Heaven is a dynamic hip hop bounce artist from New Orleans who is making waves with her raw and energetic sound. With a unique ability to channel the infectious rhythms and vibrant energy of her city, Heaven has quickly become one of the most exciting new voices in the bounce scene. Her music is a powerful blend of hard-hitting beats, catchy hooks, and unapologetic lyrics, capturing the essence of New Orleans' rich musical heritage while pushing the boundaries of modern hip hop. Heaven’s rise has been nothing short of meteoric, as her electrifying performances and charismatic presence continue to captivate audiences both locally and beyond. Her authenticity and fearless approach to music have resonated with a growing fanbase, earning her recognition as a true innovator in the genre. As she continues to gain momentum, Heaven is poised to become a leading figure in the world of bounce music, bringing the sound of New Orleans to the forefront of the global hip hop scene.
A: OnlyHeaven: I just like to talk about real-life situations, things people can relate to. That could be love or just something about myself.
On “Never Hard,” I go, “She said, I got a little stomach, that’s from eating niggas bread.” Like, I’m a big girl, so sometimes people try to come for me, though they know not to come for me for real. They’ll be like, “Oh, she got a stomach, da, da, da.” So I turned it into that’s from eating all the nigga’s bread, that’s like taking his money.
[Laughs.] Yeah, like when I went, “I got your text nigga/Say where I’m at nigga/Really been on your mind,” I had really got a text from someone who had tried to be weird with me, and I kind of just brushed them off. I remember they hit me up late at night and then hit me up again talking about “good morning.” So I was like, “Nigga, I really been on your mind, huh?” and was saying it all day to myself until I went to the studio.
If I rapped about you, I told you about it. I’m gonna send you the song and say, “This is about you.” But one time someone reached out to me, you know what… let me not be too messy with you.
OK. Somebody reached out and thought my song “No Friends” was about them. And I had to be like, “Sir, you’re not even relevant.” People be thinkin’ songs about them because they feel guilty, but a lot of my music is about recent exes or things my friends told me.
I’m so sweet. I think I’m a hopeless romantic because I don’t give nobody a chance. But, once I’m on you, I’m on you. But, also, once I’m off you, I’m off you.
Ass shaking. Booty poppin’. Everybody cute. Everybody fly. It could be different. It could be dangerous. You never know. But it stay fun.
It’s just the environment. I grew up all over New Orleans, Uptown, Seventh Ward, wherever. I went back to New Orleans last week and just being away let me look around and be like, “We are really our own goddamn everything.” Everything about New Orleans is its own world.
Drink all day, everyday. Anywhere, anytime, anyplace. We could buy a bottle at three o’clock in the morning. We do whatever we want. We don’t have no rules. When we go out of town, it’s funny, like “What you mean I can’t bring my drink outside of the club?” I went somewhere, I forgot where I was, and I had got a drink and was just walking away from the bar with the drink. The doorman was like, “You can’t do that,” and I just looked at him. In New Orleans, I would have taken that drink and walked right by the police with it.
I believe so. The music back then was a lot more raw. It’s still explicit now, but it used to be even more explicit. They got straight to the point. Things are more commercial now.
Definitely Sissy Nobby; he don’t care what you see. And Kelly Pounchin. Kelly not really spoke on, but they was so raw; rest in peace.
I love Calliope Ceedy. I always knew I wanted to be a bounce artist, but her music was always it to me. She had the energy, always sounded like she was having fun. It sounded like 100% her. I actually ran into her a couple of months ago.
Big Freedia doing work with BeyoncĂ©. VickeeLo collabing with Meg Thee Stallion. That SupahBadd song, the one where it goes, “There’s a meeting in my bedroom.” All of that showed me that bounce was bubbling outside of the city. Of course, Magnolia Shorty had been doing that, but back then, it was just her.
I feel it’s all positive because I don’t want bounce to just be a New Orleans thing. I want to take it worldwide. Some people in New Orleans don’t like when people take it outta town, but I feel without that we’ll all be stuck in one place.
No, every artist that has come up to me wants me to do me, like Drake and artists of that caliber.
He reached out. I can’t talk too much about it, but he saw my video for “In Here” on WorldStar. He wanted me to do something for his project with PartyNextDoor. We did something and he really wanted it to be on his album, but things happen.
Interview Source: https://pitchfork.com/thepitch/an-interview-with-onlyheaven-the-hopeless-romantic-of-new-orleans-bounce/
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