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I'm independent, so it's a slow grow, but it's really great to finally share this project with the world and have something really good quality that’s mine to refer to when people say, ‘Have you heard of Justine Skye?’ĪZ - And on top of that, being independent now, you’ve put more of yourself into it than ever before. It's really exciting to put out a project that's being so well-received.
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I’ve already got six million streams on Spotify, and it just keeps going up. Skye, sitting in her sunny Los Angeles apartment - the city where she says she has been “building herself a life since age 17” - tells us about her decision to go independent as an artist, her approach to activism and adversity, and her latest album, Space and Time.ĪNNA ZANES - Congratulations on the album.ĪZ - How have things been since it came out? That’s why, over the last year, rather than running from the fearsome, constrictive cultural and global climate, she leaned in and made some freeing changes for herself. Still, under the thumb of marketing and music industry conglomerates, Skye saw her success as surface-level. What’s happened since Skye’s blogging days has been a blur, her career on a constant upswing - studded with hit singles, projects produced under major labels and well-supported by a social circle composed of the Hadids and Kardashians. The 25-year-old Brooklyn native initially found fame in the height of the Tumblr era by way of her iconic lavender mane and quippy digital “diary.” But that was merely a glimpse of the astoundingly well rounded artist we know today. Justine Skye is out to prove that being an influential post-internet pop star doesn’t have to be about “influencing” at all.