2 Pistols' first success with a single came with an
independent record called "Dirty Foot," which he wrote while
still in high school and distributed in the Tarpon Springs
area, at the urging of his cousin. After hearing it played
in a local dance club and then witnessing another rapper's
performance, 2 Pistols had his first chance to perform
on-stage.
It’s nothing short of a miracle that Jeremy Lemont Saunders, aka 2 Pistols, is here to tell his story.
With a history of incarceration and
brutal violence in his family that predates his own life,
his is a story of a survivor.
2 Pistols is an ‘80s baby who managed to keep his eyes on
the prize after many obstacles seemed to block his path.
While his parents spent most of his childhood in jail,
Jeremy shuttled between his aunts and older brothers,
eventually opting for the street life by the time he was a
teenager.
The transformation from Jeremy Saunders to 2 Pistols has
been several years in the making. And his story, which
illustrates the lives of so many young men like him, is both
a cautionary tale and a motivational one. With the release
of his debut album, DEATH BEFORE DISHONOR, he is one step
closer to establishing himself as a street artist with
passion, dedication and talent.
“Music has always been apart of my life,” says 2 Pistols.
“For as long as I can remember. But I never thought about
making a career out of it. For a long time, it was all about
football.”
The former running back had an illustrious career, rushing
for 1,700 yards at Tarpon Springs High School in Tarpon
Springs, Florida, just outside of Tampa. There was a dream
of playing professional football. “Yeah, but I was only 5’7”
and 145,” he says with a sigh. “I knew that wasn’t going to
happen!”
Fate stepped in and guided him down a different path. He sat
in the back of his classes in high school, often jotting
down lyrics without really thinking about it. “Around my
way, we sometimes call certain kinds of girls, ‘Dirty Foot’.
It’s just a silly thing, a girl who is trying to get your
money and don’t have nothing of her own is a Dirty Foot. I
was just messing around and wrote a song about it.”
2 Pistols’ brother encouraged him to record the song, even
if only for fun. “I recorded the song and I pressed up a few
copies and gave it away. But it wasn’t a big deal.” And
then, several weeks later, he went to a local teen nightclub
and heard the DJ playing the song. “I was kind of shocked,”
2 Pistols explains. “The people in the club actually knew
the words to my song. That’s a crazy feeling—to put out a
song you think no one will hear and then people are singing
along to it in the club.”
That night, a local rapper took the stage to perform his own
single at the club and 2 Pistols stood by, watching and
observing. “The guy was just not that good,” he explains.
“And he could tell by my face that I thought he was whack.
So he looks down at me in the crowd and asks me if I think I
could do better. I said ‘hell yeah, I could!’”
In a scene worthy of the big screen, 2 Pistols took the
stage, grabbed the mic, cued the DJ to play “Dirty Foot” and
ripped his very first show. No rehearsal, no preparation.
“It was crazy!” says 2 Pistols. “But it was at that point
that I thought music might be my hustle.”
2 Pistols will be the first to admit that music wasn’t his
first hustle. He’s unapologetically open about his past in
the drug game. “I did what I had to do to make money,” he
says. “And I’ve paid the price for that too.” While in jail
several years ago, he had an epiphany. “I’m sitting in jail
for trying to get money and I’m thinking about how I could
have used that money to press up my own CDs,” he explains.
“I knew when I got out, I was going to take matters into my
own hands.”
True to his word, when he was released, he took every dollar
he could round up and invested in himself. He started by
promoting parties and concerts in the Tampa area. The goal
was triple-fold. He could make money by having top acts come
to Tampa. Then he would perform as the opening act for the
shows, ensuring that he could build his own buzz. And he
would be able to cultivate relationships with artists that
would help him as well. With this plan, 2 Pistols brought
acts like Plies, Rick Ross, T-Pain, Lil Boosie and the Shop
Boyz to the Tampa area for shows.
At the same time, he began establishing his own crew, a
clique called Blood Money Union, a loose conglomerate of
DJs, producers, lyricists and vocalists. “I have to be
honest,” 2 Pistols says, “No one is messing with my crew
right now—no one. And people are finally beginning to
recognize what we’ve got going on.”
Everything about him is unique from his name to his flow.
The name 2 Pistols is a nod to his twin-like personality.
“As a Gemini, people would always say I had two different
sides to me,” he explains. “But because I was living that
street life, instead of calling me something like Two Face,
my nickname became 2 Pistols.”
His multifaceted personality extends from his nicknames to
his musical influences. “I was always one of the only cats
down here in the south, driving around listening to Beanie
Sigel and Jay-Z,” he says with a laugh. “Some of the stuff I
listened to down here didn’t have a lot of depth. And good
music is good music—no matter where it comes from.”
With stellar production by the Grammy Award-winning
J.U.S.T.I.C.E. League, 2 Pistols brings raw emotion and
feelings to his work, particularly on “She Got It,” an
undeniably radio-friendly track featuring the ultra-hot
T-Pain.
With T. Pain’s distinct sound layered under the bass-heavy
dramatic track and 2 Pistol’s aggressive delivery, “She Got
It” is a no-brainer. The slick and polished production makes
it both commercially viable and club-worthy while the
content and the lyrics work for all fans of street life
narratives.
What may be very surprising about 2 Pistols is that his
subject matter is not just limited to the raw and illegal
elements of street life. He’s wholly unafraid to express how
he feels about relationships as well. “When I first started
writing lyrics, it was because I had things I wanted to say
that I wouldn’t necessarily talk to my boys about. So
rhyming became a way of expressing myself,” he says That
sentiment is evident on songs like “You Know Me,” which
finds 2 Pistols explaining to the women in his life that
there are some things he just can’t change about himself.
And that if she wants to be with him—she’ll have to deal
with it. “It’s something that a lot of people can relate
to,” he explains. “I know a lot of men who have to have that
conversation with women. And I know a lot of women who just
don’t want to hear it.”
One of the highlights of the album is a standout track
titled, “Blinded.” With an intriguing sample from the movie
BLOW, 2 Pistols spits verses on the hazards of navigating
the entertainment industry while trying to maintain his
everyday life.
“I know people who get some shine in this game and lose
sight of who they are. That’s not me. I haven’t changed just
because I have a record deal—people around me are actually
the ones changing. And on this song I talk about how that
feels.”
2 Pistols is the complete package. He’s edgy without having
to brag about it. He’s authentic without being over the top.
He’s confident without being cocky. And in addition to being
talented on the mic, he’s humble enough to learn by watching
and he’s never satisfied with the status quo.
“This is just the beginning for me,” says 2 Pistols. “The
fact that I’m even here means I’ve already accomplished so
much. There’s nowhere else for me to go but up.”
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