FEATURE:
Spotlight
PHOTO CREDIT: Voltoio
with Cortisa Star that I am eager to get to. She is an artist that has already been tipped as one of the names to watch this year. Her E.M.O. (EVIL MOTION OVERLOAD) extended E.P. confirms her as a supreme talent to watch. The American teenage rapper is awe-inspiring. I am going to start out with an interview from NME. A rising artist whose debut E.P. (it is more of an album in terms of length but is being labelled an E.P.) is about being “young, lit and turnt”, she has gone from being this TikTok sensation to walking the catwalk at Paris Fashion Week:
“It’s only taken three years for Cortisa Star to go from making messy beats in her bedroom to teetering on the edge of being music’s next “it” girl. The 19-year-old artist first started making her blown-out, distorted internet rap as an escape from the isolation of rural Delaware, a place where she felt like “the most different person in the room 90 per cent of the time”.
Seeking solace in the internet’s limitless realms helped Star construct the person she is today. It wasn’t long before she was mining samples from looperman.com and uncovered a world of female underground rappers like Skypearleddat, whose fuzzy distortion and bratty aggression informed her own delivery. “Her song ‘SHE AIN FWM!!!’, that really just woke me up,” she tells NME. “I was like ‘wait, I’m a girl, I’m angry, and I can rap: let me do that’.”
Hot off her track ‘Fun’ blowing up on TikTok in 2024, Star has since dropped five singles and is determined to bring permanence to this nebulous virality. Cosigns from Charli XCX, Doechii, Kim Petras and Lil Nas X – with whom she is manifesting a collaboration – have increased her velocity and determination tenfold. “I’m an outcast in this scene,” says Star. “There’s no trans rappers nowhere out front, and having the support is just so important, especially cuz they’re so open about it.”
Chatting with NME shortly after her runway debut for luxury brand Miu Miu’s AW25 show at Paris Fashion Week, she still can’t quite believe that it happened at all. In true Star-style, she topped it off by dropping her own hype track inspired by the moment. “[‘Paris’] was very much a ‘I’m here bitch’ type of song – I’m not going anywhere.”
PHOTO CREDIT: Voltoio
One of the lyrics on ‘Paris’ is “don’t like the track, so I had to adjust.” How did this sentiment inform the creation of your EP, ‘E.M.O. (Evil Motion Overload)’?
“It was pretty spontaneous. My team set up a six-day recording trip in New York and I recorded 12 songs and was like, ‘This could make a cute little EP’. I had this random vibe because it was the first time I was in the studio that I could scream and be as loud as I could, musically.
“I worked with a lot of producers. Getting to see how everybody works differently and how everyone – even my friends – put their inputs on the beat and how something should be changed is so beautiful. There was boys from Jersey, trans girls who love hyperpop. MsChickenSandwich made ‘Bad AF’, so she was there the whole time. And this is a very umru EP.”
The EP feels like a real homage to being a club kid.
“Just being young and going through this crazy shit and living my life, that was what I was really pouring out onto [‘EMO’]. I’m just young, lit and turnt – and that’s a lot of people. Everybody young and turnt, even the 50-year-olds.”
“I love creativity so much and artistry will always be my centrepoint”
Your song ‘Fun’ blew up on TikTok last year. Did you find people on your wavelength off the back of that song?
“I got more followers the second I started posting my music, because I used to just post dumb videos of me trying to be funny, and then the music got so serious. It’s such a random array of people that like my music, people from everywhere.
“Social media is awesome. I was basically raised on the internet because I grew up in a small town of Sussex County, Delaware which was farmland, beach. So, the internet was a beautiful escape, like my fantasy world.”
‘Misidentify’ is a track that is especially queer-affirming. As a transgender woman in the music industry, how has your journey shaped your artistry and the messages you convey through your music?
“I was gender-fluid, non-binary when I was in high school… I really, truly did believe that gender did not benefit a single person on this Earth, not even my dog. Just realising that my identity and how I am perceived by others, and even how I perceive myself, it does not matter when it comes to the cleaner’s process. I love creativity so much and artistry will always be my centrepoint. Once I realised that, I could just focus on that.
“It came to a point where I literally can no longer conceptualise the perception of myself from other people’s view, because it just does not matter to me. It is [liberating]. People tell me all the time, ‘If I got your comments or if I got the same DMs you would have, I’d kill myself’. And I’m like, you don’t have to do that. You can turn off your phone and go outside. It’s OK.”
As a trans woman and a rapper in a genre that has been historically misogynistic and discriminatory to the queer community, what has your experience been creating music in that genre and community, as well as a young person navigating that?
“It’s been crazy because, even when older people jam me and they’re like ‘You’re a pioneer’, ‘You inspire me so much’. This is a crazy life we live because I don’t even feel like I’m inspiring anybody. I’m just moving, I’m just doing what I feel like I want to do every day.”
“I used to have the worst social anxiety. Now, I’m in New York yelling in the deli for my sandwich”
Your lyrics are often confrontational and sexual, meanwhile your delivery is relentless. How does each of these things help with your freedom of expression?
“I like to put the thoughts [from] the backest part of my mind on the song, but also the ones at the front – never the ones in the middle. I don’t really care about anything anymore, anything anybody says. I used to have the worst social anxiety. Now, I’m in New York yelling in the deli for my sandwich”.
I am going to move to an interview from FADER. A star of Rap’s underground, Cortisa Star is undoubtably a role model to so many out there. With very few transgender rappers being spotlighted, Star’s rise and projection is going to give strength and voice to so many people out there. I am really interested to see where she heads next. Once she bursts into the mainstream, I can see Cortisa Star changed the scene and starting conversations:
“Her rave-ready raps position Cortisa as a perfect after-hours MC, dictating the terms of the moment: no lore, no future, just the present throbbing at 160 BPM. Her charisma oozes through speakers in frenetic, ecstatic bursts, like on combustible 2023 cut “Menace” or 2024’s “choke” by skaiwater, where Cortisa’s guest verse catapults #gigi to a delirious peak.
Swag you can hear is a prerequisite for any rapper, but Cortisa’s charm is extra apparent on LCDs and OLEDs, ideally blasted on Friday night minutes before the Uber arrives. A December 2024 From The Block performance of her single “Fun” immediately went viral, racking up thousands of enthusiastic and disparaging replies overnight. The initial comments were mostly confused and focused on her complexion and bleached fro to label her a knockoff Ice Spice. But as the footage continued to trend, hip-hop social media aggregators began reposting the video as transphobic outrage bait, honing in on one bar from the song: “Hundreds of bands put that bitch in my panty/ He like my body he know I’m a tranny.”
Though Cortisa’s upbeat, I get the sense she’s had to develop a thick skin from an early age. Born in Baltimore, Cortisa mostly grew up in a small town in Sussex County, Delaware, where the nearest fast food place is 30 minutes away. She started recording music in late 2022, sometime after dropping out of school due to bullying. “I posted a little TikTok saying I’m pretending to be the rap princess and people grabbed it and started running.”
Her early songs were punched in over type beats from YouTube or loops she would add drums to herself. These tracks were recorded into BandLab on her Chromebook, either in the basement or her bedroom surrounded by her sisters and best friend. They quickly garnered the young rapper a seriously invested 250K+ TikTok following.
Over 2023, Cortisa steadily built her skills, developing her flows and honing her lyrics. She says she’s inspired by Rico Nasty and Chief Keef (she calls “Bitch Where” “diva-coded”), but is also quick to cite Valee and Skypearleddat as inspirations for their flows and intensity. Even with her vocals pitched up and layered over themselves (“I like them pretty punchy, more extreme”), her outlandish personality was conspicuous from the get-go: “Feeling really crazy I’ma stalk her with a drone,” she warbles on “100Cherries.” “It's taking your deepest thoughts, and putting it all out,” she says of her verses. “That's the menace side of me that I never got to express.
“My whole thing was, I don't care about how people perceive me, I'm gonna do whatever I want.” she adds of her first songs. “What's changed is definitely the mixing and organizing and just making it more clean-cut, because the mixes was crazy, I can't lie.”
Cortisa is otherwise coy with details about the new songs she’s recording for her debut EP. She teases collaborations with hyperpop producer Umru — “a generational talent. He was cooking something very serious y’all,” she says — though when I ask about guest verses, she demurely deflects. “There’s some girls on there.” Over email, Umru tells me he wanted to make sure the sound of “recording on a Chromebook in Bandlab… wasn’t totally lost in the music even though it was recorded in a studio,” adding that he “loved her energy.”
She enjoys making music in a space where she can be really loud and more freely experiment. On the new project, she says she sings, has a “little R&B moment,” experiments with tempo, and switches up her flow and cadence. “I never knew I could do that before,” she says. “Just trying to make things a little different for me and the bitches.”
Her vocals are still raw and intense, but deliberately so. On the new single “MISIDENTIFY,” Cortisa’s Auto-Tuned flow surges and soars over a roiling sea of bass. The midtempo instrumental focuses attention on Cortisa’s flow, “mastering rap high up in the mountains with a samurai.” The shift from self-recording has helped her bars land harder and punchier: “Call me man but I don’t give a fuck / ‘Cause I’m that fucking guy,” she flexes on the bigots.
“At the end of the day, trans people are always going to be here,” Cortisa says. “We’re never going to leave. And I just want to stay close with my community, and make sure everybody knows what resources you have, where you can go and be safe, where it’s not safe.”
I am going to end with an interview from W Magazine from March. That is when Cortisa Star made her Miu Miu debut in Paris. Someone who is very stylish and has their own look, it is interesting knowing more about their outfits and favourite spots to shop. For anyone who has not discovered Cortisa Star yet then I would advise you to check her out:
“Much of Star’s charisma lies in her uniqueness; her personal style, which she describes as “maximalist junk,” is influenced by everything from rave culture to digital mood boards, plus the hyperpop world of which she’s part. After her appearance on a freestyle video series went viral a few months ago, Star experienced a barrage of fickle online takes (she tweeted, “Straight people found out about me, and they are losing their damn minds, OMG?”). Despite backlash from those who couldn’t wrap their heads around a trans rapper, Star also received lots of encouragement, including cosigns from the likes of Charli xcx and Doechii.
She credits growing up with a sense of alienation for her current bombastic style. “It really started when I was younger, in high school,” she tells W. “I was an outcast, and I was just like, I need to really show that off.” The experience also gave her a sense of humor that’s apparent in her playful lyrics. “You could say I was a class clown growing up,” she says. “The mug wasn’t always there, so I had to be funny.”
Now working on her “very dramatic” debut EP, Emo—which includes a secret feature—Star says it’s going to be “a very big year for Cort.” Below, she talks walking in Miu Miu, her favorite places to shop, and why people’s opinions of her just don’t matter:
How has life changed since you first went viral?
I still feel the same, but yesterday I was eating at a pizza place, and someone knocked on the window and was like, “Hi, I love you so much.” It’s awesome meeting so many new people.
How did your Miu Miu moment come about?
I went to the casting with Ashley Brokaw, and once I got confirmed, obviously I was gagging so bad. It was my first time out of the country in Paris. I got to walk around and shoot a little music video. And everybody at the show was so nice: all the makeup artists, hairstylists, nail artists, and other models.
When you’re putting an outfit together, what’s the inspiration?
It’s really about where I am and who I’m around. I take a lot of inspiration from my friends, my sisters, the Internet. A good Pinterest board always helps me.
Where are some of your favorite places to shop?
I’m a real thrifting enthusiast. In Baltimore, I love to go to Savers or any local thrift store. I like finding those creepy shops that you’re a little scared of.
Do you have a style pet peeve or something that you hate to see?
Honestly, I like to see everything. With the right mind-set, you can make anything beautiful.
Now that you’ve walked in Miu Miu, are there other designers you’d like to work with?
I really love classic ones, like Ed Hardy and New Rock. And of course, now that we’re up in that realm, I love me some Valentino, some Chanel.
You’ve gotten some big shoutouts from artists like Charli xcx. Has anyone else reached out that made an impression on you?
Yes, Arca is the sweetest girl in the world. That’s the one thing I learned: all these girls are so sweet, and they love seeing people win.
Might you be working with any of them soon...?
If God is good and the universe is willing.
How are you staying grounded now that your career is blowing up? How do you manage all the feedback, good and bad, you get online?
Ever since I was younger, the way I conceptualize people’s perception of me, I just put it completely aside. Unless you’re in my spaces or you have a direct input on my life, whatever these people say, I just do not even think about it. It doesn’t even see me”.
I will end there. A remarkable and powerful artist who I was moved by the first time I heard her, I would recommend that everyone check her out. Maybe still coming through, it is not going to take too long until she is at the forefront. I am going to sign off, but I would compel people to seek out Cortisa Star. This amazing artist is going to be a major star…
VERY soon.
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Follow Cortisa Star
PHOTO CREDIT: Ray Warren
Instagram:
https://www.instagram.com/cortisastar/
TikTok:
https://www.tiktok.com/@icarlycamera
Twitter:
Spotify:
https://open.spotify.com/artist/7oM0bObDNv5Uv1TNyDoqEG?si=aGOwLkTYRxy7y66eBXDiyg
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