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LeBow senior Zhane Littlepage

LeBow Senior Releases Rap Album

BY NATALIE SHAAK

November 16, 2015

It is the dream of every musician to take the stage with bright lights shining and a crowd of thousands going wild. For LeBow senior Zhane Littlepage, this dream became a reality when she opened for top rappers Wiz Khalifa and Lil Wayne at Drexel’s Fall Fest concert in October.

While the show was her biggest performance since she began writing poetry and music at 10 years old, it is the release of her first album and her future making music that has Zhane most excited.

Zhane first began working on the album, writing all the lyrics, while studying abroad in London and Paris in the summer of 2014.

“I fought music for a long time and would tell myself it was just a hobby and not what I really wanted to do, because, of course, it is not the safe route,” she says. “I tried to fight it, but when I was abroad, I said ‘you can’t fight this anymore.’”

But it was a move to California for co-op that made her album a reality. She secured two three-month internships that had her working with two different Philadelphia natives. She began at Will Smith’s film company, Overbrook Productions, and then Troy Carter’s artist management company Atom Factory. While there, she not only got to network with top artists but also booked studio time and worked with producers to complete her album.

She released her debut album titled The Loudest Library under the stage name Zhane Nichele in March 2015. She offers it for free download on her website zhanenichele.com.

“It’s an album with a lot of stories on it,” she says. “I picked the name of it because the contradiction is like me. I sing, but I also rap. A lot of people, when they first look at me, say, ‘You’re not a rapper.’ I think that is why the title represents me as an artist. The album is also a lot of storytelling, like an internal library.”

It was Zhane’s time on co-op in California that helped her define her goals after Drexel. She plans to move back to Los Angeles to pursue her music career when she completes her degree in Marketing and Entrepreneurship in June.

Born in Philadelphia and raised in New Jersey, Zhane knew she wanted to go to college in Philadelphia after attending boarding school in North Carolina for three years.

“I wanted to be close to home, and I felt Drexel was the best school in the city, definitely because of the co-op program,” she says. “Drexel separates us from other graduates through the co-op program. By the time you graduate, you’ve already had so many opportunities that employers are looking for. The hardest thing graduating students typically face is people telling them they don’t have experience. The greatest thing about Drexel is you come out with that experience.”

She also acknowledges her work inside the classroom during her four years at Drexel as contributing to her success in music. She found her classes both practical and enjoyable.

“My entrepreneurship classes were my favorite because those are the classes where I don’t feel like they’re work. I feel like they are things I want to learn. I’m really engaged and care about it.”

Besides classes and co-op, Zhane credits the LeBow BRIDGE program as making her Drexel experience so impactful.

“It’s supposed to be a support system, but it is really a family for us,” she says. “We have our advisors. They are our mentors and our academic advisors. They’re our counselors. Whatever we need them for, we can depend on anyone in the program. We definitely feel a strong bond.”

The BRIDGE program is where she developed her strongest friendships, found support, engaged in community service and learned the skill of mentoring others, all of which she hopes to utilize in pursuing social entrepreneurship. After securing her music career, she hopes to start a nonprofit organization that focuses on mentoring and tutoring inner city youth as well as a creative arts center.

Whether it is her music, her engagement in the community or her work in the classroom, she values being herself and taking inspiration from those around her.

“It’s authentic. It’s me. This is where I want to be.”

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