VIDEO VOYAGEUR: 3 Q’s WITH DEBO RAY

Debo-Ray

Debo Ray is well known for her powerhouse vocals, and for her ability to command stage presence, but with her latest single “Take That,” the Boston based artist opens a new chapter. Vulnerable, raw and fearless, the song marks a turning point in her music journey – one where personal history, healing and musical innovation come together.

In this exclusive interview, Debo shares the story behind “Take That,” the emotionals that shaped its lyrics, and the process of bringing her past and present selves together on screen.

Filmed in collaboration with Vano Projects, the music video captures the emotional weight of childhood memory, the struggle to reclaim identity and the ultimate act of self liberation.

Watch the Official Music Video here:

1.Tell us the story of this song. Why did you choose to visualise this song specifically in this way?

“Take That” is about reclaiming your power. It’s about what happens when you face down your past, especially the parts that tried to define you, and choose to stand in your truth anyway. I (and my writing partners Jerry Velona and Prince Charles Alexander) wrote this song from the perspective of someone who’s walked through emotional fire and come out the other side with scars and strength.

We chose to visualize this story by weaving together my past and present selves: child Debo and adult Debo, because I truly believe our younger selves never leave us. They’re witnesses. They’re roots. They hold the earliest versions of our dreams. Showing both timelines in the video allowed us to bring that emotional journey to life. I wanted people to feel the transformation.

The video team at Vano Projects helped us bring this vision to life with so much creativity and care, even within the constraints of an indie artist budget (which, let’s be real, is always a part of the puzzle!). We shot everything in just a day and a half across three nearby locations, and somehow, it all came together like magic.

2. What was the inspiration behind this video? (visuals, storyline etc.)

I’m a first-generation Haitian-American, raised in a deeply religious and traditional household. My upbringing was filled with music (both my parents are gifted singers and instrumentalists) but it was also filled with strict expectations, unspoken tension, and emotional volatility. My father had a temper that shaped a lot of my early experiences with fear, shame, and silence. Those patterns followed me, even into adulthood.

For years, I buried that part of my story. I thought if I just kept performing, kept achieving, I could outrun the pain. But when I began writing this album, I knew I had to be honest. “Take That” became a turning point: a declaration. Not of vengeance, but of truth. A way of saying: This happened. It shaped me. But it doesn’t own me anymore.

The visuals reflect that healing arc. There’s resistance, confrontation, but ultimately, release. And that’s the legacy I want to build; not one of hiding pain, but transforming it.

3. What was the process of making the video?

Creating with Bojan and Laura of Vano Projects is always a joy. They’re not just brilliant visual storytellers, they’re collaborators who really see me. We’ve done several videos together now, and they understand my vision, my aesthetic, and my need to tell the whole story from styling, setting, emotion, all of it.

Jerry (my husband, co-writer, and creative partner) and I brought them a loose concept rooted in the lyrics: this idea of a young girl running toward herself. I told them I was finally ready to show more of what I’d been holding back. From there, the four of us sculpted the vision: Laura sourced the two phenomenal actors — Jaelyn Francis, who played little me, and Jimmy Jules, who played my father — and Bojan found the main location. Jerry suggested the Harvard Stadium for the final running shots, which gave the video that haunting sense of endurance and triumph.

We shot most of it in one powerful, emotional day and wrapped up with a quick sunrise shoot at the stadium. The result is something that feels both deeply personal and universally human. It’s one of the bravest things I’ve ever created.

Keep up with Debo Ray on her Website

Saint Tone Lights the Fuse with New Single “Explode”

With brand new single “Explode,” Saint Tone delivers a ballad that digs deep into the emotional trenches, conveying a message of healing and release.

Saint Tone is known for his positive and uplifting songs, but the Sarasota based artist slows things down on this more introspective track. The emotional impact is just as hard hitting.

Listen in here:

Built around warm acoustic guitar, gentle piano and subtle atmospheric textures, “Explode” draws listeners into an intimate space of vulnerability. The lyrics are raw and reflective, with lines like “I am here to expose all the bitterness that soils my soul”, striking a chord for anyone burdened by the trials of life and any unresolved pain.

As the song unfolds, it becomes clear that this isn’t just about sadness. It is more about transformation. Saint Tone invites us to confront the darkest corners of ourselves, not to dwell there, but to finally let go.

The repetition of the chorus – “If I don’t let it go, I will explode” – is both a warning and a revelation. The result is a song that is much like a musical exhale, making way for light again after a rough period.

For fans of Sting, Damien Rice or Ben Harper’s more meditative work, “Explode” will feel like home.

It’s a powerful reminder that sometimes the most important journey is an inward one, and one where healing begins with honesty.

Saint-Tone-PRESS

About Saint Tone

With over 7,000 performances to his name, Saint Tone delivers an uplifting fusion of pop, rock and country styles. He combines catchy hooks with spiritual affirmations and thought provoking lyrics.

Based in Sarasota, Florida, Tony Saint Tone writes music that is centered on themes of self empowerment, motivation and connectionl. His storytelling and high vibe energy together with empowering messages create a musical exoerience that is both fun and deeply meaningful.

Perfect for anthem seekers, dancers and old souls alike, Saint Tone’s music will make your feet move while also feeding your soul.

Find out all about Saint Tone on his Website

Stream music on Spotify and Apple Music

Debo Ray’s Self Titled Debut Shines with Bold Emotion and Limitless Sound

With her self-titled debut album, Debo Ray, the Boston based powerhouse vocalist delivers a soul baring statement of intent. And it is one that refuses to be boxed in by convention.

Known for her virtuosic collaborations and genre blending performances with artists like Terri Lyne Carrington, Esperanza Spalding, and the band Screaming Headless Torsos, Ray has now stepped fully into her own creative spotlight, and she brings with her a striking voice and a fearless approach to storytelling through sound.

Listen here:

From the opening track “Tell Me What You Want,” it’s clear that Debo Ray is not interested in playing it safe. The opener fuses classic R&B sensibilities with a whip smart rap verse, immediately signalling that Ray is here to challenge expectations.

She follows it up with tracks like “Feelin’ Lucky”, which swaps intensity for lightness, dipping into pop’s playful textures without ever losing her signature vocal presence.

Throughout this album there is an energy of total freedom, with each song like a different room in a beautifully lit house.

Drawing directly from her life experiences, tracks like “Gaslight” and “You Read Me Wrong” confront toxic relationships and emotional exhaustion with an unflinching honesty. “Take That”, which is the album’s final track, could have veered into cliché territory in lesser hands, but Ray has transformed it into a moving meditation on solitude and survival. Her vocals here are rich, sincere and even the simplest lines resonate.

One of the most striking things about Debo Ray though is how cohesive the project feels despite its stylistic elasticity. Whether its pulling from rock guitar rifts, jazz harmonies or gospel style vocal layerings, Debo connects each choice back to the core truth of each song.

The other thing to note here is that whether Ray is pulling from rock guitar riffs, jazz harmonies or gospel style vocal layering, she connects each choice back to the truth of the song. Her voice is a thrilling instrument in its own right, morphing from silky smooth phrasing to more gritty soul belts with a total command of her voice without ever losing warmth or clarity.

What makes this debut especially compelling is its balance. It contains joy and pain, vulnerability and confidence, and tradition and innovation all live comfortably side by side. It’s a full picture of who Debo Ray is as a musician and a person. She is complex, radiant and rooted in truth. As she herself has said, “After years of interpreting the music of others, I felt it was time to tell my own story.”

This album is that almost certainly telling that story. One of reclamation, celebration and a declaration of creative freedom.

Find out more about Debo Ray on her Website

Stream music on Spotify and Apple Music

Havilah Tower’s “Open Wide” Shines a Light on Quiet Courage

An emotional folk-pop reflection on the moment your life begins to shift.

Open-Wide-Artwork-Havilah-Tower

Havilah Tower’s latest single Open Wide captures something elusive. That subtle turning point when you realize the life you’ve built no longer fits the shape of your heart.

Wrapped in a warm folk pop instrumentation, “Open Wide” is something of a softly unfolding meditation on self-honesty, transformation and the beauty of rediscovering what truly matters.

Built around a graceful acoustic guitar line and anchored by Havilah’s soulful and expressive vocals, the song opens like a journal entry. It’s private, deliberate and fully human. As she sings of a dream life slipping from her grasp, the listener is drawn into that universal threshold where illusion gives way to truth, not with drama, but with clarity. This is the sound of someone who is choosing alignment over image and heart over habit.

What takes “Open Wide” to the next level though is its arrangement – the cello swells, the ambient textures and the thoughtful percussion surrounds the lyrics without ever overwhelming them. Each instrumental choice seems to lean into the song’s emotional arc, and echoes the idea that shedding old narratives can work to make space for something more honest and grounded.

Lyrically, Havilah strikes a balance between a sense of vulnerability and control. Lines like “the dream that I had, it’s not what I thought” carry both disappointment and empowerment. There is maturity in her writing, as each verse is anchored in lived experience.

Listeners who are familiar with artist like Patty Griffin, Brandi Carlile or even the more introspective moments of Taylor Swift’s “Folklore” will feel at home here. But “Open Wide” is not derivative – it is distinctly Havilah.

What makes the track even more especially resonant is how it reframes letting go not as failure, but as a grace.

It’s a song for anyone who has ever paused in the middle of their own story and asked: “Is this still true for me?”

In that way, “Open Wide” becomes more than a single, but also an invitation. One that asks you to step into your life with your own eyes – and heart – fully open.

Keep up with Havilah Tower on her Website

Stream music on Spotify and Apple Music

VIDEO VOYAGEUR: 3 Q’s WITH REEYA BANERJEE

Get ready to hit the ground running with Reeya Banerjee’s brand new music video for her punchy new single “Runner.”

This visually dynamic video brings to life the hectic, high energy pace of Reeya’s NYC corporate commute days. All complete with high heels, crowded platforms and a barefoot dash through Grand Central Station.

Directed by Reeya herself and edited by Khalifa Cyrus, the video captures the raw, scrappy energy of city life and the relentless rhythm of chasing deadlines, trains, and moments of breathless motion. It’s a candid and kinetic snapshot of a uniquely New York experience, set to a soundtrack that’s as urgent and unrelenting as the story it tells.

Watch “Runner” now and feel the pulse of the city through Reeya’s eyes:

1. Tell us the story of this song. Why did you choose to visualize it this way?

“Runner” is a punky, breathless tribute to my NYC corporate commute era — all high heels, Metro-North mayhem, and motion without pause. I was constantly running: to the train, to the office, back to the platform, across the Mid-Hudson Bridge after work… lather rinse repeat five days a week.

This song captures that manic rhythm. I wanted to visualize it literally — because I really did run barefoot through Grand Central to catch my train. So we shot that. It felt right to put my actual memories on screen.

2. What was the inspiration behind this new video (visuals, storyline, etc.)?

This is my first traditional narrative music video — and it’s rooted in one of the most absurd and real parts of my 20s. The storyline recreates my daily commute: barrelling through the streets of midtown Manhattan, dodging crowds in Grand Central, racing across the platform in heels (or not), and finally collapsing into a train seat as the Hudson River goes by. Khalifa Cyrus brought the pacing to life by blending live footage, timelapses, and performance moments that channel the song’s urgency. It’s scrappy, sweaty, and deeply New York.

3. What was the process of making the video?

We shot on location in Manhattan and Brooklyn — no permits, just sneakers (and high heels!), friends, and phones. Guntas Singh and Jack Quigley helped film the Grand Central and street scenes while I directed and hoped no one would kick us out of the concourse. Khalifa Cyrus handled the edit, cutting between candid footage and the video’s climactic barefoot sprint. This was a deeply DIY process that mirrors the energy of the song: raw, real, and running on fumes.

Keep up with Reeya Banerjee on her Website

“Second Chance” Is Stigma’s Boldest Leap Yet — Raw, Reflective and Roaring with Purpose

7

There’s a fire in “Second Chance” that doesn’t flicker. It surges.

German hard rock band Stigma, forged in 2021, have made good on the promise of their earlier EPs (Last Order, First Call) and delivered something tougher, deeper and far more personal. This is a record born from global, political and internal unrest, and every note very much feels like a response to it.

Recorded high in the Italian mountains and carved out of both philosophical musings and lived in experiences, “Second Chance” truly stands out.

Listen in here:

Stigma don’t look for the easy answers here. Instead, it’s more about owning the chaos, surviving the night, and daring to keep going. From the opening track “The Signs”, frontman Gerald Zinnegger sets the tone. It’s searching, defiant and anthemic.

“Spinning circles in space and time” he sings, with conviction. That duality of doubt and defiance ripples through the whole of the album. “Glorious Victory” follows with a cinematic sweep. Guitars soar, drums pound and the message lands with a force – that true strength lies in control.

If “Second Chance” has a heartbeat, it is “Blaze of My Heart” where Zinnegger is at full throttle, singing like a man with nothing left to lose. It’s a cathartic outburst and a reminder of why any of us hold on through the noise. The bands sounds really locked in here.

Their lead single, “Faraway” is a rare and tender moment. This song is restrained, melancholic and shot through with longing. Inspired by the prison island Gorgona, it is a study in emotional isolation. Yet even here, Stigma show a flicker of hope, of imagined forgiveness.

Then comes “Monster,” arugably the album’s most vulnerable moment. The lyrics here flirt with self loathing but stop short of collapse. The closer “Corruptor” slinks in with a poisonous groove – hypnotic, lean and devestatingly timely. It’s a warning more than protest that corruption is not always loud. Sometimes, it whispers. And, sometimes, it is you.

Overall sound wise, the album strikes a powerful balance. Guitarist Markus Mantau, bassist René Chlebnitschek and drummer Bernd Paptistella lay down a muscular, dynamic foundation throughout. The production captures the sweat and shadows of a real band in a real room.

Crucially, “Second Chance” is an album that connects everything together. It is an album that reminds the listener that rock doesn’t have to posture to hit hard. That heaviness can come from honesty, not just distortion. That a band still finding its shape can already sound this defined.

If “First Call” introduced Stigma, “Second Chance” certainly cements them as not just a band to watch but a band that sees the world clearly and sings about it honestly.

Find out more about Stigma on their Website