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Artist Name: Country C

Album Title: Staging Lanes CC

Stream on Apple Music

Download on Amazon

 

 

 

Representing Columbia SC, national recording artists "Country C" releases his debut album entitled "Staging Lanes CC". Hosted by DJ Whoo Kid this album has 11 high quality tracks. A very diverse catalog of music giving you the soundtrack to Country C's life. With features from Moneybagg Yo, BlocBoy JB, DJ Luke Nasty, Shanell, Deezie Mcduffie, and more this project delivers the true sound of the south.

 

 

Not only is Country C a recording artist, he is an actor, race car driver, Donk Rider, entrepreneur, business man, and CEO of Need More Entertainment.

He currently has several music videos out. As well as a YouTube series called "Killumbia". With over 7 millions views and counting you have to check it out if you don't know about it!

Get use to the name COUNTRY C and make sure you support this ARTIST ON THE RISE.

 

 

Follow on ALL social media @countryclive

For Bookings, Features, and Interviews contact dmgbookings06@gmail.com

 

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Video After The Jump Shot just south of Paris, France in Linas at l'Autodrome de Linas --Montlhéry, this 1.58 mile oval track, built in 1924, features banks as steep as 51 degrees, which is more than double the standard incline of most NASCAR ovals. Chosen by Ken for this specific reason, the ramp-like banking proved to be a unique and exciting challenge. The driving physics for the stunts performed were totally unknown until Ken Block attempted the maneuvers during filming. Damn, crazy driving skills involved here. twitter-5d.gif
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Scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr. (left), and Police Sgt. James Crowley talk race at the White House.

Atlanta Journal Constitution Reports With mugs of beer and a calm conversation, President Barack Obama tried to push himself and the nation beyond a political uproar Thursday, hailing a "friendly, thoughtful" conversation with the black professor and white policeman whose dispute had ignited a fierce debate over race in America. "I have always believed that what brings us together is stronger than what pulls us apart," the nation's first black president said after the highly anticipated meeting ended. "I am confident that has happened here tonight, and I am hopeful that all of us are able to draw this positive lesson from this episode." Under the canopy of a magnolia tree in the early evening, Obama joined the other players in a story that had knocked the White House off stride: Harvard professor Henry Louis Gates Jr. and Cambridge, Mass., police Sgt. James Crowley. Vice President Joe Biden was with them on a Rose Garden patio. "We agreed to move forward," Crowley said later when asked if anything was solved. "I think what you had today was two gentlemen agreeing to disagree on a particular issue. I don't think that we spent too much time dwelling on the past. We spent a lot of time discussing the future."

President Barack Obama and Vice President Joe Biden have a beer with Harvard scholar Henry Louis Gates Jr., left, and Cambridge, Mass., police Sgt. James Crowley, right, in the Rose Garden of the White House in Washington, Thursday, July 30, 2009. (AP Photo/Ron Edmonds) The issue in question began when Crowley investigated a potential burglary at Gates' house and ended up arresting the protesting professor for disorderly conduct. The matter mushroomed into a debate on racial profiling, fueled when Obama said in a prime-time news conference that the police "acted stupidly." He later expressed regret. Gates said after Thursday's White House gathering that he hoped the entire experience would prove to be an "occasion for education, not recrimination." He said the burden now rests with him and Crowley to use the opportunity to foster wider awareness of the dangers facing police officers and the fears that some blacks have about racial profiling.
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