The Sincasa Frequency: A Forensic Audit
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Summary
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In Season 3, Episode 2, Steven Robert Meyers Jr. pulls back the curtain on the sonic filing cabinet known as Sincasa Metal. This isn’t just an album; it’s a forensic monument. While the Alamance County court system, weaponized by opposing counsel, moved to redact his rights and erase his role as a father, Steven turned to the only language that couldn’t be silenced: high-decibel, high-fidelity frequency.
This episode traces the "Why" behind the noise. It begins with the raw origins of the genre—born not in a studio, but in a mobile laboratory powered by a cigarette lighter. Steven reveals how he used his car as a fortress of solitude, protecting his quality of life with tinted windows and dabs while the world outside remained oblivious. From those traveling car sessions to the ten months spent rebuilding life at dear friends Brian and Stephanie’s, every riff and drum hit serves as a recorded recollection of survival.
Steven breaks down the neurochemistry of creation, exploring how the Serotonin and Dopamine released during the mixing process provided a natural high—a chemical necessity for enduring "Institutional Gaslighting" and the "Sleaze" of the family court system. With technical precision, he audits the tracks using his Steven Slate VSX and Joey Sturgis Tones plugins, (or at least the Billy Decker ones he has access to) explaining how each dial turned on the JST plugins was a step toward reclaiming his agency.
From the systemic bench of Judge Larry Brown and the attempt to receive unredacted FPOA requests from Alamance County Assistant Attorney J. Kwame Opata (both honorable men) to the familial "Groupthink" of the Armada (not honorable worth a fuck), no one is spared in this audit. Yet, through the "autistic anger" and the cortisol-driven endurance of the Burlington-to-Beckley drive, the episode finds its light in "Kiara, My Light." This is a story of a father fulfilling every court order—even the invasive ones—to ensure his daughter one day knows the truth. It is a legacy of impact, a testament to endurance, and a warning to those who tried to break him: the record is permanent.
Welcome to the story behind the Meyers Family Conspiracy Soundtrack.
"The audit is open. Stay put."