Photo: DOMINIC FONDON
The voice remains the most dynamic instrument of all. Emotions echo through even its subtlest inflections and nuances. Atozzio wields his impressive range with the control of a master musician, manipulating the highs and lows with confidence and projecting just the right amount of Jacksonville grit. After penning music behind-the-scenes for everyone from Mario to Chris Brown,the Florida-born and Atlanta-based force of nature amplifies the full scope of his talents on his solo debut for MUSE GROUP.
āMy voice is the lead instrument,ā he affirms. āI conduct all of the harmonies and background vocals and leave space for it to breathe. You can vibe to the record without any other instruments. It comes down to the tone and how it sits in certain pockets. I also speak and sing differently, because Iām from Jacksonville.ā
Mom shipped out to Iraq to serve in the U.S. military during Operation Desert Storm, and Atozzio initially absorbed music through his grandma who played gospel constantly. When his mother returned, she introduced him to R&B and the likes of Lenny Williams and Prince (āAdoreā remains a personal favorite). He honed his talents in childrenās choir at church and during elementary school plays. In high school, he joined various youth choirs. Through a serendipitous turn of events, he met the legendary Isaac Hayes.
āIsaac asked me what I wanted to be, and I said, āI want to be a singer, songwriter, and producer,āā recalls Atozzio. āHe said, āIf you donāt believe you have the abilities to be everything you want to be, youāll never be it.ā That stuck with me for all of these years. I knew I just had to believe.ā
Through MySpace, he connected with producer and songwriter Christopher āDeepā Henderson [Jamie Foxx, T-Pain]. Henderson recognized his talent and became a mentor, opening the door for Atozzioās career as a songwriter and producer. He notably wrote āKryptoniteā [feat. Rich Boy] for Marioās Go, āOfficially Overā for New Kids On The Blockās Billboard Top 200 #2 comeback album The Block, and āSing Like Meā for Chris Brownās chart-topping gold-certified Graffiti. Plus, his discography expanded to include Jay Seanās international banger āIām All Yoursā [feat. Pitbull], cracking the Billboard Hot 100 and reaching double-platinum status in Australia. He powered āLove Me Some Youā and āK.I.S.S.ā for Mýa as well. Plus, he collaborated with Lady Gaga, Enrique Iglesias, and Brandy in the studio. Simultaneously, he cooked up a simmering style of his own as a solo artist, leaning into nineties R&B on early independent releases like āSituationship.ā
āWomen are still playing all of the great music from when I was a kid,ā he says. āWe all love that sound. Itās missing right now, so Iām trying to give you the vintage R&B you want that nobody else is willing to give. Iām putting my own spin on it.ā
He does just that on the 2022 single āCure.ā His fiery falsetto resounds over a laidback bass line and airy cymbals. It builds towards a climactic chorus ignited by vocal fireworks.
āItās real shit,ā he explains. āEvery time Iāve leveled up in life, it was because of the words of a woman. āCureā is me being vulnerable. At the time, I was in a relationship where I was considering marriage. We were having a moment and an issue. I was addicted to her. This was the first woman I couldnāt let go of. She was the cause of my pain and the cure at the same time.ā
Signed to legendary music executive Vince Herbertās MUSE GROUP now, Atozzioās primed to connect worldwide, because heās real.
āWhen you listen to this, I hope you relate,ā he leaves off. āThis is all honest. Iām from the hood, but Iām vulnerable, fly, and a grown man. I want men to be comfortable enough to be vulnerable. This is real energy, real feelings, and real music.ā