| 25.08.2023: Iggy Azalea - 'Money Come' - new music video out now!02.07.2022: Iggy Azalea - 'Iam The ...club' - new music video out now!  Fast ein ganzes Jahr war es ruhig um Iggy Azalea, doch nun gibt es endlich neues Material! Das Album "Digital Distortion" erscheint im Frühjahr und die erste Single ist bereits bekannt: "Team" heißt der neuste Track der australischen Rapperin. Dazu gibt es nun auch ein neues Video und wie Justin Bieber veröffentlichte sie es als Dance-Version inklusive Lyrics. Der Clip wurde von Jose Omar Hernandez gedreht   Iggy Azalea would be the first to  admit that she's something of an outsider in the world of rap. As a white girl  from rural Australia, raised in the small New South Wales town of Mullumbimby  (population: 3,000), how could she not be? It's appropriate that she's risen to  the status of one of the most promising new MCs in an era when hip-hop has  never been more open to artists from a diversity of backgrounds. It also demonstrates  that Iggy isn't just an outsider, though. Iggy has had cosigns not only from  King of the South T.I. but rap royalty from Dr. Dre to Snoop Dogg; in 2012, she  became the first ever woman to be named to XXL's Freshman list. Iggy Azalea has  succeeded in gaining the respect of the inner circle as well. It's remarkable  to think that, just six years ago, a 16-year-old Iggy touched down in Miami  airport, ostensibly for a fortnight's holiday, but with the intention of  escaping Australia for good. She knew just one person in the entire USA.   But in a sense, Iggy's background is  perfect for hip-hop. The drive and the hustle illustrated by that flight to the  other side of the world; the toughness and poverty of life in the Australian  countryside. "Does being from the country mean I'm a pussy, or soft?"  she laughs. "Because the country where I'm from is hard. People there are  tough as nails. I wouldn't fuck with anyone from there. Whether you're trapped  in an inner city or in the middle of fucking nowhere, they're both really hard  to get out of. It breeds hard people, because it's about the lack of privilege.  It's not the same privileges you're lacking, of course, but when you're lacking  anything you have to be a fighter."   Iggy's love affair with America began  at the age of 11, when her grandparents took her on a road trip starting in Los  Angeles. "I bought a blue wig on Sunset Strip and I wore it everywhere…I  remember seeing the showgirls in Las Vegas and thinking, wow, I wish this was  my life," she remembers. As a teenager, her love of hip-hop - Busta  Rhymes, Missy Elliott, Field Mob but most of all 2Pac - deepened this while  also isolating her at home. Searching for rap music online, she bonded with  another teenager in the Bahamas. "His name was Derek; he was my only  friend. We're still friends to this day. I'd send him rap songs I'd done and  say, what do you think? You're American, your opinion is legit! He really  encouraged me." By the time Iggy had hatched her plan to emigrate, Derek  had moved to Miami. "He was literally the only person I knew. So I was  like, well, shit…guess I'm just gonna go stay at Derek's house. I hope he's not  an axe murderer. And he wasn't. He picked me up from the airport with his  friends on 4th of July - I remember it was raining and there were fireworks  going off - and that's who I became friends with."   To fly across the world to pursue a  dream, knowing just one other person: it's the kind of impulsive act that seems  insane to even Iggy herself, looking back. "You're a kid, so you don't have  any idea how big things are. I was scared, but I was more scared of what would  happen if I stayed where I was. It wasn't just about going somewhere to be a  rapper. It was about going somewhere to feel like I could fit in. I was more  scared of being unhappy and stuck."   Rap is about telling stories, and Iggy  has stories that have never been told in hip-hop before - and she's planning to  open up about them on her debut album proper, which she's writing while  currently holed up in - of all places - the Welsh countryside. Her musical  journey to get to this point has been one of trial and error played out in  public: the mixtape which first garnered her mainstream attention, Ignorant  Art, was the kind of impressive, raw statement one expects from an unknown with  no pressure on her. Since then, collaborations with everyone from Southern  rappers to EDM artists have followed as Iggy tried to nail down her sound; the  ridiculously catchy single, "Murda Bizness", demonstrated a growing  knack for songcraft - as well as a brilliant Toddlers & Tiaras-themed  video, cheekily comparing the cut-throat competition of the rap game to child  beauty pageants. Last October, a follow-up mixtape, TrapGold, indicated that  she'd found her voice. Almost wholly produced by Diplo, it combines booming,  clattering trap production with Iggy sounding more aggressive and confident  than ever, both when she rattles off doubletime flow or when she slows it down  to menace the listener. "I was so mad and frustrated and angry, that's why  it's so aggressive," she explains. "I felt mad at people who'd fucked  me over, I was mad about people shitting on me for being on the XXL cover, I'd  broken up in my relationship. After I did TrapGold I felt like I'd let it all  out. My album will definitely be like that, because I liked the way that made  me feel…" To that end, as well as Diplo, producers from Flosstradamus to  Bro Safari are sending Iggy beats to work with.   TrapGold also showcases a lot of what  makes Iggy so distinct as an artist. In between the shit-talking and gleeful  bragging, she sprinkles snippets of interviews with Salvador Dali, Andy Warhol  and David LaChapelle; as the title of her first mixtape indicated, Iggy is all  about combining ignorance and art in a fresh way. As a child, art was another form  of escapism alongside rap, instilled in her by her comic book artist father;  she tells stories about bonding with Pusha T over their mutual love of  Basquiat. But, as she says, in rap "someone can have the best metaphor and  someone else could just say, 'Fuck you, bitch!' - and people want to hear the  second one because of the way it makes you feel inside." Iggy gravitated  towards Southern rap for a reason - "The South doesn't give a fuck and  they have more fun" - and perfected a distinct, uptempo-friendly clipped  style of her own. "When you rap fast it almost seems like another  language," she explains. "People can't understand all of what you're  saying, and it's cool to me not because you can have bad lyrics but because it  becomes about the way you say it and the energy of it all." Elaborating on her style, Iggy  asserts: "Who cares about real life when it's so much fun to just say all  this stuff? If someone tells me not to go in a room, I'm going to go in that  room, and even if there's nothing in the fucking room I'm going to have so much  fun just because you told me not to be here."   She's firmly in that room now - and  she's certainly having that fun right now. |