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Rae shared first hints of new music in June 2024 through her social media. While guest appearing at Charli XCX and Troye Sivan's Sweat Tour (2024) at their Los Angeles show, she posted a video of herself in a bikini and stilettos walking underwater in a pool as a snippet of "Aquamarine" played over it, [2] which quickly gained traction online and was also teased in the intro to her "Diet Pepsi ...
The official music video was released alongside the song on August 9, 2024, and was directed by Sean Price Williams. The video opens with Rae teasing her next single " Aquamarine " and continues with her having fun in a car in her bra and underwear, alongside her male love interest portrayed by Drew Van Acker .
FYI, Addison manifested working with Arca a full year ago, telling Vogue in August 2023 “I mean, I would love to work with Arca, obviously! I just love her sound, and I think she’s so cool."
Addison Rae Easterling (born October 6, 2000) [2] [3] is an American social media personality, singer, and actress. Rae rose to fame on TikTok in 2019 and amassed over 88 million followers, making her the fifth most-followed individual on the platform. She found success with her different ventures including music and acting.
Rae's attendance at the 2024 CFDA Awards comes one month after her head-turning red carpet look at the MTV Video Music Awards held at New York's UBS Arena on Sept. 11 this year.
Specifically, with Charli XCX, Troye Sivan, Rosalía, and Addison Rae, all of whom showed up together and filmed a TikTok of themselves chilling to Addison's new song "Aquamarine." And when I say ...
Addison Rae stepped out in a seashell bra and blue fishnets at a party celebrating the release of her new song "Aquamarine."
AR is the debut extended play by American social media personality and singer Addison Rae.It was released on August 18, 2023, through Sandlot Records. AR is a pop and bubblegum pop record with influences of electropop, synth-pop and dance-pop, which Rolling Stone described as "plasticky, pristine pop that online audiences ironically, and then unironically, eat up."