What I Live For (Eazy Music Remix)
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04:51
2
Run This (Vicious Conspiracy Remix)
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04:20
3
Jealous (Fredrock Remix)
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04:21
4
I Am Not Done (HD Smith Remix) [feat. Moxiie]
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04:15
5
Ambulances (Devon Craig Johnson Remix) [feat. Drew Boogie]
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04:19
6
I Am Not Done (HS Remix) [feat. Moxiie]
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04:23
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Beast (HS Remix)
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04:36
8
Run This (HS Remix)
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02:53
9
What I Live For (HS Remix)
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04:19
10
Jealous (HS Remix)
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04:45
℗© 2014 The Hustle Standard
Artist Bios
Bodybuilder, photographer, and clothing-brand founder Rob Bailey started out trying to make high-energy workout tapes, but when matched with producer Charlie Hustle, he came up with a blend of rock, hardcore, hip-hop, rap, and dubstep that made him an unlikely but viable left-field musical artist as the second decade of the 21st century rolled in. In 2015, after issuing a series of mixtapes and EPs, Bailey and Hustle unleashed their first full-length, workout-ready Bro-down, Go.

His story is one of him simply following his interests. His interest in art, design, photography, video, and graphics took him to art school for a time at the Art Institute of Philadelphia, but he left without graduating to take a job as a Web designer at QVC. When his wife, the then-unknown Dana Linn Bailey, told him her dream was to be a professional bodybuilder and to own her own gym, he threw himself into advancing her career, using some of the marketing skills he picked up while working for QVC. Bailey invested $400 in T-shirts and screen-printed them in his garage, thus starting a successful fashion brand, Flag Nor Fail. Relentlessly creative, Bailey next set out to make mixtapes of tracks he liked to work out to, refining things until, along with producer Hustle, he created a mash-up of various beat styles, from hard rock to rap and club rhythms, with a rough, powerful vocal style laid over the top. He found himself becoming a successful independent musical artist with a built-in niche audience and enough accessibility to build on it. An EP from Bailey and the Hustle Standard, Battle Tested, appeared in 2012, with an eight-track mini-album, Beast, following in 2013. Two years later saw the release of Bailey's debut synth pop and F-bomb-laden full-length Go, which was also released in a clean version. In late 2018, Bailey & the Hustle Standard issued their sophomore long-player, Spectrum. ~ Steve Leggett