Songwriter CJ Tuttle isn't trying to replace artists. He's trying to prove that a lyric — the right one — can survive any throat that sings it.
CJ Tuttle sang in his old band twenty-five years ago. He's the first to admit that's most likely why it never went anywhere. So he spent the next two decades writing songs and waiting for someone else's voice to find them.
"I write songs but I can't sing. AI gave me the voices I never had."
In 2025 he found Suno, fed in his old lyrics, and CodiKrome was the first voice that came back. The 15-track debut album Mama Didn't Raise No Quitter arrived that August alongside a companion novel. Since then the roster has grown to five distinct artists — country, rock, pop/reggae, soul/blues, modern soul — all the same writer, finally getting heard.
Not a replacement for human artists. A demonstration of what one writer sounds like when he stops waiting.
Same lyrics. Different voices. Different rooms. Every song below started as words on paper — now you can hear them all the ways they could be sung.
Want to see them all in motion? The video library is right here →
Every track on this site started as a lyric on paper. If you're looking for original songs to record, cut, or license — the catalog's open. Serious inquiries only.
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