Full-Stack Artist

I've been a fan of music since 2016. Since college, I've also become a producer and vocal artist.

A full-stack artist, if you will.

Many people tout music libraries spanning every genre. I'm different. I pride myself on my depth. At some points, I've spent thousands of minutes per week exploring trap and underground rap.

It wasn't until college, after meeting a couple producers and rappers, that I realized how accessible music could be.

That curiosity and willingness to experiment became my driving force. First in founding Poetic, then in mastering app development, and quickly in music too.

It was actually through customer discovery that I met the rapper who properly introduced me to the music industry.

Why music?

For me, music is another creative stack to master. It's where art meets technology — the same principles I use building products.

Creating something from scratch is inherently personal, whether it's software or music. Product development taught me to share unfinished work, learn in public, and keep iterating. The best products and songs come from people who aren't afraid to try and fail.

Listen & Collaborate

I've got a collection of tracks and beats to share. But instead of rushing to streaming platforms, I'm building my own music hosting setup.

I'm planning to build a keyboard-centric music app for power users and producers.

It takes effort, but I control the experience. My music will come to streaming, but not until I improve my systems.

Until then, reach me on Twitter to find updates, or any of my socials to collaborate.

Influences

My sound draws from melodic trap and internet-era producers. There's too many to list, but Lil Uzi, Nino Paid, and Yung Fazo have been on repeat.

And, there’s never been a better time to learn about music from the best.

Today, fans can watch live, raw studio sessions and take part in unforgettable moments. This has never been done before.

It's intriguing to see artists becoming more open. Even the most reclusive are now joining livestreams with young creators like 21 Savage, Lil Baby, and Lil Uzi, just to name a few.

Double platinum certified rapper DDG began his journey with content creation and picked up music as a fun hobby. Now, he consistently livestreams to his fans, where all the tracks on his latest album titled blame the chat were recorded live.

Additionally, PlaqueBoyMax livestreams everyday in 2025. He's well known for his series "Song Wars" and "In the Booth" where rappers come on to chat and rap. Quavo, Ian, Rob49, Lancey, Skepta, Nemzzz, Jace, have already joined the trend.

His debut solo album FIVEFOREVER got 1.6 million streams on Spotify, first day, and #1 on US Apple Music's Hip-Hop/Rap chart.

Music is the long-term game, and content is leverage.

I'm not hilghy trained in music, but the path to becoming highly skilled is clear. Like programming, these skills can be learned. They're enjoyable, playable, long-term endeavors.

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