There are artists who perform, and then there are artists who transform. Debra Scott Brown is firmly the latter.
Her music what she calls poppy, funky, jazzy rock is vibrant, soulful, and alive. But beneath the rhythm, the groove, and the undeniable stage presence is something deeper: a story of survival, redemption, and purpose. And it’s that story that gives her music its true weight.
Debra doesn’t just sing songs. She tells the truth.
A Voice Born From Experience
Long before the stage lights and microphones, Debra’s relationship with music started in the most pure way possible as a child dancing around her home in chiffon dresses, feeling safe, free, and connected.
Music wasn’t just entertainment. It was refuge.
Growing up in a household filled with country, orchestral arrangements, and timeless classics from the 1940s through the ‘80s, she developed a deep appreciation for sound in all its forms. That wide range of influences would later shape her unique style one that refuses to be boxed in.
But her journey wasn’t linear.
Debra openly shares that she battled a long-term addiction to crystal meth an experience that could have ended her story, but instead became the foundation for something far more powerful. Through faith, resilience, and transformation, she found her way out and now uses her voice not just to sing, but to reach people who are still in that darkness.
“I’ve had people tell me they stopped using drugs because of my story,” she shares.
That’s not just music. That’s impact.
More Than Music It’s A Mission
What sets Debra apart isn’t just her sound it’s her intention.
Her music lives in a space that is introspective, soulful, and powerful, with a touch of grit and vulnerability. She’s expressing life as she’s lived it love, pain, growth, faith, and everything in between.
Her goal is simple, but profound:
To make people feel hope.
To remind them they’re not alone.
To show them that change is possible.
Whether she’s in the studio carefully shaping her voice or on stage fully letting go in performance, Debra brings authenticity into every note. There’s no mask. No persona. Just truth.
And people feel that.
Rooted in Community, Rising With Purpose
As a proud artist from the Coastal Bend, Debra is deeply connected to the Corpus Christi music scene a community she describes as “poppin’” with talent and growth.
She’s not just part of that movement she contributes to it.
Through her work, her collaborations, and her support of fellow artists, she’s helped build a culture of encouragement and unity. She speaks highly of the musicians around her, honoring both rising voices and those who’ve left a lasting legacy.
This isn’t competition for her.
It’s community.
Finding Her Voice
For years, like many artists, Debra was known primarily as a cover performer. But deep down, she always had something more to say.
Original music. Her own story. Her own voice.
Opportunities like The Golden Mic have given her the platform and the confidence to step fully into that space. To share the songs she once held back. To be seen not just as a performer, but as a creator.
And she’s embracing it fully.
Her song “Here I Am” one of her earliest original works captures that moment of reflection and vulnerability. It’s not just a song. It’s a statement.
A declaration. She’s here. And she’s ready.
Fearless, Authentic, Unstoppable
Ask Debra how she hopes people see her, and the answer says everything:
Fearless. Strong. Authentic. Joyful.
That’s not branding. That’s identity.
She’s not trying to be perfect. She’s being real and in doing so, she’s giving others permission to do the same.
Her music is for anyone who’s been through something.
Anyone searching. Anyone healing. Anyone who just needs a reminder that it’s okay to feel, to grow, and to keep going.
The Sound of Hope
When you listen to Debra Scott Brown, you’re not just hearing a blend of pop, funk, jazz, and rock.
You’re hearing a life that refused to stay broken.
You’re hearing resilience turned into rhythm.
You’re hearing hope loud, unapologetic, and alive.
And maybe, just maybe… you’ll hear a little bit of your own story in hers.
If you want to support local music in the Coastal Bend please consider donating to fund the next season of The Golden Mic.
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.
There’s a certain kind of band that doesn’t just perform songs they create experiences.
Animal Mood is that kind of band.
You can hear it in their sound restless, colorful, alive but you really understand it in the moments they leave behind. Like the night someone walked up to them after a Valentine’s Day show and said their music was the soundtrack to asking someone to be his girlfriend and she said yes.
That’s not just a good show.
That’s impact.
A Sound Built From Everywhere
Animal Mood isn’t easy to label and they’re not trying to be.
Call it dance punk. Call it indie. Call it art rock with Latin undertones.
None of it fully captures what they do.
Because their sound is built from everything.
Josh grew up around guitar and drums, shaped by family musicians. Jose’s roots pull from Mexican heritage and Latin influence. Gilly’s background spans salsa, rock, blues even Afrobeat. Together, those influences don’t compete they collide in a way that feels intentional and fresh.
The result?
Music that feels modern, but nostalgic at the same time.
Music that doesn’t sit still.
Energy First, Always
If there’s one thing Animal Mood agrees on, it’s this:
Their music has to move.
“Our sound… I would say is very energetic.”
That energy isn’t just sonic it’s emotional. Their catalog swings between upbeat, danceable tracks and slower, more intimate songs, but underneath it all is a consistent thread:
Connection.
A lot of their songs revolve around love not in a cliché way, but in a way that feels human, messy, and real.
They’re not writing for a niche audience either.
They’re writing for anyone who’s ever felt something.
The Power of the Scene
Being based in Corpus Christi has shaped Animal Mood in ways they don’t take lightly.
The scene isn’t massive but that’s part of the strength.
It’s tight-knit. Immediate. Honest.
“You get to put your art out there and get immediate feedback.”
That kind of environment forces growth.
You can’t hide behind hype. You can’t fake connection.
You show up, you play, and the community tells you exactly where you stand.
And right now, that community is evolving more experimentation, more collaboration, more artists pushing boundaries.
Animal Mood fits right into that movement.
A Band Built on Chemistry
There’s something deeper happening within the group itself.
This isn’t just a band it’s a network of musicians who have played across multiple projects, learned from each other, and built a shared language over time.
Josh and Jose’s connection goes back to early jam sessions. Gilly’s musicianship adds another layer entirely harmonic depth, musical range, and technical precision that elevates everything they touch.
They push each other.
They inspire each other.
And you can hear that in the music.
No Formula. Just Feel
Ask Animal Mood what they sound like, and you won’t get a clean answer.
Because there isn’t one.
“We don’t really subscribe to any particular sound.”
That freedom shows up in everything they do from indie textures to punk energy to moments that lean into Latin rhythm or jazz-inspired harmony.
It’s unpredictable in the best way.
And that unpredictability is what keeps it alive.
The Stage Is Where It Happens
For Animal Mood, the studio matters.
But the stage?
That’s everything.
“The stage… that’s where it’s at.”
Live shows are where their music breathes where the energy becomes tangible, where the audience becomes part of the experience, where anything can happen.
No click tracks. No shortcuts. Just real-time music, played by real people.
That commitment to authenticity is part of what sets them apart.
Looking Ahead
With a new EP on the way including a standout track described as a “salsa punk jam” and their first Spanish-language release Animal Mood is stepping into a bigger version of themselves.
Not changing who they are.
Just expanding it.
Being part of The Golden Mic Season 1 gives them a platform to take that next step to reach new listeners, connect with other artists, and build momentum beyond the local scene.
And that’s the point.
Programs like this exist to give artists the opportunity to grow not just creatively, but sustainably through education, exposure, and community support.
What They Want You to Remember
If you ask Animal Mood what they hope people say about them a year from now, the answer is simple:
“Damn… they did it.”
No overthinking. No overcomplication.
Just proof that the work paid off.
Final Word
Animal Mood doesn’t chase a trend.
They build from their influences, their culture, their community and most importantly, their chemistry as a band.
And in a world where so much music feels manufactured, that kind of authenticity stands out.
Because at the end of the day, they’re not just making songs.
They’re creating moments.
The kind people remember.
If you want to support local music in the Coastal Bend please consider donating to fund the next season of The Golden Mic.
There’s something different about artists who don’t come from the typical blueprint.
Coming out of the Northside of Corpus Christi, Magnu5 represents a part of the city that doesn’t always get the spotlight but definitely has something to say.
His music carries that weight.
You hear it in the grit. You feel it in the delivery. You recognize it in the honesty.
His sound leans heavy into dark, sample-driven boom bap, with clear East Coast influence Dipset energy, Big L sharpness, MF DOOM creativity but it always feels uniquely Magnu5.
More Than Music It’s Applied Pressure
For Magnu5, this isn’t just about making songs.
It’s about survival, responsibility, and proving something to himself, his family, and his city.
There’s a line between hobby and necessity, and he crossed it years ago.
When you hear him talk about empty pockets, about wanting more for his kids, about choosing music instead of the wrong path that’s not branding. That’s reality.
And that reality fuels everything.
His process is simple: Work fast. Stay sharp. Keep dropping.
No overthinking. No waiting for perfect conditions.
Just pressure.
The Sound: Grimy, Raw, and Intentional
Magnu5 doesn’t chase trends and he’s not trying to sound like anyone else.
His music is built on:
Heavy boom bap drums
Chopped samples
Dark, cinematic energy
Straight-up bars
Every beat has to feel right. Every verse has to mean something.
He’s not interested in filler.
If you press play on a Magnu5 track, expect to feel like you’re riding through the city late at night windows down, mind moving, plotting the next step.
It’s music that makes you think. Music that makes you move. Music that reminds you there’s work to be done.
For the City, By the City
Magnu5 makes it clear this isn’t just for him.
It’s for Corpus.
For the kids growing up without a clear path. For the hustlers trying to figure it out. For the artists grinding without recognition.
He wants people to hear his music and say “This is ours.”
Because for a long time, Corpus Christi has been boxed into one narrative musically. But artists like Magnu5 are shifting that perception proving there’s a whole other layer to the city’s sound.
And right now, that movement is building.
Artists are collaborating more. Supporting each other more. Actually pushing the city forward instead of competing in silence.
Magnu5 is right in the middle of that shift.
The Mindset: Hungry
If there’s one word that defines him, it’s simple:
Hungry.
Not just for success but for growth and legacy.
He wants people a year from now to look back and say: “I should’ve been paying attention earlier.”
And if you listen closely, you’ll understand why.
The Golden Mic Moment
Being part of The Golden Mic isn’t just exposure it’s validation of what he’s been building for years.
Programs like this matter because they create real opportunities for artists who don’t always have access. They give a platform to voices that are usually overlooked.
And for Magnu5, it’s another step forward toward achieving his goals.
Final Word
Magnu5’s music pulls you in.
It’s gritty, intentional, and rooted in real life.
No gimmicks. No shortcuts.
Just bars, beats, and a mindset that refuses to stay where it started.
And if you’re paying attention…
You already know this is the kind of artist you don’t sleep on.
If you want to support local music in the Coastal Bend please consider donating to fund the next season of The Golden Mic.
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.
Ryan Garza doesn’t make music you simply listen to.
He makes music you experience.
The kind that moves through your body before your brain has time to catch up. The kind that feels rhythmic, unpredictable, alive. The kind that doesn’t just ask you to pay attention it dares you to move.
“My sound is wild,” he says.
And that might be the most honest way to describe it.
From the Radio to the Rhythm
Long before stages and live sets, Ryan Garza was just a kid obsessed with the radio.
Recording songs onto a cassette player. Replaying them over and over. Studying sound before he even knew that’s what he was doing.
Music wasn’t introduced to him it was always there.
Growing up in Corpus Christi, in a household where music constantly filled the air, he absorbed it naturally. His mom played saxophone. His parents played music often. And somewhere in that environment, something clicked early.
That curiosity turned into instruments.
That experimentation turned into improvisation.
And that improvisation never stopped.
Where Discipline Meets Play
For a lot of artists, there’s a tension between structure and freedom.
Ryan Garza erased that line.
From church bands in high school to leading music in live settings, he learned discipline early timing, arrangement, performance. But at the same time, he never lost the instinct to play.
“I treat it like a toy… I’m always playing with new sounds.”
That mindset defines everything he does today.
His music pulls from everywhere:
Live percussion
Keyboard loops
Funk rhythms
Experimental textures
But instead of feeling scattered, it feels intentional like controlled chaos built on a strong foundation.
Music That Starts With Art
The music industry is constantly shifting. Trends move fast. Platforms change. Attention is harder to hold.
Ryan knows that.
And he doesn’t chase it.
“The art is where it starts… just keep creating.”
That philosophy grounds him.
When things slow down or feel uncertain he doesn’t pivot away from the work. He leans deeper into it. Because for him, success doesn’t come from chasing momentum.
It comes from consistency.
From showing up. From creating. From trusting the process.
The Coastal Bend Creative Surge
If you ask Ryan Garza about the local scene, his answer is immediate:
It’s booming.
What used to be a handful of original acts has turned into a wave of creativity artists collaborating, covering each other, building something together.
“The creativity is off the charts right now.”
And he’s right in the middle of it.
From working with bands like The Tres Matts to sharing stages with emerging artists across genres, Ryan isn’t just part of the scene he’s helping shape it.
More importantly, he understands something many overlook:
Scenes don’t grow on their own.
They’re built.
Creating the Moment, Not Repeating It
Ryan Garza’s performances aren’t meant to be replicated.
They’re meant to be lived.
His focus on live drums, looping, and improvisation means every show is different. Every moment is responsive. Every beat is intentional but never rigid.
“I want people to feel like dancing… to move.”
And that movement isn’t just physical.
It’s emotional.
The Songs That Hit Deeper
For all the energy and experimentation, there’s another side to Ryan’s music.
A more vulnerable one.
Songs like “One Day I’ll Be Perfect” come from real moments stress, growth, reflection. Written in the quiet aftermath of being overwhelmed as a parent, the song carries something heavier beneath its surface.
“I was crying while writing it.”
That honesty translates.
Listeners feel it. They respond to it. They carry it with them.
Because even in his most emotional work, there’s still something else present:
Hope.
Fatherhood Changed the Focus
If there’s one thing that’s reshaped Ryan Garza the most it’s becoming a father.
It’s changed how he thinks. How he moves. How he creates.
“I want my daughter to see me do cool things.”
That shift added something new to his artistry:
Purpose.
Not just to make music but to mean something through it.
The Golden Mic Moment
Being selected for The Golden Mic Season 1 isn’t just validation.
It’s alignment.
A chance to work with other artists. A chance to build something bigger than a solo effort. A chance to access resources that many independent artists simply don’t have.
“I don’t have the team… this gives me that.”
And that’s exactly the point.
Programs like this exist to bridge the gap between talent and opportunity, between creativity and sustainability.
Because scenes don’t grow by accident.
They grow when people invest in them.
Building Something Bigger Than Himself
Ryan Garza understands something fundamental:
Great cities don’t just have music scenes.
They create them.
“Opportunities need to be created… that’s how things snowball.”
That belief ties directly into the mission behind Raps & Apps an organization built to provide education, resources, and pathways for artists to turn creativity into real careers.
Because when artists are supported, communities evolve.
What He Wants You to Feel
If you strip everything else away the genres, the influences, the technical skill Ryan Garza’s goal is simple:
He wants you to feel it.
“I want people to remember the feeling… the waves hitting their body.”
That physical reaction. That emotional response. That moment where music stops being background noise and becomes something real.
Final Word
Ryan Garza describes himself as genuine.
And it fits.
Because in a space where it’s easy to overthink, overproduce, and overcomplicate…
He’s doing the opposite.
He’s experimenting. He’s evolving. He’s staying rooted in the art.
And most importantly he’s making music you don’t just hear.
You feel.
If you want to support local music in the Coastal Bend please consider donating to fund the next season of The Golden Mic.
Others grow up inside of it until it becomes inseparable from who they are.
John Elijah is the latter.
From the outside, you might describe him as a rhythm & blues and soul artist. You might hear the blues influence, the rock undertones, the hints of something older something raw. But the truth is, none of those labels fully capture what he does.
Because what John Elijah creates isn’t just music.
It’s a feeling in motion.
Born Into the Sound
Before there were stages, before there were crowds, before there was even the question of “What do I want to do with my life?” there was music.
Born in San Antonio and raised along the Texas coast in Port Aransas, John didn’t find music. It was already there living in the walls of his home, carried through the hands of his father on piano and guitar, echoing through everyday life.
For most artists, there’s a moment when music becomes serious.
For John, that line never existed.
“It was pretty much always that way.”
That matters. Because when something isn’t a choice it becomes instinct. And instinct is what you hear in his sound today.
The Coastal Bend Effect
There’s a certain energy to the Coastal Bend that doesn’t translate on paper.
It’s loose, but not careless. Free, but not unfocused. A place where people don’t take themselves too seriously but take their craft seriously enough to make it matter.
That balance shows up in John’s music constantly.
“We’re making music to have fun.”
But don’t mistake that for simplicity.
Because beneath that ease is intention years of growth, discipline, and refinement.
If you ask him what’s changed over time, he’ll tell you straight:
He’s better.
And not just technically—but emotionally, creatively, spiritually connected to what he’s doing.
A Sound That Refuses to Sit Still
Trying to define John Elijah’s sound in a single genre is like trying to describe the ocean with one word.
It shifts.
One moment you’re in deep, slow-burning blues. The next, you’re lifted into soulful grooves. Then suddenly, there’s grit rock influence, edge, tension.
And just when you think you’ve figured it out… it changes again.
“We touch on everything… but we try to make it all feel greasy and bluesy.”
That word greasy says everything.
It’s texture. It’s imperfection. It’s human.
And most importantly it’s alive.
The Stage Is Where It Becomes Real
If the recordings give you a glimpse of John Elijah, the stage gives you the truth.
Because that’s where control loosens.
That’s where structure becomes suggestion.
That’s where the music breathes.
“We’ll bring a song back next week with a completely different feel.”
Improvisation isn’t a trick for him it’s a philosophy.
It means trusting the moment. Trusting the band. Trusting the crowd.
It means accepting that the best version of a song might not be the one you planned it might be the one that happens right now.
That kind of freedom is rare.
And when audiences feel it, they don’t just listen…
They lock in.
Influence Isn’t Distant It’s Local
A lot of artists talk about legends they’ve never met.
John talks about the people who handed him opportunities.
The ones who gave him his first gigs. The ones who showed him what it looks like to build something real inside a community.
“The people in your area inspire you more than anyone.”
That perspective changes everything.
Because instead of chasing something far away, he’s building something right here.
And in doing so, he becomes that inspiration for the next artist coming up behind him.
Music That Moves People Literally and Emotionally
There’s a line early in his story that might be the simplest way to understand everything:
“Our music is for anyone who wants to get down.”
On the surface, that sounds fun and it is.
But underneath that is something deeper.
Because “getting down” isn’t just about dancing.
It’s about letting go.
It’s about feeling something real joy, release, connection especially in moments when people need it most.
He’s had people come up to him after shows, telling him how the music helped them through loss, through hard times, through moments where they needed something to hold onto.
That’s the part you can’t manufacture.
That’s the part you earn.
The Bigger Picture: Building Something That Lasts
John Elijah isn’t just focused on his own path.
He’s thinking about the ecosystem.
About what it means for a city to invest in its artists not just emotionally, but financially, structurally, intentionally.
“If you want a city to grow… you’ve got to invest in the arts.”
That’s why opportunities like The Golden Mic matter.
They don’t just highlight talent.
They enable it.
They remove barriers like the cost of recording and replace them with opportunity.
And when that happens, artists don’t just survive…
They build.
A Sound That’s Still Becoming
If you ask John Elijah to describe his music in one word, he lands on something unexpected:
Whimsical.
And if you ask him to describe himself?
Seeking.
That might be the most important part of this whole story.
Because it means he’s not done.
He’s not trying to arrive.
He’s trying to evolve.
“I hope people hear my name and think… he really pushed on.”
This Is What It Sounds Like When It’s Real
In a world where so much music is overproduced, overplanned, and overthought…
John Elijah is doing something different.
He’s letting it breathe.
Letting it change.
Letting it be human.
And that’s why it works.
Because at the end of the day, the goal isn’t perfection.
It’s connection.
And when you hear it when you feel it you understand exactly what he meant from the very beginning:
This is music for people who want to get down.
If you want to support local music in the Coastal Bend please consider donating to fund the next season of The Golden Mic.
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.
Antidot3 doesn’t make music for passive listening.
He makes music that sits with you.
The kind that lingers in your chest a little longer than expected. The kind that feels more like a scene than a song. The kind that forces you to feel something even if you don’t quite know what it is yet.
“I make dark cinematic hip hop,” he says.
And that word cinematic might be the key to everything.
Music That Feels Like a Movie
For Antidot3, music isn’t just sound.
It’s atmosphere. It’s tension. It’s storytelling.
Each track plays out like a scene sometimes heavy, sometimes reflective, sometimes chaotic. But always intentional. Always emotional.
His influences are wide-ranging, from 90s hip-hop to 80s records and even experimental artists like R. Stevie Moore. That blend shows up in his work not as imitation, but as expansion.
Because Antidot3 isn’t trying to fit into a genre.
He’s trying to build a world.
The Moment That Didn’t Break Him
For some artists, the first time on stage is validation.
For Antidot3, it was the opposite.
A high school talent show. A group performance with friends. And instead of applause he got laughter.
“They were pointing, laughing… but it didn’t matter,” he remembers.
Because something else was happening in that moment.
He was having fun. He was creating. He was on stage.
And that was enough.
That experience didn’t shut him down it locked him in.
Built Through Consistency
Since 2018, Antidot3 has been sharpening his craft piece by piece.
It started with verses. Then hooks. Then full songs.
No shortcuts. No overnight moment.
Just repetition. Learning. Refining.
“I just developed the process,” he says.
And that process more than anything is what separates artists who start from artists who last.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ClxIpRdCY90
Music for the Underdogs
Antidot3 knows exactly who his music is for.
The ones who feel overlooked. The ones who’ve been told “you can’t.” The ones still trying to figure it out.
Because that’s who he is.
“I’m somebody who’s been told that before… and I just keep going.”
That mindset lives inside his music. It’s not always loud. It’s not always obvious.
But it’s there.
In the tone. In the lyrics. In the feeling.
Not Background Music
There’s one thing Antidot3 is clear about:
He doesn’t want his music to sit in the background.
“I want people to feel something,” he says.
Even if that feeling isn’t comfortable.
Even if it’s confusion. Even if it’s tension. Even if it’s something they can’t explain.
Because indifference is the only thing he’s not interested in.
The Coastal Bend Energy
Coming out of Corpus Christi, Antidot3 is part of a scene that doesn’t always get the recognition it deserves but refuses to slow down.
“There’s a lot of drive. There’s a lot of passion,” he says.
Artists are building. Experimenting. Pushing.
The city might not have the spotlight of places like Austin or San Antonio but it has something else:
Hunger.
And Antidot3 is right in the middle of it.
Blending Without Boundaries
In a time where genres are becoming less defined, Antidot3 leans all the way into it.
Hip-hop. Cinematic soundscapes. Dark tones. Experimental layers.
It all depends on the moment.
“It just depends on how I’m feeling,” he says.
That flexibility isn’t confusion it’s freedom.
And it’s what allows his music to evolve without losing its identity.
The Golden Mic Moment
Being selected for The Golden Mic Season 1 isn’t just another opportunity it’s a turning point.
After navigating personal challenges and pushing through uncertainty, this moment represents something bigger:
A voice.
“Just to have this right here… it means a lot,” he says.
It’s also a reminder of what happens when artists are given the tools and platform to grow.
Through programs like Raps & Apps, musicians aren’t just creating they’re learning how to sustain their careers, connect with audiences, and build something real.
When It All Comes Together
Ask Antidot3 where he feels most alive, and the answer isn’t complicated:
The stage.
That’s where everything clicks. That’s where the energy shifts. That’s where the music becomes something bigger than him.
Final Word
If there’s one word Antidot3 uses to describe his sound, it’s cinematic.
If there’s one word others use to describe him, it’s genuine.
And maybe that’s the balance.
Dark but honest. Heavy but intentional. Complex but real.
Because at the end of the day, Antidot3 isn’t trying to be understood by everyone.
He’s trying to be felt.
And for the people who do
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.