TLDR: Summer Slam (The Album) by Sayzee is a gritty project that merges pro wrestling storytelling with raw lyricism and unapologetic defiance.
Wrestling and rap may seem worlds apart, but for Sayzee, they speak the same language: bravado, struggle, and the hunger to win over a crowd. His latest project, Summer Slam (The Album) isn’t just another nostalgic tribute to ’90s wrestling. It’s a personal manifesto forged from suplexes, steel chairs, and pain tolerance.
Summer Slam is the official sequel to Sayzee’s 2013 underground release Sayzor Ramone, a grimy, character-driven project that channeled the swagger and tragedy of wrestling icon Scott Hall. Where Sayzor Ramone was introspective and mythic, Summer Slam punches harder. It’s an evolution, just as wrestling grew from smoky bingo halls to global arenas, so too does Sayzee’s sound stretch from gritty loops to bombastic, arena-ready production.
Here’s the best part: Summer Slam is entirely Sayzee’s own creation. From the beats and artwork to the recording and mixing, every element was crafted solo. In recent years, he’s grown steadily more self-reliant, and this project cements that evolution.
Laced with samples that echo the crash of a folding chair or the low hum of a packed gymnasium, the album pulls from the golden age of WWF, the chaos of ECW, and the precision of New Japan Pro-Wrestling. It’s more than aesthetic. These references mirror Sayzee’s own journey through hip-hop’s indie grind.
Tracks like “Big Van Vader” and “Across the Barbed Wire” balance wrestling lore with raw commentary on artistic survival. For every body slam, there’s a bar about industry politics. For every pop from the crowd, a metaphor for pain behind the spotlight.
And don’t get it twisted. Summer Slam isn’t wrestling cosplay, it’s commentary. It offers a sharp lens on the highs, lows, and behind-the-scenes politics of both rap and wrestling, and society as a whole. These are subjects Sayzee has long since mastered. While others fade from the underground without a trace, Sayzee continues to stand tall in the ring, arms raised, self-made and battle-tested.
Summer Slam (The Album) features guest appearances by Xavier Woods (“Receipts & Dues”) and Jason Packs (“Put A Tent Up”). You can find the album on Apple Music, Bandcamp, Spotify, and various other digital streaming platforms. Along with the new project, yesterday Sayzee dropped new supporting visuals with the Tyler Roussel-powered “Mean Gene Machine.”

























