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DloBitch: A Midwest Voice Built on Movement, Music, and Momentum

DloBitch comes out of the Midwest with a story shaped by movement, resilience, and sound. Born in Rockford Illinois and grew up in Peoria, his childhood meant bouncing from state to state, house to house, sometimes even shelters. But that instability never hardened him the way people might expect. He was young, innocent, and focused on simply growing up. Looking back, he doesn’t frame it as a struggle story so much as a foundation—one that quietly taught him how to adapt, observe, and keep going.

Music entered his life early and never really left. By five or six, he was already soaking in the voices that defined an era—Lil Wayne, Gucci Mane, 50 Cent—artists whose presence was loud, confident, and unapologetic. By the time he hit his mid-teens, around 15 or 16, he started taking music seriously, turning that lifelong connection into something active and personal. As his taste evolved, so did his sound, pulling influence from newer voices like Polo G and G Herbo and the raw energy of the Chicago drill scene. Today, DloBitch describes his style as hip-hop at its core, but melodic when it needs to be, flexible enough to shift moods and ideas without losing identity. That versatility isn’t forced—it’s curiosity. He’s always wanted to experiment, to see how far his sound can stretch.

His catalog reflects that journey. Early recordings came out of studios in Iowa and Minnesota, while later work was sharpened and refined by engineers like MixedByLukee, Ang4rmten, and others who helped elevate the final sound. Growing up, there weren’t many flashy hangout spots—most days were spent at home, or at local parks in Peoria playing basketball and kicking it with friends. In Iowa, it was more about the people than the place, anywhere the moment took them. His most recent release, “How I Feel,” captures where he’s at now, with more music already lined up. With two or three singles on the way before the release of his deluxe project, the momentum is building. Along the way, he makes it a point to give credit where it’s due—shouting out visual collaborators like DirectorTrueVision, ShotByDizzy, and VictryRecords for reinforcing the importance of image, as well as his family, producers, and engineers who continue to support the vision. For DloBitch, the path hasn’t been straight, but it’s been real—and that honesty is what continues to drive the music forward.

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