字幕列表 影片播放
-
- I knew that I was gonna be involved in music somehow,
-
I just didn't really know how I was gonna get there.
-
Living in Indonesia, being born in Jakarta,
-
it just seemed impossible.
-
I'm Niki, this is "On The Rise".
-
(gentle synth music)
-
I have been singing for as long as I can remember
-
because my mom sang at church.
-
I would say I identified as a singer-singer
-
probably when I was like, 18?
-
(slick trap beats)
-
When I started my career professionally, singing,
-
my family was, I honestly, I'm sorry mom and dad
-
but I kind of signed my first contract behind their backs.
-
In the beginning I think
-
it wasn't that they were unsupportive,
-
it was more so that they didn't understand
-
because obviously they came from a different generation
-
and it just was difficult to wrap their head around.
-
It just sort of took a few conversations for them
-
to ultimately kind of understand where I was coming from.
-
♪ Oh, I'm in love, I'm in love with you, boy ♪
-
I don't know how I managed to win that Taylor Swift contest
-
but I got involved because my mom had sent me a flyer
-
and I was like, this is a hoax,
-
don't believe everything you read,
-
and she was like, no, no, no, this is real!
-
Just being 15, walking out into a stage
-
of just like, and everybody's faces at that point
-
kind of like, they just kind of blur into one in a way,
-
and also you have like the blinding lights on you
-
and it just kind of, that experience solidified my love
-
for performing and that's when I kind of realized, like,
-
oh, okay, 10,000 people sounds daunting
-
but when you're up there and the adrenaline's rushing
-
and it's just like, I can do this,
-
and I actually like doing this,
-
and I like entertaining people.
-
♪ If I could, I'd freeze this moment ♪
-
♪ Make my my home ♪
-
♪ You're all I want to want to know ♪
-
How I got involved with YouTube is kind of a loaded answer
-
but I actually started it
-
after I had opened for Taylor Swift
-
when I was 15 years old.
-
I was just noticing that on my Instagram
-
people were curious about me and people just wanted to know
-
if I wrote songs and they just wanted to know about me
-
and what my experience was like
-
and so I think one of my very first YouTube videos
-
was just kind of like an update blog
-
of life after the concert and what I was up to
-
and then that kind of catalyzed me just feeling really
-
prompted to kind of share my original songs on there.
-
YouTube just kind of allowed for this, you know,
-
it just felt like a community where people
-
supported my endeavors and they supported my dreams
-
and just like, my writing and whatnot.
-
(upbeat synth music)
-
I had no plan, really, but my immediate plan
-
was obviously the traditional route of going to college,
-
getting a degree, figuring it out.
-
I actually released "See You Never" before I went to college
-
that's how I first got involved with 88rising
-
and the story behind "See You Never" was also pretty funny
-
because I literally was talking to
-
my producer friend who I was working on the song with
-
and I said, you know, how crazy would it be
-
if it like ended up on 88rising, hahaha.
-
Like that would ever happen, you know?
-
Pipe dream-type, you know, this type of conversation
-
and then it happened and I was just kinda like, what?
-
And yeah, that started my relationship with 88
-
and it just kind of snowballed into like,
-
hey, come out to L.A., we wanna work with you
-
and we wanna sign you.
-
I wasn't going to class and it got to a point
-
where I was literally between Nashville and L.A.
-
every single week and I just kinda decided, like,
-
this is not sustainable for me
-
and I already know that this is kind of what I want to do
-
in the future anyway so I just kind of went out on a limb
-
and did it.
-
It took a lot of courage.
-
My latest single "Switchblade" kind of talks about that
-
in a very metaphorical kind of way.
-
♪ This place, the skies are vast and no one's ♪
-
The release of Zephyr was honestly insane,
-
I had no idea in terms of how it was going to catalyze
-
my career from then on and how it was going to affect
-
my relationship with my fans,
-
and what kind of fans I attracted and just like,
-
you know, just basically built the, how it was gonna build
-
the foundation in which I, you know, grew my career.
-
The reception was overwhelming,
-
it was just so positive and people were so excited to see
-
especially within the Asian market, Asian Americans,
-
Asians in Asia, Asians everywhere just kind of,
-
I received an overwhelming amount of responses
-
just saying, like, hey, thanks for representing me
-
and like, what, you know, my face and like what I look like
-
and my story and that was, that was what kept me going
-
I think, it was just like, okay, I need to do this
-
for all the girls that look like me,
-
all the kids that look like me,
-
that wanna do what I wanna do.
-
Zephyr is actually Greek for west wind,
-
I wish it was intentional, I wish I could say
-
that I was that much of a genius but it really wasn't.
-
I discovered that later, it was the body of work
-
that kind of moved me westward
-
and just kind of, to the U.S. and it just established
-
this global audience.
-
(slick hip-hop beats)
-
I am such a huge fan
-
of the Kacey Musgraves "Golden Hour" album,
-
I just love that album.
-
I'd really love to work with those guys,
-
Daniel and Ian, that's probably a dream collaborator,
-
dream director, man.
-
You know what, I'm honestly a sucker
-
for Taylor Swift's videos so I would love
-
to work with Joseph Kahn.
-
His videos with Taylor are insane.
-
Those are probably my two like, dream collaborations.
-
(crowd cheering)
-
Welcome to Head in the Clouds II!
-
My name is NIKI, I've waited a really long time
-
to play this show.
-
Yo, I put this song out four days ago, you know it?
-
Y'all the first to hear it live!
-
Seeing thousands of people sing the words
-
that you penned back to you is the most insane feeling.
-
Both Head in the Clouds festivals were absolutely insane.
-
We started the 88rising tour with that festival
-
being the first stop and it was just
-
so incredibly career-defining for me
-
and just, like, to see an ocean of faces
-
that just kind of, like, they all looked like me, you know?
-
All in one place, and it was just, it was so great
-
to gather in the spirit of just celebrating
-
heritage and culture and music.
-
There are no words to describe it,
-
but that was very, very much fulfilling and solidifying.
-
(mellow synth music)
-
So, what's next is my Moonchild concept album,
-
it's my debut album that I've been working on
-
comprehensively for about a year and a half now
-
and I have a single coming out, it's called Selene,
-
I'm super excited about this whole project
-
because it's definitely my most wide-ranging body of work
-
so far and it's a cohesive concept album.
-
It's kind of like listening to a storybook
-
if you listen top to bottom.
-
This album was definitely my little brainchild.
-
I loved fairytales and I loved sci-fi and just like,
-
you know, it follows this titular character
-
of the Moonchild from top to bottom
-
and you witness her growth.
-
All of my past work has been very much focused on, you know,
-
young love and puppy love.
-
This album is very much centered around self-discovery
-
and just my personal journey growing as an artist
-
and as a human being.
-
(delicate piano music)
-
In terms of making it, I dunno, I feel like
-
I will forever strive to get to the next level.
-
Every time that I release something, the goal is to out-do
-
what I've done before.
-
I have fans that have like, stuck with me
-
since the YouTube days that I still, I'm like,
-
oh my gosh, I'll see their handle or their name
-
and be like, I know you!
-
You commented on that video like in 2015!
-
It's insane and then to see them like, graduate school
-
and it's just, yeah, it's very,
-
it's been a very rewarding experience for me
-
and all I want to do is just motivate Asian faces everywhere
-
that you can pursue your dreams, whatever they look like.
-
(chill synth music)