Kyera
Singer. Writer. Worldbuilder
Kyera is a singer-songwriter, television writer, and conceptual artist creating cinematic soul music, story worlds, and emotional experiences that merge music, narrative, and perception.
Featured Collaborations
Passion (feat. Carlos Santana)
“Passion” is a cinematic soul collaboration featuring Carlos Santana, produced and composed by Narada Michael Walden, with lyrics written by Kyera. Originally sparked by Narada Michael Walden’s recognition of Kyera’s emotional intensity and distinct vocal presence, the song explores self-worth, vulnerability, desire, and spiritual connection through a grounded emotional lens.
Passion Amapiano Remix (feat. Goya Menor)
What began as a personal connection to Goya Menor’s voice eventually became collaboration. After discovering his breakout Amapiano sound and publicly supporting his work online, communication opened naturally between the two artists. When Goya heard “Passion” and connected with the emotional atmosphere of the record, the remix began to take shape.
The Passion Amapiano Remix transformed the song into a different kind of movement, blending cinematic melody, Santana’s signature guitar work, and the pulse of contemporary African rhythm into a global collaboration that expanded the world of the original.
Television & Story Development
Long before television writing, music was already present. Inspired as a child by films like Close Encounters of the Third Kind and the emotional architecture of John Williams, Kyera began writing songs at the age of seven — drawn to the idea that sound itself could function as communication, contact, and transformation.
Alongside music, Kyera developed a career in television writing, contributing to series including The Jamie Foxx Show, The PJs, My Wife and Kids, Girlfriends, Third Watch, and Single Ladies. Though many of these projects were rooted in comedy, the experience helped sharpen a voice built less on punchlines and more on irony, character tension, observation, and emotional contradiction.
Early in her career, Kyera worked closely with Keenen Ivory Wayans, an experience that reinforced discipline, narrative precision, and creative range. She later sold television concepts to ABC and Showtime, including a project developed with Tracey Edmonds.
Today, those same instincts continue through The Wasn’t — a cinematic world unfolding through music, story, perception, and emotional signal.
Before television, there was sound.