay Ray:We're not one dimensional.
Jay Ray:We are not
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: You know?
Jay Ray:and we need to be allowed, given the room to be able to be those things.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: Yes.
Jay Ray:And to your, to your point, when you have folks in your life, that's
Jay Ray:like, I see all, I see all of Latrice.
Jay Ray:I see all of Sir Daniel.
Jay Ray:I see all of Jay Ray and I'm in, and, and I fuck with them
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: Yes.
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: the long
Jay Ray:the long way.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: The long way.
Jay Ray:can I bring in, I want to bring in a lyric from that came in from the chat
Jay Ray:and I want to make sure that we do that before we, before we leave out tonight.
Jay Ray:Mark McPherson shout out to Mark.
Jay Ray:I saw Mark.
Jay Ray:On Monday in person, Hey Mark, um, Mark, uh, picked one of the most
Jay Ray:beautiful songs, just my imagination by the temptations and the lyric,
Jay Ray:isn't that a beautiful song?
Jay Ray:And just these lyrics each day through my window, I watch her as she passes by.
Jay Ray:I say to myself, self.
Jay Ray:Even though that's not in the lyric here, but that's what happens.
Jay Ray:So you're such a lucky guy to have a girl like her.
Jay Ray:Okay, I'm not gonna sing.
Jay Ray:It's truly a dream come true out of all the fellows in the world.
Jay Ray:She belongs to me, but it was just my imagination running away with me.
Jay Ray:It was just my imagination running away with me.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: Mm hmm.
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: taste of J racing and then everything to come
Jay Ray:I love that song.
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: on y'all.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: he a good man.
Jay Ray:Savannah.
Jay Ray:Thank you.
Jay Ray:Latrice
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: a good man.
Jay Ray:Savannah.
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: Let's trees.
Jay Ray:We have thoroughly enjoyed you on this episode of Queue Points podcast.
Jay Ray:Before we get up out of here, please, please, please let the
Jay Ray:people know how they can get more of you, how they can contact you
Jay Ray:and find out about your practice.
Jay Ray:And of course, listen to your podcast.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: Absolutely.
Jay Ray:Thank you all so much for having me.
Jay Ray:I have thoroughly enjoyed myself.
Jay Ray:Um, my cheeks are literally hurting cause I've been smiling
Jay Ray:the entire time, um, which is always like a plus and a positive.
Jay Ray:I do a lot of interviews, you know, um, and they don't always.
Jay Ray:But I have thoroughly enjoyed myself today.
Jay Ray:Um, I love y'all so very, very much.
Jay Ray:And, um, I'm just, you know, so now like next step is we got to work.
Jay Ray:together for real, for real.
Jay Ray:We got to do something for real, for real.
Jay Ray:Um, so y'all, you know, we're gonna see what comes out of that.
Jay Ray:But thank you so much for having me.
Jay Ray:Um, I can be found.
Jay Ray:I spent most of my time on instagram.
Jay Ray:I'm not gonna lie.
Jay Ray:Although, um, that's not really saying much because I do not post that much.
Jay Ray:I'm gonna be honest.
Jay Ray:Um, but if you want to keep up with me and what I got going on, Instagram
Jay Ray:is the best place to do that.
Jay Ray:Um, and you can follow me on Instagram at Latrice Sampson Richards.
Jay Ray:Um, I have also a tick tock, uh, that I, you know, been kind of
Jay Ray:dipping into the tick tock streets.
Jay Ray:Uh, you know, they look like they trying to ban it or whatever, but we're
Jay Ray:gonna see what happens, uh, with that.
Jay Ray:But you can find me on tick tock at rich by marriage.
Jay Ray:Um, Which I think I'm going to change that soon.
Jay Ray:I think I'm gonna change it over to Pied Melanin, um, which
Jay Ray:is the name of the company.
Jay Ray:I am working on the Pied Melanin website, but in the meantime you can find my old
Jay Ray:website, which is not fully updated.
Jay Ray:So keep that in mind when you go to the website, it's not fully updated.
Jay Ray:It's in the process.
Jay Ray:of being updated and changed over.
Jay Ray:And that's Latrice Samson Richards.
Jay Ray:com.
Jay Ray:Um, and, uh, I do live event consultations, planning execution.
Jay Ray:I literally, one of my clients texts me today and she was like,
Jay Ray:Hey, are you available for June?
Jay Ray:Um, you know, it's like wanting to get on the calendar and things like that.
Jay Ray:I got some really amazing events that.
Jay Ray:I'm planning and working on, like I was telling y'all before last year,
Jay Ray:um, it was just, it was the most difficult year of my life, hands down.
Jay Ray:Um, when my dad passed and, uh, I had all these plans of things that I wanted
Jay Ray:to do, and it just shut that down.
Jay Ray:You know, it just.
Jay Ray:it just really shut that down.
Jay Ray:So I'm on the other side of that now.
Jay Ray:And, um, I'm really excited to finally be like pressing gas on all of the things
Jay Ray:that I've been telling y'all was coming for the last two, two years, two or three
Jay Ray:years, um, that kind of got derailed.
Jay Ray:So just, you know, be on the lookout for all of the things.
Jay Ray:And, uh, yeah, that's, that's it.
Jay Ray:I do respond to DMS.
Jay Ray:Um, so if you want to work with me, you can always just
Jay Ray:jump into DMS on Instagram.
Jay Ray:Listen Latrice, we will absolutely be right there
Jay Ray:supporting Latrice Samson Richards.
Jay Ray:Um, you, you, the work that you do is incredibly important and just you as
Jay Ray:a, a human being are just, I remember sitting in that room in Philadelphia.
Jay Ray:And we hadn't met yet, but I remember it was somebody giving a testimony
Jay Ray:and you just spoke life into that person from your seat in the audience.
Jay Ray:And I'm like, we got to work with her.
Jay Ray:I
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: yep.
Jay Ray:It's true.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: Yes.
Jay Ray:Yeah.
Jay Ray:I mean, because I just feel like it don't cost you nothing
Jay Ray:to be a decent human being.
Jay Ray:And my goal.
Jay Ray:In life is to make sure that anybody who experiences me, no matter how long, if
Jay Ray:it's for this hour and a half, that, that we've been talking tonight, if this is the
Jay Ray:only contact you ever get with me for the rest of your life, I want for you to come
Jay Ray:away from that experience, feeling like your life has been made better in some
Jay Ray:way, even if it's just for that moment.
Jay Ray:You know what I'm saying?
Jay Ray:Like that, that is the goal.
Jay Ray:And so, you know, I, I just, I appreciate y'all and I love y'all.
Jay Ray:I love the people and the people love me back.
Jay Ray:So it's a, it's a mutually, it's a reciprocal relationship, you know,
Jay Ray:it's a reciprocal relationship.
Jay Ray:And, um, yeah, I love y'all.
Jay Ray:Thank
Jay Ray:y'all.
Jay Ray:you too Latrice.
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: is real.
Jay Ray:J Ray, share some love with our listeners and let them know.
Jay Ray:Um, just remind them how they can keep up with us.
Jay Ray:And so that they can get more, uh, they can find this show
Jay Ray:with Latrice and others like it.
Jay Ray:So
Jay Ray:So y'all are doing the most important thing.
Jay Ray:If you can hear our voices, if you could see our faces, that is amazing.
Jay Ray:Go ahead and hit the subscribe button so that you can subscribe and know when the
Jay Ray:new stuff from Queue Points is coming up.
Jay Ray:And if they have a notification bell or anything like that, go ahead and hit that.
Jay Ray:If you, um, want to do us a solid, please share the show with your
Jay Ray:friends, your family, your colleagues.
Jay Ray:If you like Queue Points and you really enjoy what we do over here,
Jay Ray:chances are the people that are close to you will really like it too.
Jay Ray:So we would love it if you could share it.
Jay Ray:Those things are absolutely free.
Jay Ray:The other free thing that you can do is join our mailing list and our newsletter.
Jay Ray:If you visit magazine.
Jay Ray:Queue Points.
Jay Ray:com, you can join for absolutely free.
Jay Ray:And if you want to go a step further and get really cool merch, like
Jay Ray:the Slow Jams Can Heal Us line.
Jay Ray:We have our Stop Tweeting, Start Wrapping shirts.
Jay Ray:We got all types of stuff out there that you can buy at the Queue Points store.
Jay Ray:And that can be reachthatstore.
Jay Ray:Queue Points.
Jay Ray:com.
Jay Ray:Bye.
Jay Ray:Y'all have been, y'all have been falling through the store.
Jay Ray:We've been watching the orders come through and come in and go out.
Jay Ray:We appreciate that so much.
Jay Ray:We even got, yo, we got our bags over there.
Jay Ray:I'm gonna show you the bag again.
Jay Ray:Cause this bag so fly.
Jay Ray:This is our record shopping bag.
Jay Ray:You can fit 26 albums in here, y'all.
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: Oh, that is a very specific number.
Jay Ray:it is very, I count it.
Jay Ray:You can fit 26 albums in here and we got three of them.
Jay Ray:So we got this the slow jabs can heal us in a couple others.
Jay Ray:So
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: Well, I need to get me a shirt.
Jay Ray:I'm gonna have to, let me get my life together.
Jay Ray:Let me get
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: we got
Jay Ray:We got you
Jay Ray:Latrice Sampson Richards: Yes.
Jay Ray:And y'all sign up for that newsletter.
Jay Ray:So y'all can get that Spotify
Jay Ray:list.
Jay Ray:Yeah.
Jay Ray:Yes,
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: what the lady said.
Jay Ray:That was the lovely Latrice Samson Richards.
Jay Ray:I am DJ Sir Daniel,
Jay Ray:And my name is jray.
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: and this is Queue Points podcast, dropping the
Jay Ray:needle on black music history.
Jay Ray:What do I wait?
Jay Ray:I almost forgot my, my lines to the people, Jerry.
Jay Ray:you didn't even say it.
Jay Ray:Yes.
Jay Ray:We have to
Jay Ray:DJ Sir Daniel: So I got to hit him.
Jay Ray:With the lyrics that you heard tonight, this means even more
Jay Ray:in this life, you have a choice.
Jay Ray:You can either pick up the needle or you can let the record play again.
Jay Ray:I'm DJ sir.
Jay Ray:Daniel.
Jay Ray:That was Jay Ray.
Jay Ray:Our lovely guest Latrice Samson Richards.
Jay Ray:This is Queue Points podcast, dropping the needle on black music history.
Jay Ray:We will see you on the next go round.
Jay Ray:Peace.
Jay Ray:Peace