Bibi Bourelly has released a new video for Riot, now taken in with a powerful sense of significance, following the Orlando shooting two nights ago.
In a world where we could see Donald Trump as the new US President, millions of refugees are left without a safe home and the growing scenes of violence across the globe, we need something to fill our hearts with the courage to survive.
This video gives us this courage in a simple, yet the most beautiful way possible.
The powerful nature of the black and white video is illustrated by the passionate protests used and lyrics of the stripped back acoustic track, only grows with the addition of the voiceovers. “If we don’t have fundamental changes in our system, we will continue to suffer as people and the planet,” a woman said over the angry screaming of protestors as images of love and pride as shown as the video closes, implying what the answer to the problem should be.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T6cS_DigCjE&feature=youtu.be
In the wake of the shooting, Bourelly has also penned a letter for the victims of the shooting:
“Sometimes when I’m on a plane, flying from country to country, city to city, chasing this peculiar dream of mine… I look down at the world beneath me and realize what we really are in the grand scheme of things. If you pay close attention, when the plane is just taking off you can faintly see people in action, living their own lives. It’s ironic and charming in a weird way because they’re not even aware that someone else is admiring them with fascination from a different angle of the world, as they walk this distinctive earth of ours.
Thousands of tiny, moving heads eventually blend in with the landscape as the aircraft rises higher. The large swaying trees that appear to be so mighty from the ground, shrink into what appears to be green fragments of leaves… and by the time we reach the clouds, everything that we thought to be its own individual thing, every detail of anything that we ever considered to exist on its own, melts into the the scenery and we become one.
We are all one from the clouds
We are not our genders
We are not our religions
We are not our races
We are not our opinions
We are not our doubts, insecurities or fears…
We are not one voice, we are a roaring crowd.
We are the land and sky; We are an ambiguous mixture of every color that exists under the sun.
We are all in this together and we are responsible for each other.
Everything you do or say matters to us, whether you realize it or not.
Love infinitely. At all costs no matter what.
praying 4 Orlando
(and the rest of the entire world.)
Fighting 4 our future.
New society 4 the unity of all.
Yours truly,
Beebz”
Image: Noisey
What were you doing when you were 21 years old? Most people would probably answer aimlessly, searching around for answers to life that we were all told existed. There would be the inevitable gap year, the dead end job and the faltering love life. For Bibi Bourelly, it is rubbing shoulders with the musical elite and releasing her first solo EP entitled Free the Real Part 1. Bourelly first came into the spotlight having written Rihanna‘s mega-hit Bitch Better Have My Money, and has already been credited for her work with other artists like Usher and Lil Wayne.
We were lucky enough to have a chat with the upcoming artist, who, in spite of rubbing shoulders with such musical heavyweights, is far from overwhelmed – she’s far from her peak just yet – nor has it got to her head. Bourelly is a rising star, undeterred by the glare of the spotlight. Behind all the hype and chart success, she is just a normal twenty something that’s still trying to get it all together.
We spoke to Bourelly about where she talked about the need for conflict in her music, living and dying for her art, and how she’d love to just be a fly on the wall around the late Janis Joplin.
Listening to your Free the Real Part 1 EP it’s clear that it comes from a place of vulnerability. And you’ve also said it was from a time where you felt misunderstood. Is it a cathartic process for you to put your feelings into songs or does it sometimes only heighten those issues that you’re trying to deal with?
It could be either way really, it’s so powerful. It depends on what you allow yourself to come up with and how you decide to express it.
You said the place where your music comes from is “immortal”- does that mean that you look at it like the filmmaker David Lynch does, where he believes that the idea already exists on another mental plane and you just receive it?
That could be it, I’m a very spiritual person. It’s definitely not me. I myself, Bibi, can be dishonest. I make mistakes, I say things the wrong way, but I want to be accepted by people. I think my soul, my spirit, my purpose is not to be that way though. So it could be that.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XnugCpTmJE8
You’re obsessed with your art but are you obsessive over it. Do you spend like one week going over a melody or are you from the other way of thinking where you believe if you stay on one thing for too long it loses its magic along the way?
100%- the music is definitely lost immediately when you sit with a track too long. What a song is, is a moment. It’s capturing the moment. When you record a song it is about capturing that moment. It isn’t supposed to be able to be repeated in that same way. It’s supposed to just be caught. Capturing it becomes the challenge. It’s no longer the purest form of self-expression if you sit on it for too long, it becomes self-expression that is polished.
In your songs there are a lot of references to haters and all that negative energy around you. Do you feel like you need some sort of conflict in order to create?
Definitely. That is what I have been learning about myself recently. It’s either that, where conflict is necessary for me to make my art, or it’s just that I’m really bad at ignoring conflict. Either way it’s not very positive *laughs*.
So you prefer to say things out loud and if people don’t like what you have to say that is their problem?
That’s how I feel. But obviously I feel bad after what I say sometimes. But I say it anyway because I believe in that you say what you feel.
Do you believe that you have to suffer for your art?
I mean I suffered for my art. I can’t speak in general terms or for other people. Other people call themselves artists that I would never call artists. But who am I to say that someone is not one? That in itself defeats the whole purpose. I can only speak for myself and I definitely suffered for my art.
Talking about artists, what’s your relationship to the word and concept of it now that you have gained some recognition? Has it changed in any way or does it still mean the same to you?
You have to live for your art to be an artist. You have to be ready to die for your art. It has to be the reason why you breathe. The dying part is dramatic, but I truly believe that you have to live for your art. It has to be the reason why you’re alive – it’s your engine, your motor.
Beyond just your art, it is bigger than that too. It is people, the world, the environment. In my opinion, and at least from my experience, the way I create is through taking in and letting the world marinate inside of me. It’s being receptive of things other people just aren’t receptive of. It’s allowing yourself to feel things that other people don’t allow themselves to feel. So it’s bigger than just my art, it’s people too. I believe that I am meant to create and move people forward. It’s not like, ‘I just want to make shit because I’m bored’ *laughs*. I’ve been making things since before I could talk and I don’t know how and I don’t know why. But this is why I’m alive. I don’t think there is a lot of people who think and feel like that.
I read that you said humans need to, “strive for truth and push each other higher instead of going around in circles.” Where and why do you think we, as people, have stagnated?
Because we are all so fucking judgemental. I’m not excluding myself from this but we’re all so judgemental and waste time doing it. We love to point out each other’s flaws instead of focusing on our own desires and truths and insecurities. Instead of fixing ourselves from within we waste our time fucking ridiculing others. We need to decide to live our lives how we want to live them.
We are distracted instead of investing our time into ourselves. We need to learn how to become the best people that we can be. I don’t want to say it’s not hard to do, but if everyone just focused on making sure they were living honestly and doing what was making them happy, the world would be a lot better of a place. We wouldn’t just keep on fucking hurting each other all the time.
You seem confident in yourself, but obviously you have your insecurities and anxieties. How do you deal with being so young and being thrust into the spotlight and having to deal with this judgement on a personal level?
You know, I don’t know how I deal with it – I just wing it. Honestly, it’s like fucking asking someone to work four jobs or something. I work three jobs! I’m getting through it and it’s just a survival mechanism. I’m trying to figure out how to stay normal. It’s so fucking crazy though.
You try to reach out to people because you want to connect with them. But the moment you do that some exclude you. Or they think that you’re superior. I think that if you think that you’re superior, that’s a way of excluding people. So I don’t want to do that.
How do I deal with my insecurities? I’m learning how to not be insecure. I’m learning how to understand that no matter what I say, somebody is going to say something about me. But also I’m learning that it’s fucking okay to change my mind. It’s okay to say something today and go back on it tomorrow. It’s okay to be a human being. It’s okay to be a regular ass person *laughs*. As long as you’re conscious and aware of your insecurities it’s okay. You’re never going to be perfect, but I’m going to aim to be better all the time. And that’s what I’m trying to say.
Do you see your music as a sort of activism then in a way? Do you use it to try and provoke reactions in your listeners and to get them to think about the sort of things you think about, or do you try and stay away from all that?
My overall goal is to make people feel something that will elevate them and move them to the next level. So whether that is consciously or not- they don’t even have to fucking know. I want to create something that evokes thought in you. It’s that simple.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1REwtjUc4mY
You’ve said creating songs sometimes is a burden because you can’t stop it. Have you tried to take a break away from it or have you become used to the constant cycle of creating?
I can’t help it. It’s not really a matter of trying to take a break away from it. You know what, it’s weird though. I’m in a place now where I’ve been feeling kind of musically uninspired. But every now and then I do meet people who move me.
Is it almost like the fact that you were thrust into the industry and you’ve lost a bit of the spark, because you have to deal with so much other stuff- like interviews for example?
Exactly! One, I appreciate this interview and I don’t say that often. Two, the music industry… You think your whole life you’re going to get something. I’m going to work really, really hard and one day I’m going to get into the room with the best people in the world! There’s going to be this big treasure box and I’m going to discover something amazing. But then you open up this big red curtain and there is nothing there.
You learn so much about life in that moment. Part of life is learning that lesson, and becoming uninspired by that. But then the other part is figuring out how to find the inspiration in truth. That’s the truth and that’s just the way things are.
We’re so hard on ourselves. We think that the grass is greener on the other side. We think that there are keys to life and fucking treasure chests. You think that you’re going to open them up and you’re going to flourish. People write books about all that shit! But really it all comes down to just being yourself – that’s the key. Do what the fuck you are good at.
I read you were a big fan of Jeff Buckley and his version of Hallelujah. So it got me thinking about which three artists you would hypothetically like to meet, dead or alive, that you think would give you some of that inspiration you desire?
[Jean- Michel] Basquiat. I’d just love to kick it with him because he seemed cool. Janis Joplin.
Great choice.
Yeah, but I would just want to be a fly on the wall with Janis Joplin.
Yeah, she seemed like a bit of a wild one.
Man, she was epic. When you look at her- I would just like to absorb everything. Just watch her, because I feel like I would take in a lot more that way. And Stevie Wonder.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4KsWoiqTX4A
Free The Real Part 1 is available now via Def Jam.
Image: Sam Balaban/ Fader
Bibi Bourelly, the sassy singer-songwriter behind the cut-throat lyrics on Rihanna’s Bitch Better Have My Money has announced her debut EP Free The Real: Part #1. The EP is set to be released on May 6th via Def Jam Recordings with Part #2 expected later in the year. Her singles Ego and Sally have been blowing up all over the place so we can’t wait to hear the rest of it.

Bibi is basically hip-hop’s answer to Amy Winehouse with her husky voice, unapologetic lyrics and funky beats that make you want to dance. What’s more, she’s funny, down-to-Earth and full of genuine talent. As well as Rihanna, she’s also written songs for Selena Gomez and Essex rapper Nick Brewer and featured on Usher‘s single Chains and Lil WayneFree Weezy Album.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1REwtjUc4mY
Starting from the EP’s release date, Bibi will be hosting a series of ‘Society Sessions’ in New York which are said to be “a mixture of performances, art and DJ sets from various people in you culture and, of course, a performance from Bibi herself.” Society Sessions will also be hosted in LA, London and Berlin but sadly not in Australia.
Expect big things from this one.
You can get the EP from May 6th here.
Free The Real: Part #1 Tracklist:
1. Sally
2. Ego
3. Guitar
4. What If
5. Riot
Image: Mass Appeal
She may have gotten her name out there by writing Rihanna‘s huge hit single, Bitch Better Have My Money, but Bibi Bourelly is wasting no time at all making sure everyone knows exactly what she’s about in her own right. Having released a couple of singles since BBHMM, she’s now just taken another huge step forward in her own solo career by popping her late night TV cherry on Jimmy Fallon‘s Tonight Show.
Performing her latest single Sally, Bourelly is a force to be reckoned with during this performance. The stomping bluesy tune is fierce and rocking, reminiscent of bygone eras with her raspy voice and the raucous honky-tonk feel of the track – like you’re in a Western canteen somewhere in Texas, USA – this performance is exactly what she needs to step out of her songwriting shadow and into her own spotlight.
Looking effortlessly relaxed as her dynamic voice cries out “Let me see you rock, little Sally!“, Bibi Bourelly looks right at home on national (and international) TV. The best part is the message of her song which has now been thrust onto the screens of probably millions of people to “Love all your haters” and to own who you are. Literally the musical embodiment of “yas kween.” We can’t wait to see what she does next!
Image: Screenshot of clip
Last year, I shared Bibi Bourelly‘s thunderous debut single and video for Ego. Now, she’s returned with Sally, which has been released alongside a really cool, tech-savvy video clip.
The track is raucous and lively, anchored by a stompy blues-rock bass, with Bourelly’s raspy melody commanding full attention up ahead. It’s raw, playful and melodically brilliant – everything you’d expect from an artist who, at only 20, has already penned four tracks for Rihanna (including Bitch Better Have My Money and numerous tracks from ANTI) as well as Selena Gomez, Usher and more.
Designed with the help of LA’s Master of Shapes, the innovative (and slightly creepy) interactive video tweaks Tumblr pages, gifs and more to actually move in real time to the rhythm of the track. You can check out the fully interactive Tumblr clip here, or the “pseudo” version below.
With a voice as dynamic as Sia, as effortlessly sexy as Rihanna, and a writing and performing talent to match both, one thing is clear: Bibi Bourelly is an extraordinary talent in a world stifled by ordinary. I’m genuinely excited to see what’s next for this accomplished young artist.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tb7-joSPDLM&feature=youtu.be
This was originally published on Indie Shuffle
Bibi Bourelly is quite the enigma. The upcoming artist shot to immediate and remarkably intense Internet fame earlier this year when it was revealed that this Berlin-born, LA-based 20-year-old was in fact the writer of Rihanna’s mega-hit Bitch Better Have My Money. Since then, she’s signed to Def Jam, featured on a Lil Wayne track and written for artists like Usher and Selena Gomez.
We wrote about her incredible debut single Ego back in October. Ego is a raw, bluesy number, showcasing Bourelly’s coquettishly throaty voice and stellar personal lyricism. Now, the accompanying video clip has been made available, and it perfectly captures that coarseness.
The black and white video sees Bourelly running through city streets, drinking with friends, jumping onto building roofs, etc. As coarse and emotive as the song itself, it’s a genuinely great listen, with a video that perfectly captures the rawness of it all.
Of the video, Bourelly says, “My goal every time I write a song is to sound honest… I didn’t want the video to be perfect. I wanted it to look like the truth.”
There’s big, big things coming for Bibi Bourelly. Keep an eye on this one.
Hey, you know that song that Rihanna put out this year that’s probably one of the biggest and most widely listened tracks she’s ever done? What’s it called again? Oh yeah, Bitch Better Have My Money, that one. Well, the woman who wrote that is now putting out her own music, and it’s amazing. She’s nineteen, her name is Bibi Bourelly, and her track is called Ego.
Ego, as you might expect, is partially about Bibi’s ego, but it’s also a story of how she got into music, her attitude and not letting anyone bring her down. The production is super simple, with basic percussion, a really nice twangy surf guitar sound, some piano, and a bit more bass thrown in for good measure. It really lets Bibi’s voice run all over the instruments – which sounds absolutely gorgeous. It’s so strong and so passionate throughout the entire song, you really start to feel emotional as her voice gets raspy throwing out really personal lines.
[youtube http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K-OA_Mrhr_8]
From BBHMM to Ego, expect to hear way more about Bibi Bourelly, and hopefully we hear more from her. She’s got a killer voice and some killer lyrics, and she’s already written two killer hits. Keep it locked for all news on Bibi, no doubt there will be, and get acquainted with her here.