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Artist
Bobby Bishop resides in Lynn, Massachusetts. He was second runner-up in an artist showcase in 1999, which allowed him to work with Deftone, a producer who was just starting ReServed Records. Three projects followed – the ReServed Project in 2000, where Bobby's track featured KJ-52, his first full length album "The hip-hop alternative (community’s call)" got released in 2002 and "The community music EP" in 2004. Most notably, “A song for Amy” from the 2002 release received extensive media exposure, because of the sensitive issue it adressed which is rape. Beatmart Recordings He later on began submitting music to Tod Collins, who had started a label called Beatmart Recordings. Two songs "One hit wonder" and "Lunchroom freestyle" landed on Collins’s project Best of the submissions, which led to a deal with Beatmart in 2004. His first record for this label came out in 2005 and is called "Government Name". Song for Amy part II Amy’s Song, a track on the 2005 album Government name, is about a a young woman from his youth ministry in Lynn, Massachusetts. At the time he was a youth pastor and she told him that she had been violated at her school on several occasions. The perpetrators went to jail, but this didn’t change Amy’s reality. Bobby : "I wrote the song alongside her, and she came to the studio with me to record, “coaching” me along the way. This 2005 version was necessary because this song has become a staple to my ministry." Compassion In 2006 Bobby Bishop announced he ha
The Community Music - EP (Revisited)

Everyday Man
Government Name

The Hip-Hop Alternative (Community's Call)

Everyday Man - EP
The Community Music EP (Revisited)
The Hip-Hop Alternative
One Shot
Best of the Submissions
Microsoft Windows Sponsored Songs
The Community Music EP
Government Name - Special Edition