
register today
The First Step is to register to get in the communication stream. Singers, rappers and songwriters, and others interested in Good Energy Music, register today, no later than 4/10/25.
Submit music by 4/15/25
Next, work on that hot music and send in that one piece. Covers OK for initial submission but only original music will be recorded.
SCHEDULE
Registration Open 3/15
Orientation 1 (Virtual) 3/30
Orientation 2 (Virtual) 4/10
Music Submissions Due 4/15
Review & Selection 4/16-4/19
Winners Studio Session 5/3
hERE'S YOUR CHANCE TO MAKE A HIT WITH DOMINIQUE SANDERS

With music’s unique ability to be replayed to the masses and even reach “anthem” status, it is an ideal platform for fostering positive change.
advisors & selection squad
Hover below for bios. Industry, stage and community leaders supporting the GE movement.
DJ Q
Irv Da PHENOM
The ROYAL CHIEF
Angela Believes
Darron Story
Ossco bolton
Royce Sauce Handy
Carlton Rashad
creating Good energy

The Power of Words
What we say, hear, and see has a profound impact on us. Advertisements, movies, social media, books, debates, and even music have long been used to change minds, influence moods, and spur action. At the heart of these mediums are the words—the script, ad copy, lesson plans, sermons, lyrics, and even direct conversations. Words hold power; they can bring life or death and become the narrative of our lives. With this in mind, we can leverage words to build, inspire, and motivate. With music’s unique ability to be replayed to the masses and even reach “anthem” status, it is an ideal platform for fostering positive change. Let’s focus on filling the atmosphere with more “positivity” or “Good Energy” for the safety, well-being, and upliftment of our communities.
Kansas city! we started this

Big Joe Turner, a Kansas City native, sang rhythm and blues songs such as “Shake, Rattle and Roll,” “Corrine Corrina” and “Lucille” that became the foundation of a new genre of music when white singers such as Elvis Presley and bandleader Bill Haley popularized them for audiences of white teen-agers in the mid-1950s. The music took the name rock ‘n’ roll because those words appeared in the lyrics of several blues songs.
The Los Angeles Times wrote after his death that he “transformed decades of urban black music into the roots of rock ‘n’ roll.” Turner continued recording and performing his music until his death in 1985. Now, he is believed to be the most recorded jazz and blues singer ever.
“Rock and roll would have never happened without him,” songwriter Doc Pomus remarked in Rolling Stone magazine, on the occasion of Big Joe Turner’s death in 1985 at the age of seventy-four.
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