A Brazilian singer whose 2012 hit "Amiga" celebrated female bonds over Afro-Brazilian beats.
For her sound, try "Chacoalhadão." For her heart, it's still that early hit, "Amiga."
She came up singing in Salvador's churches and community events, pulling from the city's Afro-Brazilian pulse. That sound carried into "Chacoalhadão," a collaboration with Tati Zaqui and Belle Kaffer that feels like a street party. Her music often works as a conversation between women, whether it's about friendship or something more defiant.
She started locally in Bahia before "Amiga" connected in 2012. Her self-titled album arrived in 2015, and she's kept building through features, like on "Pegando Fogo" with Pocah. A televised kiss in 2017 pushed her advocacy into wider view.
Keep it compact: a lyric you come back to, a live memory, or the part of the catalog you would point someone toward first.
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