THE serum – A Sonic Evolution (Exclusive Album Visualizer)
- Omniscient Studios
- Jun 14
- 3 min read
Updated: Jun 16
Celebrate THE serum with us in NYC Instagram | Youtube | X | Facebook | LinkedIn We’re bringing the energy of THE serum and Phoenix Reign to life at the Omniscient Studios Album Release Party on Friday, July 25th at OS NYC – 50 Bowery. Visuals, music—plus real chances to connect with artists, writers, and creators. This isn’t just a party, it’s a creative collision. Don’t miss your chance—tickets going fast!
THE serum FULL ALBUM VIZUALIZER
THE shop
THE breakdown
This album was a long time coming.
I hit a point where I felt like I had nothing left to say when it came to rap. So I fell back and locked in on something new—music production. That summer, I made a promise to myself: one beat a day. Just to see what would happen if I stayed consistent.
At first, I was just winging it—YouTube tutorials, Reddit threads, calling up friends who knew more than me. But little by little, something started forming. A style. A sound. My sound.
I started making beats with anime in mind—specifically the kind of music that plays during fight scenes. That stuff always hit different for me. It made the moment feel larger, like the music was the adrenaline. That idea stuck, and I started stitching in audio from scenes I loved—iconic moments that meant something to me.
Once I got a rhythm going, it actually became fun. I wasn’t overthinking. I was just creating. But, like life does, things got hectic, and I had to pause for a while. After about a year, I eventually picked it back up—slowly. Sometimes just making beats for the sake of it, or linking with DJ MilkyWaay every now and then. He’s been my go-to for real. Helped me sharpen up when I needed it.
During all this, I was listening to a lot of Sade, Tribe, Erykah Badu, J Dilla, UK jazz rap, Westside Gunn, Nujabes, Gang Starr, MF DOOM, Nas, Jay-Z… but also diving into breakcore, stuff like Riovaz and PinkPantheress (she’s an icon). Without even meaning to, I started blending the sounds that my soul was resonating with. Boom bap drums, breakcore energy, jazz samples... all of it.
I kept going back to that idea of stitching sounds. Like hiding Easter eggs in the music. You’ll catch little pieces of anime, movies, shows—if you know, you know. But truthfully, you’ll find pieces of me in the album. I really tried to approach the album in a cinematic way. It’s not just a collection of tracks, it’s meant to be listened to front to back. Please run it through like that at least once.
It wasn’t until I finished it that I realized something deeper: I wasn’t just making beats. I was telling my story through samples. I was making a love letter to nostalgia—trying to hold onto the joy I felt as a kid, the courage I had back then, and carry that into who I am now.
There are messages in this album. Life lessons. Things I needed to hear—and maybe you do too. But more than anything, I just wanted to make something that feels good. Something that leaves you feeling lighter, reflective, hopeful. Like you just watched a really good movie and need a second to sit with it.
Hope you enjoy it.
— serum RADIO*
Why the name serum RADIO?
*serum RADIO (real name is Adonis Suero) is a name I came up with by playing off the English translation of my last name, Suero, which means "serum" or an IV in hospitals. Then I had this epiphany— I realized…music is the IV. My music, like an IV, is meant to heal, energize, or simply make things better. That connection just made perfect sense to me.
The RADIO part comes from growing up with it always on — whether it was playing at home or in the car, it was a constant part of my life before streaming took over. I was always flipping through different stations, hearing a mix of genres, DJ personalities, and curated playlists. It exposed me to so many different sounds and artists I might’ve never found on my own. That kind of variety and creative freedom really stuck with me — and I wanted to carry that same energy into what I create.
So serum RADIO became the perfect reflection of both — music as medicine, and sound without limits.
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