Where Independent Music Finds Its Voice

Voycce is the sound of a midnight confession draped in velvet and fire. A genre-bending artist rooted in soul, hip-hop, and trap, he doesn’t just sing—he speaks from the wound, weaving love, loss, loyalty, and longing into every melody.

His music lives between the garden and the grind—romantic like a timeless lover, loyal like a brother, and introspective like a poet unafraid to be raw. Influenced by voices like Lucky Daye, SZA, and Bryson Tiller, Voycce carves his own lane: cinematic, intimate R&B for those who survive by feeling deeply.

He doesn’t hide or hold back. Instead, he builds emotional worlds where vulnerability is strength, not weakness. His voice moves like water—sometimes a storm, sometimes a slow drip—but always flowing with purpose. Sculpting soul in shadow, Voycce creates rituals of sound for the midnight souls, blending dark R&B, trap soul, and futuristic funk. He doesn’t chase fame—he follows feeling.



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Tell us about yourself, who are you and where do you come from?

I was born in Cumberland County, North Carolina, and my path carried me through Texas, Wisconsin, Arizona, and Colorado. Each place added its own rhythm to my story. Now, I reside in Atlanta, Georgia—a city where music pulses in every shadow. My journey shapes the sound I create: a blend of soul, shadow, and midnight confession meant for those who feel deeply and move through the night searching for connection. I come from quiet beginnings. Raised by a single mom doing the best she could with three kids and a prayer. We didn’t have it all, but we had enough—enough love, enough laughter, enough grit. I never went hungry. Never slept on the streets. But I knew what it meant to go without. To watch your mom stretch a dollar like it was magic. To smile through the weight, just to keep the house from breaking. I was stubborn. Still am sometimes. Made choices that shook the ground beneath me. Some I regret. Some I don’t. But every misstep carved something into me—something stronger. Something wiser. I’ve worn shame like a second skin. I’ve messed up, let people down, let myself down. But I kept showing up. Even when I had nothing but music and a heartbeat. Even when I didn’t like who I saw in the mirror. Music was never just a dream. It was therapy. It was church when I felt too broken to pray. It was the only place I didn’t feel the need to explain myself. And now— I’m not here to fake a perfect story. I’m here to show you what growth really looks like. Not polished. Not pretty. But real. Still learning. Still healing. Still hungry. Still believing the fire in me is louder than the doubt around me. If you’ve ever felt behind, If you’ve ever questioned your worth, If you’ve ever been the one people counted out— Then you already know me. Because I’m just like you. And I’m not done yet.

How was your passion for music born? Who are your idols?

My passion for music was born in the quiet moments—when words felt too heavy and silence was too loud. Music became my refuge, a place where I could speak without fear and feel without judgment. It’s the pulse in my veins, the ritual I return to when the world fades away. My idols are those who dare to be vulnerable and raw—Lucky Daye, SZA, Bryson Tiller, and Ari Lennox. They taught me that honesty in music is a kind of strength, and that every melody can carry a story worth telling. Their voices shaped my sound, but I’m here to tell my own story—one midnight confession at a time.

What kind of music do you do?

I create what I call Gen Z Funk—a blend of dark R&B, trap soul, and futuristic funk. My music lives in the shadows of midnight drives and quiet rooms, where emotion seeps through every note. It’s cinematic and intimate, crafted for those who feel everything deeply and seek connection in the stillness. More than just songs, my tracks are rituals—soundscapes that speak to the heart’s hidden corners.

What is the most important song for you? What message do you want to convey to the listener?

The most important song for me right now is “Anymore.” It’s a confession and a turning point—where I lay down the weight of running from myself and my past. This song is about surrendering the chase, facing the shadows I’ve been avoiding, and finding peace in stillness. I don’t want to run anymore because running only prolongs the pain; it keeps me from healing and truly being present. Through “Anymore,” I invite listeners to stop escaping, to confront their truths, and to find strength in vulnerability. It’s a midnight ritual for anyone ready to stop hiding and start feeling.

Why should a listener who doesn’t know you listen to your music?

If you’ve ever felt the weight of silence after a heartbreak, the restless nights where thoughts echo louder than the world, my music is the space where those feelings are seen and honored. I don’t just make songs—I craft soundscapes that speak to the parts of you that words alone can’t reach. For anyone searching for a soundtrack to their midnight thoughts, a companion in their solitude, or a mirror for their deepest emotions, my music is that quiet ritual. It’s for the lovers, the loners, the ones still feeling everything when the world sleeps.

What are your future projects? Where do you see yourself 5 years from now?

My future projects are about deepening the ritual—crafting albums and visuals that feel like midnight journeys through love, loss, and rebirth. I’m building a world where every song is a chapter in a cinematic love letter, blending dark R&B, trap soul, and futuristic funk with raw, honest storytelling. I want to create not just music, but an experience that listeners can live inside. Five years from now, I see myself as a voice for the nocturnal souls—a guide through the shadows and the afterglow. I want to be recognized not just for the sound I make, but for the emotional spaces I create. I’ll be expanding my reach while staying true to the feeling, growing my community of Freqs and Echoes who resonate with that midnight frequency. It’s not about fame—it’s about connection, healing, and evolution.

Tell our readers a funny episode that happened in your career as an artist.

So I’m mid-performance at this moody little hookah-stripper-lounge—singing one of my melancholic-but-make-you-move tracks—and this security guard starts twerking to the beat. I see it out the corner of my eye, and my soul said, “Go with it.” Next thing I know, I’m grinding back, she’s bumpin’, I’m slappin’ and grippin’—on beat. The whole crowd’s losing it, and I’m out here giving sensual chaos in real-time. Right as it’s reaching peak intensity, the DJ yells, “Ayy! They gettin’ freaky up there!” I just started laughing and blushing, still holding the mic, still hitting the notes—like, yes, this is the show now. Honestly? It was one of the wildest, most unscripted moments of my career. And the fact it happened during a heartbreak song? Only in Atlanta.

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