Music / SelectsTimbaland Selects Kat DahliaThe singer Timbo calls "this generation's Nina Simone" on toking on South BeachShareLink copied ✔️May 28, 2013MusicSelectsTextOwen Myers Taken from the June Issue of Dazed & Confused: Hip hop king-pin Timbaland: “When I heard ‘Gangsta’ the first thing I noticed was Kat’s tone. It’s sooooo incredible. And then when I saw her picture, I was like, ‘Yo, I need to meet this girl!’ I look at her as this generation’s Nina Simone. She’s that powerful. Her rasp and her whole swag game is just incredible.” Her debut single was called “Gangsta”, but Miami-born R&B singer Kat Dahlia insists that big pimpin’ isn’t on her agenda. “The song’s not too symbolic,” she says from her New York home. “It’s just there on the plate for you to digest.” The socially conscious, Mary J-esque piano-driven midtempo is inspired by Dahlia’s upbringing, and paints a gnarly picture of “a one bedroom South Beach lifestyle” in which “they just paying for the view”. “Of course it’s autobiographical!” the 22-year-old laughs. “In Miami you just stew, smoking weed all day.” On the track she rages like the South Beach midday sun through purple haze, speak-rapping about the guardian angel who urged her to put down the blunts and start singing. “His name’s Candy Warhol!” Dahlia hoots of her friend, who cameos in the line: “I spliff it hard / Candy says to stop, my voice is getting too harsh.” “He used to be on an MTV show (From G’s to Gents) but I met him working at a restaurant and he started unofficially managing me.” Dahlia is currently signed to Epic-backed label Vested in Culture, run by legendary exec Sylvia Rhone, who masterminded the rise of everyone from En Vogue to Nicki Minaj. It’s a long way from her days as a “bridge and tunnel” girl commuting into New York from New Jersey, waiting tables to get by. “I was pretty much on my ass,” she says. “I got into a fight with my manager, so I just sat down at the bar and wrote ‘Gangsta’. I was so pissed at the world. It was one of those moments when you’re like, ‘Why is this shit so fucking hard?’” Is “Gangsta” a modern day “No Scrubs”? “In a sense,” she says. “Don’t even try stepping up to this if you’re gonna be that!” You’d be a scrub to underestimate her. She recently hopped over the pond to work with London producer Naughty Boy, and has laid down “a dope melody” for Timbaland’s new album. “I’m definitely thinking worldwide,” she says. “I have such a plethora of sound and emotion on my album.” Such self-assurance might seem arrogant in a lesser artist, but Dahlia owns her vision for dominance. “I’m putting out a Spanish album too. Why not stay in touch with my Latin roots?” One thing’s for sure – she’ll never have to wash marinara sauce out of her shirt after an evening shift again. Photography by Jeremy LiebmanStyling by Alison Isbell Escape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy Expand your creative community and connect with 15,000 creatives from around the world.READ MORE2Slimey isn’t here to be a meme artist: ‘I want a fucking Grammy’ Nourished by Time: ‘Music should be fun – but it can’t be fun all the time’K-pop has an AI problemCoals are kickstarting Poland’s dream pop sceneEvilgiane’s camera roll from his tour with Snow StrippersFinnish alt-pop star Pehmoaino: ‘Art helps us survive this dark country’10 great albums you may have missed in the last three monthsLamb is making ‘electronic lyrical’ music that sounds like no one elseArabic shoegaze duo Kiss Facility speak a language deeper than words‘Nazis can’t dance’: Photos from London’s House Against Hate protest rave5 tracks you can’t miss from March 2026ADL: The best and worst tracks on Yeat’s new albumEscape the algorithm! Get The DropEmail address SIGN UP Get must-see stories direct to your inbox every weekday. Privacy policy Thank you. You have been subscribed Privacy policy