Her old manager, Viktor. The man who owned her alias “HouseElectroPP” through a legal loophole. He’d find her. Sue her. Ruin her.
It was 11:58 PM on December 11, 2024. Maya sat alone in her cramped bedroom studio, the only light coming from the soft blue glow of her laptop screen. On it was a single, unuploaded file: New Releases 9.12.2024 - HouseElectroPP Music -...
Maya finally leaned back, tears cutting tracks through her cheap foundation. The last note faded. She looked at a Polaroid of Paolo taped to her monitor. Her old manager, Viktor
The “PP” in the label name wasn’t just a tag. It was a promise to her late father, Papa Paolo, who taught her how to solder a synth circuit board. “Proud Paolo,” he used to say. “Make a sound that has your name on it.” Sue her
At midnight, her finger hovered over the “Publish” button. The sample she’d embedded—a crackly recording of her father’s old Italo-disco vinyl skipping—looped in her headphones. Then she saw it. A new email subject line:
For three years, she had ghost-produced tracks for other DJs. Big names. Sold-out arenas. Her beats had made other people famous, while she drowned in unpaid rent. Tonight, she was stealing her own music back.