 Because I mean, growing up in the house with him, I was around PMC, Bumbi, Lil Flit, Kiki. I was around there 24 years. You call the magical names. You call the magical names. You was around PMC. Awesome, Vince. We used to take a lot of energy. I'm here with you. Going down. PMC story. Yeah, we on Boss Talk 101. Yeah, we gonna talk. Tell us about growing up with your dad. Because being Ronnie Spencer, the man that he is, and let me tell you, I love his voice. We looked him up and listened to some music. Girl, I've been thinking that nigga was the Isley Brothers for 15 years, nigga. Let's be real. No, no, no, we gotta get it clear though. I'm gonna tell you, I ain't no lie. Ask her about that song. I was really, I'll say this nigga is the trick, they done tricked me. It might have been Isley Brothers on there. You don't know for a fact it was him. I heard the nigga singing on one day. I said that was the damn Isley Brothers. Was that him? That's my dad. The whole time. The whole time. I thought that was Ronald Isley. And I'm the biggest fan. He sound just like him. Bro, I'm telling you right now. I've been in my mind, I'm saying, how in the hell is PMC them? Chad them? No, no damn. Ronnie Spencer, but Ronald Isley. That was my dad. That's dope, man. And I'm telling you, I did not realize it. Because I did not care about none but PMC. I ain't gonna lie to you. I was a PMC fan and then I'm still is. But it was like, nothing else really matters. You know what I mean? Yeah. You know what I mean? But what I'm finding out blew my mind. He looked up all of Ronnie Spencer's song and we comparing voices trying to figure out if this is really him. Yeah. So he has a song with Ronald Isley. That's dope. Really? You gotta really listen. What's the name of it? It's called Hold On. It's not out yet. We are trying to get him to put it out. We trying to get him to like the fall or the winter because the song is real mellow. They gonna sound just alike. But you gotta really listen to it. To see which one is who. Yeah. You think it's just Ronald Isley. Wow. Good song though. Good song. I believe you. Who wrote it? So actually it was a joint thing. So Ronald Isley wrote his verse, Daddy wrote his verse and then they kind of collabed on the hook. Okay. Were you there when they did it? No. I wasn't there. I was at the babysitter unfortunately. Oh. Wow. They didn't want to bring me. Wow. But my dad actually went to his house. Went to St. Louis and laid it there with direct note D dirty dollar. I had to be every bit of like teen. Yeah. And my daddy just been holding on to that song, holding on to it. Why do artists do that? They'll drop something, but don't drop it. But they'll you know lay it and then hold on to it for years. I don't know. Well my daddy was more of like sentimental values and then they wanted to shoot a video to it too. But then Ronald Isley fell sick. So my dad was like well let me just hold on to it until you know I talk to his people and it's the right time to put it out. So hopefully it's the right time because I like the song. So going back to being Ronnie Spencer's daughter, tell us about that. My daddy's strict. Like big strict. Once he found out I wanted to do music, I can't even describe it. My daddy is one of them people. This is what you want to do. And I started investing my time and my money in it. You better take seriously because if you don't, you only get one shot. My daddy's a one shot type of thing. So once I was like, yes, this is what I want to do. Voice lessons, opera training. We did ballet. We did dance. You said do you have siblings that did also? Just me and my dad. I'm the only child on my dad's side. Oh. So yeah. Anything that had to do with like music, production, anything to make you better and greater as an artist, I did it. I can imagine how he felt to know that his child wanted to come up in his shoes. I can imagine. No, I can imagine. Because you wanted to do it. It's not that he was forcing you to do it. It's different when your child wants to do something that you do and find the love in it compared to you're like, you need to do this because I already paved the way. You need to go ahead and do this with me. And you know, most kids are like, no, I want to go here. I want to do this. I never had anything else I wanted to do. Because I mean, growing up in the house with him, I was around P.M.C., Bumby, Lil Flit, Kiki. I was around there 24 hours. You called the magical names. You called the magical names. You was around P.M.C.? Yes. Man, wait a minute. We better stop this whole interview. I'm being real with you. Give me a P.M.C. story. That you can remember. Yeah, she did. So either she did or either she didn't, man. Either she lied or either she did. I can give you one that I really do remember. Yeah, you hear what I just said? Either she lied or we're going to put on a don't never. I just talked to he's Leo the other week. Don't do this, man. No, I got you. We went to the zoo. We wasn't supposed to go to the zoo, but we ended up going to the zoo. It was my dad, P.M.C., and then P.M.C. son. Okay. And P.M.C., people think that it's a character. He ain't no character. That's him. That's him all the time. The way he talks in his songs, he talks in real life. Wow. My dad mimics him. So the whole time we at the zoo, P.M.C., Ronnie, look at that bird. My daddy. I see that bird. So, you know, he's talking like that. But he's not a character. It was all real. Wow. He'd never fake anything. Nothing was for the cameras. And the love he has for the South, that's him. Deep. Like that is. He don't play by Texas or South or period. He don't play. No. And it was even, I like to say that P.M.C. was kind of like an uncle because my grandmother didn't play about P.M.P. either. Wow. Like, at all. We would go and visit him. Mama West. I think we're family. You talking about when he was on T.R.O. unit? Yes. You used to go to the prison to visit him? Yes. We went to go and visit him. Wow. How was that? Just like going to visit his family. I mean, how was you? You was young. No, I was like, yeah, I was young. I was probably like 10 or 11. 10 or 11. Somewhere in that area. So you just watched. You didn't ever say nothing to him. You like he. No, I got talked to him. Was that, was that, was that like the visit was, it was just like sitting here. Yeah. Like my grandmother had it to where she can have contact visits for him. Yes. So he would sit across the table and then we would sit on the other side. But it wasn't anything like weird or different. Yeah. That's not so funny. He was a celebrity. Correct. Correct. Yes. So I mean, people were coming to visit and it'd be like, is that P.M.P. Walk up to him and be like, can I just shake your head? My grandmother kind of looked like. Yeah. I'm busy. Busy. That's right. He would still do it, but. Wow. That's okay. Because I know a lot of people. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I bet he does. How was that when he passed away for you? Sorry about that baby. It was unbelievable. Sorry. That's so good. It was, you don't, you couldn't believe it. And then the way that they, they described it. He was in LA. Yeah. It was just a shocker. Yeah. He was, he was great. He was going to go and do great things. Of course. Like, he had the city on his back.