

"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. "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. But after moving to Los Angeles at 19, things began to change. 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.

#SABRINA CLAUDIO ABOUT TIME DOWNLOAD HOW TO#
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.
