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Why Q'moshyn Made "Pray For Your Radio"

  • Writer: WillandLiz Wooten
    WillandLiz Wooten
  • Oct 16
  • 1 min read

People who know I have the inside track, I'm often asked, "Why did Q'moshyn make the song Hood Supa Hero 3 song "Pray For Your Radio?""

Q'moshyn mentioned observing "drones and starlink lights at night" while listening to the Amit Kane Beats-produced instrumental. It evoked a sci-fi, futuristic theme of looking to the skies for answers, being invaded by extraterrestrials, and being influenced by technology. The song is a call to challenge conventional radio programming and embrace values like peace and community rather than commercialism.

Praying for hip-hop culture on the radio can be viewed as a way to address both the negative and positive aspects within it, recognizing its culturally disruptive yet significant socioeconomic impact. It offers spiritual redemption from destructive themes like violence, misogyny, and substance abuse while also supporting the genre's capacity for social commentary, celebrating life, providing hope in difficult times, and promoting self-determination, unity and justice. The hook also can also be plea for listeners to seek out music with a deeper purpose. 

Check out the song for yourself!

Q'moshyn is known to be vocal about his views on the hip-hop scene, often using his music to challenge industry trends and focus on more substantive content. "Pray For Your Radio" is another example of this, offering a critique of the mainstream music scene.

- Will Wooten, Old Millennial Musings 

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Michael Troutman
Michael Troutman
Oct 20
Rated 5 out of 5 stars.

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