GRITS
Reitereate
Gotee Records


GRITS
Hip-hop moguls who own their own empires are revered for their rag-to-riches accomplishments: after a life of hustling and hard knocks, they've managed to touch hip-hop heaven and become magnates of the rap game. For proof, they've got the record label, the deep-rolling roster, the ice-encrusted platinum necklaces, the bodyguards, and the superstar girlfriend on the side. Sometimes they'll even record an album for fun.  

Except for the record label part, veteran hip-hop duo GRITS is nothing like that. In a climate that's grown exponentially hostile towards vacuous, superficial hip-hop posturing, the group's artistic aspirations reach much higher. They're older, they're wiser, and, more than ever, they're aware that their triumphs aren't to be hoarded. They've been blessed to be a blessing.  

Reiterate, their eighth full-length album, marks the beginning of this new era for the best-selling crew. Not only is the tandem made up of Teron "Bonafide" Carter and Stacy "Coffee" Jones still actively recording; after more than a decade with boutique independent label Gotee Records, the emcees are stepping out in faith and launching Revolution Art, an indie label of their own that, they hope, will make more than just hits.  

"I want to be like Clive Davis—I want to have lifetime artists," Bonafide says with conviction. His partner, Coffee, adds, "It can be a scary and overwhelming thing, but you're just kind of at that point when you know it's time to step into that place. It's a risky business, but when you're gambling on something you're passionate about, that takes a lot of the fear away."  

Their decision, though, is far from a gamble. As the highest-grossing rap group in faith-fueled hip-hop, they have some clout. Already, the guys have secured national distribution for Reiterate and future Revolution Art projects through Provident-Integrity, a unit of Sony-BMG. And if that weren't enough, GRITS also has a number of power players supporting their new venture. To wit, the duo's former benefactors are one-hundred percent behind them.

"My hope is GRITS becomes part of the new wave of leadership in this industry," says Joey Elwood, president of Gotee and longtime friend of the duo. "Nothing would make me happier for them than to see the future being developed by their thoughts and ideas.  They've been shaping the future as artist for some time; now it's time for them to take the next step, and I know they will do it."

Elwood's associate, Toby "tobyMac" McKeehan, has some praise of his own: "GRITS has changed the face of positive and spiritual hip-hop. They are relevant and have a knack for discovering talent that stretches our industry to places I love seeing it go."

Endorsements like that are enough for any new enterprise to hit the ground running, but GRITS isn't a group to fall back on others' opinions to validate their work; they let their own art do the talking. "We want to make soundtracks for life and let it be what it is," Bonafide says. "At the end of the day, it's all art. We started a revolution but at the end of the day it is art. Let it speak for itself. I don't have to give you my whole biography in life…I'm doing my art every single time." Upon that maxim—life as art—is that Reiterate and Revolution Art were created. The concept is nothing new for GRITS. As early as their classic albums Mental Releases and Factors of the Seven, the twosome was toiling autonomously, with a budding yet firm idea of who they were becoming—very little need for supervision or oversight. By the time their career-defining Art of Translation and Dichotomy albums arrived, the music was simply an extension of years of self-discovery and life on the road.

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