Rooted in Sound. Grown for the Culture.
Vyda doesn't do subtlety. Southern-raised and unapologetically real. Her debut album Receipts & Red Flags moves from knowing better to doing better — and sounds incredible the whole way through.
A voice that sounds like it came up through the floorboards — worn down by time, soaked in bourbon. Delta blues with Southern rock edges. Raw, slow, and unhurried.
Delta Rose carries the South in her voice like it was born there. The soul of the Church meets the spirit of the juke joint. Debut album Love Gone Cold - out now on Velvet Empire Music Group.
Raw neo-soul in the spirit of Lauryn Hill. Her debut album Even If It Hurts is 10 tracks of healing, self-reclamation, and the courage it takes to let go — live drums, acoustic guitar, and a voice that sounds like lived experience.
Raspy, soulful, and raised on gospel. Beau bridges country and soul with a voice built for stadiums and back porches alike. Nashville polish with small-town heart.
Smooth, versatile, and built for late nights. Jev shifts between deep soulful baritone and agile melodic runs without missing a beat. The voice of a man who's been hurt but looks good doing it.
Not the loudest in the room, but the one everyone's quoting the next day. Cam brings lyrical density and soulful production together - introspective bars that reward every listen.
Sharp, witty, and emotionally intelligent. Ellery writes songs that sound like your inner monologue set to music - polished pop with indie soul and lyrics that earn their place.
Faith without the filter. Solomon raps with precision and sings with churchy conviction - gospel-rooted hip-hop that stands toe-to-toe with anything on the charts. Real talk, real belief.
Atlanta-bred and zero filter. Lael Knox brings raw trap energy, funny punchlines, and a Southern accent that hits different. Heavy 808s, clap snares, chant hooks built for TikTok and the function — equal parts ratchet anthem and viral moment. She doesn't ask for the room, she takes it. Her style is hard club trap with a sense of humor sharp enough to cut — the kind of bars you rewind twice before you even realize you're already singing along. Lael Knox isn't here to fit in. She's here to be the one everybody's quoting on Monday.