PC is a multifaceted recording artist, producer, and drummer whose extensive career is marked by notable collaborations and projects. His partnership with composer, cellist, and longtime Kronos Quartet member Joan Jeanrenaud has resulted in three highly regarded works: the GRAMMY®-nominated album Strange Toys, the iTunes-charting Pop-Pop, and the art-inspired Visual Music. Throughout his career, PC has recorded and performed with a diverse array of musicians, including rock legend Jackson Browne, dream-pop artist Ingrid Chavez, Prince and the Revolution's synthesizer expert Dr. Fink, the avant-garde group Broun Fellinis, clarinetist Ben Goldberg, woodwinds innovator Kyle Bruckmann, Oakland emcee and pianist Kev Choice, vocalist Jennifer Kreisberg from the renowned Native American group Ulali, Emmy-winning musician Van-Anh Vanessa Vo, performance artist Cellista, experimental composer and guitarist Zachary James Watkins, and the Americana/country project Owl Country, which features David Grisman and Charlie Musselwhite. In 2018, PC initiated a new creative and educational project called RIGHTSTARTER, collaborating with award-winning San José rapper DEM ONE. He is also known for playing the SlapStick, a unique musical instrument created by Bay Area inventor and musician Andy Graham.
In addition to his musical endeavors, PC is a published writer who has been active since his college days. In the 1990s, he published two chapbooks: The Daily Balance (Artlab, 1992) and Half-Truths (Artlab, 1995). His 2018 chapbook, Inside Pocket of a Houndstooth Blazer, served as a companion piece to his acclaimed album Physical Science. His notable multidisciplinary collaborations include ongoing versions of the multiracial identity performance piece HALF-BREED, the award-winning project Ir-Rational, the 2012 Fall of a Sudden project in Hong Kong, the 2008 public art installation Light Haiku with kinetic sculptor Chris Eckert, the 2005 poetry/art/music project Twenty Haiku, and continuous performances with Vadim Puyandaev and Erika Tsimbrovsky of Avy-K Productions, as well as ongoing collaborations with choreographer Robert Moses. His writings have appeared in various publications such as DRUM! Magazine, Electronic Musician, Grammypro.com, and Seagate Creative. He is featured in the award-winning collection Indigenous Literatures from Micronesia published by the University of Hawai'i Press in 2019.
PC began his music career in the early 1990s as an R&B and Gospel drummer and indie producer while simultaneously working as an elementary school teacher. In 1998, he embarked on a solo career as an artist and label entrepreneur, releasing his debut album The Trouble I'd Bring You through his own label, Beevine Records. This label also saw the release of A Good Deed in a Weary World (2002), which charted on CMJ, California (2004), and Twenty Haiku (2005). In 2005, he co-founded the innovative record label and recording studio Talking House Productions with Seagate CEO Steve Luczo and other industry colleagues, which later released PC's 2008 album Grab Bag. The Talking House facility eventually became known as Studio Trilogy, hosting pop superstars including Lady Gaga, T.I., and will.i.am.
In his professional engagements, Muñoz served as a Board Governor and Education Committee Co-Chair for the San Francisco Chapter of the Recording Academy/GRAMMYs from 2015 to 2018. He was an Artist-in-Residence with the Dresher Ensemble in Oakland in 2015, received an Asian-American Cultural Center Grant in San Francisco in 2014, and was an Equilibrium Fellow at the Loft Literary Center in Minneapolis in 2013. Additionally, he held the position of the first Director of Education for the former San José Symphony and currently serves as the first Director of Education & Community Engagement for Freight & Salvage in Berkeley. He resides in San Francisco with his wife and son.