ST. PANTHER DEBUT SINGLE “INFRASTRUCTURE”
St. Panther’s new single “Infrastructure” premieres today as an exclusive single from “Insecure: Music From The HBO Original Series, Season 4” soundtrack through Issa Rae’s Raedio and Atlantic Records. Listen/share “Infrastructure”
GRAMMY-award winning producer Ricky Reed’s Nice Life Recording Company and multi-instrumentalist producer Nate Mercereau’s How So Records announce the signing of St. Panther. St. Panther’s “Infrastructure” is the first single from the consortium. St. Panther (real name: Daniela Bojorges-Giraldo) is set to release her debut EP through Nice Life/How So in late Summer 2020.
St. Panther had this to say about the single; “Infrastructure was the first song I wrote after getting home from my first US tour. I spent those following days at home gathering all of the surreal experiences that lead up to the tour, as well as post, and began writing/producing this new batch of songs inspired by those experiences. (Being picked up by a management, all of those first meetings with different labels in different buildings) in a way the assembly of the song was much like the assembly of my career in music, and the song served to reflect the infrastructure of that journey.”
St. Panther looks to release her debut EP with Nice Life and How So late this Summer and continues to receive praise from her earlier work…
“Great music, and more importantly, authentic music will always find a way to win, just as we can see with St. Panther” -- Lyrical Lemonade
“[an] artist you're definitely going to want to keep your eye on” -- Nylon
Artist, producer, singer, multi-instrumentalist, and rapper St. Panther refracts raw feeling over a hypnotic hybrid of soul swagger, jazz eloquence, and hip-hop heat. Acclaimed by Lyrical Lemonade and christened an “artist you’re definitely going to want to keep your eye on” by Nylon, the Irvine, CA native turns up the volume on this enigmatic personality via her 2020 debut EP for Nice Life Recording Company/How So Records and more to come.
Following high school, she made a name for herself as a sought-after local producer, jumping from recording friends at 50 bucks a pop to helming Makeout Reef’s full-length LP, Existential. Gigging constantly, she fronted Quiet Girl and also began concurrently performing under the moniker of St. Panther. The moniker came from a childhood nickname. “My dad used to call me ‘Little Panther’ in middle school,” she recalls. “I was bullied a lot, so he was like, ‘Instead of being a little cat, you have to be strong like a little panther.’ The name stayed with me. It ties everything together.”