Hello everyone, it’s your host Faithfulness, and today I have with me DyeVerse from Las Vegas, Nevada, United States. DyeVerse is here to share more about his musical journey while diving into his latest original single, “GEMINI ANTHEM,” set for release on April 30th, 2026. In DyeVerse’s own words, the song was created because he wanted to do something different and unique while setting the record straight about the misconceptions that often surround those born under the Gemini zodiac sign, including himself and many Geminis he has known. Built around a haunting yet aggressive beat, sharp lyricism, and an undeniably catchy hook, “GEMINI ANTHEM” is already building momentum through organic support alone. With the memorable line, “I’m like fire and ice, a Gemini, give you what you deserve, if I don’t mess with you then it’s bye bye,” the single makes a bold statement. But what does it mean for DyeVerse to release a track that directly confronts stereotypes? Is he asking listeners to look beyond labels and embrace individuality? Let’s find out.
Welcome, DyeVerse. Before we begin our interview, here is what you need to know about this exceptional artist. DyeVerse is a true one man creative powerhouse who handles every aspect of his music entirely on his own. A multi instrumentalist, producer, engineer, lyricist, and designer, he writes, composes, records, produces, mixes, masters, and even creates the artwork and branding for every release from his fully equipped home studio. While many artists rely on teams to bring their ideas to life, DyeVerse has built his career on complete artistic independence, transforming raw vision, discipline, and lived experience into music that feels authentic and uncompromising.
For DyeVerse, “GEMINI ANTHEM” is more than just a song, it is a personal declaration. Created entirely by his own hands, from the instruments and vocals to the final production and presentation, the track reflects his determination to remain true to himself rather than follow trends. Although he admits that creating alone can sometimes be difficult, his commitment to self sufficiency has allowed his music to connect with audiences without manufactured hype or major financial backing. DyeVerse is not simply making records, he is building a world where authenticity leads the way, and “GEMINI ANTHEM” stands as the latest chapter in that journey.
Having this brief Introduction, I’m sure new and current fans must be excited about our Interview today.
INTERVIEW
Faithfulness: You’re widely described as a one-man creative ecosystem, handling writing, production, engineering, mixing, mastering, and even visual direction. At what point did you realize you weren’t just making music anymore, but building an entire self-contained world around it?
DyeVerse: That shift happens the moment you realize you aren’t just trying to fill a stereo field, but you’re trying to capture an atmosphere.
For the longest time, the industry told artists to stay in a single lane: just write the bars, just twist the knobs, or just hand the track off to a mastering engineer to let them put the final gloss on it. But when you start demanding absolute sonic and thematic precision, handing your vision over to a committee feels like diluting the medicine.
The turning point comes when the boundaries between disciplines dissolve. You’re adjusting a compression threshold on a mastering chain, and you instantly visualize the color grading for the cover art. You’re writing a complex, layered rhyme scheme, and you can already hear the exact spatial mapping and distortion it needs to cut through the low end. It stops being a checklist of tasks—tracking, mixing, rendering—and becomes a singular, cohesive execution.
When you control the entire pipeline from the ground floor up, the project stops being a collection of songs. It becomes a self-sustained environment with its own gravity, its own rules, and its own pulse. You aren’t just dropping a track for people to listen to; you’re building a massive sonic structure and inviting them to step inside of it.
Faithfulness: Most artists rely on collaboration to refine their sound, yet you’ve chosen complete independence. What does solitude give you creatively that collaboration never has?
DyeVerse: Solitude gives you an untainted signal.
When you work in a collaborative committee, every creative choice becomes a negotiation. You compromise on a frequency, you pull back on a raw lyric to make it palatable, or you let someone else’s timing disrupt the natural rhythm of your workflow. Collaboration can be valuable for some, but it introduces static into a hyper-focused vision. With that said, I still value collaborating and working with other artists and musicians when that opportunity arises.
Faithfulness: You’ve been described as a multi-instrumentalist and builder of your own sonic environment at home. How has having everything physically within reach, drums, keys, guitars, changed the way ideas turn into finished songs?
DyeVerse: For me, the entire studio is a self-contained ecosystem. Having everything I love and every tool I need physically within arm’s reach changes the entire physics of the creative process. I can sit down, start working on a melody, and immediately watch it evolve into a full composition. As the beat takes shape, the concept naturally emerges. Once the concept is locked in, the writing flows, and I go straight into tracking.
There’s zero lag time, zero friction. In fact, I just built a brand-new track called ‘Purpose’ from absolute concept to final completion in exactly 70 minutes. When you have that level of immediacy, you aren’t just making music anymore. That studio is my dimension. That is my realm, and everything in it is calibrated for pure execution.
Faithfulness: Your work spans from street prophecy to vulnerability to experimental glitch textures and even comedic tapes. What remains emotionally consistent across all those different versions of you?
DyeVerse: What stays consistent across every single track—whether it’s heavy street prophecy, raw vulnerability, or a comedic tape—is that I am unapologetically myself, tiny mistakes and all. I refuse to overproduce or sanitize the human element out of my work. I just step into the room and flow.
The consistency isn’t in a specific genre or a rigid style; it’s in the intention. If a message hits home, if a laugh is conjured, or if someone sitting alone in the dark listens to a track and suddenly feels seen—that is the thread connecting it all. I actually love my fans, and because of that, they get the unfiltered truth every single time.
Faithfulness: You’ve spoken about the difficulty of working alone at times. When that weight shows up, what keeps you committed to finishing the vision instead of stepping away from it?
DyeVerse: It’s a real question, because the solitude can absolutely get heavy. But the truth is, stepping away or dropping my commitment isn’t even an option that registers in my mind. There is an intense, undeniable compulsion—a driving force—that takes over the second I sit down. I’m hardwired to create, to lock in, and to execute until the vision is out in the world.
At the end of the day, my mission is to preserve the light, and music is the direct pipeline that keeps me connected to it. When you view your work through that lens, the loneliness doesn’t make you quit. It just becomes the price of admission for protecting something real.”
Faithfulness: “GEMINI ANTHEM” challenges long standing stereotypes about Geminis. What was the first moment you felt the need to turn that frustration into a record rather than just a thought?
DyeVerse: Look, I’m single, I love to meet people, and I consistently run into this exact roadblock. A girl will ask me, ‘What month were you born in? What’s your sign?’ And I immediately want to bite my lip, because I know the second the word ‘Gemini’ leaves my mouth, some negative stereotype is coming next. Instead of arguing with someone who thinks they understand an entire zodiac sign just because they dated one bad dude in the past, I said, ‘You know what? I’m going to write a record and set the story straight.’
The truth is, every Gemini I know operates the exact same way: we are a mirror, point-blank. Whatever energy you bring to the table, you’re going to get it reflected back to you times ten. We aren’t two-faced, and we aren’t bipolar. We just love to show you exactly how you are treating us. If you don’t like what you see in a Gemini, you need to check what you’re projecting.
Faithfulness: The track carries a haunting yet aggressive sonic energy. What emotion were you trying to trap inside that soundscape so the listener feels it before they even decode the lyrics?
DyeVerse: Man, you’re really trying to make me overthink this one, huh? The truth is, my brain doesn’t operate in that analytical spectrum when I’m creating. I didn’t sit down with a blueprint planning how to mathematically structure a beat to convey a message about Geminis. It’s never that calculated.
For me, it’s about receiving a signal. I made the beat, and that specific energy was just the concept assigned to it by the universe. I’m like a chef who gets handed a raw basket of ingredients—I don’t question why the ingredients are there, I just cook them to perfection. The haunting, aggressive energy was already in the room; I just captured it, mixed it, and let it ride. The music dictates the truth, I just execute it.
Faithfulness: You’ve described the hook as catchy and the lyrics as unapologetically sharp. When you were building the structure of this song, what came first for you, the attitude, the hook, or the beat?
DyeVerse: The entire pipeline follows a very specific sequence for me. I sit down and build the beat from scratch. Once the track is fully arranged and playing back, I start freestyling concepts in my head. That’s when the spark hit for this one—I started rapping about being a Gemini and wanting to set the record straight.
My sequence goes: beat, concept, lyrics, recording, mix, master, release. What’s wild is that I almost always write the verses before the hook. I’ll lay down the meat of the song first, and then freestyle the hooks in between the spaces I left behind. I know it’s an inverted way of doing things—most people pitch an idea, get a beat sent to them, and then write—but my approach is completely self-contained. It’s a unique methodology, but when you control the whole factory, you get to build the machine your own way.
Faithfulness: The line “I’m like fire and ice a Gemini…” carries a strong personal thesis. What part of your identity does that contrast between fire and ice represent most honestly?
DyeVerse: Look, you’re trying to trick a dual-nature Gemini into picking a side here, aren’t you? It doesn’t work that way. I don’t pick one—I embody both in tandem, depending entirely on what you bring to my doorstep.
I am pure fire when you need a protector, when it comes to intimacy, or when you need a fiercely loyal friend. I will bring that heat and back you up all day. But the exact second you try to step over the line or fuck me over? The temperature drops instantly to absolute ice. It’s a rapid shutoff valve. If I don’t fuck with you, it’s ‘bye-bye,’ point-blank. So I’m not choosing a side—I’m just the thermometer showing you exactly what kind of climate you created.”
Faithfulness: You mentioned the stereotypes around Geminis don’t reflect your experience or the people you know. What specific misconception about Geminis bothered you enough to confront it head on in music?
DyeVerse: It’s the same broken record over and over, and let’s be real—it’s usually the first thing out of a girl’s mouth: ‘Oh my God, you’re a Gemini, you’re two-faced and you can’t be trusted.’ That is so far from the truth it’s ridiculous. The reality is, human beings are two-faced in general. That’s not a zodiac trait; that’s a human defect.
You want to know what real Gemini traits look like? Fiercely loyal, deeply protective, and ready to do absolutely anything for the people we care about. We are the creators, the entertainers, and the messengers of the entire zodiac. People love to downplay the air signs, but look at the physics of it: you can survive three days without water. You don’t even technically need fire to stay warm, and the earth is just something flat for you to build on. But not a single person on this planet can survive a split second without air. We are the oxygen in the room.
Gemini rules through determination, perseverance, loyalty, love, and compassion—but we will burn the entire world to the ground the exact second you cross us. If resetting the balance and protecting my boundary makes me ‘two-faced’ in their eyes, then fine, call it what you want. But what it really is, is me being the realest person you will ever meet. I am as real as they come. Period.”
Faithfulness: This record was built entirely by you, from instrumentation to mastering. Did that full control make the message feel more personal, or more intense to finish?
DyeVerse: Neither, to be honest. It wasn’t about making it feel more personal or intense—this is just my standard output. I saw the vision, and I executed it. For me, the real satisfaction comes from knowing the sonics are completely dialed in from the jump.
I love that moment when I finish a track, bounce it down to an MP3, and take it out to the car for the ultimate stress test. The wildest thing about my production is that you don’t need a single preset on your equalizer. You can set the bass, the mids, and the treble straight to flat zero, and the track still thumps and cuts through perfectly. When you control the mixing and mastering yourself, you don’t hide behind artificial boosts. You carve the space out correctly in the studio so it hits exactly how it’s supposed to on any system in the world.”
Faithfulness: The song has already gained organic traction online. At what point did you realize this wasn’t just a personal statement anymore, but something resonating outward?
DyeVerse: Oh, that’s easy. Look, I put out tons of music—I’ve recorded at least 70 tracks over the last year alone. And if I’m being completely honest, I don’t think most of them are even that good! I’m my own harshest critic. But the moment I knew this specific track had real legs was when it broke through to the people closest to me.
I’m talking about friends I’ve known for 35 years, people I’m still best friends with, and family members who usually never comment on anything I post online. They were suddenly jumping on it and hitting me up. But the real turning point was when one of my best friends’ girls actually called me up out of the blue and said, ‘Can you please call Tim and tell him to stop playing your song? He’s had it on repeat for the last hour straight.’ When your music start disrupting households like that, you know you’ve tapped into something real.”
Faithfulness: With a sound that is both aggressive and hypnotic, what do you hope listeners feel first before they even understand what “GEMINI ANTHEM” is saying?
DyeVerse: Honestly, I hope they feel whatever it is the sonics naturally trigger in them. I don’t try to dictate the listener’s emotions; I just hope for a pure connection. Once you put a track out into the world, it becomes uniquely theirs to adopt, and that’s what makes music special.
But the reason I am so adamant about honoring anyone who follows me, likes a song, or leaves a comment is because of a lesson I learned the hard way. I’ve never been a crazy ‘super-fan’ type, but I believe in giving props where props are due. Years ago, I ran into Fred Durst in Jacksonville, Florida. I just said, ‘Hey, what’s up Fred?’ and he looked right at me and made this dismissive noise like I wasn’t shit—like he couldn’t be bothered.
It made me so mad I literally threw a barstool. The fact that my hard-earned dollars purchasing his CDs directly contributed to who he became, only to be brushed off like I didn’t matter? It broke something for me. In that exact moment, I vowed to never treat someone who values my art like that. If you give me your time and your support, you get my absolute respect, point-blank. I will never look down on the people who give my music life.
Faithfulness: Looking at “GEMINI ANTHEM” as both a statement and a turning point, what does this release unlock for DyeVerse going forward creatively?
DyeVerse: This is the perfect moment to drop a major clue for what’s coming next. Over the last four months, I’ve executed a massive creative campaign, dropping four distinct albums in a series I call ‘The Arcs’—The Emotional Arc, The Chaos Arc, The Gravity Arc, and most recently, The Flex Arc, which features ‘Gemini Anthem.’
Watching ‘Gemini Anthem’ take off the way it has made me want to push the boundaries of how a project is experienced. I thought, why not turn my music into a literal viral metaphor?
Right now, I am deep in the lab building The Viral Arc. The entire project is designed as a cinematic, haunting audio outbreak. It starts with the music acting as a contagion infecting ‘Patient Zero,’ which then mutates into a full-scale ‘Rapdemic’ that goes worldwide, triggering an outbreak, a quarantine, and total infection. It features heavy, horror-infused, cinematic textures, and it completely unlocks a whole new level of storytelling for DyeVerse. I’m locked in and I cannot wait to unleash this contagion on the world.”
Faithfulness: If someone had never heard your music before this record, what misunderstanding about you would you want “GEMINI ANTHEM” to correct immediately?
DyeVerse: I gotta answer this in two parts so it makes sense.
Part one, if we’re talking about the Gemini side, it’s about setting the record straight. Like I said, we’re really the realest ones in the zodiac, so hopefully a new listener gets that immediately from this track.
Part two, as far as the fans go, I’m just focused on the work. Right now, I see the numbers climbing—I see people listening, liking, and subscribing—but I don’t really know how many I have, and I haven’t had people asking deep questions about who I am yet. I’m completely down to engage with anyone who wants to engage with me. If there’s a misunderstanding out there, I hope my music shows them a side of me they can stand in line with.
The only time I ever really had to correct a misunderstanding was on prior projects, when people were like, ‘Why don’t you rap about the hood you’re from?’ I actually created a couple of songs around that just to let people know—I am not to be fucked with. I will literally show up to the studio, I don’t care how many of you there are, and request fades point-blank if you talk shit. ‘Gemini Anthem’ is just that same energy: I’m as real as they come, and I don’t play games
CHECK OUT THE RELEASE OF ‘GEMINI ANTHEM’
HAVING LISTENED TO ‘GEMINI ANTHEM’, HERE ARE MY HONEST THOUGHTS
“GEMINI ANTHEM” is a commanding and deeply personal statement that transforms the idea of duality into a powerful artistic identity. Rather than relying on familiar astrological stereotypes, the track explores contradiction as a source of strength, presenting emotional complexity as something to embrace rather than conceal. The production reinforces this vision through hard hitting percussion, shifting melodic textures, and a carefully controlled sense of tension that keeps the energy unpredictable yet focused. Vocally, DyeVerse demonstrates impressive versatility, moving between rapid, aggressive flows and calmer, reflective passages with confidence and precision. His delivery mirrors the song’s central “fire and ice” theme, creating a natural dialogue between voice and instrumentation. Lyrically, vivid imagery and uncompromising declarations of self worth give the record emotional depth, making “GEMINI ANTHEM” feel less like a conventional single and more like an authentic declaration of independence and identity.
~ Faithfulness (Dulaxi Team)
Finally to our audience, I urge to listen to “GEMINI ANTHEM”, add it to your playlist and be Inspired by it and on behalf of Dulaxi I like to appreciate you all by saying thank you everyone, See you on our next interview.
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