P-Trapp, Black HollyHood Entertainment, and the Rise of Revolutionary Artistry
Some records make noise.
“Big Crip” makes impact. ♿️
Birthed under Black HollyHood Entertainment, developed through Phamily Rych, and powered by Roc Nation distribution, Big Crip is already pulsing through the streets with more than just 808s — it’s loaded with testimony, trauma, and triumph.
♿️ Who Is P-Trapp?
Known on Instagram as @ptrapp32, P-Trapp is more than an artist — he’s a survivor with sound.
• Hailing from South Carolina, rooted with the LC Clicc of the San Diego Rollin’ 30’s
• Connected through family ties to New Orleans
• Shot three separate times — surviving 12 bullets total
• Fresh off a federal bid for gun trafficking
• Collaborated with legends like MJG and Pastor Troy
Every scar has a sound. Every setback has a beat. Every lyric is a coded message for the misunderstood.
♿️ Redefining C.R.I.P. — A New Manifesto
“C.R.I.P. don’t mean what they think it mean. It’s Community Revolutionary In Progress.”
— P-Trapp
In a world where pain gets misused and power gets misunderstood, Big Crip flips the narrative. It doesn’t glorify violence — it elevates what it means to survive it. ♿️
This isn’t a gang anthem — it’s a blueprint for the misjudged, the misrepresented, and the ones still breathing through trauma.
♿️ Soundtrack of Survival
Every track on Big Crip is earned — not engineered.
It speaks to:
• The ones who were left for dead
• The ones who came home with charges, not cheers
• The ones who were expected to fold — but found a new form
This project is cinematic, strategic, and spiritually coded. It’s for the ones who’ve been through real war — physically, mentally, emotionally.
♿️ Behind the Business
This ain’t just rap — it’s a brand.
• Black HollyHood Entertainment is building a kingdom through chaos.
• Phamily Rych sharpens the image, the mindset, and the mission.
• Roc Nation brings the infrastructure to amplify the message.
Every bar is branded. Every post is pressure. Every move is momentum.
♿️ What the Streets Are Saying
“They shot me.
They locked me.
They counted me out.
But they never counted the God in me.”
— P-Trapp
The buzz around Big Crip is organic. From strip clubs in Atlanta to TikTok loops in L.A., people are connecting with the vulnerability, the symbolism, and the raw honesty. The ♿️ emoji — once seen as weakness — is now a badge of power.
♿️ Get Connected
Big Crip is streaming now on all platforms
Follow the artist: @ptrapp32
Press & Booking: [email protected]
This is bigger than music.
It’s a testimony.
A movement.
A ♿️power shift.