This year's edition of the Tiny Desk Contest may have already crowned the winner, but 91ÖÆÆ¬³§ Music discovered thousands of talented artists during the process, and Weekend Edition is spotlighting some of those stand-out entries.
One of those entries was the song "Lala" by the artist Zhalarina, a powerful, a cappella rap song she describes as a love letter to her father, who was incarcerated at the time she wrote it. The term "Lala," Zhalarina says, comes from a phrase the artist's father used to say to her.
"There was a time, unfortunately, and it happened once where my dad sort of seemed like he wasn't in his body and I didn't know what was happening," she tells Weekend Edition's Scott Simon. "He realized that I realized it and explained in the quickest way that he could that he was just in 'La La Land.' Growing up, the irony of 'Lala' potentially being a drug ... I thought about that later."
Zhalarina says "Lala" has led to a lot of healing. And her father, who was released from prison in 2019, refers to it as their special song.
"He's like, I was listening to our song the other day," Zhalarina says. "My favorite thing about the song is that it has done exactly what I wanted it to do for my family ... My dad definitely cries every time he hears it, and I think it's sparked a lot of conversations that were difficult to have."
Listen to Scott Simon's interview with Zhalarina in the audio player above, and .
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