Avatar

@krewellajahan / krewellajahan.tumblr.com

welcome to my little hellhole
Avatar

the notepad on my phone during 32 hrs of vocal rest

A few months ago I did 32 hours of silence as recommended by my vocal coach. I just stumbled upon the ‘notes’ section on my phone from that weekend. This is really uninteresting. I don’t know why I’m sharing it. Oh well, if there’s even one girl that feels better about heavy periods after reading it then I’m glad I shared it. 

Do u know if we have Zertec medicine at home ?

Can we stop at CVS

My vocal coach recommended to take at night to experiment To see if it helps

No kinda healthy food open this late ?

medicine Taste like poison

My throat doesn't hurt. My vocal chords are just so torn up from all the post nasal drip

Very well received restaurant from food critiques. Saw it mentioned in vice. Hole in the wall

Will u ask if they have vegan options

This is so generic and scripted

My toilet keeps running Very bad It was fixed yes

He replaced the valve And it just started doing that right now

My vocal coach recommended

When are u going

Sorry I can't talk. Ur a sweetie for being understanding

I' can't talk at all

I don't want to be around a bunch of people when I feel like I'm gonna wanna talk

Lemme go talk to Yaz real quick about studio

Can I make I breaky when u come back

Only Walgreens has this kind, I'll have Yaz get it on the way home from studio Not CVS

Don't worry about it I'll have Yaz get it 

There's hemp milk I steamed

I put fresh ginger at bottom

Yazz

Dinner date tonight ? I don't want to I'm scared I'll turn schizo

What time are ur plans with the guys . I don't wanna do crossfit cuz I'm gonna be in situations where I have to talk

My period is so bad so no lower body

I feel fine tho!

This whole conversation is a summary of my life

I watched more of Trump speech and it was disturbing felt very nationalistic

But Abu said to give him a chance

Very good point about the pilot thing

Thank you bb. Normally I break out around my period

I'm so heavy I literally have to change my pad or tampon every 30 min

She won't go unless u walk her that's what I do when it's raining 

I don't like all the back and forth but it's one of those situations where we're gonna get convinced to do them

When are we doing vacation why go back and forth

So still going back and forth

May as well do it after Cuz we'd come home for like 2 days

I watched it  

We should it's our president

Can we just board it up since we don't use it anyway

Our remote only works when you get super close

Borax is a mildew remover and it didn't work. Also I scrubbed with bleach and it didn't work

Will u be around to feed the hoe

To dinner with Casey

Maybe we should find another spot

Do u wanna ask how long

I gotta text Yaz about something real quick

I'm not old hehe no I wanna stand for real

When we order can u ask for vegan for me- sometimes they use fish sauce or chicken stock as base . Just so no animal product

When we ask what's vegan curry on the menu I'll decide

What time do we have to leave

I thought it was entertaining I was expecting a crazy twist

I thought the doc was gonna be the one seeing all the ppl

I wanna sleep with you but I gotta get all my stuff

Do you want meee

I do I'm just gonna be a mess. I have to get up every few hours

Only if u really want me. Just cuz my period it's really uncomfortable for me

Wanna see a really good music video new hardcore band

It's kinda scary how kids nowadays are so comfortable talking to a camera vlogging

Like I wouldn't even know how

Did you happen to look at that video interview I posted on twitter a couple days ago

It's really good . U should watch it when ur more awake it's 15 min

An interview with this guy Simon sinek . He is an expert in the digital age and talks about social media addiction . Just go on my personal Twitter it's the first link

Yaz and Nida left and scar only peed I gtg home soon:/

There's a big women's march downtown

Yes but they already left

I gotta take care of scar

She just needs to poop so she doesn't do it inside

I'm sorry u would do the same for Nanuk

Avatar

enough is enough

Last night I was haunted by thoughts about the murder of singer Christina Grimmie that happened a couple days ago. I never met her and nor did I get a chance to listen to her music prior to her death. But I couldn’t stop thinking about Christina. I caught her live once at iHeartRadio music awards in 2015 and she sounded like an angel. Now she is with the angels. As I was drifting off to sleep, I was possessed by imagining the peace of Christina's meet and greet at the venue in Orlando, and how the moment was disrupted by bullets.

Little did I know, as I was wondering what Christina’s personality must have been like and how many people are mourning over her, another attack was going down in Orlando. As I was wrapping my head around how someone could possibly be motivated to shoot an innocent human, a gay nightclub turned into a bloodbath.

It is so troubling to think that a place where people come to dance, celebrate, and forget about their worries, has been violated. Music venues are like second homes for some of us. When I am in that space, I am completely present. The last thing on my mind is whether or not my life, as well as the life of my sister, crew, and fans is in danger.

These music events are often symbolic of tolerance and coexistence, as we just experienced at LA PRIDE festival a few days ago. Our safe places have been threatened.

And as I trying to make sense of these shootings that happened in the past few days, I am reminded of the shooting at UCLA that happened just 10 days ago.

How many times do we have to hear about someone’s life being taken for us to realize that we need to reform our gun laws? I don’t know what the right decision is regarding gun control so I’m not going to act like a purveyor of wisdom regarding the law and how background checks should be done...

But what I do know is that humans are fucking crazy. Humans have the capacity to hate, go insane, hold grudges, abuse drugs, have a temper, develop violent tendencies…

Our primitive brains are simply not equipped enough to handle guns.

My heart is weeping for the lives taken this week, and their families and friends in mourning. Let us not give up on humanity. Please maintain peace and love within your communities. That will reverberate across the country.

Avatar

The 6 Year Anniversary of 6/08/10

6/08/10 is the day I decided to drop out of college and quit my side-hustle job along with my sister Yasmine, our former band-member Kris, and our manager Nathan Lim who found us on Myspace. Letting go of the security of my college education as well as my source of income was terrifying, but in the back of my mind I knew that Krewella would never see the light of day if we didn’t nurture the project with daily practice, discipline, and work ethic. If we didn’t make the decision as a group to abandon all other pursuits to commit ourselves to music, I think I would have spent my life always wondering what Krewella could have been. I think I would have been tortured with resentment for not taking a risk. When we got the date tattoo’d on our necks, it was symbolic of our promise to Krewella, to never give up, and in a sense trapped us from ever getting jobs that required us to cover the ink in such an exposed place.

Before 6/08/10, I just assumed that life happens and you grow up and abandon your creativity and pursue a conventional job to survive. I didn’t think it was possible to love your work like a child loves creating and being imaginative…with responsibility and professionalism to maintain, of course. It’s just surreal to think I have a job that allows me to explore my creativity.

Every year that passes, we still commemorate the dedication day. I see it is a marker for progress and artistic evolution. It’s also a reminder to myself that stepping outside my comfort zone and following an unpredictable path led me to a fulfilling and stimulating life. 

When I look back on my attitude on 6/08/10, I was desperate to feel growth as an artist and hungry for success. I don’t want to lose sight of that urgency by settling and feeling like my work is done simply because I’ve toured the world. The desire for progress not only as an artist, but as a human, is what I live for. The hustle keeps us young and alive.

The reason why we talk about 6/08 so publicly with our fans, is because I hope it inspires them. I hope it is reassurance that sometimes it takes years to see results of hard work, and those years are often filled with self-doubt. I also hope it is a reminder that it’s ok to switch up your game plan and reinvent yourself. Sometimes the very act of quitting something you’ve invested so much time into in order to explore another path takes so much courage.

Before this turns into a full blown rant, I will end this letter with a quote I keep reminding myself to live by:

“..what stands in the way becomes the way.” -Marcus Aurelius

That is how our EP Ammunition came to be. Yasmine and I shall rock this attitude as long as we keep making music together. PEACE AND LOVE!

below is a pic showing how thick and muscular my neck has gotten from head banging from touring over the past few years.... compare with first image at top of letter. girls with thick necks are unfuckwithable

Avatar

Reimagining Sisterhood

I have to admit, the photograph for the Ammunition EP is my favorite image of Krewella to date. In the past, that might have been determined by vain reasons, like the selection being 1 decent angle of me out of the 300 where I look constipated.

But I don’t think I look pretty here at all. 

I look fucking handsome. I’m actually turning myself on.

What I am seeing in myself is exactly what I admire in images of men: A crinkle in between the eyebrows showing determination and focus. A weathered face with a constellation of acne scars along the jaw, fearlessly exposing flaws.

I bet you thought I had defined cheekbones, but the shadow of my furry side burns must have fooled you.

The only soft thing about me in this photo is the peach fuzz on my chinny chin chin.

When I look at Yasmine’s face, I see an experienced young woman stoically overcoming weariness. Maybe she's tired of women “smizing." Tired of women erasing the lines of their hard work and labor.

What makes a woman powerful is not her mummified face, but her embrace of mortality.

Yasmine’s relationship with my body in this photo is particularly meaningful to me. First of all, I want to mention that if her large, un-manicured hand was 5 inches lower, it would cover my small boob. I just wanted to get that off my chest. 

My face and body language is reading, “fuck you,” in disbelief, displaying toughness through anger. Yasmine is exuding strength through acceptance and patience.

The position Yasmine holds is one of protection and restraint. She guards me when I am vulnerable, and is a voice of reason when I want to charge. “It ain’t worth it, bro, it’s ain’t worth it,” she says.

I refer to Yasmine as my bro, basing the spirit of our relationship to that of male friends you read about in books and see in movies, who demonstrate loyalty, honor, and security. I love the endearing title “bro.” I use it so much to describe my sister and close buddies, that I often forget the power of sisterhood.

The female bond is often perceived as being born through gossip and boy talk, and easily severed by competition and jealousy. I am constantly hearing, “do you fight?”, “who does this better?, and "who is hotter?,” as if rivalry is obligatory for sisters, or females, working together.

When I think of my other half, I think of my team member. We cross-check each other, we have each others backs, we safe guard each other. Allegiance to your girlfriend makes her more powerful. Encouraging your girlfriend’s aspirations and being proud of her achievements makes you stronger.  

We remind each other to respect our bodies, nurture our souls, take care of our minds. We remind each other to never settle for less, but also advise when to let go of a battle if “it ain’t worth it.”

I love this photo because it shows the grey area between the culturally constructed masculine and feminine. It shows acceptance of mortality and imperfection. I see two women that won’t be taken advantage of. Two women helping each other fight their demons.

Whether siblings or BFFs, my understanding of the female bond is born through shared values, encouragement, and honesty. The unit is fortified by unconditional love, honor, and protection. This is a recipe for resilience. This is the essence of sisterhood.

Avatar

New Eyes For Supermom

Epiphanies are born in emergency rooms. It’s a strange and depressing place where your mind replays scenarios, or creates hypothetical ones, as you wait for someone you almost lost- or are about to lose. On the evening of Saturday, September 12, 2015, I found myself in the lobby of an E.R., texting my two sisters on my blood crusted phone, reeking of B.O. and mildew from marinating in my bathing suit all day. My mom’s blood splatters were painted on my shins, but I wore them like armor to remind myself of her strength and suffrage.

This sounds like I’m about to describe a scene from Gone Girl. I’m slightly morbid, but when it comes to my family, I am extremely sentimental. Thankfully no one died. My mother, Neda, is alive, well, and at almost 60 she’s still kickboxing.

Earlier that day, we were swimming with my mom, who was visiting her daughters in Los Angeles and escaping Chicago. On the way home, my mom and I were in the backseat fantasizing about the epic dinner we were about to cook, completely entranced in our conversation and oblivious to the traffic-congested streets of L.A. I replayed sweet memories of how I used to crawl on the kitchen floor in my nightgown as a kid, pretending I was a cat, while tugging at my mom’s apron as she hovered over the stove. Nostalgia coated my brain like warm blanket as she described her secret recipe for garlicky red sauce. I admired her dewy, sun-kissed face in the car as she spoke so confidently about her ingredients..

And then it happened. “Fuck!!!,” my boyfriend yelled from the driver seat in a way I’ve never heard him say the word. I was awoken from my reminiscing in a panic and the second I looked at the road, a reckless driver was making an illegal U-turn toward us. Before I could even process the collision, the air bags exploded, filling the air with smoke and debris, followed with screams of agony from my mom. The shock from the impact left me feeling powerless and paralyzed for several seconds. It took me a minute for my senses to reawaken so I could look to my left in the backseat to see if she was even alive.

The grim reaper dangled my mom's life in front me. The Angel of Death gave her back to me.

The result of the car crash was my boyfriend’s totaled Prius, my mom’s mutilated fingers, and a new pair of eyes for how I see her.

As a child, the garlic red sauce Neda was describing seemed like it magically appeared on the stove. It magically appeared the same way the bills were paid, the house was clean, vacations were made, and our wardrobes were full. What was expected and taken for granted as a child, was a daily struggle for my mother.

Neda could have been the poster child for the Supermom movement.

To make our world comfortable, she worked 14 hour days including weekends, slaved away in the kitchen to feed a family of 5, drove us and the neighbor to school, dusted every corner of the house, consoled three hormonal teenage girls, converted to Islam and raised us Muslim, took us on her business trips, and still managed to come out of the daily circus of life appearing fully capable, tough, and immortal.

It wasn’t until my late teens, during the crumbling marriage of my mom and dad, where I observed her fragility. But my priorities didn’t concern my parents, and maintaining a social life was paramount to everything. With a family reduced in size, dinners were shorter and ended with us teens headed straight to the computer to continue our Myspace chat conversations, or getting dressed up to go out. My mom was left in the kitchen alone, slowly picking at the remains of her home-cooked meal. While tears fell into her plate over the broken family, her only company was a super size bottle of red wine from Costco.

“I think my finger is off,” my pale-faced mother said as I held her hand in a bundle of pool towels outside the scene of the car crash. Her blood was pouring into a stream of gasoline that was dripping from the totaled car. I had to pretend it was red wine to prevent myself from getting squeamish.

When the ambulance arrived, I begged the EMTs to let me ride with to be near her. In the back of the truck I was really shaken up, but I tried to act unaffected and emotionally stable around my mom who was losing more blood and color in her lips. Still not knowing if her finger was on or off, she managed to be so calm. Barely complaining about the pain, she just said “I feel like throwing up.”

With three kids in the house, my parents dealt with a lot of puke. The stomach flu made me miserable, but I secretly loved the attention my mom gave me when I was sick. She would set up a sleeping bag outside her home office, nurse me with tea and toast every couple hours, and brought home rented VHS movies for me to binge watch.

She cared for me that same way even as a 19 year old, except that time I was in a full-size bed and nauseous from drinking too much on Halloween the night before.

Most of my teenage years, my mom enforced rules of Islam that forbade drinking, but at that time she was amidst a divorce and loosening her grip on us. Maybe feeling like a single mother left her with no choice but to let go and allow us to make our own mistakes. When I fucked up, she was disappointed and stern, but was always by my side giving me a lesson, whether that was in the the courtroom after I got caught stealing from Macy’s, or while watching me get breathalyzed at a busted high school party.

I have to pry stories out of my mom to hear about her self-admitted mistakes, from an unwanted high school pregnancy, to unfaithful boyfriends, to mescaline and cocaine. I remind her not to be ashamed or embarrassed, and that I can vicariously learn through her life.

“I cheated death,” my mom profoundly said as her hand got wrapped with gauze in the ER. In other words, we got lucky.

I will never forget the site of the artery dangling from her finger, dripping blood slowly like a leaking hose. She still wore a smile, even before the pain killers trickled into her bloodstream through an IV. I kept begging my mom to power through the discomfort and resist getting a morphine drip. I’m scarred from the horror stories I’ve heard about medical drugs leading to addiction, especially the one about my mom's father.

I never met my Lithuanian grandfather. He was addicted to heroin during the aftermath of WWII. My mom's immigrant family was on the edge, living paycheck to paycheck in a blue collar neighborhood of New Haven, Connecticut, during the civil rights movement. One night after curfew, as my grandfather was walking home from work as a cook, he was brutally mugged. He was killed when she was 10 years old.

Neda has gone her entire life without the closure of knowing who took her father’s life. But bitterness and vengeance never surface when she talks about her murdered father, which is not often. She never victimizes herself or blames her struggles on the traumatic loss.

My mom just admits that the reason she always had a man in her life, is because she didn’t have a father. I admire her accountability and honesty.

“I was a lost child, lost teenager, now a lost adult,” she recently told me. What I see is a misguided girl who made mistakes and was forced to grow up fast, thrusting herself into adulthood, into a woman who learned to embody the characteristics of culturally constructed male roles...

Work ethic. Strength. Bravery. Physical endurance. Self-discipline.

Sometimes I imagine her father frozen in time, still wearing mid-century fashion, watching over her from Heaven. I imagine him watching his daughter’s life like a movie throughout the decades.  

I wonder if he was proud of Neda when she risked dropping out of college to move across the country alone, to build a career for herself as an independent graphic designer. I wonder if he was proud seeing his daughter of the civil rights movement challenging the stereotypical image of the white American couple, by marrying a Pakistani man and converting to Islam. I wonder if my grandfather is mind-blown watching my mom's biceps flex as she lifts weights and does kickboxing, well into her late 50s. I can’t imagine how helpless he must have felt from Heaven, watching my mom get held up at gunpoint at a laundry mat in L.A in the 80s.

When the time came for surgery to get her artery repaired and fingers readjusted, my mom forced a smile as she got wheeled into operating room. Jokes filled the air about how her eyelash extensions were still in perfect condition, despite the car wreck. She insisted that her daughters go home during the operation, and reassured us that she was in good hands with professionals.

My entire life Neda has proven to be strong and independent. But I know that when she says she’s fine alone, those words secretly mean she would love the company of her children. Behind the smile is a woman who suffered most of her life.

I often hear the assumption that women are needy and attention-seeking, usually attributed to having “daddy issues.” I also have observed how a women is devalued in our society once she gives birth, as if arriving at motherhood strips a women of her sexuality, youth, and relevance. Let us be reminded that not only giving birth, but raising a child as a working women in the modern world while navigating prevailing gender inequalities, is a job that requires an immense amount of labor, responsibility, and strength. Overlooked and often discarded, these women are walking female heroes.

Neda’s aura of independence and heroism left me forgetting that despite possessing the superpower to juggle everything in life with grace, she is human. Several months after the car crash, I still replay the scene in my head to make sense of the incident. It look a life-threatening event to gain perspective and view a fragile and delicate side of my mother. It was a sign from whatever higher power is up there, to be awakened to the mortality, history, and experience of the person who raised me.

Avatar

The Beauty Behind The Grim Reaper

This is the ghost of my past who never gave me closure.

This is the shadow of the chair in my hotel room when I am tortured by insomnia.

This is the outcast who challenges the norm and forges their own path.

This is the woman with strong, rugged hands, and owning it.

This is temptation following an addict’s every footstep.

This is The Grim Reaper reminding me to savor each moment of every day.

This is the person who is ashamed of their body because of hegemonic standards of beauty.

This is the gay man feeling afraid to come out.

This is the man masking his vulnerabilities because he thinks they make him appear less masculine.

This is the widow in mourning, trying to reach out and feel life again.

This is my reflection when I feel like nothing because I compare myself to others.

This is the maturing woman who feels pressure to hide and defy the natural signs of aging.

This is the wall inside the head someone battling mental illness.

This is the genderless state I felt after being called a prude as a teenager.

This is the desexualization of myself after being labeled a slut as a woman.

This is the misunderstood and overlooked second-class citizen.

This is the celebration of fearless self expression in the face of judgment.

This is a remarkably beautiful and ominous photo of my sister Yasmine. It was taken by our friend, Jack McKain, in the back alley of a retro neon-lit motel in Los Angeles’ Chinatown. The moment was captured on film camera as Yasmine was retreating inside a piece of sheer, black fabric that we spontaneously purchased during our photoshoot escapade.

I am scared of this photo, yet drawn to its profound nature. Haunted by the fear of some people interpreting the figure as offensive and threatening, I am far more possessed by its aura of universality. What I love about this piece of art, besides my sister, is that it transcends race, ethnicity, religion, age, and time. It can be whatever you want it to be.

If this image resonates with you because you see a victim of sexual assault living in shame, then let it give you a voice after years of internalizing fear.

If you see a burka in the photo, then let it open your eyes to the individual complexities that exist past the barbaric, one-dimensional representations of Muslims in the media.

If this cover art challenges your expectations of a young woman’s image in the music industry, then let it encourage you to think outside the box and challenge the status quo.

In what sometimes feels like atomized society, I often feel emotionally detached from the experiences of others. I forget to imagine the perspectives of people outside my bubble, especially while living behind a screen. Growing up in an era that breeds competition and emphasis on unique individuality, our sense of humanity is often lost, and power of community often neglected.

Our open-mindedness towards envisioning the experiences of other humans affects our dialogue on a personal level, and from there it has a ripple effect that influences communication in our families, social groups, and then communities. There is no such thing as enough rights, enough peace, and enough equality.

My grandfather Muhammad Yusaf once preached to me that living and thinking in a stagnant state is actually retrogression. With the decline of empathy in our society, we have to consciously practice taking the perspective of others to advance towards having a more tolerant world. Empathy is what allows us to cooperate and unite.

Despite different contexts, behind the veil we all experience the same threads of emotions. The seams are imaginary borders that divide us. Let this be the fabric of humanity that reminds you that we are all one.

Avatar

praying for the city of flags

everyday there are lives lost at the hands of evil people. not one city, community, or country is more valuable than the other. but while being half way across the world from Belgium, the attacks that happened yesterday feel like they hit home.

i am deeply sensitive to the attack because in Brussels, at Tomorrowland festival, i experienced a profound statement of global unity. the crowd was made up of thousands of people from around the world, proudly waving their flags. i saw Israeli flags, German flags, Indian flags, Japanese flags. i saw individuals from enemy nations dancing side by side, smiling, and embracing each other.

i fearlessly rocked my "HUG ME IM PAKI” shirt and felt so empowered to know we were accepted and embraced for challenging stereotypes, not only as women in the music industry, but also as half-Pakistanis on that stage.

that day in 2014, Brussels was fearless. tolerant. loving. progressive. it was a glimpse of what the world could be like if we were to overcome our differences.

it breaks my heart to see the place where i had a perfect view of global harmony under attack.

while those committing atrocities are putting pressure on us, let us not crack. this is a test of character.

let us conquer through unity and strength. not crumble through hate and fear.

sending love to those who are suffering from the attacks. sending love to the city that was violated. praying for the world that is being destroyed.

Avatar

The Secret Life of Yasmine Yousaf

My bedroom is upstairs, 16 steps above Yasmine’s. From here, I have a better view of my little sister than a fan’s front row view at a show (don’t be jelly). For many of you, Yasmine is a star, idol, or role model that you’ve only met through pictures, videos, and songs. What you don’t see are the simplistic, spontaneous, low maintenance, and nurturing aspects of her personality that I get to observe in our day-to-day life.

So here I am, reporting from the frontlines, the secret life of Yasmine Yousaf.

Photo by Hayden Belluomini

Yasmine wakes up at approximately 7AM everyday since we’ve been home focusing on our upcoming body of work (which is about 90% completed, no plug intended). In my groggy state, I can hear her pouring dog food into our dog Scarlette’s metal bowl downstairs in the kitchen. After Scar inhales her food in less than 60 seconds, she takes Scar for a hike. Yasmine never leaves the house without making her bed.

When they return, Yasmine gives our pitbull a detailed body wash on our balcony, where she carefully scrubs in-between the the crevices of her paws with baby shampoo. The dog wash is also an opportunity to for Yasmine to inspect our dog's butthole to see if she has any funny things happening down there. For someone who doesn’t fancy children, my sister shows such care for our baby.

Following Scarlette’s bath, Yasmine takes a shower while listening to whatever song she is obsessed with at the moment. Sometime she’s listening to Bring Me the Horizon, lately she’s been jamming Twenty One Pilots. The shower does not surpass more than the length of 2 songs, as she is concerned about water wastage in California.

When we leave the house for the studio, she is barely wearing makeup and is usually dressed in a black tank and baggy drop-crotch pants. Almost every day she wears these clunky Doc Martens which are tearing at the soles. They’re the shoes you see her wearing in almost every live show photo for the past few years. She simply will not give them up.

The second we get in our Prius, I get a whiff of her woodsy, spiced, natural men’s cologne. I enjoy the scent so much. On the Los Angeles 101 freeway we listen to our catologue of demos and make notes on how to improve the songs.

Once we settle down in the studio, we talk about our where our heads have been and how we can articulate our feelings into song. When we’re done purging our thoughts and picking each other’s brains, she puts on her glasses and then taps away on her computer tirelessly for 5-10 minutes. When she feels like she’s ready to present her lyrics, she grins to herself and says, “I think I have an idea.” Sometimes she laughs at her self and says, “this is going to be really stupid.” I usually love what she thinks is a ridiculous idea.

Photo by Jack McKain

While Yasmine is recording in the vocal booth, everyone on the other side of the glass is usually blown away by the insanely high notes she can hit. We sometimes joke around and call her a robot when she records doubles of her vocal because they sound so perfectly on and consistent.

If we take a break to order lunch or dinner in the studio, Yasmine almost always offers to pay for everyone’s food. I can tell she doesn’t think twice about expecting anything in return; she’s simply generous. For a snack, Yasmine nibbles on dried mango or roasted hazelnuts from Trader Joe’s.

That brings me to Trader Joe’s. Did you know Yasmine used to wear a tropical button-up shirt and bag groceries at TJs?

On the way home, we stop by her old employer to pick up chicken thighs to cook a Friday night family dinner.

Yasmine makes a killer sweet potato, kale, and almond butter soup. Rustic meals are her specialty, with roasted vegetables infused with fresh rosemary from the bushes in our neighborhood. I feel like a little child waiting for her to finish cooking. If she’s in a beer mood, she loves to enjoy La Fin Du Monde, otherwise she is usually drinking a Malbec from Argentina to accompany our dinner.

Settlers Of Catan is Yasmine’s favorite game (warning: a highly addictive board game that severs friendships and brings out the worst in people). Occasionally she likes to rally a small group of friends together on a weekend night to “settle” around our dining room table.

Photo by muthafuckin me. taken with an iPhone 6. 

If she goes out on a weekend, she sometimes comes back home within in an hour, preferring to be in bed, with her head in a book.

In her room she has worn-out plushy Minion slippers, a Funnasyi stuffed animal from fans in Tokyo, juxtaposed with her elegant but aged Steinway piano from Craigslist, and flowy, white curtains. Her room is like Nickelodeon meets Pottery Barn; a blend of juvenile souvenirs and French-country sophistication.

When we grew up in Chicago, we shared a room together. I always knew when Yasmine was asleep because she went in and out of purring like a cat, and snoring like someone slurping the remains of a milkshake. I was on the top bunk, only a ladder away. Now it’s 16 years later, and I’m lucky to only be 16 steps away.

While I can usually tell how long it’s been since she washed her hair, or what her footsteps sound like, I’ve never felt like I’ve had enough. I’ve never been sick of being around Yasmine, despite living together since birth, creating music together, and touring the world together. I still can’t tell when she is PMSing though. I wish I had a sixth sense that could detect hormonal changes.

I’m taking this day, Yasmine's birthday, to reflect on the power of simplicity in her lifestyle, yet the deep and complex nature of her thought process. Thanks to all of our fans who have paid attention to the details, admired her little quirks, and look past pictures and videos in search of other aspects of her personality.

PS: I am not a stalker. I am just Yasmine’s #1 fan.

-muthafuckin jahan

Avatar

In light of Eid today.

My father once said ‘my dear Jahan, remember you are a product of the East & West,’ as I was traveling into the highly populated Muslim country, Indonesia, for a show on our international tour. He did not elaborate, but I think it was implicitly meant as warning not to coerce the crowd into taking their tops off, or not to wear my ‘FUCK’ shirt on stage. It was meant as a reminder to respect and adapt to other cultures during my nomadic escapades, while maintaining my own individuality and identity- the backbone of that ‘identity’ being a sexually liberated 25 year old American-born, half-Pakistani woman. Despite not speaking my father’s native language, Urdu, I still refer to myself as a DESI, which is a term used to identify our fellow Pakistani, Indian, or South East Asian people. Despite not being a practicing Muslim, I still associate myself with them, as I was raised in a Muslim household and some of the values have remained a part of me today. I am just one of the millions of other desis who have been raised in the Western world and have adapted to its values and norms, while trying not to lose sight of our native roots or Eastern traditions.

Since childhood, many of us desis have been in a tug-a-war battle with our identity, navigating opposing forces: the clashing cultures of the East & West. We are walking paradoxes, with one foot in the land of freedom and sexual liberation, and the other foot in a land where values like modesty, innocence, respect for elders, and discipline are paramount. Up until recently, I have spent my entire life wandering through no man’s land in search of who I am, and where I belong. It took me years to muster up the courage to say I was proud to be raised in a Muslim household and that I identify with my desi brothers and sisters. For over a decade, the influx of the negative content in the media circulating around Islam the Middle East silenced me- to the point where I simply could not stand up for myself.

After the 9/11 attacks, this one kid would point at me and aggressively shout “JIHAD!!!” every time we crossed paths in the hallway at school. I giggled along with everyone else, essentially surrendering to his name calling. Although this seems like a petty and minor encounter with a close-minded boy compared to violent hate crimes that occur on a global scale daily, the experience still haunts me and angers me today. It angers me not because the boy was ignorant, but because I had allowed myself to slowly and shamefully abandon my Eastern roots over the years. I defied my Pakistani descent to the point where I couldn’t even defend my own people who were being blamed as a whole for atrocities that extremist Muslims were committing. The self-inflicted shame I felt for being Pakistani made me more submissive than I’d want any teenager or young adult to be. I simply could not stand up for myself because I wanted to fit in and wanted to be accepted by the cool kids (who were mostly thought of as being ‘cool' for degrading others). We cannot sacrifice our authenticity and identity in order to feel welcomed into social groups.

Whether it was feeling insulted for being dubbed a prude during freshman year of high school, or being questioned for ‘why MY people’ bombed the Twin Towers in New York City, I wish I could go back and speak out against the ignorant attitudes I was witnessing in the media and in person. But now is my chance to protect and defend the values I was raised on. As strict and sheltered as it seems, our household rules during our teenage years that forbade dating, short-shorts & tank tops, going to the mall with boys, alcohol, and movies with sex scenes (in a nutshell), were the building blocks for who I am now as a woman in the United States. Fundamental aspects of my father’s culture are deeply embedded in me, whether that is self-control or respect for my elders. 

I also proudly grasp on to values that living in a liberal, democratic America has taught me, whether that is independence, celebration of individuality, freedom of speech, or enjoying my sexuality. Now there are certain cultural qualities and customs from both the East & West that may not be in line with my personal world view, but I am constantly sifting through the light and dark of both create my own set of values. 

Although it has taken a lot of soul searching, I have realized that being a half-Pakistani American is a blessing as I have the opportunity to communicate with both worlds. I do think it is my social responsibility to encourage everyone, whether in my situation or not, to raise their voice and speak out regarding issues that are important to them. Many Muslims and desis are silenced because of the internalized shame or guilt they feel because groups like Boko Haram and Taliban are dominating the representations of Muslims in the media. However, there are many Muslims in other areas of the world who are silenced because they are in fear of their life. They are silenced because they become a target of ISIS if they encourage anything from Western education to women’s rights. If you are reading this, chances are that your decision to speak out is not determined by whether you will be beheaded or not. The predominant images of Islam in the media showcase the barbaric and savage behavior of the the extremist Muslims and we need to overpower those representations by shedding light on the beauty of our respective religion or culture, and that we are capable of modern and progressive thinking. Progressive doesn’t always have to be a word to describe Western societies. So let us truly appreciate and use our gift to freedom of speech to promote more positive and realistic messages about our culture and traditions, whether that be the sense of community and strength of family in Southeast Asian countries, or the beautiful emphasis of PEACE in Islam.

May peace be upon you, no matter who you are. And MashAllah to those who fasted this month. I admire your dedication and self-discipline as the days were long and hot. Eid Mubarak!!!

SOME FUN PIX:

My German-Lithuanian mother converted to Islam and used to sew us little turds Pakistani garments to wear on holidays like Eid. (Yasmine, Aisha, me, and our cousin Nida).

This is my white ass in a hijab, believe it or not!!!! I wore this to Islamic school where all the teachers spoke Arabic and I didn’t understand a thing they said.  

BELOW IS THE SACRED LOTA. You will find one of these in most Muslim households because the Quran emphasizes cleanliness. It is watering pot for your flower and your balloon knot after you pee and poop. I highly suggest you buy one for your girlfriend. You can tell her it’s a genie lamp.

My pits are stinky and I sweat curry but HUG ME I’M PAKI!!!! 

Avatar

my mom’s rallying cry for equal opportunity in response to Baltimore riots.

“.......I never thought after growing up in New Haven, CT and remembering the riots and curfews in ‘67-’68, that we’d see this again so many years after the Civil Rights Movement. I say we give everyone equal opportunity and that starts with spending real money on educating every child equally so that every kid, regardless if they come out of an impoverished 'hood or an uppercrust suburb has chance at life. Let’s take care of our own and really come to grips with our racial divide.”

Avatar

MY ASS. UNPLUGGED.

Salaam-Alaikum Krew, it’s Jahan again! Did anyone catch the headlines last weekend??? I’m talking about the very important breaking news that Krewella’s Ultra 2015 set was UNPLUGGED!!! Minutes after Almighty Deadmau5 tweets “Aw man, Krewellas got them new completely wireless DJMs??? I’m jealous," EDM reporters spread the news like wildfire and the story gets massive traction in the dance community, while Deadmau5 receives praise from critics for his honest and brave reporting from the frontlines. For those of you who are out of the loop with global events, Deadmau5 is the most trusted name on Twitter. Deadmau5’s success skyrocketed when his ratings surpassed TMZ’s after reporting the hard facts of the Krewella break-up several months ago, and since then he has proven himself to be a credible news source for all things Krewella!

All sarcasm aside, I’m rolling my eyes at how much noise the Krewella “fake DJing” story created in the EDM blogosphere last weekend. Not only because it’s another dose of gossip contributing to the pollution on the internet, but because it’s fundamentally based on lie... a “news story” based on the words of someone whose internet reputation thrives off of using slanderous dialogue to entertain his 3 MILLION Twitter worshippers. Every time Yasmine and I are slammed in the media, we debate whether or not it’s worth it to react and share our side of the story. Rumors have real and damaging effects on individuals, careers, religions, political officials, and on society as a whole. Just like our announcement last year stating that we in fact did NOT kick Kris out of Krewella, contrary to what his lawsuit said, we have every right to expose the truth- THE FANS DESERVE THE TRUTH.

This story needs to be cleared up once and for all: We have NEVER played a pre-recorded set and do not intend to do so in the future. Since day one of touring as Krewella in 2011, Yasmine and I have been solely responsible for DJing our shows. We curate the song selection and mix the tracks live, and as a special surprise for Ultra 2015 we introduced our band. To assume that we played a pre-recorded set means that our intentions were to be…..perfect. This goes against what Yasmine and I stand for in the dance music scene. It takes away the raw, human element of our performance. We take pride in allowing ourselves to raise our voices, be vulnerable, fuck up, take risks, face our fears, and unleash our blood, sweat and tears. We would have to be fucking fools to play a pre-recorded DJ set at Ultra, especially knowing it would be our online LIVE streamed debut since the shitty lawsuit drama, and knowing Deadmau5 was going to watch and tweet about it (by the way, Deadmau5 and Kris also share the same lawyer, Dina Lapolt. I’ll let you draw your own conclusions from that).

BREAKING NEWS: Rukes reports proof of cables hooked up at Ultra. Minimal clicks & retweets cuz truth isn’t juicy or fun enough for twitter :(

****If you need a technical explanation of how our equipment was plugged in at Ultra, here’s a helpful video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Bi731cWjRwA&sns=em

We ALL have the right to expose the truth, protect our honor, and share our stories. When a buzz-worthy rumor spreads and completely undermines mine and Yasmine’s hard work, passion, integrity, dignity, and performance- I WILL STAND THE FUCK UP FOR KREWELLA! To bite our tongues and wait for the storm to pass gives too much power to the pattern that we have all fallen into on the Internet: the ingestion of junk food gossip and the regurgitation of bullshit. Within the electronic dance music scene, I have seen far too many influentials reinforcing this cycle by choosing to maintain their internet personas based on promoting lies and rumors about others. And a lot of these people are really fucking talented- but does that give someone a sense of entitlement to degrade others? It’s the typical high school story of the football team’s star who gets mad pussy but still continues to bring down the dork in the hallway- anything to get a round of applause.

Shit talking and degrading others online for publicity and attention completely abandons the values that many people in the dance music community once wore (and many still wear) as a badge of honor. I’m referring to the values that I was introduced to when this genre was on a brink of becoming mainstream almost 5 years ago. P.L.U.R. (peace/love/unity/respect) was the first commandment I was taught by young fans. Togetherness and acceptance were the pillars of the dance culture, and because of these values, I was proud to be welcomed and have a place in the world of dance.

Correction: “I am proud.” The dance music scene doesn’t have to be corrupt. When I’m old, I want to look back on my career and know that I was part of a movement that promoted tolerance, individuality, and speaking out on issues that one believes in. I want to say that 2015 was the year where the paradigm shifted, so that our complacent, jaded, or hateful attitudes were overridden by a fierce movement to stand up for what we think is right for the community. We could save the dance music culture’s honorable values if we become more conscious of what we say and what we share. Spreading the word and reminding people of what the fundamental values are will create awareness.

So here Yasmine and I are, standing in the middle of this war-zone, searching the rubble for the remains of these pillars that have been crumbling before our feet. The thousands of fans that crowded our stage this year at Ultra gave us renewed faith in them as the future leaders of our society- that there is no judgement based on labels and headlines, and that they can think for themselves. These people represent the future of our Krew. #FUTUREKREW. And trust me, there will be many more battles we face with evil trolls. But Yasmine and I are unstoppable, and we will be louder than bombs that try to interfere with our mission to create art and give life to our community. The dark age of evil trolling is coming to an end. The KREWLIFE lives on. 

Avatar

The Breakfast Sacrifice

Good morning. It’s 9 AM Sunday and here I am typing on my phone while I’m eating breakfast. I type with one thumb as the other hand is working like a motor in automatic, shoveling greek yogurt in my mouth. I’m so fixated on my phone that sometimes I forget breakfast is at the table with me. “I thought we were going to have alone time together this morning?,” breakfast says. I lock my phone and set it down right next to my bowl. “Stay there. I’ll be back,” I tell phone. Ten seconds later, I’m back like the muthafuckin Terminator. "I’m so obsessed with looking at you. Please don’t tell breakfast.” But phone doesn’t respond to me. I think it’s still tormented from the time I locked it in a closet to test my self-control. I’ve just come to embrace my addiction to phone and how it is a part of my daily routine, like a crack cup of coffee. What’s a little phone here and there going to do…I haven’t noticed any adverse physical side effects. All of my friends have the same relationship with their phone as well. But there are a few that say the strong bond with phone has changed me. Toothbrush misses the way we used to lie in bed for 5 minutes a day in a meditative state while brushing together. But now I just feel like I can kill two birds with one stone if I have a two minute quickie with toothbrush and phone together. It feels so efficient. Ceiling also says it misses how we used to gaze at each other for hours and feels like we don’t have a deep connection anymore. I just got so tired of looking at it every night. When phone came into my life I didn’t feel as lonely during my restless, sleepless hours. Phone did keep me up later though. Shower is lucky because my precious phone isn’t allowed in there because it will die. My Prius probably nags at me the most. Despite the reckless drivers and rush hour traffic, the car used to feel like a sanctuary away from the world, where I would blare the same music playlists on repeat for months. I sang and talked out loud to entertain myself and car through the bumper to bumper daily rat race. But now Prius is just a vehicle that takes me to work while I occasionally knock out a couple texts at stop lights along the way. Prius says I shouldn’t feel accomplished if I’ve sent a few emails at the end of a trip. I remind myself everyday but I still battle with the temptation of looking at phone while I’m with car. Prius keeps expressing it’s fear of me becoming a murderer and that it shouldn’t take someone’s life for me to change my ways. Breakfast interrupts my neurotic rant with phone to say, “Remember when you were a kid, I used to be your favorite part of the day?” I reassure breakfast that the phone is just there to accompany us hanging out. It’s not like it’s taking away from my breakfast experience. “I don’t even think you salivate when you see me anymore,” breakfast said. I look at my bowl and all I see is skid marks of yogurt left. Oh shit I don’t even remember what it tasted like before I swallowed. But it always comes back the next day. No one died so I guess I don’t have to change a thing. Out of all the mornings I’ve been negligent to my breakfast, this one was worth it though. I’m glad I sacrificed my breakfast today to obsessively type in my phone to share that I am going to be active on social media again, because I have a voice. I’m on a life long journey faced with uncertainty and challenges, I am wresting the lightness and darkness within me daily, and I’m surrounded by inspiring people. NOW is the greatest opportunity in history for us to share what we are learning from our experiences, because of social media. So to my phone, I thank you for being the vehicle for my voice. I know we are struggling to have a balanced relationship but I am working on it everyday. I considered relationship therapy but I think the problem is just me. I was using you for the wrong reasons at the wrong times. But starting today I’m going to start using your power for the right reasons.

This little thought was inspired by my friend IN-Q who inspired me to see life in everything, even inanimate objects:)
Avatar

Quarter-Life Fantasy

Hey guys..I wanted to respond to your letters but I didn't get a chance to tweet everyone back....so this is for the rest of you: THANK YOU ALL FOR THE LOVELY BIRTHDAY WISHES!! Gosh I feel so blessed. I've never received so many Mr. Bean themed e-cards before. Despite being a year older, you guys and everyone I surround myself with make me feel like a kid again. And I used to be very afraid of getting older. I think fear, anxiety, and stress gets the best of us. 'The best of us' meaning the free spirit we had as children, before we developed a sense of self. Before our awareness of social status. Before our creativity was forced inside a framework. So here I am wanting my young soul back!! I am on a journey to rediscovering who I was as a child. Part of that was stepping away from social media 6 months ago. That was the easy step since I pretty much stopped cold-turkey. It's been incredibly liberating! But the hardest part of letting go is changing the gears that give momentum to my thoughts about 'work' and 'play.' By taking life so seriously in the past few years I began to lose sight of why enjoy creating art so much: catharsis. There's still a lingering voice in my head saying 'you don't deserve to bum around...take a vacation..sleep in..or see your boyfriend. You haven't worked hard enough.' And I really struggle with not fully enjoying the little things in life because I've allowed stress to hijack my body.  No one should deprive themselves of play time. That's so against our nature as animals! So if you are young and carefree, please don't walk away from your uninhibited, free spirit. If you work like a dog and feel like you're aging from carrying the weight of the world, please try to tap into your reservoir of youth. The creative, ego-less child is still in there somewhere. The inner child/adult balance can be nurtured. Here is where I come full circle: YOU guys make me feel young. Playing shows isn't exhausting...it's fucking exhilarating. My work IS play- I can't lose sight of that. To this day it still feels like a dream, so thank you for contributing to my quarter-life fantasy. And my birthday wish is that everyone who is working hard toward their life's pursuit can be fulfilled with happiness and youth. Thanks again to everyone for being so thoughtful. Some of the messages literally brought tears to my eyes. 

xo jahan

Avatar

enjoy the silence

At the last boom of the encore, the house lights turn on. I'm scanning the crowd, full of half naked bodies and sweaty faces. I see hand-painted signs that say 'KREWELLA GET ME WET'...'I DROVE 5 HOURS TO SEE YOU'...and my favorite is usually 'IS YOUR PUSSY WET?' 4,000 pairs of eyes stare back at me as mascara is running down my cheeks and wet strands of hair are glued to my face. I'm spewing some nonsense over the mic but I can't hear myself because they are shouting so loud. I'm walking like I have a stick up my butt since my pants are so soaked. I jump over the fence and reach out to as many waving hands as possible and you guys pull me in with such force.

Damn I love you guys. Playing shows and seeing your excitement for our music gives me an overwhelming feeling of warmth through my body. That's a REAL, mutual understanding of each other right there. And I'm finding this is far more authentic than anything we could find online. This is a human bond. And this is the relationship I want to have with our fans. Not a one-way street with me on a pedestal while everyone is watching in the sidelines while I'm in their timelines, but a genuinely connected relationship where I deliver my best music work and performance- because that's what you deserve as our investors of support, energy, and love.

That being said I will no longer be maintaining/checking my personal social media accounts Twitter and Instagram- only sharing my writing once in a while via Tumblr. I love technology and I know that social media deserves so much credit for the growth of our group. I've watched you guys nurture your own global network to spread the word about us. It makes me so proud to know that we have such a unique fan base unlike any other. It's quite powerful enough to call an online movement. But lately I've been thinking about how I want to distribute my time and creative effort, and what kind of example I set for the small city of online followers you guys have given me. People tend to equate the virtual currency such as followers and 'likes' with success, and the blue checkmark as legitimacy. And we all work so hard to achieve an elevated status online..but does that really make us happy in reality, or is it just an illusion and impostor for connectivity? 

For those of you who followed me a year ago, you might have noticed I was responding to tweets daily and posting pictures of my experiences a few times a week. I was quite the social media hustler. Before I could barely open my eyes in the morning I would check my twitter to see if anything happened while I was sleeping. And then the cycle would continue every few hours after that, responding to fans and 'checking to if anything happened.'

But that's the worst way to start the morning. You basically set yourself for dicking around throughout the day. How could I possibly call myself a dedicated artist if my flow of thoughts and ideas are fragmented and intercepted by the urge to refresh my feed or prove what I did that day? And what was I checking for? Why do we all post thoughts, photos, and maintain our profiles online? Acceptance. It all boils down to the fundamental human need- acceptance and sense of belonging. Maybe we feel unworthy in reality...insecure in our relationship...alone even though we are surrounded by others...or bored and can't focus on our craft. So, we construct an identity online that supplements the emptiness. With every retweet we feel validated; every unknown follower a friend. It's reassurance that somebody thinks you're attractive online or values your clever tweet enough to share it. Neurochemicals of happiness are triggered in the brain, and that makes us feel high...to the point where we want hits of it several times a day. And that's what leads to the compulsive need to post and refresh.

In today's society we have been coddled into thinking we are in control of our media consumption and that we are 'active' consumers just because we create our own profiles, go shopping online, respond to tweets, etc. But most of the time we are just lurking...browsing...stalking. That is not active. I think we have abandoned our wisdom..the wisdom to judge character and motives in people, and instead of following our gut and listening to our animal instincts, we are blinded by the portraits people paint of themselves online. We abandoned the wisdom to look away from the screen and genuinely listen to the person talking in the driver's seat...or look out the window daydream...to patiently wait in line and think...how can we ever contemplate our passions if we are always trying to fill the empty space with a sense of feeling 'busy' by refreshing a twitter feed or comment stream? Why can't we just enjoy the silence?

Are you a voyeur or a creator? Slave or a master? Artist or a lurker?

I didn't start Krewella to be an internet socialite. I didn't start making music to have an image. Everything else followed. I didn't start this shit for the charts, numbers, and ratings. When all that jazz starts clouding creative thoughts, the artistic vision becomes unclear and polluted. I started Krewella because making music is straight up fun and cathartic, it was an escape, and writing sometimes is the only way I can harness my thoughts into something meaningful when I cannot express them verbally. Moving forward all I want to give you is my writing, music, creative entertainment, and visual art. And I hope I can get you to THINK.

I hope you understand that the decision to leave my personal social media is not out of a lack of appreciation for our beloved fans or desire to cut off communication with you guys. It's not me thinking I'm 'above' social media, or over a trend. Like I said before, social media was and still is integral to our ability to reach endless corners of the world. And what I have to say is by no means a representation of krewella since I cannot speak for my team.

But for my individual presence online, I'd rather remain silent in a system where people are hustling to fit in and bowing down to those with an elevated online status. Sure, maybe I'm trying to prove a point. I might be voicing a very unpopular opinion, but I'd rather stay true to myself than be a people-pleaser and act based on 'likes.' Perception IS reality, and if we can see through the illusion then maybe we can become more authentic human beings. I hope you can ponder your existence online and if that means anything in reality, or harness your existence online to be revolutionary: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EFS6cP9auDc&feature=youtu.be.

I hope you can live outside the screen, find comfort in solitude, pursue your deepest passions with focus, and enjoy the silence.

Also I hope you can make it to a show and experience something I could never offer you over the internet.

All love to you guys,

jahan

Avatar

peace in desperation

the silver platter can be so blinding 

poisoned seeds are disguised with icing

promises of perfection without compromising

beautiful fruit can be paralyzing.

a gold paved route leads to desolation

where love, struggle, and desire are vacant.

a misguided hand leads the broken wagon

to the castle of forbidden passion.

but some aren't given the trail of crumbs

others turn around and unfollow the footsteps.

some can't harness their mother tongue

a prodigy is gifted, but a soldier is timeless.

because each neurotic battle inside our minds

idiosyncrasies and sleepless nights

the dissatisfaction with our abilities

frustration with ourselves and life

fuels the words from our lips

writes pages to be ripped

feeds the urge to persist

then calms the soul to commit.

a seed of purpose has been planted

your wish can now be granted.

maybe there's happiness in starvation

can we not devour what is so easily given?

maybe there's peace in desperation,

maybe there's peace in desperation.

Avatar

we are welcome to explore our sexiness when HE wants us to, but not when WE want?

I can't even count how many times lately I've been asked 'what do you think about the Miley Cyrus?' in a phone or pre-show interview. I usually avoid discussions about other artists' gossip, but I'm pretty passionate about issues that have underlying themes of sexism. I'm not here to defend Miley or condone her behavior- I just want to encourage people to be more aware of how they might be selectively interpreting what is and what is not socially acceptable, and how the way we negotiate sexual power is unfair.

The public sphere is obsessed with the controversial image Miley is propelling. 'What kind of message is she sending??,' everyone asks. What I'm more curious about is why our so-called 'enlightened,' free-thinking society won't allow women to explore their sexual desires without condemning them. It is accepted and ubiquitous for male artists, like Robin Thicke (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yyDUC1LUXSU), to use sexually explicit representations of women in their content, but when a female artist exploits this image of herself (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LrUvu1mlWco), she is brought down . 

What kind of message is this sending? That we are welcome to explore our sexiness when HE wants us to, but not when WE want? That we should sanitize our explicit actions and only let them come out from hiding when we are the object of the masculine gaze? Male artists are allowed to live out their explicit fantasies of women in music videos, but when the female artist is in control and chooses to embrace her sexual side, she is punished?

Despite the popular belief that our society is 'advanced' and forward-thinking, gender fairness is still curtailed by the strictly defined boundaries of sex. Femininity is controlled by the male dominated sphere and it extends beyond the realm of 'music video hoes.' The attempt to rob a woman's power of her own body exists to this day in anti-abortion laws and restrictions to birth control in some states.

We are in denial if we don't think gender representations in the mass media and the public's reaction to them are sexist. Maybe we can finally answer the question, 'why aren't there more female DJs?' Or more far more importantly why there hasn't been a female president in the United States when we applaud ourselves for being a country that promulgates gender equality. If fairy tales and teen magazines teach a girl at a young age to have submissive behavior, that her focus in life is finding her true love over finding happiness in independence, that she can't FUCK-- she can only MAKE LOVE to her prince charming, then it's no wonder we can't accept a female star freeing herself of the rules of femininity that society continues to perpetuate. 

Avatar

this is the art of getting wet

Fuck showers. Fuck sleep. Fuck food. Fuck manicures, fashion, and friends. Let the stale sweat marinate in your pants day after day, and don’t you dare change them for you will lose sight of the creative zone you have been in for a week straight. Every day the bare skeleton of a song slowly morphs into what will hopefully be a fully fleshed beast. And when the weekend comes, it’s time to take a step back, fly away, and play a show on the opposite coast. I’d add to the list and say ‘fuck money,’ but every dollar earned at the show is poured right back into the development of our project, Krewella. Kris, my sister Yasmine, and I are passionate slaves to the entity we created ourselves almost seven years ago in our parents’ basements in Chicago. We have completely surrendered our lives to Krewella by dropping out of school, quitting our jobs, neglecting our family and friends, and replacing leisure time with moments to pursue our master plan of becoming artists that touch listeners on a global scale. This is what it means to live, eat, breathe, and dream music. This is the art of getting wet.

‘Get Wet’ is a milestone for us as it is our first full-length work of art. Though we have been a group since 2007, the debut of this album marks the beginning of our career. Everything from the vocal lessons, to hundreds of recorded demos, to failed music videos, to shows where we were booed off stage that happened before the completion of the LP were preparation for the journey that we are about to embark on.

with our managers, Jake and Nathan, and director Miles Evert before spinning at our release party in LA this past Tuesday.

With the help of our amazing fans, our managers Jake Udell and Nathan Lim of TH3RD BRAIN MGMT, our agents at AM Only, Miles Evert the producer of KREWLIFE series, the blog community, colleagues at radio, and support from our label, the record the three of us wrote and produced in our Chicago meat district apartment on New Years Eve 2011 was on the rise earlier this year. ‘Alive’ was responsible for our international growth and entrance into the mainstream realm several months after the Play Hard EP release. As it was our first time receiving commercial spotlight, we noticed shift in a handful of our fans, claiming they felt betrayal and that we were becoming too ‘popular’ and that we ‘sold out.’  It’s extremely important to me to address this concept of ‘selling out,’ because uninformed music consumers use this term loosely, but truly do not understand what it means. We don’t belong in the old game where the so-called ‘machine’ feeds a pop-star puppet to a mainstream audience. 

When Columbia Records discovered us in Winter 2012, we already had a fully executed yet unreleased Play Hard EP, and a budding online presence. We didn’t need to follow a star-making model because we created ourselves. We had music, artistic vision, image- an entire brand that had we had been marinating. What was going to take our project to the next level was a magnifying glass over our work to share with millions more, and capital to reinvest into the art. Whether we have aligned with an agency, label, or brand, it shouldn’t matter if we have accepted these opportunities because they only further enable us to focus on the creation of music while they provide a support system so we can survive as full-time artists. Commercial licensing and brand sponsorships are ways for an artist to financially support themselves in the modern music landscape as record sales are low and file-sharing is high. Appearances on MTV or product endorsement shouldn’t lead fans to question artists’ authenticity, and the reality is that it has no affect on the music we create. 

What affects the music we create is you guys, our krew. The tattoos, pictures, stories, tweets, letters, and shows we experience together formed the ‘Get Wet’ album. You guys are the inspiration behind the story we are telling about the past couple years of our lives touring the world. Seeing the way our krew communicates with us on social media and in the physical realm made us realize that our music stands for so much more than a party song. And these experiences we’ve shared together made the writing for ‘Get Wet’ more colorful and truthful than ever before. 

Raging with our Krew in the foam at Exchange LA the night #GetWet dropped

Each song on ‘Get Wet’ serves a different purpose for the emotional, multi-dimensional music listener. ‘Live for the Night’ is your party jam. ‘Dancing with the Devil’ is your fierce response to haters (‘If we die, then who will be your enemy? So shut the fuck up we’re about to leave a legacy”). ’Human’ sympathizes for the misunderstood, sad, and lonely (They say pain is an illusion, you are just confused, and this is just a bruise, but I am only human).  ’We Go Down’ is the rage anthem that unites the reckless little misfits (we are giants we are bigger than the monster, every second we are taking back the power, on a run till we get a fucking answer, try to hold us down but we’re only getting stronger). 

We are turning the page in an era of Dj over-saturation and redundancy. We are bringing the rock to the rave. This is rock n’ rave baby!It’s not about looking pretty, being safe and feeling clean. ‘Get Wet’ is about losing your inhibitions and dancing, taking risks, embracing your fucked up, crazy side, and enjoying the ride that we are all on together. We hope ‘Get Wet’ will make adults feel youthful and kids feel empowered. It is a shoulder to lean on. It will tell the story of your lives when you can’t put your emotions into words. We’ve carefully crafted every lyric, instrumentation, song order, and nurtured this album like it’s our new born baby. And this baby is soaking wet and ready to jizz all over trolls around the globe.

You are using an unsupported browser and things might not work as intended. Please make sure you're using the latest version of Chrome, Firefox, Safari, or Edge.