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JJ Tyson Proves You Can Make Metal Albums and Worship Music Without Picking Sides

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JJ Tyson’s path into music started the way most teenagers’ dreams do — with a drum kit at 15 and some high school friends ready to jam. What’s happened since then reads like a rock autobiography that nobody saw coming.

The Pennsylvania native, who proudly notes his home state produced Poison, Halestorm, and Live, spent years drumming for popular local bands before stepping away for two years to write his own material. That break changed everything. When he reconnected with a former bandmate and released “Walk Away,” the song exploded online, racking up over a million views and birthing Black Water Greed.

“The popularity skyrocketed,” Tyson recalls. “Magazine covers, interviews — it all happened fast.” But success brought its own complications. Internal tensions split the band apart, leaving Tyson at a crossroads.

Rather than retreat, he pivoted. Working with producer David Mobley, he created The Tyson-Mobley Project, an album that performed well enough to convince him solo work was the next step. Four solo albums followed: “Back from the Ashes,” “Digital Mine Crime,” “The Other Side of Me,” and his latest, “Cellar Dweller.”

Released August 1st, 2025, “Cellar Dweller” doesn’t pull punches. The 18-track album stretches over an hour, diving into trauma, betrayal, and personal demons with the help of studio band Crosswindz and co-executive producer Mobley. Songs like “Unleash the Rage” and “Haunted Hallways” tackle isolation and survival head-on — no sugarcoating, no easy answers.

But here’s where Tyson’s story gets interesting. While “Cellar Dweller” delivers hard rock intensity, he’s simultaneously working on his second Christian album, “Army of Faith,” due late September, plus a Christmas album featuring 12-14 original songs scheduled for November. It’s a range that would give most artists whiplash.

The reason becomes clear when Tyson talks about his fans. “I write meaningful lyrics that have touched a lot of hearts,” he says. “Hopefully my message can help them cope with issues they may have.” He shares stories of listeners who’ve told him his music helped them through breakups and toxic relationships. One fan said he “wrote her life in five minutes.”

Looking ahead, there’s talk of touring in mid-2026, though for now, the focus remains on perfecting the music. His message to fans mixes rock attitude with spiritual conviction: “I love my hard rock roots but I love my messages I put in my Christian songs, to spread the word of God to the world. This world is falling apart and we need to pull together and love one another.”

His advice for others cuts through the typical music industry noise. “Just do your own thing and what makes you happy — it reflects on your fans, and they are the ones that make you or break you. Stay focused and loyal.” It’s the kind of wisdom you only get from someone who’s watched a band implode at peak success, rebuilt from scratch, and discovered that authenticity matters more than any genre boundary. The guy making rage-filled tracks about personal demons is the same one writing Christmas songs and Christian albums about bringing people together.

What stands out is how he treats fan loyalty as a two-way street. They’re not just consumers — they’re the reason he keeps pushing boundaries between hard rock and worship music, between anger and healing. When someone tells you your song helped them leave a toxic relationship, that changes how you approach your craft. Tyson gets that. He admits it’s been a long road, crediting the right connections and people along the way, but ultimately his message stays consistent: stay true, stay focused, and remember who you’re really making music for.

Fans can find Tyson’s music across platforms including YouTube, Spotify, Apple Music, Pandora, and connect on Facebook.

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