A hip-hop outsider who turned college dropout restlessness into dancefloor anthems and sharp social commentary.
For the full picture, listen to 'Fuck Me on the Dancefloor' for the club provocation, then 'I'm White' for the sharper social edge. That's the range.
She arrived with a debut album called 'Princess Superstar is Born' and immediately carved out a space for herself with unapologetic tracks. Songs like 'Fuck Me on the Dancefloor' and 'Perfect Exceeder' became her signatures, blending club energy with lyrics that deliberately pushed buttons. She worked with artists from Del tha Funkee Homosapien to Amy Winehouse, but her voice always stayed distinctly hers, even when the material drew criticism.
After dropping out of college and moving around, she got into hip-hop through DJ Z-Trip and released her first album. Later records like 'Come on Princess' and 'Half Alive' featured collaborations and a backing band called The Enforcers. She kept making the music she wanted, navigating the reactions to her provocative themes and image.
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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