Oh, yeah. It works. Take “Are You Real?,” KJ’s ultra-hip collaboration with Kutless frontman, Jon Micah. A canny blend of poignant, pump-your-fist-in-the-air rhyming and crisp, incisive hard rock, “Are You Real?” grabs you by the heart and refuses to let go. Brynn Sanchez lends her brown velvet vocals to “Never Look Away,” creating an atmosphere that is as electrically charged as a Texas sky before an impending thunderstorm. Of course, KJ-52 has no problem rapping solo on such neo-classics as “Fivetweezy,” “Rock With It,” and “Thank You.”
| So how did this lower middle-class white guy from the poor side of Tampa end up setting the Christian rap world on its ear? Just who is the man behind “Behind the Musik?”
“I didn't come from your typical background,” KJ confesses. “I grew up in the lower income section of Tampa. My parents were two ex-hippie artists who met each other at art college. I wasn't one of those guys who grew up in church. Because of everything that was going on I just started internalizing all those things that happened to me. About the time I got into middle school I really started falling apart. Not just things I was doing on the outside, but internally. When I looked at myself I saw something that I wasn't very happy with. I felt that because of some things that had happened to me in the past, that there must have been something wrong with me.”
After his parents’ divorce, KJ moved with his mother to the ‘burbs. But the change just accentuated his feelings of alienation. “I went from being the only white kid in an all black and Cuban neighborhood, to a suburban neighborhood where I was still just as poor,” he says. “I was at that age when all you want to do is fit in, and I didn't. I felt like a big square in a circle world. Not having Christ made things that much harder. Everything just kept getting progressively worse.
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“I ran away twice,”KJ continues. “I almost got shot by the cops one night. I was just in the wrong place at the wrong time. I'm not saying I was a hoodlum or gangbanger or anything like that. I was just a kid bouncing back and forth between my parents. And I don't blame my parents for any of this. I'm not saying its all their fault for the way I was. I don't buy into that. I hate it when kids use that as an excuse. You’re a free agent. You can do what you want with your life. You have a choice to overcome your past, and with Christ you can definitely do that.”