On March 28th, Praiz Singz didn’t just release an album. He released a declaration.
This image captures Praiz Singz in his prophetic element — not as an entertainer, but as a vessel. It sets the tone for the weight of this album: sacred, intentional, anointed.
Sounds of the Shofar is not the kind of project you stumble on casually. It calls to you. It waits for the quiet moment when your heart is still, then pierces the silence with something ancient, something eternal. This is not entertainment. This is alignment.
Released on his birthday, the album doubles as a personal milestone and a prophetic offering — a soundtrack for those who understand that seasons don’t just change in the weather, but in the spirit. Each track is laced with the sound of the shofar: the ram’s horn that, for generations, has carried messages across time — of war, of awakening, of worship, of warning. For Praiz Singz, the shofar becomes voice, breath, weapon, and witness.
A striking visual representation of the sonic experience — bold, symbolic, and spiritually charged. The artwork carries the same power as the music itself.
And this isn’t metaphor. You hear it. You feel it. The sound doesn’t just travel through your ears; it rests on your chest. It stirs something. It speaks in frequencies older than language, reminding the listener that music can be a doorway. A bridge. A trumpet blast to call your soul into attention.
But beyond the sound is the man.
Praiz Singz has always moved differently. His work isn’t built for charts or radio spins. It’s crafted for communion — for moments when heaven touches earth and you’re left undone. With this album, he leans deeper into his prophetic assignment, using music as medium and message. It’s worship, yes. But also intercession. Also warfare. Also prophecy.
Sounds of the Shofar is not complete — at least not yet. What we have now is the first installment, a prelude to the full vision. Part Two promises even more depth, more sound, more spirit. But what’s here already is enough to shift atmospheres. Enough to remind us that God is still speaking, and sometimes, He uses music to do it.
This is not a trend. It’s not a campaign.
It’s a call.