Nothing Solves A Problem Like A $100 Bill....
“Dolla Bill” finds Alexander Blane speaking from a raw place—posted where he doesn’t want to be, doing what he has to do, and trying to keep his soul intact while chasing stability. He raps about long nights, fast-lane living, and being “always open” because bills don’t wait and responsibility doesn’t pause. But the deeper story is the prayer behind the hustle: “I hope the Lord forgive me… I wish there was a way I could make me some change without changing.”
Instead of turning the struggle into a flex, Blane turns it into a confession. He knows being broke can break a man—or reshape him—and he’s determined not to let it. Dolla Bill is the sound of someone fighting for a better life, one hard decision at a time, with faith in one hand and pressure in the other.
Listen To The Song
Dolla Bill
Dolla Bill is a modern grind record about survival, sacrifice, and the moral tug-of-war that comes with being broke. Blane isn’t glorifying the corner—he’s admitting the pressure: needing money, needing change, and trying not to let the struggle change who he is. The hook carries the conflict: he wants to “get his money up,” but he’s praying for forgiveness and fighting to stay clean-minded in a dirty environment. The song lives between faith + desperation, hustle + fear, and ambition + integrity—when providing comes first and pride comes last.

