For The Golden Mic Season 1 by Raps & Apps Made possible by a $20,000 grant from the Coastal Bend Community Foundation and supported by the Texas Commission on the Arts.
Chris 56 doesn’t make music for the crowd.
He makes it for the person standing in the back.
The one who showed up alone. The one nursing a drink. The one trying to feel something real again.
“I make music for the loners, the drunks… the people like me,” he says.
It’s not a marketing angle. It’s not branding. It’s lived experience. And it’s exactly what gives Chris 56 his edge raw, emotional, unfiltered, and just self-aware enough to turn chaos into connection.
A Sound That Doesn’t Ask Permission
Raised in Corpus Christi, Chris56 grew up on a collision of sounds. His dad played ‘80s records. His mom leaned country artists like George Strait and Toby Keith. Somewhere between those influences and his own instincts, he built something that doesn’t sit neatly in any box.
He calls it “y’all-ternative.”
It’s Southern rock grit, hip-hop rhythm, pop-rock melody, and an emo core that refuses to disappear. It’s the kind of genre that doesn’t exist until someone decides it does and then suddenly, it makes perfect sense.
There’s energy in it. There’s pain in it. And most importantly, there’s movement.
“I always try to keep people dancing,” he says. But beneath that movement is something deeper something that keeps people coming back even when they don’t fully understand why.
The Moment Everything Slowed Down
For Chris 56, music stopped being a hobby the moment the world literally slowed down.
He remembers performing at a local venue, opening for a rap group, when he jumped into the crowd. Time stretched. The noise blurred. And in that moment, everything clicked.
“It felt like a fever dream,” he says.
That was it.
No backup plan. No second guessing. Just a decision whether spoken out loud or not that this was the path.
Fifteen years later, he’s still walking it.
Why He Never Stopped
Plenty of artists start. Not many last.
What kept Chris56 going wasn’t industry attention or viral moments it was something far more personal.
Messages.
People reaching out. People connecting. People telling him his music meant something to them.
And then there was that moment.
Right before a show, standing in a bar with a drink in his hand, a stranger stopped him and told him a song he wrote had saved his life.
Not inspired. Not entertained.
Saved.
Chris didn’t fully process it at the time. It wasn’t until after the show that it landed.
“That’s why I do it,” he realized.
The Coastal Bend Has Something to Say
Chris56 isn’t just representing himself he’s carrying a city with him.
He speaks openly about the Coastal Bend music scene, calling it overlooked but undeniable. There’s talent here, he insists real talent but without the infrastructure of a major music industry, it doesn’t always get the spotlight it deserves.
That’s part of the mission.
To prove it belongs.
Artists like El Dusty have already carved out space, and new acts are constantly emerging. The scene is alive. It just needs amplification.
Chris56 plans to be part of that signal.
The Chris56 Effect
There’s a pattern at his shows.
People come alone.
Not in groups. Not in packs. Alone.
And somehow, that becomes the connection point.
There’s something about his music that speaks directly to individuals not crowds. It doesn’t require validation from the person next to you. It meets you where you are.
“I want people to feel love,” he says.
Not surface-level positivity. Not forced optimism.
Real love. The kind that understands pain but doesn’t stay there.
The Golden Mic Moment
Being selected for The Golden Mic Season 1 isn’t just another opportunity it’s a shift in visibility.
For Chris56, it means reaching more people. Sharing his message on a bigger stage. Taking something that’s been built over years and finally putting a spotlight on it.
It also represents something bigger than one artist.
Programs like this create space for talent that might otherwise stay hidden artists with everything it takes, except the platform.
And that’s the gap Raps & Apps was built to close combining creation and commercialization so artists can actually build sustainable careers.
No Filters. No Masks.
Ask Chris56 what makes him different, and the answer isn’t complicated.
“I’m just telling my own story.”
That’s it.
No gimmicks. No imitation. No chasing trends.
Just honesty.
In a landscape where artists often feel manufactured, that kind of clarity hits harder than any marketing strategy ever could.
Final Word
Chris 56 describes himself and his sound in one word:
Kick ass.
It’s blunt. It’s confident. It’s a little chaotic.
And it fits.
Because at the end of the day, his music isn’t trying to be perfect. It’s trying to be real.
And for the people standing in the back, alone, just trying to make it through the night.
That’s more than enough.
If you want to support local music in the Coastal Bend please consider donating to fund the next season of The Golden Mic.