The majority of the early pop icons, including Bing Crosby, Frank Sinatra, Elvis Presley, the Beatles, etc., were men, according to history. Nevertheless, let’s talk about the female performers: Billie Holiday, Judy Garland, Ella Fitzgerald, and eventually Diana Ross. As media technology developed from radio to television, faces became to matter just as much as speech. Pop singers who looked good enough to go along with their talent went on to build enormous, global fan bases that supported them in every move. With TV, more people were able to hear them sing, fall in love with their appearance, and follow their every move.
Kim Petras, a German native who became the first transgender artist to reach the top spot in the US charts, had to go through a lot of difficult rites of passage there before finding her voice elsewhere.
Kim Petras was a 1992 Cologne native who was reared in the nearby town of Hennef. By the time she was two years old, Kim Petras had already begun to come to grips with who she was.
Kim first rose to fame in a different way about ten years ago. At the age of 16, she made herself the center of German culture and media by promoting her own gender-confirmation operation with the support of her parents and a few German journalists. Kim underwent the operation in 2008 at the age of the youngest individual in Germany.
Before joining Republic Records, she put out music as a solo artist between 2017 and 2021 under her own label, BunHead Records.
When Petras was a teenager, she started making music recordings. In 2011, she released her debut EP, One Piece of Tape. She independently published “I Don’t Want It at All,” her debut single, in 2017, and it quickly rose to the top of various Spotify viral music lists. “Feeling of Falling” (with Cheat Codes), “Heart to Break,” and “1, 2, 3 Dayz Up,” which all reached the top 40 on the Billboard Hot 100, came after the song (featuring Sophie).
Sources claim she’s single.
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