Backline, a grant and educational initiative designed to help Milwaukee-area musicians break out, has selected the first batch of musicians for the first of its two 2019 accelerator programs, which provide intensive, 12-week music-industry mentorship and $20,000 grants, the program announced Wednesday. The Backline artists selected for Spring 2019 are:
- Kaylee Crossfire. The multi-talented singer, songwriter and rapper has toured throughout the U.S. promoting her music independently and created a strong buzz that continues to grow. Kaylee Crossfire has appeared in commercials and TV series such as Chicago P.D. and opened for celebrity artists such as Tink and Snow Tha Product.
- Klassik. Klassik is a rapper, multi-instrumentalist producer and performer. He is known as being as a dexterous a rapper as he is an impassioned and soulful singer, often highlighted by his intense and incisive falsetto. This is intertwined with his own unique, personal and unbridled storytelling and a penchant for curation and collaboration. (Lyft is co-presenting the Backline grant to Klassik.)
- REYNA. REYNA (sisters Victoriah and Hannah Gabriela Banuelos) first appeared in 2016 with their debut single “Spill Your Colors,” attracting over 20,000 streams in the first day. The sisters previously found success with their former project, Vic & Gab, in 2011 when their track “So Long So Tired” was used on their hit MTV series “Skins.” (REYNA is this year’s Mary Louise Mussoline Backline Artist, named in memory of Radio Milwaukee’s late former executive director.)
The artists were selected from 227 applications after five judging rounds that included evaluations and interviews with local and national tastemakers and studio sessions. Non-commercial station 88Nine Radio Milwaukee (WYMS-FM 88.9) and nationally ranked startup accelerator gener8tor developed Backline last year to help Milwaukee musicians succeed, improve Milwaukee’s recognition as one of the country’s most vibrant music cities and assist companies in attracting the young employees they need. Last year, four artists went through the accelerator and received $20,000 grants. The next cohort will take place this fall, with a call for applications expected in July.
Backline Program Director Mag Rodriguez said the selected artists have great potential to break out nationally. “Backline has received over 560 applications between its two programs,” Rodriguez said. “We now have three of the city’s best artists participating in the same cohort and can only imagine the talent that will surface in the fall program.”