With a new single, The Official 4pm is back, singing their music, their way

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With a new single, “Some of the Time,” coming out on December 16, The Official 4pm is back, with three of the original four members doing what they always wanted to do, singing their own music and doing it their way.

“Some of the Time,” an R&B/soul number about the ups and downs of couples, features the voices and harmonies of Roberto Pena Jr., his brother Reney “Ray” Pena, and Larry McFarland, who first got together in 1991 with Martiz “Marty” Ware in an acapella group called IV Real.

They became 4pm – For Positive Music – when they got their first record contract in 1994.

“We’re based around the premise of positive music, but it doesn't mean that every song is peaches and cream,” said Ray. “‘Some of the Time’ talks about the ups and downs of relationships. We're talking about I love you some of the time, but sometimes I can't stand you. That's really what the song is about.”

“Some of the Time” is set for release on December 16, a week before they will drop a seven-track EP called “Some of the Time: Pik-A-Mix.” That EP will include the original version of “Some of the Time” (Produced by Hookmaster Jaz) plus 3 additional remixes; an Afro-Latino version (Produced by Mr. MIG), a house version (Produced by StereoSoulz), and, said Ray, “a sort of urban feel good mix (Produced by DJ Soulchild).” The EP will include radio and extended versions of all 3 remixes.

In the same way that the “for positive music” reference in their name doesn’t limit the themes of their songs, The Official 4pm, listed in various places as R&B/soul, does not limit itself to R&B and soul.

“Our influences have expanded our overall style into a lot of different subgenres,” said Ray. “We still fit into the R&B-slash-soul category, but you're gonna see as we start releasing these tracks that we cross over into pop, we cross over into reggae, we cross over into Latin music, and there's a lot of influence from all of those genres mixed in.”

What the 4pm refers to, said Roberto, is “to identify ourselves as a group that was going to sing songs and entertain people without degrading women or promoting the use of drugs and alcohol.”

“And no profanity,” added Larry.

That doesn’t mean their songs aren’t from real life.

“Like Ray was saying, we want to talk about real life stories,” said Larry. “We don't want to make up something and be like, ‘Oh, wait, what are you talking about?’ We try to tell stories that are real and relatable.”

Ray, Roberto and Larry are becoming active again after many years. They are not, as Ray said, getting back together because they never split up. Marty is doing other things and is not part of the current project, but the three members are still in touch with him. "He's our brother and always with us in spirit," added Ray.

It is, in fact, a reawakening of the dream they once had, back when they were 20-somethings in 1994, excited and hopeful after getting their first contract. But the career they anticipated did not happen, lost in a music industry that did not allow them control over what they sang and where they went. They were not allowed to present much of their own music.

“My hope for this first single and the first LP,” said Roberto, “is that people open their arms and open their ears. We still have the love for music even though we haven’t been in the scene for a while, and all the songs that they're gonna hear are songs that we've written over the years. The music never left us.”

“We are songwriters, too,” said Larry. “But when we first came out, people really didn't get a chance to hear all the songs that we had, because those songs weren't released. They only released the covers. Now they’ll get a chance to hear songs that we wrote.”

“It's crazy to see how the internet has changed the game,” said Ray. “It has changed the industry so much that it allowed us to put this music out independently. This is all coming out on our very own label — The Official 4pm Records.”

Ray also pointed out another difference between the dream then and the dream now.

“We’re 50-plus, all of us, and our children are part of this process.”

His son, Ricco, is overseeing the operational side of their label, and his daughter Cierra is the group’s web designer and brand manager. Roberto’s son, Roberto III a.k.a. Tres' is also part of the team and the three of them are managing the group’s online presence and social media.

This time, win, lose or draw, The Official 4pm will work their dream their way, with their music.

During Covid time, Roberto spent 15 days in an ICU on oxygen therapy. At the end of that, he said, he thought, “Okay, now that life is coming back, are we going to just let life control us or are we going to take life by the by the horns and go for it.”

He continued, “So I think we all each individually felt that same enthusiasm, that same drive where you say, ‘Look, life is too short. Let's just do this. Let's do this now, and let's go in for a hundred percent.’”

Stay connected to The Official 4pm on all platforms for new music, videos, and social posts.

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Royal Deb displays her Jamaican roots new reggae single “Somebody For Everybody”

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Since Royal Deb was just a child in St. Ann, Jamaica, she has been immersed in the reggae music scene. Now the eccentric, joyful artist from the Caribbean is taking that inspiration and making her own music, with her newest single “Somebody For Everybody.”

The song touches on how whether you are big, small, fat, skinny, tall or short- there is someone out there for you. It was a collaborative effort between Royal Deb and renowned producer Andre Betts, who not only worked with her on the lyrics, but also on making the beats and directing the music video.

“No matter what is going on in the world, no matter what you look like, or the size you are, or the color, no matter who you are- there’s Somebody For Everybody,” she said. “There are people who are single that are hearing this, and telling me, thank you. They say, I want to go out and find me a mate, find me a partner. I say, go out and find your somebody.”

Royal Deb said the video was the perfect way to show all the love and fun she has. She is a big fan of dressing up in different outfits and getting into different characters, and this was her shot to do just that.

“I just feel it,” she said. “I just love to express myself like that. And I feel it when I’m singing, when I’m dancing.”

Royal Deb was born and raised in the Parish of St. Ann, and growing up she was enthralled by reggae legends Bob Marley and Gregory Isaacs. She still remembers crying when Bob Marley’s casket was taken into the street, and said that it is just more than music. It is a way of life and a mantra. Sean Paul is also her cousin, so the musical prowess is part of her overall being.

The sounds of reggae not only filled the dance halls, but it also made its way into the streets for massive all-night dance parties. This kind of life is what inspired her dream of performing on a large stage in America.

“The music has always been in my soul,” Royal Deb said. “I grew up a farm girl, but at night when I’d hear that sound system in the street, I’d be out of the house. I’d be out there dancing every damn night. Then when I was in school I used to go on stage, and I said, ‘one day I’ll make some reggae music.’”

Royal Deb moved to the US in the 1980s and married her “rock” Larry Barr, who has supported her in every step in her music career. They both train together as martial artists, and she is a clerk during the daytime. She has also raised two daughters and two stepsons, and in the midst of life, Royal Deb is striving to make her dream of being a reggae artist come true.

Royal Deb has been hard at work with Betts putting out some top quality, reggae music for the world to hear. She already released “Give Mi Da 6” and “All My Ladies,” and she is well on her way to creating an album. She has aspirations of hitting the stage for the world to see her, and said she has many gigs throughout Bergen County, in New York and New Jersey in the near future. If there’s one thing she knows how to do, it is carry a crowd and party.

“I have to think big and positive,” she said. “I’m such a positive person. Once you take the fun out of things, that’s where everything goes down. You have to make life joyful and happy, and that’s how it flows. Just like music. Some people might say I started late. But no, I am here.”

Be sure to check out “Somebody For Everybody” and the music by Royal Deb, available on all platforms.

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