
A Deep Conversation With Steph Simon
07/22/22 • 58 min
Steph Simon is a leader of World Culture Music - a collective of artists inspired by the legacy of Black Wall Street to stake their claim to the city and restore the excellence that 98 years ago turned to ashes.
A true leader and visionary for the city, Simon uses his music to uplift and inspire transformation both personal and communal while never taking himself too seriously. There is a spiritual undercurrent to his work that is unmistakable, perhaps what one would expect from an artist who grew up listening to Notorious B.I.G. in the heart of the Bible Belt. As he puts it on the gospel-tinged track “Silver n’ Gold”, his music is “like a mix between holy ghost and Hova quotes.”
On his new album Born on Black Wall Street, Simon draws parallels between the creative culture in Tulsa today and the energy that made Black Wall Street thrive in the first place. Throughout the album Simon takes on the persona of “Diamond” Dick Rowland, a 17-year-old boy scapegoated for instigating the 1921 massacre after an incident with a white girl in an elevator. Of this creative choice Simon said, “I feel a connection to [Rowland] that I can’t explain, almost like I’m carrying his spirit with me. It wasn’t right that his name was used as a catalyst for a lot of pain and destruction, I use the name Dicky Ro to be the catalyst for transformation and hope.” His authentic spirit carrying messages of economic empowerment, community healing and personal growth will be felt by all who listen.
Born on Black Wall Street stands as a seminal album for the emerging Tulsa hip-hop scene, but Simon is speaking to a uniquely black American experience that will find resonance in the heartland and beyond. On album centerpiece “Diamonds” he raps, “See it, want it, buy it then you own it/put your pot with mine let’s make it grow.”
Steph Simon is a leader of World Culture Music - a collective of artists inspired by the legacy of Black Wall Street to stake their claim to the city and restore the excellence that 98 years ago turned to ashes.
A true leader and visionary for the city, Simon uses his music to uplift and inspire transformation both personal and communal while never taking himself too seriously. There is a spiritual undercurrent to his work that is unmistakable, perhaps what one would expect from an artist who grew up listening to Notorious B.I.G. in the heart of the Bible Belt. As he puts it on the gospel-tinged track “Silver n’ Gold”, his music is “like a mix between holy ghost and Hova quotes.”
On his new album Born on Black Wall Street, Simon draws parallels between the creative culture in Tulsa today and the energy that made Black Wall Street thrive in the first place. Throughout the album Simon takes on the persona of “Diamond” Dick Rowland, a 17-year-old boy scapegoated for instigating the 1921 massacre after an incident with a white girl in an elevator. Of this creative choice Simon said, “I feel a connection to [Rowland] that I can’t explain, almost like I’m carrying his spirit with me. It wasn’t right that his name was used as a catalyst for a lot of pain and destruction, I use the name Dicky Ro to be the catalyst for transformation and hope.” His authentic spirit carrying messages of economic empowerment, community healing and personal growth will be felt by all who listen.
Born on Black Wall Street stands as a seminal album for the emerging Tulsa hip-hop scene, but Simon is speaking to a uniquely black American experience that will find resonance in the heartland and beyond. On album centerpiece “Diamonds” he raps, “See it, want it, buy it then you own it/put your pot with mine let’s make it grow.”
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A Deep Conversation With Cam James
To learn more about Cam and his music, visit
http://www.camjamesmusic.com
Instagram: @itscamjames
Twitter: @itscamjames
http://biglink.to/camjames
Tulsa-based rapper Cameron James Williams, professionally known as Cam James, is a storyteller. At Georgia Tech in 2011, he started turning his spoken word pieces into music. He has built a career around thematically motivated songs that lend themselves well to film production.
Following his first major television placement on BET's Being Mary Jane in September 2017, Cam starred in an international tourism campaign called "Hear The USA" for Brand USA and Spotify in 2018. His song "Lately" earned a placement in the Netflix Original movie Uncorked (2020), "114 AM" in the Netflix Original series Grand Army (2020) and "Babyface" in the OWN series Queen Sugar (2021).
Next Episode

A Deep Conversation With Artist Barbara Ide
Barbara Corso Ide, a native of Indiana, has lived near Nashville, TN, for 28 years.
She has a BS and MA in Elementary Education from Ball State University, and an Ed.D. from Trevecca Nazarene University in Leadership and Curriculum.
Barb and her husband have three children and four grandchildren. She enjoys gardening and food preservation, exercising, book clubs and quilt guilds.
She comes to the art quilt world after retiring from a 43-year career in public education.
Taking and manipulating digital photographs has become the fuel for her interest in
storytelling through art quilts.
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