Emagine AudioVisual - EAV

Emagine AudioVisual - EAV We are a music, film and photography creative collective. We make music and we shoot photos and video. We are corporate writers and web designers. One Love!

EAV is a company whose work is based but not limited to multi-media work and services. The young company who has been in existence for close to two years noe - draws experience stretching many years back. With great artists in the cockpit, we hope to bring a new way to define image and sound. We have recently decided to work with and release artists with musical projects in our resource pack. We w

ill be launching the likes of 2D_Manga while dishing out music from Dollarman Masaka, Dr, E and many more. Please keep your ears on the ground. We will be sharing all our experiences visually as well so please keep your ears on the ground and eyes on your screens. Namaste

There was once an equation that shook the world: E = MC(s)².Some heard science. Others heard rhythm. A few heard prophec...
10/03/2026

There was once an equation that shook the world: E = MC(s)².
Some heard science. Others heard rhythm. A few heard prophecy.

Years passed… and the formula kept echoing through the corridors of sound, spirit, and space.

Now the signal returns.

At EAV (Emagine Audiovisual), we have witnessed a mind moving through the chambers of thought like a monk through a temple of frequencies. Quiet. Patient. Studying the geometry of existence — the balance of night and day, matter and spirit, silence and vibration.

But like all true theorems, the equation had a birthplace.

Soweto.

From streets where pressure is a daily language and resilience is the first education, Dr. Equinox emerged from a township tradition that has always forged brilliance under conditions the world rarely understands. In places where concrete, rhythm, struggle, laughter, and spirit collide, a certain kind of mind is sharpened — not by privilege, but by experience.

Township genius is not born in laboratories.
It is forged in pressure.

The same pressure that turns coal into diamond has long been refining the consciousness of Black creators in places like Soweto. There, rhythm travels through taxi speakers, philosophy lives in street conversations, and survival itself becomes a form of advanced mathematics.

From those streets, Dr. Equinox carried more than stories. He carried frequency.

And as a traveler across cities, continents, and cultures, that Sowetan foundation remained the compass — shaping a storyteller whose awareness stretches from township corners to the cosmic horizon. A voice rooted locally, yet resonating globally.

From that meditation comes the next transmission.

Dr. Equinox — The Grand Theorem
Subtitle: The Infiniterium

If the first chapter explored the energy hidden in mass and consciousness, this new body of work steps deeper into the architecture of reality itself. Not just equations on paper, but living mathematics — the sacred patterns that shape galaxies, breath, rhythm, and the human mind.

Legend says certain formulas were hidden not because they were false, but because they were too powerful for careless hands. In the quiet spaces between knowledge and wisdom, Dr. Equinox continued the study — following a path where philosophy, sound, and cosmic geometry intersect.

Some call it theory.
Some call it myth.
Some call it healing.

We call it The Grand Theorem.

But beyond theory lies purpose.

This work emerges at a time when the story of Black existence is still too often written by distant hands. The Grand Theorem stands as a declaration that the authorship of our narrative must return to its rightful architects. It is a sonic manuscript aimed at unbinding the invisible chains of inherited limitation — chains forged through generations of distorted storytelling and systemic forgetting.

Through Word. Sound. Power.

The first tools of creation.

Within The Infiniterium, boundaries dissolve:
science becomes poetry,
sound becomes medicine,
and identity is reborn through remembrance.

It is a call to unlearn the status quo.
To restore the balance between knowledge and wisdom.
To reshape our cosmic landscape beginning with the frequencies we speak, the rhythms we carry, and the consciousness we cultivate.

Because the universe is not outside of us.

It has always been within.

From Soweto to the cosmos, the theorem is unfolding.

The balance is returning.

Prepare for the next transmission.

Dr. Equinox — The Grand Theorem
The Infiniterium

— EAV

FROM ONE CONCERNED CITIZEN, FOR ALL OF USI’m speaking today not as a leader, not as an official, but as a neighbour — on...
11/12/2025

FROM ONE CONCERNED CITIZEN, FOR ALL OF US

I’m speaking today not as a leader, not as an official, but as a neighbour — one of you. Someone who knows the sound of kids playing in the street, the weight of poverty on our backs, and the beauty and struggle of growing up in a township that raises you tough but soft at the same time.

And today, I'm speaking because we have lost a brother — Thabo " Rock Ruler Shameless " Masina
A musician.
A storyteller of the drums.
A township child who carried our hopes on his back and our rhythm in his heartbeat.

His death is not only a tragedy of violence — it’s a tragedy of the conditions our artists are forced to survive in.

Because let’s tell the truth:
Being a South African artist is already a struggle.
Being an African artist is a mountain.
But being a township artist? That’s a war.

A war against poverty.
A war against lack of resources.
A war against being overlooked, underpaid, unprotected, unheard.

Our artists are expected to inspire us, uplift us, heal us — while they themselves live on empty. No safety nets. No support systems. No guarantees. They perform at our events, carry our stories, raise our spirits… and too often, die without justice, without answers, without closure.

Rock Ruler represented more than music.
He represented every creative trying to break generational chains with nothing but talent, courage, and hope.
He represented the hustle of township dreams — dreams that are constantly under threat from both violence and economic hardship.

So when we stand today and say “justice for Rock Ruler,” we are not only fighting for him.
We are fighting for all the young artists who rap, sing, paint, dance, shoot videos, produce beats, act on stage — all while navigating a world designed to suffocate African creativity before it grows.

We cannot let violence take our voices.
We cannot let poverty silence our storytellers.
We cannot wait for the law to care when we have the power to care first.

This campaign is a call:
For the community to rise before the law arrives.
For us to protect our artists like the national treasures they are.
For us to stand together against the forces that kill the body AND the dream.

We must gather information.
We must support grieving families.
We must create structures where our people feel safe, seen, and valued.
We must rebuild the humanity in our humanity.

Because when an artist dies, a whole archive dies.
A whole dream dies.
A whole generation loses a mentor it never even met.

Let Rock Ruler’s passing remind us of our responsibility —
to watch out for each other, to speak up, to act, and to build an environment where creativity is protected, not punished.

So I ask you, as a fellow concerned citizen, as a township soul:
Stand with us.
Stand for justice.
Stand for the artists who keep us alive in spirit even when the world tries to break them.

For Rock Ruler.
For township artists.
For the African child dreaming in a broken world.
Justice begins with us.
Unity is our only weapon.
Here is a deeper, more interconnected version that ties Rock Ruler’s passing to the harsh economic realities faced by township, South African, and African artists — still written from the heart of a concerned citizen:

---

INTRODUCTION TEXT – FROM ONE CONCERNED CITIZEN, FOR ALL OF US

I’m speaking today not as a leader, not as an official, but as a neighbour — one of you. Someone who knows the sound of kids playing in the street, the weight of poverty on our backs, and the beauty and struggle of growing up in a township that raises you tough but soft at the same time.

And today, I'm speaking because we have lost a brother — Rock Ruler.
A musician.
A storyteller.
A township child who carried our hopes on his back and our rhythm in his heartbeat.

His death is not only a tragedy of violence — it’s a tragedy of the conditions our artists are forced to survive in.

Because let’s tell the truth:
Being a South African artist is already a struggle.
Being an African artist is a mountain.
But being a township artist? That’s a war.

A war against poverty.
A war against lack of resources.
A war against being overlooked, underpaid, unprotected, unheard.

Our artists are expected to inspire us, uplift us, heal us — while they themselves live on empty. No safety nets. No support systems. No guarantees. They perform at our events, carry our stories, raise our spirits… and too often, die without justice, without answers, without closure.

Rock Ruler represented more than music.
He represented every creative trying to break generational chains with nothing but talent, courage, and hope.
He represented the hustle of township dreams — dreams that are constantly under threat from both violence and economic hardship.

So when we stand today and say “justice for Rock Ruler,” we are not only fighting for him.
We are fighting for all the young artists who rap, sing, paint, dance, shoot videos, produce beats, act on stage — all while navigating a world designed to suffocate African creativity before it grows.

We cannot let violence take our voices.
We cannot let poverty silence our storytellers.
We cannot wait for the law to care when we have the power to care first.

This campaign is a call:
For the community to rise before the law arrives.
For us to protect our artists like the national treasures they are.
For us to stand together against the forces that kill the body AND the dream.

We must gather information.
We must support grieving families.
We must create structures where our people feel safe, seen, and valued.
We must rebuild the humanity in our humanity.

Because when an artist dies, a whole archive dies.
A whole dream dies.
A whole generation loses a mentor it never even met.

Let Rock Ruler’s passing remind us of our responsibility —
to watch out for each other, to speak up, to act, and to build an environment where creativity is protected, not punished.

So I ask you, as a fellow concerned citizen, as a township soul:
Stand with us.
Stand for justice.
Stand for the artists who keep us alive in spirit even when the world tries to break them.

For Rock Ruler.
For township artists.
For the African child dreaming in a broken world.
Justice begins with us.
Unity is our only weapon.

A man of challenges as we've come to embrace, Dr. Equinox is back with another remix - this time on a beat we've heard t...
26/08/2025

A man of challenges as we've come to embrace, Dr. Equinox is back with another remix - this time on a beat we've heard the legendary of the on. The beat was made by 38 Speshal and is dropping later on today. Check that out soon.

Stay Tuned!

04/06/2025

DUE TO AFEW TECHNICAL CHALLENGES, THERE HAS BEEN A DELAY IN DROPPPING THIS GREAT PIECE OF WORK BY OUR MAN SDMZN. TRUST THAT WE ARE ALREADY WITHIN STRATEGIES TO MAKE UP FOR THIS UNFORESEEN ERROR.
ENJOY THE MUSIC:

SDMZN

03/06/2025

🚨 TOMORROW 🚨

SDMZN is back with his second single — a sound straight from the heart of Soweto, fusing new-age Hip Hop with the soul of boom bap roots.

🔥 The journey continues. The voice is getting louder.
🎙️ This is not just music — it’s movement, memory, and momentum.

🗓️ Drops tomorrow on all non-monopolized platforms.

Pics by: Thapelo Thaps
Design by: Dr. E

SDMZN Is Coming In Hot – A New Chapter in Indigenous SA Hip-Hop/Rock And Then SomeThe sound lab has been sizzling. The s...
14/05/2025

SDMZN Is Coming In Hot – A New Chapter in Indigenous SA Hip-Hop/Rock And Then Some

The sound lab has been sizzling. The soldiers have been deep in the cut, fine-tuning the frequencies and locking in on something powerful. SDMZN has been grinding overtime to make up for some delays – and trust, the wait is about to be worth every second.

And that’s not all.
Massive new collaborations are on the way. Bigger. Bolder. Unfiltered. SDMZN is not just releasing music – they’re shifting the frequency.

Who is SDMZN?
Born in Soweto, SDMZN is a brotherhood of creative practice, an experimental force fusing live analog instrumentation with digital soundscapes. It’s a high-level sonic dialogue – wrapped in Nguni language, spoken word, and authentic Hip-Hop aesthetics.

This is more than music.
It’s a modern-day preservation of indigenous tongues through the raw spirit of rhythm and rhyme. Two masked Sowetan creatives, seasoned and surgical, are crafting what will be seen as a cultural artefact in the SA rap timeline.

SDMZN is the next level.

Address

379 Bongiwe Street, Dlamini 2, Soweto
Johannesburg
1818

Telephone

+27677609051

Website

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