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Chloe Flower
Chloe Flower
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Key Information

Chloe Won (born August 6, 1985), who is known professionally as Chloe Flower, is an American composer, writer, producer and classical pianist.[1][2][3] She studied at Manhattan School of Music Pre-College and later at Royal Academy of Music in London.

Career

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In early 2011, Flower was discovered by producer Kenny “Babyface” Edmonds before signing to the Island Def Jam Records department, Sodapop. Her album, categorized as Contemporary Classical, was not released until 2021 on Sony Masterworks and features spoken word by author and public speaker Deepak Chopra.

In 2011, Flower opened the North American tour for Italian operatic pop trio, Il Volo.[4]

In 2012, Flower was featured on Nas’ eleventh studio album, Life Is Good where she performed on, A Queen’s Story, produced by Salaam Remi. In November 2013, Flower was featured on Celine Dion’s eleventh English-language studio album, “Loved Me Back to Life” on “Lullaby.” In the same month, Flower was featured on the lead single “Know Bout Me” from American hip-hop producer Timbaland’s third studio album, Opera Noir.

In 2014, Flower scored the music for the short film I Choose directed by AnnaLynne McCord. In 2015, she scored "A Ballerina's Tale," a documentary on American Ballet Theatre Ballerina, Misty Copeland, directed by Nelson George.[5] In July 2015, Flower scored the music for Nike and Kevin Hart's Health is Wealth campaign.[6]

At the 2015 TCA Press Tour, Netflix announced its "Mike Epps: After Dark" special. The sold-out special was filmed live at the historic Orpheum Theatre featuring Flower's live classical music with Epps' stand-up comedy.

In July 2015, Flower gave her Walt Disney Hall debut to a sold-out audience. The closing song featured a historic classical version of Eric Clapton's hit song, "Change the World" which she performed with her producing partner, Kenny "Babyface" Edmonds.

In February 2019, Flower became an instant viral sensation for a spirited performance of the song "Money" by Cardi B at the Grammys. She performed the piece on a crystal piano on loan from the Liberace Museum.[7]

In August 2019, she was selected as a Steinway Artist.

In July 2021, Flower released her debut album, Chloe Flower, with critical acclaim. The album debuted at No. 4 on the Classical Billboard Charts.

Flower has co-produced songs for 2 Chainz ("Pretty Girls Like Trap"), Céline Dion ("Love Me Back to Life"), Swae Lee ("Christmas at Swae's"), Questlove, Babyface, Nas ("Life Is Good") and Johnny Mathis. She has also performed as a feature performer with Meek Mill to a sold-out audience at Madison Square Garden, Cardi B, and Becky G.

In 2022, Flower became the first classical instrumentalist to perform as a soloist for Disney's Holiday Special and Magical Christmas Day Parade.

Flower composed and performed live all of the commercial intros and outros, the opening theme song, and the closing scene of the 80th Golden Globe Awards.[8]

Flower has composed for Kevin Hart, Misty Copeland, Krug Champagne, The Rock n Roll Hall of Fame, and her music was part of the soundtrack for Paramount+ feature film, On the Come Up.

Discography

[edit]
Year Title Label
2021 Chloe Flower Sony Masterworks
2023 Chloe Hearts Christmas Sony Masterworks
2024 I Love Me More Popsical Music Group

Philanthropy

[edit]

Since 2006 Flower has been working with The Somaly Mam Foundation, an organization that rescues children aged 3–17 from sex slavery. She works closely with AFESIP, an organization based in Cambodia that works to care for and secure the rights of those victimized by sex slavery and human trafficking. She also works closely with CAST LA, which assists persons trafficked for the purpose of forced labor and slavery-like practices and works toward ending all instances of such human rights violations.[9]

In August 2012 Flower and Deepak Chopra, performed for a room full of patients in New York City as part of the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center A-List program created by Tory Burch.[10]

In 2013, Flower performed and served as a panelist on music education and human trafficking for the United Nations’ CTUAN Conference. Then in 2014, Flower partnered with LA county detention, probation, and foster promoting music education and anti-slavery for at-risk youth and performs regularly at Eastlake Detention Center. On July 30, 2014, Flower partnered with The United Nations Office of Drugs and Crime on the launch of the first UN recognized World Day Against Trafficking of Persons. Flower performed and spoke alongside Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and the President of the General Assembly, John Ashe.[11]

In 2015, Flower partnered with Art for Amnesty, a division of Amnesty International, which brings together world-renowned artists for musical projects that benefit Amnesty International.

Flower is an artist ambassador for the United Nations Office on Drug and Crime as well as the youngest board member of The Liberace Foundation. She has also partnered with Compton Unified School District to help bring awareness to Music Education.

Awards

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In May 2013, Jada Pinkett Smith and Lisa Ling presented Flower with the Creative Impact Award from CAST LA in recognition of her work in music education and in countering human trafficking.[12][13]

In October 2022, Flower received The Last Girl's Impact Award from the organization, Aapne Aap, with Gloria Steinem in attendance, for her work to end human trafficking.

References

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[edit]
Revisions and contributorsEdit on WikipediaRead on Wikipedia
from Grokipedia
Chloe Flower is an American classical , , and recognized for developing the "Popsical" genre, which integrates traditional piano techniques with elements of pop, hip-hop, and . Trained from age two in , she studied at the and the Royal Academy of Music in , establishing a foundation in classical repertoire by composers such as Beethoven and Bach before innovating crossover styles. Flower achieved prominence through high-profile collaborations, including accompanying at the 2019 and contributing to projects that blend orchestral arrangements with contemporary beats, culminating in her self-titled debut album released by in 2020. An official Steinway Artist and the youngest board member of the Foundation, she advocates for and combats , earning accolades such as the Creative Coalition Award for her .

Early Life and Background

Childhood and Initial Musical Training

Chloe Jeanne Won, professionally known as Chloe Flower, was born in to Korean immigrant parents. From an early age, her family environment reflected the disciplinary approach common in Korean-American households toward artistic pursuits, emphasizing rigorous practice in . Flower began reaching for piano keys at age two, exhibiting prodigious talent marked by perfect pitch and an ability to replicate sounds by ear. This self-initiated engagement preceded structured lessons, allowing her to experiment with phrasing and improvisation, though teachers occasionally corrected deviations from strict classical technique. By age three, she was delivering solo piano performances, focusing on foundational classical pieces by composers such as Bach to develop precision and finger independence. Her initial training extended briefly to other string instruments like and around this period, providing a broader classical foundation, but remained her primary instrument. These pre-teen years involved consistent daily practice, honing technical skills through that prioritized etudes and sonatas for building endurance and accuracy, without reliance on formal conservatory enrollment until later.

Family Influences and Cultural Heritage

Chloe Flower, born Chloe Jeanne Won on August 6, 1985, in central Pennsylvania, is the daughter of South Korean immigrants who emphasized early exposure to classical music as part of their family's adaptive cultural framework in the United States. Her parents facilitated piano lessons starting at age two, capitalizing on her innate perfect pitch, alongside violin and cello instruction, which fostered a disciplined routine grounded in repetition and technical proficiency rather than coercion. This structure reflected broader Korean immigrant parental strategies prioritizing instrumental mastery and perseverance, drawing from Confucian-influenced values of diligence in the performing arts, without documented evidence of the hyperbolic "tiger parenting" stereotypes often amplified in Western media narratives. Flower's Korean heritage, inherited through her first-generation immigrant parents, instilled a cultural orientation toward viewing music as a pathway to personal discipline and excellence, shaping her foundational before formal conservatory entry. Family dynamics centered on supportive immersion in Western classical traditions, adapted to their new environment, which encouraged Flower to internalize music as a tool for self-expression and resilience amid immigrant challenges, distinct from later genre-blending pursuits. No public records indicate siblings' direct involvement in her musical development, underscoring the parental focus as the primary familial vector for her early inclinations.

Education and Formative Years

Formal Studies in Classical Music

Flower began her formal education in the pre-college program at the , which she completed in 2000. This early training, starting around age twelve, immersed her in the rigorous demands of classical technique and repertoire. She subsequently advanced her studies at the , , and the Royal Academy of Music in , where the curriculum centered on classical performance, including technical mastery of composers such as Johann Sebastian Bach. These institutions provided intensive coursework in execution, , and interpretive skills essential for classical proficiency, emphasizing precision and endurance over stylistic experimentation. Complementing her academic pursuits, Flower secured an internship at ' Rush Philanthropic Arts Foundation during her studies, offering practical insight into merging classical foundations with urban music production environments. This experience highlighted the causal links between disciplined classical training and adaptive applications in diverse musical contexts, without diluting the technical rigor acquired through her institutional programs.

Key Mentors and Early Performances

Flower studied intensively from age two, advancing to the Manhattan School of Music's precollege program by age twelve, where she received instruction from Zenon Fishbein, who emphasized technical precision and interpretive depth in classical repertoire such as works by Beethoven and Bach. This training cultivated her foundational skills in phrasing, dynamics, and pedal technique, enabling mastery of complex etudes and sonatas through iterative critique and practice. Her education extended to The Juilliard School and London's , where faculty oversight further refined her execution of standard classical pieces, fostering discipline in and ensemble playing essential for professional readiness. These institutional environments prioritized causal skill-building via repetitive mastery of canonical works, rather than performative innovation, laying the groundwork for her later adaptations. Early performances circa 2005–2010 occurred primarily in New York academic settings, including student recitals at Juilliard and Manhattan School affiliates, where she demonstrated proficiency in solo classical selections to peers and examiners. These venues served as platforms for honing stage presence and audience engagement within classical circles, establishing her as a technically adept interpreter before branching into hybrid styles. Prior to developing her "popsical" approach, Flower's compositional efforts were limited, focusing instead on arrangements of existing classical material during studies, which reinforced her understanding of harmonic structures and thematic development without deviating from tradition. This phase underscored an organic progression from interpretive performance to original creation, grounded in rigorous classical pedagogy.

Professional Career

Early Career and Industry Entry

Following her studies at , Chloe Flower entered the professional through an at Rush Productions, the company founded by hip-hop pioneer , where she gained practical experience in production and the urban music landscape. This hands-on role marked her initial foray into industry networks, emphasizing merit-driven hustle over nepotistic connections, as she leveraged her classical training to bridge into contemporary genres. In early 2011, Flower was discovered and signed by acclaimed producer Kenny "Babyface" Edmonds to the Island Def Jam subsidiary Sodapop, recognizing her innovative fusion of with contemporary beats. Under this mentorship, she honed skills in composing, production, and sound engineering, contributing to tracks for artists including and during the 2010s. These session and compositional efforts formed the foundation of her portfolio, showcasing disciplined persistence in navigating a competitive field without relying on high-profile endorsements. Flower also addressed performance challenges, such as anxiety before gigs, through self-imposed rituals like energizing with high-energy music or studying athletic performances for focus, underscoring a commitment to personal discipline over external interventions. By the mid-2010s, this groundwork enabled early live appearances and media scoring, including the documentary A Ballerina's Tale for , solidifying her entry via verifiable creative output rather than publicity stunts.

Breakthrough Collaborations and Mainstream Recognition

Flower's accompaniment of rapper on the single "" at the on February 10, 2019, represented a pivotal moment in her ascent to mainstream visibility. Seated at Liberace's crystal-embellished grand piano, she delivered a custom-composed impressionistic introduction featuring broken chords evocative of Ravel or Debussy, seamlessly transitioning into Cardi B's hip-hop track and underscoring the performance with classical flourishes. This fusion highlighted Flower's technical prowess and innovative arrangement skills, earning her individual spotlight as Cardi B reportedly encouraged her to "have her moment" during rehearsals. The Grammy appearance generated approximately 9 million social media engagements and positioned Flower as a breakout figure, with music publication describing her as the performance's "bad ass" pianist who stole the show through sheer musical command rather than spectacle alone. This exposure directly facilitated her signing with Masterworks, enabling the release of singles like "Get What U Get" and "No Limit" later in , which showcased her emerging "popsical" style blending piano-driven classical structures with pop and hip-hop rhythms. In 2020, her solo piano track "Flower Through Concrete"—composed on a SPIRIO|r instrument—further amplified her reach, accumulating over 2 million streams on by emphasizing resilient thematic motifs amid pandemic-era introspection. These collaborations and releases drew acclaim from industry observers for substantiating Flower's viability as a genre innovator, evidenced by streaming metrics and press coverage that credited her classical training and adaptive arrangements for bridging disparate musical worlds without reliance on external programmatic initiatives. Grammy.com profiled her as redefining through such high-profile integrations, attributing her rapid trajectory to onstage execution that captivated audiences and peers alike.

Evolution of "Popsical" Genre and Independent Ventures

Flower's "popsical" genre evolved significantly from 2020 onward, characterized by a core fusion of classical piano virtuosity—featuring rapid, intricate passages akin to 19th-century Romantic traditions—with layered hip-hop and trap beats for rhythmic drive. This approach prioritizes structural integration of her conservatory-honed technique over superficial genre borrowing, as evidenced in tracks like "Bohemia" from her 2021 debut album, where cascading piano arpeggios and dynamic phrasing underpin pulsing trap percussion. Similarly, "Get What U Get" incorporates hip-hop beats to propel virtuosic improvisations, highlighting her production choices that embed classical depth within modern frameworks. The release of her self-titled album Chloe Flower on September 3, 2021, via , marked a milestone in this development, compiling originals that recontextualize preludes and etudes with pop-infused electronics, such as the Bach-inspired "Prelude No. 1," which adapts contrapuntal lines to contemporary tempos without diluting technical precision. This period underscored her commitment to genre innovation grounded in empirical experimentation with and , rather than market-driven mimicry. During the 2020 , Flower demonstrated adaptability by pivoting to digital platforms, offering free online lessons to instruct students remotely and preserve instructional continuity amid venue closures. These virtual sessions, conducted via video, emphasized technique and repertoire accessibility, enabling her to sustain professional output and audience engagement through low-barrier innovations like live-streamed demonstrations. In pursuit of enhanced creative sovereignty, Flower founded Popsical Music Group in early 2025 as her independent label, releasing I Love Me More—backed by the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra—on May 2, 2025, as its inaugural project. Distributed via The Orchard and UK, the venture prioritizes entrepreneurial oversight in artist selection and production, with a stated focus on amplifying women and minorities in classical spheres, thereby allowing Flower to dictate pacing and thematic integrity unbound by major-label timelines.

Recent Projects and Releases (2020–Present)

In 2023, Flower released Chloe Hearts Christmas, a 16-track holiday album featuring reimagined such as "" and "," produced under . The project emphasized festive reinterpretations blending her popsical style with orchestral elements, distributed on November 1, 2023. Flower founded Popsical Music Group in 2025 as an independent label aimed at promoting women and underrepresented groups in , marking a shift toward greater artistic control. Her first release under the imprint, I Love Me More, debuted on May 2, 2025, comprising 18 tracks including arrangements like "Flowers" and collaborations with artists such as , , , and Babyface. The album, centered on themes of self-empowerment, was distributed through a with The Orchard under , formalized in August 2025. Later in 2025, Popsical Music Group issued She Composed: The Holidays, the first holiday album entirely composed by , including Flower's single "Song for Snow" as a tribute to female trailblazers in . This milestone project highlighted original works by female composers, distributed via The Orchard/ channels. Flower performed a homecoming concert at the Ware Center in , on October 18, 2024, as part of Millersville University's arts series, drawing on her roots. Additional engagements integrated advocacy for , with scheduled U.S. appearances continuing into late 2025, such as at The Public Theater's on December 16.

Musical Style and Innovations

Blending Classical with Pop and Hip-Hop

Flower's "Popsical" genre fuses classical piano techniques with pop and hip-hop elements, characterized by improvisational riffs layered over pop backbeats and hip-hop rhythms. In this approach, she adapts contemporary tracks—such as those by —by incorporating classical structures like impressionistic broken chords evocative of Ravel or Debussy, transforming rap-driven melodies into piano-centric compositions while preserving harmonic complexity. This mechanic emphasizes original composition as the foundation, followed by integration of drums, strings, and beats (including hip-hop, trap, and ) treated as orchestral instruments rather than overlays, ensuring a cohesive sound through iterative listening to isolated and combined elements. Unlike traditional classical-crossover works that often rely on EDM beats or extended symphonic forms for accessibility, Popsical prioritizes concise pop structures while upholding classical rigor, avoiding simplification of technique for mere rhythmic appeal. Flower differentiates her method by composing melodic and harmonic cores rooted in before adding contemporary percussion, which maintains technical demands like precise articulation and dynamic control inherent to classical training, rather than diluting them for broad "coolness." This retention of is evident in her use of epic strings and as primary vehicles, blending hip-hop's pulse with classical's expressive depth without compromising structural integrity. The genre's innovation is substantiated by its role in expanding classical music's reach, as her 2021 self-titled debut album—exemplifying Popsical—drew new listeners beyond traditional audiences, with noting boundary-pushing appeal to pop enthusiasts. Empirical indicators include steady growth in streaming metrics, such as over 70,000 monthly listeners and consistent increases in new followers, reflecting crossover traction without eroding classical purists' engagement. This data supports the fusion's efficacy in broadening exposure through rigorous mechanics, rather than superficial genre-mashing.

Technical Approach and Instrumentation Focus

Flower's technique draws from rigorous classical training begun in childhood and formalized at the Precollege, where she developed proficiency in virtuoso execution, including fluid scalar passages and expressive dynamic control essential for her genre-blending performances. This foundation enables adaptations for pop contexts, such as maintaining rhythmic precision over extended high-energy sets that demand sustained physical output beyond traditional recital formats. In live settings, she favors Steinway grand s, including Model B instruments for their resonant tone and responsiveness, which facilitate seamless integration of classical phrasing with pop backbeats—often via solo augmented by pre-recorded tracks or orchestral elements, as seen in like Gershwin's . She also owns a Steinway Spirio | r for high-fidelity reproduction, aiding practice and refinement of hybrid arrangements. To manage endurance in demanding pop-oriented shows, Flower has confronted documented performance anxiety through targeted , emphasizing mental resilience to deliver consistent output amid high-stakes environments like television appearances and collaborations. This approach counters the physical and psychological toll of prolonged exposure, allowing her to sustain technical accuracy during improvisational flourishes and rapid spans characteristic of her style.

Influences from Classical Tradition and Modern Pop

Flower's musical inspirations root deeply in the classical canon, where she emulates the emotive intensity of Frédéric Chopin's nocturnes, performing works like Nocturne Op. 72, No. 1 on historically resonant instruments to evoke raw sentimentality. This reverence for Chopin's expressive phrasing informs her compositions, prioritizing emotional directness over ornamental excess. She balances this with selective admiration for figures like , whose flamboyant showmanship and genre-blending defied classical purism; Flower owns a mirrored and praises his nonconformity, stating, "He didn’t conform and he was able to crossover from classical into the pop world." In integrating modern pop, Flower draws rhythmic propulsion from hip-hop producers and performers like , valuing their percussive energy for structural drive rather than thematic lyrics, as demonstrated in her 2019 GRAMMY accompaniment blending impressionistic chords with rap beats. She also cites performative flair from artists such as and , adapting their stage dynamism to amplify classical's accessibility without diluting its technical core. This selective curation rejects insipid contemporary classical trends, favoring audacious fusions that challenge centuries-old stasis: "Trying something new is hard in a that has stayed the same for centuries." Her "popsical" ethos thus privileges causal vigor—classical emotion fused with pop's pulse—over conformist experimentation.

Notable Performances and Collaborations

High-Profile Events and Media Appearances

At the on January 10, 2023, Flower performed a medley of film themes on as the event's sole musical act, including her original composition "Golden Hour." A misunderstanding arose when viewers perceived music interrupting speeches, such as Michelle Yeoh's acceptance for , but Flower clarified that she was not responsible, attributing the playback to a producer's error in cueing unrelated rather than live performance during awards. Host publicly defended her onstage, stating the production team had instructed her to continue playing regardless, which led to Flower expressing emotional relief afterward. Flower delivered a performance at the 2023 HeForShe Summit during the United Nations General Assembly in September, closing the event alongside spoken-word segments and panels on hosted by . The summit, attended by global leaders and activists, highlighted her set as a key musical highlight, reaching an international audience through UN broadcasts and media coverage. On on May 13, 2025, Flower appeared to discuss her album I Love Me More, recorded with the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, emphasizing her efforts to blend classical techniques with contemporary appeal. The segment focused on her compositional process and recent releases, airing to the program's daily viewership of millions. Earlier, on July 4, 2024, she performed George Gershwin's with the on PBS's , a nationally televised Independence Day special drawing over 3 million viewers annually, showcasing her virtuosity in a patriotic context.

Partnerships with Contemporary Artists

Chloe Flower's partnership with rapper began with a high-profile performance at the on February 10, 2019, where Flower provided accompaniment for Cardi B's rendition of "Money," infusing the hip-hop track with classical flourishes that enhanced its dramatic staging and earned widespread attention for blending genres. This collaboration mutually benefited both artists: Cardi B's set gained an orchestral depth uncommon in rap performances, while Flower's intricate arrangements exposed her "popsical" style to a global audience of over 20 million viewers, marking a pivotal step in her crossover appeal. Follow-up interactions included Flower's covers of Cardi B's tracks like "UP" in 2021, demonstrating ongoing artistic exchange rather than mere accompaniment. Flower has extended her production and compositional role to contemporary hip-hop and R&B artists, co-producing tracks that integrate piano-driven elements into pop-rap structures, positioning her as a creative equal. For instance, she contributed to compositions for and , where her classical training informed rhythmic and harmonic innovations, allowing these artists to explore layered soundscapes beyond standard production tropes. Similarly, her work with and Babyface on select projects emphasized symbiotic genre fusion, with Flower's arrangements providing melodic anchors that amplified the vocalists' emotive delivery while challenging conventional pop production boundaries. In more recent endeavors, Flower collaborated with singer on a cover of "" released April 18, 2025, where her reinterpretation added a contemporary classical twist to the standard, fostering mutual artistic elevation through shared pop-jazz sensibilities. Another example includes her orchestral arrangement for and Ramin Karimloo's "El Tango de Roxanne" in May 2025, blending Broadway flair with pop orchestration to create a performance that highlighted each participant's strengths in vocal and instrumental innovation. These partnerships underscore Flower's role in reciprocal creative processes, where her technical expertise in and composition drives collaborative outputs that innovate within pop and hip-hop without diluting the artists' core identities.

Live Tours and Special Engagements

Chloe Flower performed an intimate hometown concert at the Ware Center for the Arts in , on October 18, 2024, marking a return to her roots with ticket prices set at $27 for adults and $19 for students. The event featured her signature "popsical" style, emphasizing close audience interaction in a venue capacity supporting such scaled performances. In late 2024, Flower announced three consecutive nights of shows in tied to her upcoming album release, adapting setlists to incorporate evolving material from recent recordings while balancing intimate arrangements with larger production elements. This was followed by a sold-out engagement at the Royal Albert Hall's Elgar Room on February 17, 2025, where she performed for a capacity crowd, showcasing spectacle-oriented adaptations including orchestral backing for her blended classical-pop repertoire. Special engagements in 2025 linked to her holiday album "She Composed: The Holidays," released on November 7, included promotional performances at , focusing on festive tracks composed entirely by women and featuring evolved setlists with seasonal orchestral adaptations for venue-specific intimacy. These events prioritized audience engagement through themed content, with ticket sales reflecting demand for her genre-fusing live interpretations.

Discography

Studio Albums

Chloe Flower released her self-titled debut studio album on July 16, 2021, through . The project, composed, produced, and recorded entirely by Flower in her apartment, is divided into three acts—Innocence, Suffering, and Hope—framing an emotional narrative through piano-driven pieces layered with pop and hip-hop elements. It debuted at number 4 on the Classical Albums chart. Key tracks include "Flower Through Concrete" from Act I, evoking simplicity and melody, and a reinterpretation of Billie Eilish's "Bad Guy" in Act III, incorporating spoken word by . Her follow-up, Chloe Hearts Christmas, arrived on November 3, 2023, also via , as her initial foray into holiday recordings with 16 tracks. The album applies Flower's "popsical" style to classics like Tchaikovsky's "Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairy" and Joni Mitchell's "River," alongside originals, emphasizing festive emotional range from joy to introspection. I Love Me More, Flower's third studio album, was issued on May 2, 2025, under her independent label Popsical Music Group, with full orchestral backing from the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Ben Foster. Spanning 18 tracks of reimagined standards and originals, it features vocal collaborations with and on "El Tango de Roxanne" from Moulin Rouge!, on a cover of Miley Cyrus's "Flowers," and on production elements. The album highlights cinematic originals like "Under the Stars," underscoring Flower's vision of empowerment through love-themed compositions. Scheduled for November 7, 2025, via Popsical Music Group, She Composed: The Holidays represents Flower's second holiday project and the first full-length holiday album across all genres composed entirely by women. Featuring 13 tracks spotlighting overlooked female composers, it includes arrangements of works by Hildegard von Bingen (lead single "O Viridissima Virga") and , performed with the orchestra and Chorus under Jessica Cottis. The production blends delicate carols with orchestral depth to honor historical contributions in classical and holiday music.

Singles and Collaborations

Chloe Flower's pre-album singles, released in 2019, generated initial buzz for her fusion of classical piano with pop and hip-hop production. Her debut single, "Get What U Get," arrived on May 23, 2019, as an empowerment track emphasizing multifaceted female identity, produced by Tommy Brown and Tone Jones. The song has accumulated over 1.3 million streams on . Another 2019 release, "No Limit," further showcased her "popsical" approach ahead of her full-length debut. Collaborative singles highlight Flower's integrations with contemporary artists. In 2019, she featured on the Korean remix of "Runaway," alongside Babyface, blending her cello and piano with R&B elements in a standalone digital single. This track exemplified her role in bridging genres through features rather than lead vocals. Post-album standalone singles in 2025 include "Flowers," which has garnered around 220,000 Spotify streams, and "Yesterday" featuring the Royal Philharmonic Orchestra, emphasizing orchestral reinterpretations of pop standards. "Under the Stars," another 2025 orchestral single with the Royal Philharmonic, underscores her continued exploration of hybrid arrangements outside full albums. These releases demonstrate sustained streaming engagement, with empirical data reflecting niche appeal in classical-pop crossover audiences.

Production Credits

Chloe Flower co-produced "Lullabye (Goodnight, My Angel)" for Céline Dion's 2013 album Loved Me Back to Life, working alongside producer Babyface to incorporate piano instrumentation into the track's arrangement. She similarly co-produced "You Raise Me Up" for Johnny Mathis's 2017 release Johnny Mathis Sings the Great New American Songbook, providing piano arrangements that enhanced the song's orchestral elements under Babyface's production oversight. Beyond vocal tracks, Flower composed original music for Kevin Hart's 2015 Nike campaign, blending -driven motifs with motivational themes suited to athletic promotion. In 2015, she scored the documentary A Ballerina's Tale, featuring ballerina , where her compositions underscored narrative segments with classical flourishes. Her scoring extended to the 2021 Krug Champagne campaign with custom tracks emphasizing indulgent, harmonious lines. Flower's production techniques frequently fuse classical foundations with electronic and pop production elements, creating hybrid soundscapes that retain acoustic purity while adding modern layering, as evident in her collaborative credits and self-described "POPSICAL" approach. This method allows for seamless integration of live into contemporary mixes, prioritizing and emotional depth over purely digital effects.

Philanthropy and Activism

Anti-Human Trafficking Initiatives

Flower has advocated against since 2006, initially supporting the Foundation's efforts to combat human and through awareness and survivor aid programs. In 2013, she received the Creative Impact Award from the Coalition to Abolish Slavery and Trafficking () at their annual gala, recognizing her composition and performance of original pieces inspired by trafficking survivors to highlight the realities of sex slavery and exploitation. These works were part of The Flower Project, an initiative integrating music and art to reintegrate survivors and raise public consciousness about coercive sexual labor. She has performed at United Nations events dedicated to eradicating trafficking, including a 2014 high-level meeting and a 2016 event focused on to end modern slavery, using her platform to underscore the prevalence of networks. In 2020, Flower contributed to UNODC's inaugural virtual music concert on the World Day Against Trafficking in Persons, which solicited donations for the Voluntary Trust Fund for Victims of Trafficking in Persons, particularly targeting support for women and children in sex slavery and forced labor. As a member of the for UNODC's Blue Heart Campaign, she advises on strategies to dismantle trafficking operations, emphasizing empirical interventions like victim rescue and prevention over generalized advocacy. In October 2022, Flower was honored with Apne Aap's Cultural Change Award at The Last Girl Awards, presented by , for her contributions to ending child , including live performances that amplify survivor voices and critique systemic exploitation in markets. Apne Aap, focused on brothel-based , credited her efforts with fostering cultural shifts toward recognizing as a form of trafficking rather than voluntary labor. These initiatives prioritize measurable outcomes, such as enhanced victim services through partnered organizations, though specific fundraising totals from her events remain undocumented in public records.

Advocacy for Music Education and Gender Equality

Flower has advocated for expanded access to music education, emphasizing its role in fostering individual development and addressing socioeconomic barriers that disproportionately affect vulnerable populations, including women and girls. As the youngest board member of the Foundation since September 2020, she supports programs aimed at preserving and promoting through scholarships and performances that highlight classical and pop influences. She has described as a "human right" essential for cognitive and emotional benefits, drawing from her observations of its therapeutic effects in preventing cycles of . In the realm of , Flower has linked to merit-based advancement, arguing that unlike gender-segregated fields such as , orchestras evaluate solely on , making a "great equalizer." She performed at the Women's Summit on September 22, 2023, where her composition underscored calls to disrupt entrenched structures impeding women's progress, while reiterating in interviews that sustained could reshape gender dynamics within a single generation by prioritizing talent over identity-based interventions. This perspective aligns with empirical patterns in , where breakthroughs by female artists like herself stem from rigorous training and innovation rather than alone, though systemic underfunding of programs limits broader impact despite such efforts.

Involvement with International Organizations

Flower has served on the advisory board of the United Nations Office on Drugs and Crime's (UNODC) Blue Heart campaign, which aims to raise awareness and mobilize support against human trafficking. Her involvement includes providing input on using music as a tool for advocacy and fundraising, as evidenced by her participation in UNODC's inaugural virtual music concert on August 25, 2020, which featured global artists to support victims of trafficking on the World Day against Trafficking in Persons. While such performances generate visibility, their direct impact on policy remains tied to broader coordination efforts rather than music alone altering systemic causes like economic vulnerabilities or enforcement gaps. In 2014, Flower partnered with UNODC for the launch of the first World Day Against Trafficking in Persons on July 30, performing at a high-level meeting on hosted by the Coalition to Abolish Slavery and Trafficking (). She also performed at a 2016 UN high-level event focused on strengthening partnerships to stop , emphasizing music's role in highlighting survivor stories without substituting for legal or preventive measures. Flower has engaged with UN Women through performances at the HeForShe Summit, where her music intersects with on , including advocacy against exploitation linked to trafficking. These international engagements underscore her use of performances to amplify organizational goals, though empirical outcomes depend on integration with data-driven interventions beyond artistic expression.

Reception and Impact

Critical Acclaim and Commercial Success

Flower's 2019 Grammy Awards performance accompanying Cardi B on "Money" garnered widespread attention for her dynamic piano arrangement, which Grammy.com described as redefining classical music through bold pop integrations, earning her the moniker of a trailblazing instrumentalist. This exposure propelled viral covers, such as her piano rendition of Lil Nas X's "Old Town Road," which amassed over 1.5 million Spotify streams by 2025. The New York Times in 2023 commended her "POPSICAL" style—blending Liberace-inspired showmanship with hip-hop and pop—for innovating within classical boundaries, as evidenced by her Grammy and Golden Globes appearances. Her debut self-titled album, released in via , featured original compositions and covers like Billie Eilish's "Bad Guy," contributing to tracks like "Flower Through Concrete" surpassing 2 million streams. Subsequent releases, including the 2023 holiday album Chloe Hearts and 2025's I Love Me More, sustained momentum, with the latter's "Get What U Get" exceeding 1.3 million streams. In 2025, Flower achieved a with She Composed: The Holidays, the first holiday album entirely composed by women across genres, spotlighting overlooked female creators in and underscoring her role in amplifying underrepresented voices through commercial releases. This project, distributed via major platforms, reflects her sustained innovation from 2019 onward, prioritizing empirical recovery of historical compositions over traditional holiday canons.

Public Perception and Cultural Influence

Chloe Flower has been widely perceived as an innovative force in , earning the moniker "Millennial " for her extravagant stage presence and fusion of piano virtuosity with pop and hip-hop elements. This perception stems from her high-profile collaborations, such as with at the 2020 , which exposed classical instrumentation to pop audiences and highlighted her ability to bridge genres without diluting technical precision. Critics and observers note her emphasis on personal flair and market-driven appeal, positioning her as a self-made artist who leverages individual talent to gain visibility rather than relying on established orchestral subsidies or gatekept conservatory networks. Her cultural influence lies in challenging the elitist image of through her "popsical" style, which packages rigorous classical training in accessible, beat-driven arrangements to attract younger and diverse listeners. By performing viral reinterpretations, such as her 2019 piano-rap mashup of Lil Nas X's "," Flower has demonstrated how classical techniques can integrate with contemporary hits, broadening the genre's reach beyond traditional venues and fostering appreciation among non-specialists. This approach promotes democratization by prioritizing creative adaptability and audience engagement over rigid adherence to canonical forms, encouraging a view of as a living, talent-driven craft rather than an insulated pursuit. Flower's model has inspired emerging musicians to blend genres, with her work serving as a template for those lacking the path to pure classical solo careers but possessing hybrid skills. For instance, her genre-bending has motivated young artists to incorporate rap beats and pop structures into performances, as evidenced by increased online covers and discussions emulating her style following hits like her Grammy appearance. This influence underscores a shift toward valuing personal innovation and broad appeal in classical circles, where success correlates more with entrepreneurial drive than institutional endorsement.

Notable Incidents and Misunderstandings

During the on January 10, 2023, Chloe Flower served as the on-stage pianist, performing musical interludes between segments. Some viewers misinterpreted her visible playing as the source of music that appeared to interrupt or play off acceptance speeches, including that of for . Flower immediately addressed the misconception via during the event, stating, "I would never play piano over people's speeches!! I'm only playing when you see me on camera!" She later clarified in interviews that her role was limited to pre-recorded or live segments shown on camera, while play-off cues were managed separately by producers through an off-stage or audio cues, not her instrument. Host publicly defended her on air, which Flower described as emotionally supportive, noting she "cried" afterward from relief. This incident represented an isolated public misunderstanding rather than a pattern of substantive or professional misconduct, with no of intentional disruption or recurring complaints against Flower's conduct. Flower has openly discussed personal challenges with performance anxiety in interviews, describing pre-performance periods involving intense worry, tears, skipped meals, and avoidance fantasies, which she has since managed through private efforts. In a 2024 reflection, she referenced a recent bout of but emphasized overcoming it without public incident or career impact. These admissions highlight internal hurdles surmounted independently, distinct from external controversies.

Awards and Recognitions

Major Honors Received

In October 2022, Flower received the Last Girl Impact Award, presented by Apne Aap and , recognizing her contributions to anti-human trafficking advocacy through music and awareness campaigns. This merit-based honor highlights her role in amplifying survivor voices and supporting organizations combating exploitation, as evidenced by her performances and partnerships in this domain. Flower has also been honored by the Coalition to Abolish and Trafficking (CAST) for her activism against modern , underscoring her integration of with artistic output to drive tangible policy and rescue efforts. These recognitions stem from verifiable impacts, such as collaborations with survivor-led initiatives, rather than nominal gestures.

Nominations and Industry Acknowledgments

Flower's high-profile performance accompanying Cardi B at the 61st Annual Grammy Awards on February 10, 2019, marked a significant industry acknowledgment, exposing her crossover style to over 22 million viewers and positioning her as a bridge between classical and contemporary genres. This appearance, rather than a formal nomination, highlighted her emerging influence, with subsequent Grammy.com features framing her as a redefiner of classical music through collaborations with pop and hip-hop artists. In June 2016, HuffPost profiled Flower in its "Female Musicians You Need To Know" series, recognizing her early work scoring campaigns for Nike and Levi's, as well as collaborations with artists including , , and , which underscored her versatility prior to mainstream breakthrough. Additional media nods, such as Pitchfork's 2019 interview dubbing her Cardi B's "bad ass Grammys pianist," further affirmed her as a notable figure in genre-blending performance, though without entry into competitive categories. Flower served as the official pianist for the on January 10, 2023, performing original compositions like "Golden Hour" and handling interstitial music, an invitation that reflected industry trust in her live execution amid high-stakes broadcasts. Despite these platforms, she has not received nominations for major awards in classical or crossover categories, such as Grammy classical fields, likely attributable to her "popsical" hybrid approach diverging from purist genre norms that dominate traditional adjudication. Her self-submissions for Grammy consideration, as noted in public appeals to voters in 2024 and 2025, indicate ongoing pursuit of formal recognition without confirmed ballot placement.

References

  1. https://www.[youtube](/page/YouTube).com/watch?v=GqBxYoQPPDE
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