“I never really had a love for music,” admits Greenville, SC native B.Me, “I had a purpose to walk in.”
That purpose came in 2018 when she penned her first song, just weeks before losing her father. What started as rhyming lines on Twitter evolved into a career defined by resilience, self-belief, and a refusal to be boxed in. “Despite the lemons life throws at you, you have to keep going,” she says. “My resiliency started speaking through my music.”
Now, the multi-talented artist, actress, and creative visionary is making waves with her latest project, AFRO’dite. The album, which explores themes of self-love, transformation, and womanhood, blends rap, R&B, pop, and alternative hip-hop into a sound that’s unmistakably hers. “The industry could never box me into one genre,” she insists. “Ever.”
The spotlight record, “WOO”, takes her artistry a step further. B.Me didn’t just write and perform the track — she directed the visual herself, crafting a short film that fuses music and cinema. Shot partly in a Steak n’ Shake in Atlanta, the video captures the playful tension of a young man’s charm sparking her attention. Within a month, “WOO” had already passed 50,000 views. “It was my first time directing from top to bottom,” she reflects. “And to see that kind of response? It’s crazy.”
Up next is “FAB (Freaky Azz B*tch)”, a high-energy collaboration with Billboard-charting producer Davis Chris, dropping this September. Recorded with a room full of supporters dancing along, the record has all the makings of a viral hit. “Everybody in the room was bopping their heads,” she recalls with a laugh. “I knew what to do from there.”
Her confidence is more than bravado — it’s earned. Over the past six years, B.Me has worked nonstop, collaborating with platinum and Grammy-nominated producers like FigurezMadeIt, receiving spins from DJ Greg Street on Atlanta’s iconic V-103, and catching the attention of soul legend Anthony Hamilton. Along the way, she’s picked up regional awards including Hip-Hop Artist of the Year (3x) and Hottest Music Video (2x).
But the story of B.Me is bigger than accolades. Raised in poverty, witnessing domestic violence, surviving and rebuilding from homelessness, and once even being told by a teacher she’d “get pregnant and drop out,” she turned pain into power. “I talk about this heavily in my singles ‘Birth Day,’ ‘Ready or Not,’ and ‘Proud of Me,’” she says. “That’s why I’m B.Me — Bodaciously Me. I’m the Diamond Diva, and diamonds are made to shine.”
As she eyes a future in both music and acting, B.Me’s message is clear: stay authentic, stay resilient, and keep pressing forward. “Don’t compare your progress to others. Comparison is a thief of joy. Focus on what YOU have going on. You’re meant to be great. #StayBodacious.”
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