P-Trapp’s “Big Crip” — From Haynesville “The Hole” to the West Coast Rollin’ 30s, This Track Carries Real Weight

 P-Trapp’s “Big Crip” — From Haynesville “The Hole” to the West Coast Rollin’ 30s, This Track Carries Real Weight

Some songs are made in a studio. Others are built from lived experience. P-Trapp’s single “Big Crip” is the latter — a bass-heavy, unapologetic anthem that bridges South Carolina dirt roads, Atlanta’s trap scene, and West Coast Rollin’ 30s energy in one record.

Born in Charleston, South Carolina, and raised in Moncks Corner — in a neighborhood called Haynesville, where the block was known as “The Hole” — P-Trapp’s roots run deep. He came up in an environment where every move mattered — from dirt tracks at home to connecting with crews like YLC, YBB, and the 20s and 30s across different cities. His journey also runs through the blocks of New Orleans before planting his flag in Atlanta. And he never forgets the ones still fighting their battles — Free Sean Nutty, Free Trey Five, Free Droop aka Manupboy Down, Free Dinky, R.I.P. Skeet, R.I.P. John Doe, R.I.P. Lil Jr, R.I.P. Keem aka Short Leg Gangsta, R.I.P. Kurt Fraizer, and shoutout to the big homie Hammer. Salute to my hood brothers — Montana, Syke, Skillet, Hurtz, Shi Money, Bucket, Tom Ski Mask, Drama, Soulja, and Trust.

While the streets gave him his foundation, Phamily Rych Artist Development sharpened his craft. Under their guidance, P-Trapp has been building more than a catalog — he’s been building a brand, an image, and a movement with Black HollyHood Entertainment. That movement has already connected him with Southern rap royalty, including collaborations with MJG of 8Ball & MJG fame and the legendary Pastor Troy. His career moves are also fueled by the marketing guidance of Dubb Slimm, whose strategic insight continues to help push P-Trapp’s music and brand deeper into the industry.

C.R.I.P. to P-Trapp isn’t just a set — it stands for Community, Revolutionary, and Progress — a code he lives by and the energy that fuels Big Crip. The track rides hard on 808s and West Coast bounce, but every bar carries South Carolina grit and New Orleans soul.

“It’s not just music for one hood,” P-Trapp says. “This is for every real one from Haynesville to Atlanta, from the West Coast to the N.O. — anybody who stands on what they claim.”

🎧 Stream “Big Crip” and tap in:
• Apple Music – Big Crip
• Spotify – Big Crip
• YouTube – Big Crip (Official Video)

📩 Management Contact:
Christopher Jenkins – Manager
📧 contact@blackhollyhoodentertainment.co.site

Follow @ptrapp32 and @blackhollyhoodent_ on Ig

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