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Social media has always been crucial for artists to share and promote their work, so starting over from scratch was daunting. She was able to retrieve the former, but the latter was completely erased. Hip-hop culture is not just rap only-it’s everything we make it.”ĭutch says part of her reconfiguration was forced due to technological issues: her Twitter and Instagram accounts were hacked last fall. I view this time as an opportunity to revisit what I’ve been doing to figure out what’s the best fit. “I became naïve to the fact that people wanted to hear what I had to say whether I thought it was important or not. “There was a point where it just wasn’t fun anymore,” Dutch shares.
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She’s been rapping for over a decade, and had admittedly been stuck in a perfunctory way of doing things. Dutch was styled by Amy Lin at MCM Worldwide, Copley Place Boston.Įven though COVID-19 has forced many musicians to return to the drawing board and stunted their creative output, Boston mainstay and hip-hop provocateur Dutch ReBelle has welcomed the reprieve. Dutch returns to MOS for a full-on virtual production (with collaborators this time).
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