There’s no sugarcoating it— 3n33c3 is a force. And she’s not just making noise—she’s starting a movement.
The Charlotte-based artist, whose name is pronounced “Eneece” but stylized with 3s in honor of her angel number, isn’t just rapping—she’s reclaiming space. Her latest single, “Copy-Paste,” is more than a banger. It’s a blistering clapback to every fake, copycat, and energy vampire that’s ever tried to dim her light.
Over a beat that slaps with Miami bass nostalgia and futuristic bite, 3n33c3 fires off bars like battle cries: fierce, feminine, and fully in control. “This is for the underestimated, the imitated, the silenced,” she says. “I’ve been all three. Now, I’m louder than ever.”
DJ Infamous of 106.5 The Beat co-signed the record as an instant summer heater, and the internet is following suit. Spotify’s algorithmic playlisting has already taken notice, securing the track placements on Release Radar, Spotify Radio, and Spotify Mixes, a major win for an artist still early in her discography but deep in her artistic purpose.
But don’t mistake early for green. 3n33c3 has been honing her voice for years—writing, performing, creating, surviving. Her story, marred by abuse, betrayal, and brokenness, is also one of resurrection. “Music didn’t just save me—it rebuilt me,” she says.
It’s that layered journey that seeps into every lyric, every punchline, every melody. Raised in Rocky Mount, North Carolina, shaped by the grit of New Haven, Connecticut, and reborn in Charlotte, 3n33c3 has always been dancing on the edge of reinvention. Her viral breakout “HEADDD” gave the world its first taste of her unfiltered energy (and earned her the nickname “Throat Goat”—a title she embraces with zero shame and full ownership). But “Copy-Paste” signals evolution. Growth. Intentionality.
And the visual? It’s coming fast. The “Copy-Paste” music video, shot June 14th, is being teased as a high-octane celebration of feminine power, think electric choreography, raw energy, bold visuals, and a cast of women who match her intensity step-for-step. “It’s not just a video,” she says. “It’s a declaration. We’re not asking for space anymore. We’re taking it.”
Backed by Major Music and distributed through Roc Nation, 3n33c3 is gearing up for her first EP, eyeing stages, and plotting her rise with purpose. And while comparisons to Missy Elliott, Megan Thee Stallion, Lil’ Kim, and Nicki Minaj keep popping up, she wears them like armor—not imitation. Influence is one thing. Identity is another.
“I’m not here to be anyone’s copy,” she says with a smirk. “I’m the original. Full stop.”
In a world full of filters and formulas, 3n33c3 is refreshingly, unapologetically real. “Copy-Paste” is just the beginning.
© 2025, alanna. All rights reserved.