Artist's albums
Hold That Spirit
2023 · album
Not A Monster
2023 · single
Hold That Spirit
2023 · single
Joy Revolution
2023 · single
Where I Want To Be
2023 · single
PSYCHO KILLER
2023 · single
Who Do You Think You Are
2023 · single
The Coast
2022 · single
Place To Call Home
2022 · single
Lost With You
2022 · single
He Calls Me River (feat. Oshima Brothers)
2022 · single
The It Girl (feat. Brooke Simpson)
2021 · single
Woman in Color
2020 · album
Rebel Soul
2020 · single
Into The Wild
2020 · single
Red
2020 · single
They Say
2020 · single
The It Girl
2020 · single
Fight Like A Girl
2020 · single
Live at Rockwood Music Hall
2019 · EP
Fight for You
2017 · album
Fight for You
2017 · single
In the River
2017 · single
In the River: A Protest Song
2016 · single
Heroine
2015 · single
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Biography
Raye Zaragoza’s Hold That Spirit is an album rooted in this realization. The Los Angeles-based singer-songwriter has always made political folk music that is informed by her identity as a woman of mixed Indigenous, Asian and Latina heritage. She gained recognition in 2016 with “In The River,” which was written to protest the Dakota Access Pipeline. When she performed a Tiny Desk Concert at NPR, she spoke and sang about making live music more economically accessible. And, she currently writes the music for Netflix's Spirit Rangers, a show featuring an all Native American writers room and cast. As she approached 30 last year, Zaragoza started thinking specifically about the expectations placed on women as they age: what they should have achieved in their careers, the nuclear families they are expected to pursue and nurture, the way that beauty standards and ageism collude to make it more and more difficult to be seen. 29 was also the year Zaragoza got engaged and, soon after, ended her relationship. After the engagement ended, she used what would have been her wedding budget to fund part of the production of her new album. As much as it was a practical decision, it was also one rife with symbolism: Zaragoza was investing in herself