And it all happens before anything else, including time, can move forward.Ībout Time is out now via SC Entertainment, LLC. It's an everyday moment that now more than ever, should be celebrated - a young woman acknowledging that her needs and wants match those of the person she's communicating them to. "I want lust too / I want love too / I want this too," she sings. In "Stand Still," clarity comes in the chorus, cutting through in a moment of transparency: Both people want the same thing. She is popular for her sultry and sensual delivery of R&B songs and started out by posting covers of popular songs on YouTube. "There's such a stigma against females and them speaking their mind and them being confident and stubborn that it's almost like it becomes a fear that we don't want anybody to think of us in a specific way." "I just learned that speaking your mind is always best, especially as a female to these men," Claudio says. As a youngster, she first soaked up the dance music she heard in her native Miami, Florida and was eventually drawn to pop-oriented contemporary R&B like Mariah Carey and Destinys Child.Her 1st major steps as a recording artist were made in 2016, when she appeared on the songs by. But after moving to Los Angeles at 19, things began to change. Sabrina Claudio is an R&B-rooted singer/songwriter who favors ballads that are low-key and aching in nature. That experience lasted for a few years, and she admits it took a toll on her. in terms of them wanting to change who I was as an artist," she says. "I was signed at some point and I was stuck in a contract, and the producers continuously manipulating me. At 14, she started posting covers online, and even though her videos became popular, she still experienced the challenges of being a young woman trying to make it in the music industry.
The singer, whose heritage is Puerto Rican and Cuban, learned how to harmonize on car rides with her grandfather, who played the guitar.
"I tried to bring a little bit of darkness and kind of deep, almost aggressive elements to balance out how beautiful her voice is."
"She's got this incredibly elegant, angelic voice, and it brings a lot of Latin elements so subtly that I don't even have to think about it," says Stint, the song's producer.