Vibe Craft Melodique
An Album of Fracture, Memory, Union, and Resurrection
I AM is a ceremonial narrative built from lived experience. It fuses addiction testimony, spiritual awakening, ancestral memory, erotic longing, grief, gratitude, and dance-floor resurrection into a single cohesive arc.
This album is not interested in religion. It is interested in revelation — in how the self dies, splinters, remembers, reunites, and ultimately chooses to live.
The masculine and feminine voices that appear throughout are not merely lovers; they are archetypes — fragmented halves of the same consciousness learning how to recognize themselves again after trauma.
1. I Am The Creator
The album opens inside psychological war. Two voices emerge:
One forged in hunger, addiction, and survival.
The other born through awakening and discipline.
This is the primal confrontation:
Not “who am I?” — but which version of me is speaking?
2. The Nightmare
Here the listener enters the addiction mind-state.
Night terrors, hallucination, insomnia, survival logic.
This is not stylized darkness — it is embodied hell.
3. I Had A Vision
This is the rupture of despair.
Not theology but lived transcendence — the moment when suffering fractures into meaning.
The protagonist does not find faith — he remembers truth.
4. Very Small Batches
The first breath of softness.
The first female solo appears not as romance but as mercy.
Where winter ruled, warmth begins to melt the body open again.
5. Paper Walls
The divine masculine and feminine can now sense one another — but they are not yet worthy of union.
Love exists as longing, not possession.
They whisper through thin emotional barriers built from old survival patterns.
6. My Father’s Bones
This is the axis of the album.
Here the story leaves romance and enters lineage.
The protagonist confronts inherited pain — addiction cycles, silence, masculine fracture passed through blood.
This is not grief — this is reckoning.
The son recognizes he carries not only wounds, but the responsibility to transform them.
7. Alto Grado
Only after ancestry is honored can union occur.
Here the masculine and feminine meet as equals — not as escape, but as evolution.
8. Find You Again
Healing is not linear.
Love stumbles. Memory pulls backward.
This track acknowledges relapse of emotion — without shame.
9. If Death Comes Tonight
Mortality is invited to dinner.
The fear of dying dissolves into dignity.
Death is no longer antagonist — it is witness.
10. In the Still of the Night
This is not passion — it is sovereignty in love.
Two healed beings choosing reverence over possession.
11. Single Barrel (Second Shot Remix)
The album passes through the veil.
What once was pain becoming rhythm.
12. Dirty Hands & Holy Hearts (Resurrection Remix)
The protagonist stops asking forgiveness and begins exercising agency.
Not redeemed — responsible.
13–15. Resurrection Trilogy
Earlier wounds are sampled, shattered, reassembled into dance-floor ritual.
Survival becomes celebration.
Memory becomes movement.
16. The End
The curtain falls without sorrow.
Not because nothing matters — but because everything finally does.
What I AM Actually Is
This album is not about recovery. It is about identity sovereignty.
It is the story of a man who stops surviving, remembers who he was before the fracture, confronts ancestry, unites masculine and feminine consciousness, and finally chooses authorship of his own myth.