Tee Jay Music blends dark, cinematic blues with trip-hop, electronic grit, and slow-burn hip-hop textures.
Built from real experience—not trends—this channel is about raw sound, heavy mood, and stories that don’t flinch.
No filters. No filler.
Just music made in the quiet, the damage, and the after.
🎧 New releases
🎛️ Experimental visuals & concepts
🔥 Independent. Unpolished. Real.


Tee Jay

Shu shu pro debut

2 weeks ago | [YT] | 0

Tee Jay

Where Was This picture Taken of me playing guitar? Correct answer wins the new album free.

6 months ago | [YT] | 0

Tee Jay

Cool

10 months ago | [YT] | 0

Tee Jay

Fall asleep to nerdy things

1 year ago | [YT] | 0

Tee Jay

None of those fighters are a pimple on Joe Louis buttocks hommie.

1 year ago | [YT] | 0

Tee Jay

A Moment of Compassion in the Ring

I remember watching this fight live, but revisiting it recently made me realize just how much I missed the first time around. Vasiliy Lomachenko has long been my top fighter, but this bout elevated my respect for him to another level—not just as a boxer, but as a human being.
During the fight, Lomachenko knocked down Richard Commey and, rather than diving in for the finish, he did something you rarely see in a sport fueled by aggression. With a gesture towards Commey's corner, he signaled for them to throw in the towel, to spare their fighter further punishment. They chose not to. And what did Loma do? He backed off, allowing Commey a chance to recover over the next two rounds, preserving the integrity of the contest and showing an empathy that's seldom seen in the ring.
By the time the 12th and final round arrived, Commey had regained his footing, and both fighters gave the crowd a show they’ll remember. For Lomachenko, it was about more than just the win; it was about respect, empathy, and honoring the sport by allowing his opponent a chance to finish on his terms. In a world where financial pressures and winning at all costs often overshadow moments like these, Lomachenko’s decision stood out. It reminded me of the kind of humility and compassion that legendary stories are made of—the kind that once filled the pages of ancient texts.
In that ring, Lomachenko embodied greatness in a way that echoes the virtues of characters revered across time. In that moment, he proved that true strength lies not only in power but in compassion. #Loma #Greatness #Sportsmanship ‪@toprank‬ ‪@BehindTheBoxerMagazine‬ ‪@RingMagazine‬

1 year ago | [YT] | 0

Tee Jay

awesome

1 year ago | [YT] | 0

Tee Jay

curious

1 year ago | [YT] | 0

Tee Jay

First-Ever Boxing Breakdown: “Two-Cent Opinion from a Guy Who Just Watches a Lot of Fights”

Welcome to the list where we talk boxing, kind of like Eminem in *8 Mile* when he roasted himself before the crowd could. You know the vibe. It’s the “get real, tell it like it is” strategy, except instead of rap battles, it’s about sweaty dudes knocking each other’s lights out. I’m here to give you my armchair analysis, and yeah, I watch enough fights to pretend I know what I'm talking about.

So, let’s jump in. **Timestamp (29:30)**: the moment where Ken Norton takes a rib shot that could’ve dropped a buffalo, let alone a normal human. This wasn’t just any ol’ jab; it was one of those gut punches that says, “Say goodbye to your lunch.” And what does Norton do? Dude just clutches his elbow into his ribs like he's trying to reset a dislocated spine. You can practically hear his inner monologue: *”Yeah, that hurts like hell, but I ain’t going down.”

Now, remember, thought supposedly travels through our brains at nearly the speed of light—299 million meters per second, give or take a vacuum. And in the nanosecond it took Norton’s brain to register the pain, he was already deciding, “Nah, I’m good.” It’s like his brain is on a time-delay, or maybe the guy’s just built different. I mean, he probably *did* want to roll around the mat clutching his ribs, ugly-crying, maybe sucking air through a straw. But instead, he gave himself a little mental pep talk: “Breathe, crunch, repeat.”He checks his ribs with a flex that says, *"Are you broken? Nope? Great. Let’s keep going."

I swear, humans can do incredible things under pressure. Picture this: you’ve got zero air left in your lungs, half your ribs feel like they’re trying to escape your chest, and instead of passing out, you’re in a mental state where you might just pop your own ribs back into place and start swinging like The Hulk. That’s Norton for you. Only guy I’ve ever seen who only fights harder *when he’s already hurt.

Ken Norton’s the kind of guy who just doesn’t want to hurt anyone unless absolutely necessary. Good heart, solid fighter. Could he have ended this in round one if he got hurt earlier? Probably! But hey, he likes a challenge, and I respect that.

1 year ago | [YT] | 0

Tee Jay

I share fights that are worthy and considered fight film by me this one is a jewl

1 year ago | [YT] | 0