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Music Farm Presents:

POSTPONED to 4/28: Big Scarr

Big Grim Reaper Tour

DOORS: 7:00PM / SHOW: 8:00PM

$20 ADV | $25 DOS

CANCELLED

POSTPONED:

Due to unforeseen circumstances, Big Scarr, originally scheduled for Thursday, November 17, has been rescheduled to Friday, April 28.

Patrons are encouraged to hang on to their original tickets as these will be honored for the new date. We are sorry for any inconvenience this may cause and look forward to seeing you at the rescheduled date. Patrons who cannot make the new date can get a refund from their original point of purchase.

To request a refund, you may email us info@musicfarm.com or call 843.408.1599 and we will assist you as soon as possible. Please note, requests must be emailed to us no later than December 4.

Big Scarr:

Scars shape us. They remind us of our toughest times. They tell our stories. Big Scarr may carry the marks of life’s trials and tribulations on his face and body, but he emerges from those tragedies triumphantly. In the year since his debut, he’s posted up over 70 million YouTube views and locked down a deal with Gucci Mane’s The New 1017/Atlantic Records. Now, the Memphis rapper speaks on his life without fear or filter on his upcoming project Big Grim Reaper. “It’s rough out here,” he exclaims. “What I’m rapping about is what’s going on where I’m from. It’s the slums. It’s the trenches. It’s the hood. It’s tough. It’s real.”

One of nine kids, he grew up in the Magnolia neighborhood of South Memphis. He lived with his grandmother until the age of thirteen. After she passed from lung cancer, he moved in with his father. Dad unlocked invaluable knowledge to navigate a dangerous world.

“Real talk, my dad showed me how to be a man,” he admits. “He was in the streets, but he was still always able to take care of me and my brothers and sisters and make sure we had what we needed. Everything I know I learned from him—the streets, how to be disciplined, and about God. That’s my dawg right there.”

Along the way, Big Scarr faced this environment head-on. At 16-years-old, he endured an intense car wreck. After flying through the windshield, he walked away with scars on his eyes, nose, and the whole side of his face, inspiring his chosen name. Trouble still followed though with a near deadly shooting in 2020. He caught a bullet in the hip, yet it traveled up into his chest…

“I was moving, so the bullet kept moving too,” he recalls. “The doctors had to split me down the middle to save me. My insides got messed up, and they had to remove my appendix, so I could walk again. I recovered and bounced back way quicker than I thought though.”

Nevertheless, his music has generated serious heat. He started to rap with encouragement from a day-one friend. A fiery freestyle powered his first-ever single “Make A Play.” Upheld by gruff flows, robust rhymes, and dynamic hooks, the intense music video has generated over 5 million YouTube views. Blown away, the icon Gucci Mane signed Big Scarr.

“It ain’t no question Wop is a legend,” he goes on. “He’s my momma’s favorite rapper. We used to ride around in the car listening to him. It’s crazy I’m signed to him now.”

Maintaining this momentum, he joined Pooh and Foogiano for “SoIcyBoyz” on the blockbuster compilation Gucci Mane Presents: So Icy Summer, and later “SoIcyBoyz 2” and “SoIcyBoyz 3.” The project would be plugged by the likes of Complex, UPROXX, and more. SoIcyBoyz 1 and 2 have racked up over 45M global streams and over 30M video views to date. Singles “Endzone,” “Frozone,” “I Would Keep Going,” “Trap House” and “Dead Opps” set the stage for more to come, also earning Big Scarr more than 850,000 monthly listeners on Spotify. 

By embracing his scars, Big Scarr gives hip-hop one of its realest stories out there.

“I don’t want anybody to get the wrong image or anything,” he leaves off. “I just go in there and say what I live. What you’re hearing is exactly who I am.”

COVID-19 POLICY

Based on the latest local guidelines, attendees are no longer required to provide proof of negative COVID-19 test AND/OR vaccination for entry into this event. Attendees are also not required to wear a mask. Be sure to check your venue website for the latest updates and guidelines as entry requirements are subject to change.

Venue Information
Music Farm
32 Ann Street
Charleston, South Carolina, 29403
https://www.musicfarm.com/