
As Litty Vuitton officially releases her highly anticipated new project 1-800-BABEMOTION, the rising recording artist is stepping into what could become a defining moment in her career. Known for her blend of melodic experimentation, confident energy, and emotionally driven storytelling, the South Carolina native has continued building momentum as one of the most distinctive new voices emerging online.
As the first female artist signed to Soulja Boy, Litty has quickly captured attention through her ability to merge music, fashion, internet culture, and personal expression into a style entirely her own. With the release of 1-800-BABEMOTION and its standout single “YOGA,” Litty Vuitton opens up about the inspiration behind the project, her artistic growth, navigating the industry, and what this new chapter means for her moving forward.
Mini Chat:
Your new album 1-800-BABEMOTION dropped this. What can fans expect from this project?
Fans can expect to listen to this project and feel like they’re calling me directly for the vibes. There’s party vibes, there’s dance vibes, there’s lover girl vibes, RNB is on this. There’s even rage vibes for my underground lovers. It’s a good mix of everything.
What inspired the title 1-800-BABEMOTION?
When I started really going up and a lot more people were taking notice to my music, I was creating that motion from little to nothing. Pronounced (1800-BABE-EMOTION), every track is essentially inviting you into my world of emotions that I felt while recording or writing the music. So its 1-800-BABEMOTION because it’s about a girl who started from zero and came up passionately creating this motion for herself — with everything she’s gone through.
“YOGA” is leading the project. What made that the right single to introduce this era?
The inspiration really stems from the 2016 underground soundcloud era, where there was a lot of dance songs coming out and there is a song I remebered called “Cold At Night” by wintertime. He would sporadically refer to women dancing and twerking as doing “yoga” and I always found that to be hilarious. Making the record was very fun and hip and I believe that the video for it is going to be fun, eccentric, and just different.
How has growing up in South Carolina influenced your sound and creativity as an artist?
Me being from the south, you know we’re a little country with these southern roots. There’s a certain slang or dialect we have and I definitely incorporate that into my music. I was inspired by my father though. My father is a producer so I remember being about 4 years old, listening to him making beats, and watching people come to our at-home studio for sessions. So when I was old enough to formulate words, I was making music.
What has it been like being the first female artist signed to Soulja Boy?
It just feels like alignment. He was my favorite artist when I was like 12, I was young and didn’t have a favorite artist until he came out. So it’s really a full circle moment because I literally would imagine that “oh I’m gonna make music with him one day.” And to have actually done the work and see everything align is cool. I was influenced by that whole dance era, the myspace era, so for it to come full circle, and for me to be the first woman he signed — I truly feel blessed and like it was meant to be.\
With this new project about to release, what do you want the rest of your year to look like?
I want everyone discovering a project, and a woman, who has really been building her world from scratch. I also want to show the youth that it can happen, no matter how old you are. With 10 years in this, no matter how long it took I stayed dedicated so I would just love for my music to reflect like “oh she’s masterful at this, she’s good with her work.” I want people to know this didn’t happen overnight and I worked for it.
As your fanbase continues to grow online, what do you want people to understand most about Litty Vuitton as an artist?
I want people to understand that it’s okay to be yourself. It’s okay to be soft spoken like Aaliyah, but have the energy of Michael Jackson on stage. It’s okay to stay in your own lane and sh0wcase who YOU are even if it comes off as different. Even if it takes people years to catch on. I’ve trusted my intuition this whole time i’ve created. I never listen to what people say I should or shouldn’t be doing, I just listen to me. And that’s how I got here so far.
https://open.spotify.com/album/1RAU7ZxaWluQawdykrRAfh?si=9TliJgJPT-GAyehKqL2ahw
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