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Comatose Red Ivy Shares Insights on Her Musical Journey

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What happened on the night of October 16 2020?
Crackers in black skin, my not-ex boyfriend KARIM LAURY and his phaggot top daddy DOMINIC ANDERSON slipped me poisonous substance after spending up to 10 days with KARIM LAURY’s father on how they would murder me. I died, woke up dead and was a rapper from there on. I was came back blank mind, no idea I was even human, and there were ghost around me, the one ghost where I got my first part of stage name, name was Comatose, he made me rap and sing all night for months, I didn’t know it then but training me to take over the music industry and drag my killers names through mud until I circle back around and shoot them, I’m going to murder Karim for sure, Dominic, he can get it too if he wants it but not a target.

You mentioned that you have evidence for this, are you planning on releasing it to the world, and if yes, when would that be?

Yes it is already in my music snippets here and there, I’m working on two music videos which includes real time footage of the moments I was poisoned as they wish me to death and how they coldly staged the night and left me for dead, or so they though. Release tid bits but the grand finale is around the corner.

What do your friends and family think about this story?
They disowned me when I woke up dead from being murdered and was suddenly and magically a a rapper, I had never done any music ever before October 16 2020, never ever even crossed my mind to be a rapper but I have been a writer for 25 years

If you had one message to the person who did all this, what would it be?

Oh I have about 400 songs to that person, end and final message will be, “how does your poison taste, die die die, it’s time to die die die, cut you with this knife and watch you die die die until the police show up keep stabbing you, die die die, police will have to shoot me off you as I stab you die die die, I’m coming to take your life, die die die”

 

Based on events of that night, what would you want your autobiography/ biography to be called?

Already have it, Synthetic Love Addiction, which is double entendre meaning he faked loving me to set me up for murder, and I faked addiction, so he’d keep loving me. He’d murdered a girl before me, that’s where I got my middle part of stage name from, she had Red hair.

What would you be doing right now, if it wasn’t for your music career?

Oh that’s be great, I was a Network Administrator, still own a Information technology Company but music is taking that over quickly, it’s 12:29AM right now, I’d be in bed with everything in my life perfectly aligned, happily anticipating waking up the next day and going out all day to run my company, help people and enjoy my life without the darkness that looms now in my heart. I was a happy good person, achieved everything in life and now I’m a phucking rapper and country star, I’d trade it all to go back to normal, and I tried but my heart is dragging me into music.

If you were able to collaborate with 5 renowned musicians for one of your projects dead or alive who would they be?

Mac Miller, for sure. He taught me Double Entendre from his grave and I even decoded his suicide letter that’s hidden in double entendre within SWIMMING ALBUM. HE even says Circles will be coming from oblivion, ya know over the wall, almost as if he had a time machine died, recorded album in Oblivion, time machine back then killed himself again. The fact that his suicide was flagged accidental, is proof the coroner ddidn’t listen to Swimming.

For our final question, what are you working on now?
Just finished my Country EP—Beans and Cornbread

I have my 6th Hip-Hop Studio Album finished: “Prodigious Savant” it has 30 songs on it. I am buttoning up my 2nd country album and about to drop another Story Tales EP like my Lost in Space with Rikki EP, just a story along the tracks venturing through whatever with an objective and just being fun and reckless through each track telling a story in rhyme. Oh I’m working on an Orchestra album too, gonna be very different and be mostly Violin and Piano.

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Comatose Red Ivy Shares Insights on Her Musical Journey Comatose Red Ivy Shares Insights on Her Musical Journey

MUSIC

Michael M Jeni Turns Heartbreak Into Self Respect And Quiet Release On New R&B Single “Played”

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Michael M Jeni Turns Heartbreak Into Self Respect And Quiet Release On New R&B Single “Played”

Iowa-based Rwandese artist Michael M Jeni returns to his R&B roots with “Played,” a moody, atmospheric, and deeply personal release that leans into vulnerability without losing its smooth composure. The song, the fastest he has ever written, recorded, and released, traces the mental and physical exhaustion of giving chance after chance to someone you love, only to end up caught in the same pattern again.

Heartbreak sits at the center of “Played,” but the song is ultimately about reclaiming self-worth. It captures the moment when someone finally recognizes their own value and chooses growth over the comfort of what is familiar. That shift comes through clearly in the words, “I’m done with giving chances, let me find my way…you’re just somebody that I used to know.”

The production is built around minimalist, slow-burn R&B, with soft, crisp, and unobtrusive beats that leave space for the emotion to breathe. The intro feels floaty and atmospheric, carried by Michael’s rich, lush vocals as they set a silky foundation. The drums offer a gentle head-nod pulse rather than a heavy knock, giving the song room to ache instead of pushing it toward a forced climax.

“Played” moves at a slow-to-mid-tempo pace, shaped by a smooth, swaying groove that makes it feel like a private late-night confession. Its hook is catchy and memorable, creating a lingering, circular pull that stays with you after the final notes fade.

Velvety keys, warm low end, airy synths, and delicate percussion give Michael’s conversational tone the right setting. The lyrics feel personal and relatable because he delivers them with a natural ease, letting the song’s soulful and introspective mood land without overstatement.

Michael sings with controlled vulnerability. His runs and ad-libs are carefully placed, which keeps the emotion raw without turning it theatrical. His vocal identity here is rooted in emotional connection rather than vocal dominance, using melody, harmony, and rhythmic finesse to make the record feel heartfelt, memorable, and widely relatable.

“Too many times you broke the rules, too many times I played the fool, I gotta graduate from this, you’re just somebody I used to know…”

Those lyrics form the emotional core of the record, capturing the painful but necessary decision to step away from a relationship that has become a repeated cycle of hurt. Instead of sinking into bitterness, “Played” turns heartbreak into self-respect, making the act of leaving feel like a declaration of personal freedom.

“Played” also serves as a compelling precursor to Michael M Jeni’s forthcoming project, “KING,” offering listeners a glimpse into the vulnerability, growth, and self-discovery shaping this new chapter of his artistry. Named after the meaning of his surname in Kinyarwanda, “KING” is expected to explore resilience, identity, healing, and personal empowerment.

Stream “Played” here and find a home for it in your playlist.

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KING TYGUSS turns faith into a battle cry on the commanding new single “Made For This Moment”

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KING TYGUSS turns faith into a battle cry on the commanding new single "Made For This Moment"

KING TYGUSS approaches music as a calling, with artistry that carries the force of Gospel truth. He is the kind of Gospel hip-hop artist who treats every track as ministry, using rhythm, testimony, scripture, and raw emotion to reach hearts inside the church and beyond it. His work feels rooted in something lived rather than performed. That honesty, along with his spiritual conviction, gives his music a weight listeners can sense right away.

A devoted educator, army veteran, and proud servant of Christ, KING TYGUSS returns with one of his most commanding and spiritually charged releases so far, “Made For This Moment.” The single brings together hard-hitting modern drill production and an uplifting Gospel-centered message, shaping the track into a declaration of faith and a rallying call for believers walking in divine purpose.

At its heart, “Made For This Moment” celebrates spiritual awakening, identity, and victory through Christ. The song speaks to those who know they were created for a higher calling, soldiers for the Most High moving boldly through faith and purpose. With passionate lyricism and a firm, commanding delivery, KING TYGUSS reminds listeners that Christ gave His life for humanity, and through Him, believers can begin to understand why they were made and what they were destined to become.

Musically, the record carries as much range as its message. It is built on a dark, bass-heavy drill foundation that grabs attention immediately, driven by booming low-end percussion, sleek electronic drums, and eerie melodic textures. Even with that intensity, the instrumental leaves enough space for KING TYGUSS to move across the beat with sharp flows and magnetic conviction. From the opening moments, the hook locks into an anthemic energy that stays with you after the track ends.

As the song develops, “Made For This Moment” takes a surprising but natural sonic turn, shifting into a glossy, haunting early 2010s pop atmosphere that recalls the cinematic edge of Iggy Azalea’s “Black Widow.” Tense synth stabs, shadowy melodies, and polished electronic details blend smoothly with the aggressive drill framework, creating a dynamic listen that reflects the depth and urgency of the song’s spiritual message.

What makes “Made For This Moment” so impactful is KING TYGUSS’ ability to connect modern mainstream production with unwavering Gospel truth. He brings faith into contemporary sound without softening its message, creating music that feels spiritually grounded while still speaking clearly to today’s listeners.

The result is a soaring Gospel anthem for every soldier of Christ who has accepted the call to action. It is for those living boldly for Him, carrying His message each day, and knowing deep in their hearts that they were truly made for this moment.

With “Made For This Moment,” KING TYGUSS continues to show that Gospel hip-hop can be sonically inventive and spiritually transformative, offering music that inspires strength, conviction, and steady faith in a generation still searching for purpose.

Check this heartfelt tune below, add it to your favorite repertoire, and share it with other soldiers of Christ.

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The Traveling High Priest delivers a transcendental anthem featuring the phenomenally gifted Jhonni Blaze

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The Traveling High Priest delivers a transcendental anthem featuring the phenomenally gifted Jhonni Blaze

With a biography that reads like a mystery, I’d best describe The Traveling High Priest as a prophetic spiritual phenomenon wrapped in the form of an artist, minister, and messenger. His artistry does not operate within the ordinary boundaries of music alone; it feels like a fusion of prophecy, spoken-word ministry, gospel rap, spiritual storytelling, and supernatural theater. He presents himself less as a conventional entertainer and more as a vessel carrying divine revelation through sound, speech, prayer, and presence. Welcome aboard!

Now that we are here, it wouldn’t hurt to talk about that ethereal performance he recently delivered with the single “Right One” featuring female vocalist Jhonni Blaze. This is a spiritually charged and emotionally immersive collaboration and marks The Traveling High Priest’s first-ever gospel release and serves as the official lead single from his highly anticipated upcoming album. Already generating major momentum online — including nearly one thousand TikTok creations — “Right One” is quickly proving itself to be more than just a song; it is becoming a movement of healing, reflection, faith, and emotional honesty.

From the very first seconds, “Right One” creates an atmosphere that feels both intimate and transcendent. The intro arrives like a warm tropical breeze, carried by silky island-infused rhythms that sway with grace rather than force. The cadence is smooth, fluid, and deeply inviting. Gentle Afro-Caribbean percussion rolls beneath the production with hypnotic precision, allowing the beat to breathe naturally while soft melodic textures drift across the instrumental like sunlight reflecting on ocean waves. Every element feels intentional, warm, and emotionally alive.

The song immediately finds its emotional center through Jhonni Blaze’s unforgettable hook:
“You said you’d change. I believe every word. Gave you my heart even when it hurt. Stayed through the nights when love felt cold. Held on to you when I should have let go.”

Her delivery is soulful, vulnerable, and magnetic — setting the emotional tone for the entire record while bringing a powerful sense of human fragility and longing to the forefront. Then comes the arrival of The Traveling High Priest, whose entrance completely transforms the energy of the track. Delivering in his divinely inspired and unclassified spiritual language, he brings an otherworldly presence that feels less like conventional performance and more like prophetic expression poured directly into sound.

As he enters, the production effortlessly morphs into a floating, atmospheric Afro-Amapiano groove layered with minimalist yet deeply textured percussion. The beat does not rush. It lingers. It breathes. Dusty underground drums, airy melodic spacing, and smoky rhythmic textures create a hypnotic sonic environment where every word, cadence, and vocal inflection carries spiritual weight. Even without understanding the exact language, listeners can feel the emotional and spiritual gravity behind his delivery.

The chemistry between The Traveling High Priest and Jhonni Blaze becomes one of the song’s defining strengths. Her melodic vulnerability and his spiritually charged presence complement each other perfectly, creating a listening experience that feels healing, uplifting, and emotionally transporting. As the groovy Amapiano stabs settle into the mix and the fading harmonies dissolve into the instrumental atmosphere, “Right One” leaves listeners suspended in reflection, faith, and feeling.

The accompanying music video further elevates the experience. Visually stunning and cinematic in presentation, the video places both artists in a scenic studio-inspired environment filled with striking photography, immersive lighting, and captivating aesthetics. Rather than relying on excessive distractions, the visual allows the music, emotion, and chemistry between the artists to remain the focal point — making it the perfect companion piece to a record already resonating deeply with audiences worldwide.

For The Traveling High Priest Thee, “Right One” is not simply another release — it is testimony transformed into music. Speaking openly about his battles with PTSD, anxiety, and depression, he reveals that the song was born directly from GOD’s guidance and his own personal journey toward healing and purpose.

That sincerity pulses throughout every second of “Right One.” Beneath its lush production and hypnotic groove lies a deeper message about spiritual discernment, emotional boundaries, redemption, and divine direction. The Traveling High Priest Thee uses the song not only as art, but as ministry — encouraging listeners to stop walking into doors GOD never granted and to trust the path GOD has designed specifically for them.

“Right One” is available now on YouTube and continues to gain momentum across streaming and social platforms as listeners around the world connect with its message of healing, faith, surrender, and transformation.

Check it out, subscribe to his channel, stream, save and share this divine masterpiece.

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