- Plano, TX
- Hip Hop Artist
- $5000-10000
Overview
As an upcoming artist, I will give my audience a fresh authentic and innovative experience. My act is not bound by a mainstream formula. I have full creative control in which puts me in the position to be flexible for the client. Also, for every client that books with us, we will donate a certain % for community action rather local, foreign, or domestic. We ourselves will volunteer personally for the cause, ex: feeding the homeless, back to school drive, charitable events, humanitarian services, etc. The client will be notified of where their contribution was served. This is for every client and every booking.
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Price range: Open
What to expect
The audience will see a star. My ensemble and appearance will carry it's own weight. Being dressed for the occasion is a must. If hired, the client will get a showcase. Old school showcase with time and effort. Dance girls a true performance not a solo act. A solo act can be present on the account of the client.
About
Geoffrey Campbell II, better known as Cam Royale, is an artist from Mobile, Alabama. He is the son of Sonya Johnson (deceased) and Geoffrey Campbell I. Cam Royale grew up in New Orleans and Mobile, Alabama. He lived in New Orleans with his mother and stepdad Thedrow Marks. They lived in the Notorious 3rd ward Magnolia Projects on Freret St across from the Brown Derby. His mother used to tell him stories about living next door to Juvenile when he was a kid attending Hoffman Elementary. He also lived in the 17th ward attending McNair Elementary School on Carrollton. Cam was inspired by DJ Jubilee, 6th & Barrone, Aaron Neville, The House of Blues, Rock n Roll, Mystikal, and Master P while living in New Orleans. Cam Royale moved to Mobile, Alabama in middle school. He was raised by both Grandmothers and one grandfather whom is now deceased. His grandmothers are Joe Tena Johnson and Faye Nettles. His late Grandfather is Gentle "Jim" Nettles. There he met a friend at Booker T. Washington Middle School named Michael Johnson, who was an upcoming rapper in middle school at the time, who influenced Cam to rap. At that moment Geoffrey Campbell II became a rapper at 13 yrs old. Cam Royale attended and graduated from Williamson High School. He played football alongside Jamarcus Russell. Before playing highschool football, Cam Royale participated in JROTC in middle school and highschool before giving it up for sports. After graduating highschool, Cam Royale got into trouble with the police. He was charged with possession of marijuana and pleaded youthful offender and was given probation. Hurricane Katrina destroyed the Gulf Coast leaving Cam homeless. At that moment, Cam got into the streets and lived the street life. The street life led Cam Royale into a probation violation in which jail time was served. He had a daughter that opened his eyes and led him to joining the Army to overcome the streets. The Army let him join with a waiver due to his previous charges. Cam joined the Reserves because he didn't want to miss the opportunity to raise his daughter. Eventually, Cam was called to duty and had to do a 400 day tour in Iraq. He came back a combat veteran. While in the military, he was a Unit Supply Specialist and the Unit Armorer. Cam was also a music producer. He was known for having a laptop with headphones making beats on FL Studios. On his free time back home, Cam was in the recording studio and making beats with Jhonnie Kage aka Sugar Bair (Notorious producer from Mobile Alabama). They recorded at Mobillionaires in Irvington, Alabama and M2KB with Yung D aka Darryl Florence. Cam Royale did shows and songs at Dubrays with local artists in the community of Theodore, Alabama. In 2016, Cam takes a leap of faith and moves to Fort Worth, Texas with a family member who sent for him. In Fort Worth, Cam is introduced to Verbal Mass Media (a recording studio at the time) by Jonesrd Turk aka Country Boy Hustle. The owner was Vance "Facts" Johnson. There he recorded a series of songs and a few projects. He also did a show with the Verbal Mass Media team in Lubbock Texas at the old Firehouse Club in the Red light District. Cam Royale has a Hip-hop mixtape dropping soon entitled "Planet Real" which was recorded at Verbal Mass Media. While living in Fort Worth, Cam Royale had an altercation with his family member and his family member left Cam Royale homeless. With no other family members in the city and no contacts, Cam had to shift into survival mode. Refusing to go back to Alabama, Cam faced the city of Fort Worth head on while chasing a dream. Working at Torchy Tacos and Jimmy John's with no car and no place to stay, Cam Royale made it happen. He attended the shelter where he could, he ate at the Salvation Army, and took showers at Beautiful Feet (a church organization that helps the homeless). He got involved with homeless veteran programs in which helped him with bus tickets for transportation and eventually with housing. Cam had to sleep in cars some nights and on the streets when he couldn't catch the shelter because of working and getting off too late. He would get off too late when the busses aren't running. And while going through all this, Cam was still recording in the studio at Verbal Mass Media. Cam ended up getting an apartment on the West side of Fort Worth in Cambridge Court after facing homelessness and hardship. Between working temp jobs and Verbal Mass Media going out of business, Cam eventually went back to Mobile, Alabama. In January 2018, Cam Royale with his wife Juanita Campbell and kids stepped out on faith. They both concluded with each other that if they believe in The GOD OF ISRAEL as much as they say and claim, they should be able to live off of their faith and escape poverty in Alabama. So they sold everything in their house for a little or nothing only profiting about $268 roughly. Withdrawing the kids from school and packing down a '97 4 door Honda Accord, they left for Fort Worth, Texas. They ran into a road block right outside of Hattiesburg, Mississippi on Hwy 98. Cam gave the officer a state id and said, "We gone... We gone to Texas." They state trooper looked at the id and looked at his family and seen the car packed with trash bags and decided to let them go. Cam Royale and his wife looked at each other and thanked The GOD OF ISRAEL. They made it to Fort Worth that next morning and checked in a hotel for one night. That's all they could afford. That next morning, they went and checked into the Salvation Army as a family. For the next 5 months Cam Royale and his family lived in the Salvation Army. The kids caught the bus and went to school from the Salvation Army. Cam worked until something opened up for him and his family. They finally got an apartment in Fort Worth's Stop 6. In the Stop 6, Cam Royale was known as the Black Jew. He was the "Candyman" in a apartment complex called Antigua Village. He took the money he made off the goodies and put back into the community. Cam and another guy name Mark gave the kids a fun day in the apartment complex. They rented jump houses, gave free haircuts, food, snacks, etc, for the kids. Cam was highly active in the community and the city. He attended city council meetings, spoke at city council meetings, fed the homeless, fed the homeless while being homeless, and was apart of United Fort Worth. Cam Royale attended Tarrant County College. There he obtained a Certification for Warehouse Management and Transportation Management. He also completed the Logistics and Supply Chain Management program. While he attended TCC, Cam was apart of Men of Color Collaborative. After college, Cam Royale opened a trucking company called "Southern Express Trucking LLC." His wife Juanita Campbell also started a commercial and residential cleaning service called "Touch By an Angel Cleaning Services." In the midst of all of this, Cam Royale decided to get back to his dream, music. He bought an in house studio and started a record label called Wake Up Music Group. While living in Fort Worth before his return, Cam Royale met an engineer at Verbal Mass Media named Ghost aka Gerald Davis Jr. Him and Ghost became real close friends. Ghost too is a combat veteran. He was in Artillery when he served. Ghost put Cam Royale studio together, setup the daws, and got everything running. Ghost recorded "Can't Lie" and felt Cam Royale had a style of his own. Ghost felt like Cam Royale has his own lane and genre because of his unique sound and style. Cam Royale leans into confessional, heartfelt hip-hop, blending sincerity with a confident delivery. His sound likely blends smooth rhythmic flows with emotional depth, aiming to connect listeners who value both authenticity and energy. This allowed Cam Royale to create his own genre called "Southern & Blues." Ghost refered Cam to Session Works Studio to get "Can't Lie" mixed and mastered. There Cam met Chad Scarlett who mixed and mastered the track. Cam also met Jeff the engineer who owns the studio and mixed and mastered Yella Beezy hit single "That's on me." After the song was finished, Cam Royale teamed up with Nyeela Love (former Assistant Director of the Doctor Phil Show) to shoot the video. Cam Royale teamed up with his now manager Jonesrd Turk aka Country Boy Hustle. They pushed the song to New heights. The song is trending at #153 on Global Radio Charts Top 200, #23 on Global Radio Charts Top Indie 100, and #21 on Global Radio Top 50 HipHop/R&B. Cam Royale is fully independent with no Major label backing, no advances, no deals, just him and his team. Cam Royale is expecting to drop "Southern & Blues: Side A and Side B." He also expecting to drop a mixtape entitled "Planet Real" and a lot more. Geoffrey Campbell II is the founder and one of the directors of "Bless Your Block Campaign" a Nonprofit Corporation that is involved in community action rather foreign and domestic.
Additional booking notes
Sound check is required. Sound check should be done at a reasonable time and not last minute. A brief walk through of the venue. Will bring personal engineer but engineer will not replace venue DJ.
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Hip Hop Artist