Snatched is her new single and it is the bomb she’s right in there with City girls and Meg the Stallion. She has the vibe she is real and she is non-bianary she is like Janelle Monet she souls and people that make her feel a certain way. she is down to earth and the come has not been easy she got all the followers and spins the old fashion way organically. Not an overnight success she put in the work. Big Boss Vette is just that a boss in the game of music.
Rising St. Louis Artist Big Boss Vette Stops By The Show To Talk About Her Music, Life In St Louis And So Much More!!
St. Louis has the talent you just got to look for it. The music business is a business first and it is about the label making money and this is the real deal.
“To me, being a boss basically means you can do whatever you put your mind to,” she explains. “No matter how far you’ve come from the bottom, the only way to go is up. When you’re finally there, you own that shit, because it’s yours. I hustled. I didn’t have anybody backing me. I had nothing. It gets hard and discouraging at times, but it will pay off in the end if you keep pushing.”
She developed a sense of hustle early on. At three years old, her father was incarcerated. Meanwhile, mom worked as a daycare teacher, while grandma “took on the role of my father,” says Big Boss Vette. Following her mother’s marriage, the family grew. Big Boss Vette told everyone, “I want to be a rapper,” and she made good on her promise.
Taking to social media, she posted freestyles on Facebook, remixing the likes of Dej Loaf’s “Try Me” and making a viral impact with millions of views. She regularly uploaded remixes to YouTube and attracted an audience.
However, trouble followed her everywhere until she got shot.
“I was always getting myself into trouble, I was always fighting, and I was always hanging with people who weren’t good for me, which is why I got shot,” she sighs. “I never expected it. My life flashed before my eyes. It made me realize I didn’t need to be in the situations I was in; I needed to solely focus on me. The situation told me I was going to end up in one of two places—in jail or dead. So, I stopped hanging out with those people, got on the right track, and went in the studio every day.”
She served up “Bad Bitch” in 2019 and racked up 1.7 million YouTube views. A year later, “Outside” exploded. Following a much-liked teaser video, her TikTok followers demanded the full version, and she delivered. It lit up TikTok with countless anime creates and support from Chlöe. At the same time, it generated 8 million Spotify streams and 2 million YouTube views. In 2021, she picked up the pace with “No Fakin,” “Dog Ass *****,” and more. Along the way, she attracted the attention of Republic Records and landed a deal with the label.
She kicks off the next chapter with the single “Eater.” Baring her teeth, she devours a second line-inspired bounce beat replete with “claps, booms, and bangs.” Meanwhile, she remains fearlessly raunchy.
“It’s vulgar,” she laughs. “It’s basically about a woman taking somebody else’s man and turning him into her ho. I love bounce music, and I wanted to put a St. Louis twist on it. It’s for the club heads and the twerkers. We made magic.”
With more music to come, Big Boss Vette only continues to make magic though.
“When you listen to me, I want you to think, ‘She has an awesome voice. She’s very open. She’s confident. She’s different. She’s the next big thing’,” she leaves off. “I’m that bitch. I’m Big Boss Vette.”