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Trey Vizionz

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ABOUT

Trey Vizionz creates music for the conversations people rehearse in their heads but never say out loud. Every memory. Every regret. Every late-night thought. Every version of yourself you almost became. That’s the world his music lives in. Born from Southern Louisiana roots, Trey Vizionz blends sharp visionary lyricism with melodic vintage R&B soul layered over modern trap cadence. His sound feels cinematic but personal, nostalgic but futuristic. A balance shaped by church choirs, Southern marching bands, reflective storytelling, and the emotional honesty of artists like Lauryn Hill, Frank Ocean, and Max Minelli. Growing up in Louisiana, Trey was surrounded by rhythm before he even understood music theory. The church became one of his earliest influences. Not just spiritually, but sonically. “I used to hate going to church,” Trey laughs. “My mom used to make me wear a full suit… I hated that. But once the choir started and the drums kicked in, I was right where I needed to be. Looking good too. I guess moms taught me my swag before I understood what swag even was.” That emotional connection to sound never left him. Before becoming Trey Vizionz, he was a gifted high school band member known for his ability to play trumpet and memorize horn arrangements by ear. The energy of Southern high-stepping marching bands, live brass sections, church harmonies, and Louisiana soul still echoes throughout his music today. Even in his most modern records, there’s always something organic underneath the surface. Something human. But Trey’s music goes deeper than sound. At the center of his artistry is reflection. Not just memories. Reflection of self. Why do people stare at themselves every time they pass a mirror? That question became the foundation for his album What The Glass Revealed. According to Trey, the answer says everything about who you are. “Ask yourself why you stop and look,” he explains. “When you find that answer… that’s your story. That’s what the glass revealed.” Throughout the album, Trey turns internal thoughts into vivid imagery and emotionally layered storytelling. Songs like Reflection, She Was A Season, and Glass House explore identity, relationships, ambition, loneliness, memory, and the quiet tension between who people are publicly and privately. His writing often feels less like songwriting and more like pages from a journal placed over cinematic production. “I believe we all got stories worth telling,” Trey says. “Even the ones we think nobody care about. The conversations we had. The things we wanted to say. The things we wish we did. The inner version of ourselves we keep hidden. That’s the real music to me.” There’s luxury in the imagery. Dark rooms. City lights. Designer silhouettes. Gold reflections against black glass. But beneath the style is vulnerability. Trey Vizionz doesn’t use music to escape emotion. He uses it to examine it. And that’s what separates his sound. In a world full of noise, Trey Vizionz creates records that feel like self-reflection with surround sound.

NOW PLAYING

This one is a reminder that expensive liquor does not improve decisioin making. You'll probably love this one. 3AM Voicemail is a late night confession about missing somone and finally getting it off my chest, no matter who heard it. I just needed to clear my chest. And I did. The good old liquid courage.

3AM Voicemail by Trey Vizionz

3AM Voicemail

Trey Vizionz

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