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Despite, yâknow, all of this, Hackneyâs Bree Runway has found a way to push through in the year 2020. Sheâs had cosigns from Missy Elliott, Amine and now Doja Cat, as well as growing her own base of fans and keeping them fed with ambitious songs and videos throughout lockdown.
Firstly there was the bass-heavy âAPESHITâ earlier this year, then she dabbled with â90s R&B on âDamn Danielâ and teamed-up with Rina Sawayama on the remix of the British pop starâs slinky âXSâ. Now there’s âGucciâ and its striking video, a celebration of Black Girl Magic with Bree piloting a kaleidoscopic journey laced with striking and metallic looks, underpinned luxury and grandeur. It is a song, after all, about designer clobber.
Itâs not been easy to reach a point of such strident creativity, though, âin the first days of lockdown I was overwhelmedâ, she says. But despite this setback, Breeâs made it clear that sheâs forging her own narrative, mastering the art of the “quarantine music video” in her lockdown releases and solidifying her reputation as one of the UKâs most versatile â and creative â musicians and entertainers.
She tells NME about how lockdown has been for her and the tribulations that inevitably arise as a musical trailblazer.
The lockdown period has forced you to go back to your DIY roots. Has the been rewarding in a way?
âIt was hard when I realised that I couldnât shoot the âDamn Danielâ video the way I wanted to because of lockdown. It was going to be like a mini-movie and we were even going to get Yung Baby Tate to come down from Atlanta, but when I realised this wasnât going to happen in that way, I sat on my bed and started crying and I thought âeverything is going to go downhill from hereâ. I knew how excited everyone was over âAPESHITâ, and I just didnât know what to do. But then I remembered that, really, this is how I started. Iâve done this DIY stuff before, the only difference was that now I had more knowledge, experience and ideas. It could only be good. So I got my thinking cap on and created a space in my living room and shot the video there.â
âGucciâ is an upbeat anthem detailing how you deserve the finer things in life. Were there any hesitations about releasing a song like this given the current climate?
âNot at all. I wanted a piece of work that I could look back at and remember that, although lockdown has been crazy for me and the Black community, there was still a moment where I felt amazing. At one point in lockdown, Black issues were at the forefront and everything was in your face. The racists were jumping out, the performative allyship was jumping out, everything was driving me nuts. It was hard for me to remember how special I was, so I wanted to make something that I could look back on and be like, âoh go, girl, you are a diamond honey!ââ
Considering your diverse catalogue â and fanbase â is there pressure to ensure that every release sounds different to the last?
âI don’t feel pressured at all. Itâs natural for me to step into the studio and come out with a country, rock, or trap song. Iâd feel pressured if I was focused on making songs that gave me high streams or something, but I don’t think about those kinds of things. Throughout my journey, I just want to continue to showcase the different sides of me. Everything I do is easy if I have that logic. Right now, all I care about is my fanbase, and theyâre amazing. It’s shocking at this point to have the kind of fans that I have.â
Thereâs some high-profile fans, too. You recently teamed up with Amine on his new track âPressure in My Palmsâ come about?
âAmine found out about me when I dropped the song â2ONâ. He commented on my clip saying that it was fire, asking to do a session with me. So, when I got to his studio, he asked me, âdo you want to rap or sing today?â After telling him that I wanted to sing, he said he had a song in mind. I got in the booth and freestyled on a track, and it made the cut! He said that he didnât expect me to be funny and assumed Iâd be cocky. I think itâs because my style is very different, so people donât know what to expect from me.â
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Lockdown has been crazy for me and the Black community, but with ‘Gucci’ I wanted to capture that there was still a moment where I felt amazing
Youâve collaborated with an array of women on all your work at every level â is having that representation important to you?Â
âAbsolutely! I love collaborating with other women â itâs like Iâm bringing two different worlds together to fuck it up. To me, collaborating with other women is almost like when you meet a girl in the bathroom and scream about how much you love each other’s hair. Everyoneâs sound is so different, which creates something special when you mix it together.â
Before lockdown you said that you were hoping to do a headline show this year, but obviously the pandemic has changed things. Has it made you rethink some of the plans?
âItâs made me feel really sad. I canât believe this is how the year has gone. Everything had been building up so nicely and it would have been great to connect with people in real life. When I do finally have a headline show, I want to focus on fashion and theatrics, bringing what I do now to the stage.â
Youâve developed a strong following in the US, but is the UK as receptive to your music?Â
âDefinitely not. If it wasnât for America, I honestly donât know if Iâd be where I am today. Itâs the Americans that circulate my stuff on the internet. I feel bad for anyone trying to do something different over here. Even on social media, Iâll post something creative or different and someone from the UK will comment on something insignificant like my outfit. Itâs such a problem over here, people can be very rude and judgemental. Bullying online and causing a ruckus has become so normalised now â this country has got to do better.â
In light of this, do you feel a pressure to conform to whatâs popular over here to appeal to the UK crowd?
âI donât feel the need to create a version of my music to fit in anywhere. But here, they like a certain thing, sounds like drill, grime and afro-swing. Iâm afraid I canât give them that. Maybe Iâll do it in the future, but Iâm not forcing it. In âGucciâ I said, âStay causing damage / In my own lane these bitches got trafficâ, and thatâs it. Iâm not in a congested lane when Iâm just doing me. Iâm creating my own path, and no one can stand in my way.â
Bree Runway’s new single ‘Gucci’ is out now
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