Reid My Mind Radio: Meet Young Ant – First Female Rapper… who’s Blind
Wednesday, February 1st, 2017Now way back in the days when hip-hop began
With Coke LaRock,Kool Herc, and then Bam
B-boys ran to the latest jam…
– “South Bronx”, KRS One, Boogie Down Productions
I’m Old enough to remember when people not of my generation thought rap music was a fad. They never thought it would become what it is today… a worldwide billion dollar, trend setting industry. I’m sure they never thought how this art form could end up being a bridge for a 19 year old young lady adjusting to her vision loss.
Young Ant, is spittin’ lyrics about her own experience adjusting to blindness. And I have a feeling that’s just the beginning… Come meet the young lady and rapper! Team Ant!!!
Hit Play below and act like you know!
Subscribe & Follow
Resources
- Listen to Count Your Blessings on Sound Cloud
- Listen to Team Ant on Sound Cloud
- Like Team Ant on Facebook
- Follow Young Ant on Twitter
Transcript
Show the transcript
TReid:
What’s good everybody, back this week with another episode of Reid My Mind Radio and I’m very excited to bring you this latest piece produced for Gatewave .
You may think the title says it all, but there’s more…
Take a listen and I’ll be back with some thoughts.
[“Ladies First”, Queen Latifah]
[Reid My Mind Radio Musical Intro]
TReid:
Young Ant in the building!
YA:
Young Ant in the building!
Treid:
Uh Oh!
So the way I look at this; Antynette is the person, Young Ant is the rapper!
YA:
[Laugh!] Yeah, that’s right!
TReid:
Alright, so first who is Antynette?
YA:
Antynette is a young lady who has been through a lot in a little bit over a year and half and is trying to find her through it with adjusting and coping and in different techniques that I’m learning and trying to find different avenues of expressing how I’m feeling.
[Intro to “Count your Blessings” by Young Ant]
TReid:
Beautiful!
I lost my sight about 13 years ago. And so…
YA:
Really!
TReid:
Yeh so one of the things that I like to hear from people adjusting to blindness is that they don’t first start with who they are with the fact that they are blind. You said you are a young lady!
Now, tell me who’s Young Ant?
YA:
Well Young Ant is a motivational rapper!
TReid:
Maybe that’s not what you expected to hear from an upcoming rapper.
Or perhaps your image of what it means to be blind
makes it difficult to understand how this young lady
who lost her sight only a little over a year ago can talk about counting her blessings.
Well, we’re about to challenge your perception today of both
what it means to be blind and what it means to be a rap artist.
Antynette Walker, 19 years old, lost her sight in the middle of her senior year in high school.
Marsell:
Antynette was born prematurely and she had eye surgery done on her eyes at the age of 1 to correct her vision. They told me that her eyes will be just perfectly fine; in which they was over the years.
TReid:
This is Marsell Walker, Antoinette’s mother.
At 11 years old Antynette began losing her vision.
Living in Atlanta at the time Marsell began searching for a reason for her daughter’s vision loss.
Marsell:
We started taking her to different doctors, getting different tests run and no one could tell us a reason why this was happening to her eye. They just kept prescribing different glasses for her eyes and after the years went on we just started coping with her losing vision in her left eye at the age of 11.
TReid:
In 2015 Antoinette began experiencing complications in her right eye.
Still seeking that diagnosis, the family moved to Minneapolis where she was first being treated at the University of Minnesota.
marsell:
He really didn’t see any dramatic changes within her vision from when she started seeing him. And she was going in complaining about the blurriness and spottiness and these were the same symptoms and things that she was going through at the age of 11 when she lost her vision in her left eye.
He somewhat tried to make it feel like she was hallucinating and it was all in her head and she knew off hand that it wasn’t so she asked me to get a referral to a newer doctor which is at the Mayo Clinic in Rochester.
TReid:
Seen by Ophthalmologist’s, Neurologist and other specialists at the Mayo Clinic, doctors had a very different opinion from the original doctor at the University of Minnesota.
Marsell:
That’s when they did notice her vision was changing dramatically. And he couldn’t even figure out why that previous doctor would tell us he seen no changes.
TReid:
Despite all of the tests that came back negative and the eventual diagnosis of Optic Neuropathy
Marsell:
She woke up not being able to see anything and that point he asked for us to do Steroids with Antynette for about a week… it didn’t work!
TReid:
That day she woke up blind, was Christmas 2015!
TReid in conversation with Marsell:
I mean, you’re her mom, and you’re watching your daughter lose her sight.
Marsell:
Yeh!
TReid:
What was that like for you?
Marsell:
It was really, really stressful. I have always been that parent who where if something is wrong with your kids you find a way of fixing it.
Your kids feed off of your energy, so I had to keep being positive. I’ll go in my room I’ll cry, I won’t let her know I was crying. I’ll come back out and as if nothing happened, but you know I didn’t know what to do. I was just numb!
TReid:
This was her senior year in high school.
Antoinette should have been thinking about the prom, her future.
Now she had to return to school after Christmas break, to a whole new way of life.
TReid in conversation with Young Ant:
What was that first day of school like for you?
YA:
Well, it was hard. Everything was much louder, it was just harder to navigate through crowds and different hallways. It was so much anxiety the first day going back because it was just new way of life, new environment, everything was just all brand new.
TReid in conversation with Young Ant:
What was the reaction of your classmates?
YA:
Everyone was shocked. Everyone was surprised . People more so didn’t believe it because they were just like last time I saw you you were able to see now you’re blind. More people were stand offish kind of and some people were supportive because some people knew what I was going through and knew that it was gonna happen and because we were that close and we talked about it frequently. But some were rude. I think that was mainly because they didn’t know how to take it and they didn’t know what was a proper reaction.
TReid in conversation with Young Ant:
That’s a mature response from you in terms of how you responded to those people who were being , you know, negative.
YA:
There’s going to be some people that you know, they don’t know any better or their parents didn’t teach them any better so there gonna you know make fun or say things that are inappropriate, but you gotta just learn to ignore it. Some people are for you, some people are against you. Not everyone is gonna be on your side.
[Song: “Team Ant”, by Young Ant]
TReid:
On the same side; like on a team!
Team Ant! That’s the official name of Young Ant’s crew, her support system her family.
working with her throughout this new journey.
Team Ant consist of her Dad,Aldo…
Marsell
He’s focusing on making her greater. He’s there hands on. It’s her message, but he knows a lot about rap so he has a big input on her delivery.
TReid in conversation with Marsell:
And are you playing the role of manager/marketer? What’s your role?
Marsell:
I am “Momager”
TReid in conversation with Marsell:
Momager
, ok! {Laughs}
Marsell:
[Laughs] It’s a new word for me
TReid in conversation with Marsell
I like it!
Marsell:
Hooking up photo shoots and videos hooking up studio time and reaching out to different people to try and get her story out there. And her father is the one that comes and oversee everything and makes sure it sounds right.
TReid::
The oldest of 4 siblings, setting an example for them is really important to Antynette.
She’s working hard at improving all of her skills. That’s Braille, navigating with her white cane, independent living skills and learning to use a screen reader and computer.
Traditionally, One of the most important aspects of being a rapper is writing your own rhymes.
At least, if you want any true rap Aficionado to take you seriously.
I had to ask…
TReid in conversation with Young Ant:
Are you writing your own rhymes right now?
YA:
Yeh!
TReid in conversation with Young Ant:
You’re like yehhhh!
YA:
[Laughs]
TReid in conversation with Young Ant:
How do you feel about the writing? Does that mean something to you as opposed to having others write your rhymes?
YA:
Yeh, Because before I went blind I was a big writer. I wanted to be a novelist. I used to write short stories and poems and different things of that sort. So I feel like you know with me losing my sight it doesn’t mean that have to stop doing what I love doing. Now I have to be more repetitive when I’m writing the stuff so I can remember it.
TReid:
In any art form, early influences can help develop an artist’s own unique style.
YA:
My father is a rapper so I kind of grew up around music and rap music. Growing up around him, listening to him rap. Growing up in Atlanta, Georgia I just grew up listening to it. Artists like Biggie Smalls, Tupac and Run-DMC and you know Snoop Dogg
TReid in conversation with Young Ant:
Very nice!.
See, I made my kids, both of them, they had to learn some early Run-DMC… I’d make them learn the lyrics…
YA:
Laughs…
TReid in conversation with Young Ant:
For real! I ain’t joking!
YA:
Right, get to the roots!
TReid:
Based on the artists mentioned I’d say Young Ant has some knowledge of rap music’s pioneers. She likes lyricists, music with a message and showmanship.
YA:
I like to call myself a motivational rapper. I’m mainly aiming to inspire, to motivate, to let everyone know that no matter what you’re going through and no matter what happens that doesn’t mean that your life stops just because you’re diagnosed with a certain thing or something traumatic happens in your life. People in society tell you that you can no longer go on. You can be whatever you want to be and you can do whatever you want to do if you set your mind to it. All my music is positive and clean. You know fun, uplifting and motivational.
TReid:
She’s gearing up for some live performances later this year. Like the South by Southwest festival in Austin Texas and Coast to Coast in Atlanta.
TReid in conversation with Young Ant:
How do you navigate the stage?
YA:
Usually, I go on before to get a feel for the stage you know to see how big it is to see what I’m working with. And then you know once I get a feel for how big or small it is , I kind of just you know [exhale!] let loose!
TReid:
Young Ant is just getting started and open to collaborating with other artists.
YA:
I would love to do a song with Stevie Wonder. That’s like the top of my list.
TReid in conversation with Young Ant:
Hold on, you’re a Stevie fan too!
YA:
Whatttttt?
TReid in conversation with Young Ant:
You’ve always been a Stevie fan?
I love Stevie… yeh! Even before…
TReid in conversation with Young Ant:
Now I’m gonna test you. You’re talking to a real Stevie head right now. Tell me what you like. Give me a song.
YA:
[Sings Isn’t she lovely, isn’t she wonderful]
TReid in conversation with Young Ant:
Ok!
YA:
I like Superstitious! That’s that’s my jam!
TReid:
There’s definitely something wonderful about this young lady.
Maybe it’s the inner strength that shines through her words and personality.
The determination that’s helping her adjust to blindness and pursue her goals.
She has the courage to make her way in quite honestly what’s a male and able bodied dominated genre
in the entertainment industry
which by the way, has never been that open to disability.
Young Ant though has a team.
[Song: “Team Ant”, by Young Ant]
A support system that’s lead by the two people who love her most, mom and dad.
[Song: “Count your Blessing” by Young Ant]
That’s an asset whether adjusting to blindness or starting a music career.
To listen to this track called Count your Blessings go to Sound Cloud and follow her on social media.
Let them know Momager!
Marsell:
Young Ant, first blind female rapper. You can find her on YouTube as Young ANT. On Twitter , Sound Cloud, Instagram as YoungAnt1121. Her Facebook page is Team Ant.
I’m Thomas Reid…
[Audio YA: I kind of just you know, let loose!]
TReid:
For Gatewave Radio, Audio for Independent Living!
[Sound of Record rewind]
This is why I like producing this podcast.
As a father of two incredibly gifted, intelligent and beautiful young ladies I was drawn to this story.
I understand the value of speaking with someone who has walked in your shoes.
Graduating high school is the time when you look to a future hopefully full of opportunity
. For Young Ant and anyone faced with the loss of their sight or any disability for that matter,
it’s natural to think that the opportunity has faded away.
All it takes though, is a glimpse of chance or hope to peek through.
That could be a small success.
Young Ant is only one year into her adjustment process.
Honestly, to some extent I think that process is lifelong. Not like a life sentence, but rather like a commitment.
A commitment to living the best life possible;
seeing happiness not as a destination but a daily process.
Now, you know what’s not a daily process?
subscribing to this podcast, Reid My Mind Radio…
For real though! All it takes is a couple of steps;
go to your podcast app, search for Reid My Mind Radio… that’s R E I D
and then hit subscribe.
Then become a fan!
I ‘m talking about young ant, but feel free to become a fan of the podcast too!
Seriously, I hope you all heard the character, strength and maturity like I did and become a fan of both the young lady, Antynette and of course, the rapper Young Ant!
[Song Roxanne Shante: “Got the party people screaming… “Go on Girl.!”… from “Have a Nice Day”}
Reid My Mind Outro Music
TReid:
Peace!
Peace!
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