For many musicians, the creative process begins with inspiration. For indie singer-songwriter Stevie Nicole, it often begins with an IV pump. Living with multiple chronic illnesses, she has learned to transform her circumstances into art, building music from the very sounds of her treatments. Her song Medicine incorporates the alarm of her IV pump as both metaphor and melody, underscoring her determination to keep creating even in the most fragile of moments.
Nicole’s music lives in the in-between spaces most artists tend to skip over—the valleys rather than the mountaintops, the pauses rather than the resolutions. “I don’t sing from the mountaintop once everything is resolved,” she explains. “I sing from the valleys and in the pauses, while I’m still finding my way out.” It’s an approach that has resonated deeply with listeners searching for music that acknowledges struggle while still pointing to hope.
Her debut album Rise, released in March 2025, is a 12-song project born in the aftermath of personal grief—the sudden loss of her best friend Caitlin, who named the record before most of its tracks were even written. That loss, layered with her ongoing health challenges, gave the project an intimacy that feels both raw and restorative. The songs are intentionally “unplugged,” without vocal edits, crafted to sound lived-in rather than polished.
Though Rise marks her formal entry into the music world, Nicole is no stranger to performance. She grew up immersed in music, graduating from a performing arts high school with a concentration in vocal studies, and has sung in venues as varied as Disney World, London’s Landmark Arts Centre, and St. Patrick’s Cathedral in Dublin. Still, she balances her creative career with her full-time work as a nurse case manager, helping patients with conditions as complex as her own.
Navigating two demanding paths at once has not been without hurdles. In an industry where constant output is often equated with success, Nicole works around what she calls “consistently inconsistent” health. “Some days it feels like I work twice as hard to get half as far,” she says. Her solution has been to lean on deliberate creativity, making the most of periods of wellness and focusing on building a supportive, authentic community. Her fans—affectionately called “Stevie’s Songbirds”—respond in kind, showing up for livestreams and celebrating new releases with what she describes as “mindblowing” enthusiasm.
Beyond the mechanics of her career, Nicole’s work is about presence—giving her audience permission to feel things they might otherwise bury. “For too many years, I repressed my emotions as a coping mechanism,” she says. “But grief made that impossible.” The result is a catalog of songs that hold space for both heaviness and joy, a reminder that resilience often means carrying both at once.
Looking ahead, Nicole is already at work on a second album, scheduled for release in early 2027. Unlike Rise, she envisions a project with larger production and fuller accompaniment, while still maintaining the emotional honesty that has become her hallmark. She also plans to expand her live performances, with gigs in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area complementing her regular acoustic sessions on TikTok.
In a music landscape where polish often overshadows vulnerability, Stevie Nicole offers something different: songs that don’t look away from pain, but instead find beauty in the spaces it leaves behind. Her work suggests that music doesn’t need to be an escape from life’s hardest moments. Sometimes, it’s a way of staying with them—together.