DyeVerse Perspective on Sound Summoner

“I make music because it’s my only way to make sense of everything I’ve seen and survived. It’s how I turn pain into poetry, struggle into savage truth. I ain’t chasing clout—this is about telling my story in a way that nobody can deny. Every beat, every bar—it’s all my soul laid out for the world. That’s why I do it, and that’s why I’ll never stop.”

For me, it’s all about the balance between the raw and the polished. You need a beat that slaps—heavy drums, real low-end weight to move your chest. But you also need that melody to haunt the track—whether it’s a dark piano or a twisted sample, it’s gotta cut through. And then? The vocal mix—crisp, clear, but not sterilized. It’s gotta let the pain and the hunger come through. That’s what makes a song real for me: power, grit, and that soul in the final mix.”

“One of my songs, ‘Thugs Got Tears Too,’ was born out of a real moment of heartbreak and frustration. I remember one night, sitting in my room, feeling like I’d spent my whole life trying to be tough—like showing weakness was a crime. I’d lost some close people, felt betrayed, and realized that even the hardest motherfuckers got pain buried inside. So I turned that vulnerability into strength and made a song that spoke on it—about how real gangsters cry too. That night was the spark—all my raw emotion turned into that savage street gospel.”