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Brittney Chantele

Brittney Chantele is a Pittsburgh rapper who is very involved in local activism. Her activism is informed by a college degree she earned when she once thought she would become a police officer. “I figured I might as well go for criminal justice and po...

Episode 19 of the The Local 913 Podcast podcast, hosted by Cindy Howes, titled "Brittney Chantele" was published on August 20, 2018.

August 20, 2018 · The Local 913 Podcast

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Brittney Chantele is a Pittsburgh rapper who is very involved in local activism. Her activism is informed by a college degree she earned when she once thought she would become a police officer. “I figured I might as well go for criminal justice and political science. After my freshman year, I really wanted to chance my major. I recognized that being a police officer was not the way I wanted to go. I wanted to be a teacher of some sort. I ended up not changing my major. I am grateful for the fact that I majored in criminal justice. I learned a lot and it’s helped my activism.” Chantele is quite at home in the hip-hop and R&B genre, although lately, she’s been working on breaking out of that sound with an experimental pop album. “There’s been this thing brewing in me. I really want to do something so out of the box and so creative. I’ve really been struggling [with], you know, “Should I stray into a genre and is that okay?” What I’ve noticed is a lot female artists get a lot of backlash for changing their genres. I always was just like “Well, I’ve branded myself as a hip-hop artist and I can’t move into anything else.” And it’s not true.” Keep an eye out for future releases from Brittney Chantele that defy her current hip-hop sound. More on Brittney Chantele is at her website. (https://www.brittneychantele.com/ ) Listen to the full conversation with Brittney on The Local 913 Podcast.Photo by Dylan Rosgone

Brittney Chantele is a Pittsburgh rapper who is very involved in local activism. Her activism is informed by a college degree she earned when she once thought she would become a police officer.

“I figured I might as well go for criminal justice and political science. After my freshman year, I really wanted to chance my major. I recognized that being a police officer was not the way I wanted to go. I wanted to be a teacher of some sort. I ended up not changing my major. I am grateful for the fact that I majored in criminal justice. I learned a lot and it’s helped my activism.”

Chantele is quite at home in the hip-hop and R&B genre, although lately, she’s been working on breaking out of that sound with an experimental pop album.

“There’s been this thing brewing in me. I really want to do something so out of the box and so creative. I’ve really been struggling [with], you know, “Should I stray into a genre and is that okay?” What I’ve noticed is a lot female artists get a lot of backlash for changing their genres. I always was just like “Well, I’ve branded myself as a hip-hop artist and I can’t move into anything else.” And it’s not true.”

Keep an eye out for future releases from Brittney Chantele that defy her current hip-hop sound. More on Brittney Chantele is at her website.

Listen to the full conversation with Brittney on The Local 913 Podcast.Photo by Dylan Rosgone

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