Call me up on stage cupcakke
by David Jasper Pratt on 2/12/24CupcakKe, you should call me up on the stage one day and I will cheer you up and wish congratulations to you every time and I could go to your concert one day!!!!
CupcakKe in Concert
Chicago artist CupcakKe divulges everything and apologizes for nothing with her brash and biting trap-inspired rap. Her heavy, hard-edged, sometimes humorous music is a clear product of her background. Born Elizabeth Eden Harris in 1997, she grew up in the south side of Chicago alongside fellow future rappers Chief Keef and Lil Reeseâbut she started down quite a different path. As a young girl, Harris wrote and performed her own religious poetry at her local church. Eventually, on the advice of a parishioner, she began to turn those poems into raps. Soon enough, with plenty of Lil Kim inspiration, her poetic wordplay quickly turned explicit.
With a tiny chunk of cash from her mom, she booked a studio to record her first demo, and CupcakKe was born. She began to upload her songs to YouTube and in late 2015, she started to see her views skyrocket. Within a day, she was featured on the major hip-hop site WorldStarHipHop. She released two more singled that would eventually be featured on her 2016 debut mixtape. The collection of songs proved CupcakKe's versatility beyond a shock rapper, with brutal and candid songs like "Pedophile" and "Life." Within a few months, she'd release her second mixtape, âS.T.D (Shelters to Deltas),' and by October 2016, she released her debut studio album, âAudacious,' including dance-fueled LGBT anthem "Lgbt."
Her output would continue to prove prolific. By early 2017, she was featured on English pop star Charli XCX's "Lipgloss," and released her sophomore album, âQueen Elizabitch.' At this time, most of her success was found online, but she'd soon hit the road for The Marilyn Monhoe Tour, bringing her vivacious personality to the stage. The following year, she was already on her third album, âEphorize,' and by the end of 2018 she would join Iggy Azalea on the Bad Girls Tour.
CupcakKe, you should call me up on the stage one day and I will cheer you up and wish congratulations to you every time and I could go to your concert one day!!!!
The show was great and I had an amazing time. Cupcakke had a pretty short show, about an hour, with three openers. I wish she would perform for longer and have one or two fewer openers.
I will never get over how great cupcakke is and I will always love her đ
This was definitely much more than just a concert, it was a religious experience omg.
She was an amazing performer, and I had an amazing night overall. The only bad part was we had to wait 2 and a half hours before she even came on, and the DJ was playing bops, but it was only fun for so long.
The concert was fun⌠but the opener was 1 1/2 hours and none of us knew when Cupcakke was coming on. She was on for about 45 minutes which was goo and very interactive with the crowd, but everyone was so mad she wasnât on earlier (concert started at 7, opener went on at 7:45, cupcakke at 9:15).
It was supposed to start at 7pm, DJ did not come out until 8pm, he did his thing until almost 9:30pm. The last 30 minutes he announced her coming about three times but it was a confused waiting game. She was only allowed to perform until 10pm due to curfew, and played a song after she was supposed to stop. Overall, her performance was fun but I was disappointed on how everything played out. From reading previous reviews this seems to be a common occurrence.
Sheâs a great performer , but the doors opened at 7 so she shouldâve been on at 8 , she didnât come on till 9:15 and then was off stage by 10. Kinda annoying but it is what it is.
Her set was only 45 minutes. And she took a while to come on stage. I had a lot of fun otherwise, but I wish her sets were longer.
Since this was my first concert ever, I was super excited to see her perform. However, she took almost two hours to appear on stage and when she did appear she only played for 40 minutes. That aside, I loved her performance. She was amazing and so was the crowd. I donât regret buying a ticket, but I would not buy another one of hers again.