SDC RADIONET

Saturday, May 9, 2026

Ace Muni

SDC RadioWorks Music Review - 

Ace Muni and “Workin’ On My Flow” Featuring Princess G Deliver a Story of Growth, Legacy, and Real-Life Hip Hop



By SDC News One

DENVER [IFS] -- Hip hop has always been at its best when it tells the truth. Not just polished studio stories or manufactured personas, but real experiences shaped by hardship, survival, family, growth, and self-discovery. That tradition continues strongly with Denver artist Ace Muni, whose newest release, “Workin’ On My Flow” featuring his daughter Princess G, stands as both a personal milestone and an example of how independent hip hop continues evolving across generations.


Born and raised in the Eastside projects of Denver, Colorado, Ace Muni’s musical journey reflects the type of lived experience that has historically fueled authentic rap music for decades. His story is not one built overnight through viral trends or industry shortcuts. Instead, it is rooted in persistence, self-development, setbacks, and transformation.

Ace Muni first began pursuing music seriously at the age of 15 while attending Eagle Rock boarding school. During that time, he immersed himself deeply into studio work, spending countless hours learning the craft and sharpening his skills. Like many developing artists, he admits that his early rap abilities still needed work. Yet that honesty is part of what makes his journey compelling. Great artists are rarely born fully formed; they evolve through experience, discipline, and adversity.

According to Ace Muni, it was not until he returned home after school that he truly “found his voice.” That phrase carries major significance in hip hop culture. Finding one’s voice often means more than simply improving technically as a rapper. It means discovering personal identity, emotional truth, confidence, and perspective. For many artists coming from underserved communities, that voice is shaped directly by the realities around them.



His time in the legal system became another turning point that changed not only his outlook on life, but also his music itself. Hip hop has long served as a form of reflection and survival for artists navigating incarceration, poverty, violence, and systemic barriers. Ace Muni’s story fits within that broader historical tradition of artists using music as both testimony and transformation.

Following his release, Ace Muni made a deliberate decision to redirect his future. Rather than allowing his circumstances to define him permanently, he entered the electrical trade and eventually became a Journeyman electrician within five years. That achievement deserves recognition because it highlights a side of hip hop culture that often goes underreported: discipline, labor, responsibility, and reinvention.

While building a professional career outside music, Ace Muni continued developing as an artist. Signing with Lajonz Inc opened additional performance opportunities and placed him alongside notable names within the rap world, including Wu-Tang affiliate Eternal, who later appeared on Ace Muni’s track “Home Cookin.” He also shared stages with artists such as Paul Wall and X-Raided, further expanding his experience as a live performer.

During this period, Ace Muni released the album “Livin Hellbound” under Lajonz Inc, contributing to his growing presence in independent hip hop circles. Yet one of the most important decisions in his career came after his contract ended, when he chose to establish his own company, Ace Muni Music LLC.



That move reflects a larger educational conversation happening throughout modern hip hop regarding ownership and independence. More artists today are learning the importance of controlling their masters, branding, marketing, publishing rights, and creative direction. By launching his own label, Ace Muni joined a growing generation of independent artists focused not only on music creation, but also on entrepreneurship and self-sustainability.

Under Ace Muni Music LLC, he released tracks including “Home Cookin,” “Passion and Xtasy,” and “Throw Your Pistols in the Sky.” These projects helped further shape his identity as an artist balancing street authenticity with broader life experiences.



However, another major evolution occurred after marriage and fatherhood entered his life. Like many artists who mature personally over time, Ace Muni’s music also began shifting in tone and purpose. Rather than leaning entirely into aggressive or explicit themes, he moved toward creating cleaner music with more family-centered energy. This transition is particularly important in today’s music landscape because it demonstrates that hip hop can mature alongside the artist without losing credibility or emotional depth.

That growth is clearly reflected in projects like “Bond of a Brothahood” and now most notably “Workin’ On My Flow.”

Released April 3, 2026 under Ace Muni Music LLC, “Workin’ On My Flow” stands out immediately because of its warmth and sincerity. The song blends nostalgic hip hop elements with modern independent rap production, creating a track that feels accessible while still grounded in lyrical authenticity.


What truly elevates the song, however, is the inclusion of Ace Muni’s 9-year-old daughter, Genevieve “Princess G” Muniz.

Princess G brings an undeniable charm and energy to the record. Her presence adds innocence, hopefulness, and emotional texture that transforms the track from simply another rap release into something much more personal. The chemistry between father and daughter creates a natural dynamic that listeners can genuinely feel throughout the song.

In many ways, “Workin’ On My Flow” represents legacy-building through music. Hip hop has now existed long enough for multiple generations of families to participate together artistically. What once began in block parties during the 1970s has evolved into a global culture where parents and children now collaborate creatively. Ace Muni and Princess G’s partnership symbolizes that evolution beautifully.

Musically, the song succeeds because it does not try too hard to manufacture emotion. The catchiness feels organic rather than forced. The production leaves enough room for both artists to shine while maintaining a smooth, replayable rhythm. Ace Muni delivers grounded lyricism with confidence and maturity, while Princess G contributes youthful charisma that instantly makes the track memorable.

There is also something refreshing about hearing hip hop centered around positivity, family connection, and artistic growth without sacrificing authenticity. In an era where controversy often dominates attention, songs like “Workin’ On My Flow” remind audiences that meaningful rap music can still uplift while remaining relatable.

From a broader educational standpoint, Ace Muni’s career arc also highlights the diversity within independent hip hop culture. His journey touches on incarceration, skilled labor, entrepreneurship, fatherhood, artistic evolution, and community identity. Those experiences collectively shape his music into something grounded in real life rather than image construction.

That realism may ultimately become one of Ace Muni’s greatest strengths moving forward. Audiences increasingly connect with artists who present honest narratives instead of artificial branding. His willingness to openly discuss personal growth, mistakes, and transformation gives his catalog emotional credibility.

Meanwhile, Princess G’s appearance hints at exciting future possibilities. Young artists growing up around music often absorb rhythm, performance instincts, and creativity naturally. Her confidence on the track suggests genuine potential that listeners may continue watching closely as her talents develop.

For longtime hip hop fans, “Workin’ On My Flow” also taps into an older spirit of rap music where storytelling, chemistry, and personality mattered just as much as commercial trends. It carries a sense of heart that many listeners may find refreshing.

Ace Muni’s journey from Denver’s Eastside projects to independent label ownership and collaborative family artistry is ultimately a story about evolution. Every stage of his life appears to have reshaped his sound — from boarding school experimentation to street survival, incarceration, career building, entrepreneurship, marriage, and fatherhood.

That ongoing evolution is exactly what keeps artists relevant and human over time.

With “Workin’ On My Flow,” Ace Muni and Princess G have created more than just a catchy single. They have created a snapshot of generational connection through music — one built on resilience, growth, and authenticity.

For independent hip hop supporters, family-oriented rap fans, and listeners searching for music with genuine personality, this release deserves attention.

SDC RadioWorks will certainly be watching what Ace Muni Music LLC delivers next. 

Workin’ On My Flow



Born and raised in the Eastside projects of Denver, Colorado my music journey started at age 15 while attending a boarding school called Eagle Rock. 

I practically lived in the studio and worked endlessly on refining my skills. However, my rap skills still left a lot to be desired! It wasn’t til I finished school and moved back to the hood, that I “found my voice”. I ended up in the system right when I was of legal age and being locked up really changed my music too. 

Upon release, I changed my attitude and decided to do something with my life. I joined the electrical trade and ended up being a Journeyman about 5 years later. Signed with Lajonz Inc and started performing a lot. I opened for artists like eternal from Wu Tang (who ended up featuring on a track called “Home Cookin’ with me) Paul Wall, X-Raided and many more. 

I released an album called “Livin Hellbound” with Lajonz Inc. after my contract was up I went on my own and founded Ace Muni Music LLC. Focused solely on marketing, I released “Home Cookin” “Passion and Xtasy” and “Throw Your Pistols in the Sky”. After being married and having a beautiful daughter, my music changed again. 

I started making more clean music thus “Bond of a Brothahood” and now “Workin’ On My Flow” which features my 9yo daughter Genevieve “Princess G” Muniz. I look forward to releasing plenty more songs in my young career.

Hip Hop/Rap artist, Ace Muni, releases the single “Workin’ On My Flow” Feat. Princess G! This beautiful song brings a nostalgic sense of catchiness mixed with great lyricism. Princess G is the 9yo daughter of Ace Muni and she sings and raps on this track. This song was released under the label Ace Muni Music LLC on April 3rd, of 2026. Here are the song links:

Spotify:https://open.spotify.com/track/6JBF3cRiwB8SqwTqLBHfIy

Apple Music: https://music.apple.com/us/album/workin-on-my-flow-feat-princess-g-single/1880546786

YouTube: https://youtu.be/zVWJ52YRchk?si=La5P5s0wMDlpSbLw

All other platforms: https://distrokid.com/hyperfollow/acemuni/workin-on-my-flow-feat-princess-g-2

Contact Ace Muni here:

Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/share/1cB356UAQh/?mibextid=wwXIfr

Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/ace_muni303?igsh=Nnp6cnFteXk2OXFz&utm_source=qr

TikTok: https://www.tiktok.com/@ace_money303?_r=1&_t=ZT-95I5cIE4Kwn

For press inquiries and/or booking, contact Josh Muniz 303-999-7952 or email acemunimusic@yahoo.com


Basic Band Info
Ace Muni
Workin’ On My Flow Feat Princess G
2026
blbproductionz303@gmail.com
Hip hop/R&B
Tupac, Biggie, Blackstreet, College Boyz, Ludacris, Mase, Eminem, 50 Cent
Ace Muni
ASCAP (USA)
Geographic
Denver
United States
Yes
 
Band Description
Im Josh “Ace Muni” Muniz. I’m from Denver Colorado and started making music when I was 15. I founded Ace Muni Music LLC with singles such as Bond of a Brothahood, Passion and Xtasy, Throw Your Pistols in the Sky(as well as a remix), and World Changez
Additional Band Websites
   


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