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Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā Ā āļø ā ēŖ āSCREAM ICONS, feat @cassolopando
#scream#scream iv#scream vi#scream 1996#scream icons#terror#horror#slashers#icons#thecenobites#projeto#ciclo um#jenna ortega#jenna ortega icons#drew berrymore icons#skeeth ulrich icons#matthew lillard#Matthew lillard icons#ghostface#ghostface icons
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Scream (1996)
#horror movies#horror movies icons#scream#scream 1996#icons#icons with psd#scream icons#90s icons#horror icons#horror#movie icons#movies icons#screamedit#movie#movies#film icons#film#horror movie#drew berrymore#drew berrymore icons#rose mcgowan#rose mcgowan icons#courteney cox#courteney cox icons#neve campbell#neve campbell icons
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sza for her song āPSAā
#sza#solana rowe#sza icons#sza kill bill#sza ctrl#sza lyrics#sza sos#ctrl#ctrl deluxe#lana#psa#drew berrymore#super model#top dawg entertainment#black artist#black female artist#black r&b artist#black r&b singers#black celebs#black female celebrities
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What a āļø
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#drew berrymore#drew berrymore icons#ever after a cinderella story#ever after a cinderella story icons#movie icons
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sabrinacarpenter via instagram " alexa play drew barrymore by sza "
#sabrina carpenter#scarpenteredit#sabrinacedit#sabrinacarpenteredit#sabrinacarpenter#sabrina icons#sabrina carpenter icons#sabrina lynn#sabrina annlynn carpenter#sabrina ann lynn carpenter#sabrina carpenter edits#sabrina carpenter moodboard#sabrina carpenter aesthetic#drew berrymore#szaedit#sabrina carpenter instagram#sabrina carpenter packs#sabrina carpenter premades#sabrina carpenter messy headers#sabrina carpenter headers#sabrina carpenter avatars#the drew barrymore show#sabrina carpenter fast times#popqueensdaily#dailypopqueens#musicianedit#musicedit#dailymusicedit#musiciansdaily#dailymusicians
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like or credit @donniedarkr
#90s#90s icons#isinha#90's icons#90's#gwen stefani#gwen stefani icons#drew berrymore#drew berrymore icons#sarah michelle gellar#sarah michelle gellar icons#will smith#will smith icons#brittany murphy#brittany murphy icons#tatyana ali#tatyana ali icons#ashley banks#ashley banks icons#vibes#vibes icons#vintage icons#vintage#icons grunge#grunge#grunge icons
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like or reblog ( twitter@licksel)
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sheila hammond 1x03 icons
ā£ like or reblog if you save
#sheila hammond#santa clarita diet#scdedit#drew berrymore icons#drew barrymore#sheila hammond icons#santa clarita diet icons
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Drew Barrymore
#drew berrymore#1990s#90s#modern hollywood#hollywood#actress#icon#iconic#barrymore#classic#classic actress#classic beauty#classic hollywood#classic icon#idol#beauty#beautiful#golden age#golden era#golden hollywood#timeless#legend#forever#love
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Yāall when I tell yāall this movie made me a fan of horror films, the opening to scream with drew berrymore is ICONIC !
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Moments In Song No. 023 - Kotic Couture
Authentic. Thatās one word that can be used to describe Kotic Coutureās current mindset. From their music, to their marketing, Kotic is making sure to put their genuine self in everything that they do, regardless of who cares. We talk to the artist about intersectionality in Hip-Hop, their love for relatable lyrics, and the never-ending journey towards authenticity.
Listen to Kotic Coutureās playlist on Apple Music and Spotify.Ā
Words and photos by Julian.
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Julian: The first thing I noticed about your playlist is that a lot of the songs are introspective and thought provoking. Thereās maybe only one or two celebratory party songs on there. Was that a conscious choice you made or just something that ended up happening?Ā
Kotic: Itās funny because I didnāt realize how introspective I was until the beginning of the year when I put a song and my friends were like, āYouāre very conscious of yourself when youĀ write.ā Looking at the songs on the playlist, it does include songs that I casually listen to, so it wasnāt really a conscious decision, but it was interesting to see the artists that I like and how they reflect on things and how that comes into my everyday life. I feel like Iām always thinking about shit or being conscious of how I move. I didnāt realize how much that was reflected in the music I listened to until I started looking at my playlist.Ā
Are those reflective songs new songs youāve been listening? Or are some of them songs youāve always loved?
Iāve always always always always listened to āSave Meā by Nicki Minaj. Since āPink Fridayā came out itās been one of my favorite songs. Iāve literally been listening to āCtrlā for the last 2 months. Thatās why āDrew Berrymoreā is my go to song right now. Itās just such a great song. Even āFamily Businessā by Kanye and āDaddy Lessonsā are songs Iāve always cycled through. But as of recent āDrew Berrymoreā has been on repeat everyday.Ā
You mentioned earlier the reason why that song sticks out so much is because it puts into words what you may not always be able to?Ā
Music is such a beautiful thing. A lot of times you think youāre the only person whoās experiencing something and I just think that SZA....SZA and I are very close in age and so I think that album and the way that she wrote it is for people of our generation. Itās very relatable. So as Iām growing and experiencing more things, and experiencing relationships, or different career goals, that was one of those songs that makes sense. It puts my emotions into words. I didnāt know how to say it but this song says it.Ā
When working on your own music, is expressing those not-so-easy-to express emotions through writing a skill youāve developed over time or is it something youāre still developing? I also know that you are really into the club music scene, so is that more introspective side something that was always present at the beginning of your career?
Iāve always loved singer-songwriters, but it always felt like I had to make party music or club music because I was always in clubs. But as of late, and especially since weāve all been quarantined, I feel a little bit more adventurous with expressing myself and wanting to challenge my writing. When I look onto the internet, or look on Twitter, or talk to people, a lot of people feel underrepresented and they want those songs to make them feel how āDrew Berrymoreā makes me feel. They want something real, they want something relatable. This is whatās going on in my life. Just recently I came to terms with the fact that Iām not on the radio right now. I really donāt have a desire to be on the radio right now. I want to make music that feeds peopleās souls and means something. Thatās been a recent shift thatās starting to be reflected in my writing a lot more.
I honestly think thatās where you find longevity. Searching for just that radio playā¦.
Itās going to fizzle out.Ā
Yeah, and like you said earlier when youāre really making that impact on peopleās livesĀ and speaking to what they want to hear, thatās how you reach longevity and stay on peopleās ears and minds.
People just want to be understood. And they want to express things to others, and sometimes thatās through music. It can be a conversation starter as well.Ā
Are some of the artists on this playlist big musical influences when you were growing up? Or are there some not on this playlist that you could tell us about?
Definitely coming up as a rapper Nicki, Missy Elliott, Left Eye. Missy and Left Eye are the reasons I started rapping. Even M.I.A. I always knew club music, but even outside of that I didnāt have a lot of exposure to different types of music. So my friends would hear Electronic music and say, āOh thatās white people music.ā So when I heard āGalangā for the first time and saw the visual I was like, āOh shit!ā And then I found out about Santigold and all these other artists, and it kind of opened up another world for me. It let me know I can make these different types of music, and pull from these different influences.
As of right now Iāve been experiencing a lot of influence from R&B music. Along with āCtrlā Iāve been listening to āShea Butter Babyā by Ari Lennox non-stop, literally. Tidal does a āmost listened toā playlist for the month and my July playlist was one song and then the whole āShea Butter Babyā album and āCtrl.ā
What about Missy Elliott and Left Eye specifically inspired you to make music?
I never connected with male figures growing up. Male rappers never talked about anything that I thought was relatable, or anything that I really liked, until Kanye came out. So hearing Missy, and hearing Left Eye, these artists are talking about things that I was relating to. Theyāre both super creative. I feel like theyāre opposite ends of the spectrum where Missy is so out there and iconic visually and is dangerous as a songwriter, Left Eye was very upfront and vocal about her beliefs and the way she felt about things. I feel like it was the marriage of the two of them that built me as a person, even to the point of me standing up for what I believe in. I remember listening to a TLC interview and they said in the āCreepā video Left Eye didnāt agree with the message so she wore tape over her mouth and didnāt want to put a verse on the song. So itās things like that that remind me to say what I feel and to always be ahead.Ā Ā
I feel like you can also see that with some of the newer artists you have on your playlist. I feel like CHIKA falls into that category you just described as far as doing her and saying whatās on her mind regardless of what other people are saying.Ā
If you havenāt listened to anything else, you should definitely listen to her Tiny Desk. I love listening to EPās, but my favorite thing is performing. So watching people perform something in a more acoustic way is always interesting to me. And the way the production was done, with the background singers being brought out for the Tiny Desk is really dope. So CHIKA is someone I really love. I love her, I love Tank and the Bangas, that's just what I enjoy. I enjoy poetry, I enjoy art. Iām very receptive to people who make art with their words.Ā
Do you have any other artists that you admire as far as their live performances go?
I saw NAO at Afropunk, she is amazing live. Jill Scott, she is amazing live. And very captivating. I did theater in high school, so performance is a very important thing to me. Watching how people put things together, I love instrumentation, I love bands. Someone who I think is very slept on is Azealia Banks. When she performs live itās crazy.Ā
You brought up Azealia and itās really crazy what happened to her. Sheās an incredible artist but I feel like all that extra stuff overshadowed her talent and music. You could honestly make the argument that she laid the groundwork for a lot of the female, and male artists even out today.Ā
I think Azealia is a great example of how the industry, and more specifically the Black community, responds to mental illness. How they respond to mental illness coming from Black women versus Black men. Because you can make the comparison of Kanye and Azealia and it's going to be two different things. I think that when you hear Azealia and some of the things she went through, and then look at some of her actions, sheās someone thatās been hurt. You can tell sheās someone who has issues with mental illness. But I think that the way the world attacks women, and demonizes women, especially darker skinned Black women, it says a lot about the way the industry carried her out.Ā
āBroke with Expensive Tasteā was an amazing album. I donāt think the label pushed her the way they should have. Thereās a lane of people who craft the way artists move, especially underground artists, and I feel like Azealia opened the doors for Black people to come back to Electronic music, to come back to House music, to rap and to sing. And then visually and aesthetically, I feel like Azealia laid down that groundwork which made people more receptive, and opened up the doors for someone like Rico Nasty to take it to the next level.Ā
I feel like Rico doesnāt get the recognition she deserves. For alternative girls in Hip-Hop Rico changed the aesthetic and the sound. And I think it just says a lot about how this industry handles and disrespects Black women. People are just so used to that being the way, they donāt think about it or question it. But yeah Azealia is just super talented, and sheās opened up a lot of doors and pushed a lot of envelopes, and I donāt think she gets the respect she deserves for that.Ā
She definitely helped pave the way for like a Rico Nasty, and even then you were saying Rico doesnāt get the recognition she deserves. Sheās very in your face, with that almost angsty punk rock, emo rock type of energy, and not to pit them against each other, but that doesnāt get the same type of love and recognition as a Cardi B or Megan the Stallion. So that goes back to your point of making sure the playing field is level and everyone gets the shine and attention they deserve. And like you said itās a societal issue, not a Cardi or Meg issue. Theyāre not trying to be the one and only voice for female rappers out here.Ā
Even Cardi just recently said, when they were talking about āWAPā and someone made a comment about conscious female rappers and Cardi was like, āYāall donāt listen to them!ā Thereās a lane for everybody because thereās something everybody wants to listen to, but I think that if you are a femme-identifying person and youre not selling sex then people donāt want to hear you. Or you have to play the game a certain way. Even if you think about Nicki she was like Iām going to put these blonde wigs on and give you this bubblegum pop shit but Iām also going to put rap songs on my albums because I recognize where I come from. So I guess itās about learning to play the game, or wanting to play the game because some people donāt want to.Ā
At the end of the day some people are like, look I just want to make what I want to make, create what I want to create, and if they like it they like it, if they donāt they donāt. And I feel like now itās hard to have these conversations because some people in our generation and younger are conditioned to think that their opinion is the only thing thatās correct. So when people are trying to have a conversation or debate itās automatic, I donāt agree with you letās shut it off. And thereās a lot of tension and things that get involved. Like Rico and Meg can exist within the same world but the world tells us that they canāt. And I think people hear what they want to hear, and see what they want to see out of that and just cut it. It definitely says a lot about society, but things are changing.Ā
Women are running the rap game right now. Between City Girls, Meg, Cardi, even artists like Mulatto coming up. I donāt care what anyone says CHIKA is the best rapper in the freshmen class. Women are really starting to be like, look Iām running this shit, Iām making the content, Iām bringing everything to the game that other people arenāt. A lot of the other younger rappers that are coming up are lazy. Because for 5 minutes when Black Lives Matter happened everyone wanted to be an activist, but now everybody is like letās go back to playing party music. And itās fine you donāt have to, everybody donāt want to express it in their art. So I just think it goes to show the wave, and whoās real. And people are leaning towards authenticity now.Ā
I would make the argument that this decade of rap, the 2020ās, is going to be leaning towards women taking over, and them taking the spotlight, and their voice taking priority. I feel like the 2010ās was when it just started being ok for you to not be rapping about trapping or gangbanging. You saw the Drakes and the Tylers and all of those guys come up this decade, so I feel like the 2020ās now will have women come in and take that role. Plus some of the male rappers are getting lazy. The last three albums you put out sound the same. Nothing is new, nothing is different. Youāre still talking about the same stuff.
And I always question artists who put, not to question their creative process, but if youāre putting out two or three albums in a year or year and a half did you really take the time to craft that? Thereās certain people now who Iām really starting to listen to more. Amine Iām starting to listen to more, and his visuals are really dope. I really like Saba, I like Smino, I like Noname. I think weāre breaking out of that time of there can only be one. It took almost 10 years of Nicki being out before someone was like, oh we can have multiple women. She was like, Ok Iāve been telling y'all there doesn't have to be only one. Or you have like J. Cole who was the only āconsciousā rapper that people were paying attention to but now people are realizing you can like more than one person and itās ok to diversify what you take in.Ā
Itās making room for people to create. And I think people have always been afraid because I think back to watching Jay Z āFade to Black'' and there was a point where they were in the studio and the guy was like, āI donāt want to talk about the shit that Iām talking about but that's the only thing labels want to push and hear,ā and Jay Z was like āYāall hear that? Yāall got people afraid to be themselves because yāall wonāt listen to it.ā And I think weāre out of that time because the internet has grown, the internet is more accessible so people can go find exactly what they want to listen to.Ā
I feel like that goes back to the piece you were saying earlier, like when youāre making music to impact peopleās lives. Thereās an audience for everyone, thereās a space for everyone. If youāre making music to get on the radio your audience is only gonna be so big, but when youāre making music to impact peopleās lives, thatās going to increase the size of your audience tenfold.Ā
I like to think of my music as a book, and each song being a chapter. Like overall, what do I want this book to be about, and who do I want this chapter to relate to? But away from everything else, how do I want to express what Iām feeling and how do I want to be vulnerable to help someone else is my biggest thing. I just recently realized Iām not going to be Beyonce. Thatās not my role, I love Beyonce, but thatās not my role. I can still love somebodyās work and their art and respect it, and want to go in another direction. So I think the realization of like, āIām cool being like the Saba, the Smino, the Mac Miller that does the festival stage, that sells out shows, but I might not be on the radio,ā thatās fine. Itās more important for me to create something that I can perform for 5 to 10 years and still be happy with it. And Iāve just come to that realization, and I think thatās changed a lot of the music Iām creating.Ā Ā
Would you say your latest release, āPink Duragā embodies that new message you're trying to get across?
Yeah I feel like that was kind of a spiritual graduation for me. I think the reason why that song was different was because I produced it. So even making the beat, Iām making this knowing what I want to say, knowing what I want to do. I just think it was a different connection with the music. I think more now Iām in the realm of, āIf you donāt like it, itās not for you but I love this.ā Iām making music for me, that I hope touches other people. But if it doesnāt, I want to make sure the stuff that I release, I can look at it and be like you know what people werenāt receptive to it but Iām 1000% proud of what I put out. And thatās just the mind-frame that Iāve been in. Iām not trying to sell myself to anybody else anymore. Labels donāt know how to sell me. Marketing teams donāt know how to sell me. So Iām just going to do it myself, and in order for me to do it myself it has to be authentic. It has to be something I believe in.Ā
Connect with Kotic Couture
https://www.instagram.com/koticcouture/
https://twitter.com/KoticCouture
https://koticcouture.com/
Connect with Moments In Song:
https://www.instagram.com/momentsinsong/
https://twitter.com/momentsinsong
https://tinyurl.com/MISAppleMusic
https://tinyurl.com/MISSpotify
#Moments in Song#what are you listening to#azealia banks#nicki minaj#Missy Elliott#dapper dan midas#sza#beyonce#m.i.a.#chika#baatchoy#kanye west#hip-hop#electronic#r&b
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