There’s a difference between artists who make music—and artists who live what they create. Angie Rose falls firmly into the second category.
Coming out of The Bronx, she’s not just another name in Christian music—she’s carving her own lane with a sound that blends hip hop, Latin influence, and raw, unfiltered testimony. And it’s not polished for comfort. It’s real. Sometimes uncomfortable. Always honest.
Her story isn’t built on hype—it’s built on survival.

Angie has been open about her battles with depression and suicidal thoughts, and that transparency is exactly what’s pulling people in. She’s not preaching from a distance—she’s speaking from experience. That’s why when she talks about faith, it doesn’t feel theoretical. It feels earned.
And the industry is paying attention. With both Latin Grammy and Dove Award nominations for Hip Hop Album of the Year, she’s proving that you don’t have to water down your message to reach a wider audience. If anything, going deeper is what’s setting her apart.
Her EP The Letters I Never Sent hits like a personal journal cracked open. It’s not just music—it’s a process. You can hear the tension, the pain, the questions… and then the shift toward healing. It’s the kind of project that doesn’t just play in the background—it sits with you. Forces you to feel something.
But here’s where Angie separates herself from a lot of artists—she doesn’t stop at the music.

Through her Unstoppable Foundation, she’s putting real action behind her message. FEMA recognized the organization for its work in Puerto Rico, and now it’s tackling projects like converting a prison into an orphanage and building homes for widows and children in Guatemala. That’s not branding. That’s impact.
There’s a line in her story that sticks—“Her music heals the heart, but her steps heal the soul.” That pretty much sums it up.
Angie Rose isn’t just trying to inspire people—she’s trying to reach the ones who feel overlooked, forgotten, or done. The ones who don’t see a way out. And she’s doing it by showing them she’s been there too.
No gimmicks. No pretending.
Just faith, pain, resilience—and a voice that refuses to stay quiet.
