Gen Alpha Influencers: Veda Is What Gen Alpha Music Looks Like at the Start
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Generation Alpha isn’t waiting for permission to create. Music, videos, games, and art are being made earlier, shared earlier, and shaped in public instead of behind closed doors. Veda is a good example of what that beginning can look like.
At just 13 years old, Veda has released her debut pop-rock single, “Wannabe Me,” marking an early but confident step into original music. It’s not framed as a finished destination — it feels more like the start of a voice finding its shape.
A Gen Alpha Artist Starting Early — On Purpose
For Gen Alpha creators, starting young doesn’t mean rushing. It means learning in real time, online, and out loud.
Veda’s debut isn’t trying to sound older than she is or chase trends that don’t fit. Instead, “Wannabe Me” leans into identity — figuring out who you are, how you want to sound, and what you want to say before the world decides that for you. That mindset alone places her firmly in Gen Alpha territory.
“Wannabe Me” and the First Step of an Original Voice
“Wannabe Me” introduces Veda as a pop-rock artist with a clear sense of self. The song doesn’t overreach, and that’s a strength. It sounds like someone building a foundation rather than forcing a moment.
The track has already begun circulating inside Gen Alpha-focused listening spaces, including being added to the GW Generation Alpha playlist on Spotify — a small but telling signal that her music is finding its way into youth-curated ecosystems where discovery still feels organic.
Why Her TikTok Covers Matter
To really understand Veda’s range, it helps to look beyond her original releases and into the TikTok videos she’s made with her dad. In those clips, they cover a wide mix of pop-rock and hard-rock songs, including material associated with Amy Lee of Evanescence.
That kind of music isn’t easy to sing. It shifts quickly from soft to powerful, demands control, and leaves very little room to hide vocally. Watching those covers makes it clear that Veda’s voice has more range and potential than a single debut track can show.
These videos don’t feel like chasing virality — they feel like practice in public, which is very much the Gen Alpha way.
Learning From Someone Who’s Already Done It
It’s also worth mentioning that Veda’s dad is a musician himself, and that experience clearly helps — from recording to performing to understanding how music actually works in the real world. But what stands out more is that she’s following his lead in how she approaches it: practicing, experimenting, and putting the work out there instead of waiting for permission.
If you have a parent whose path is worth following, that’s not a shortcut — that’s a head start.
Why Veda Fits the Gen Alpha Influencers Conversation
Veda fits naturally into the Gen Alpha Influencers conversation not because of numbers or hype, but because of process.
She’s:
- learning in public
- building skills before branding
- mixing original work with covers
- using platforms as tools, not identities
That’s how Gen Alpha creators grow — not by waiting to be discovered, but by becoming discoverable through consistency, curiosity, and shared learning.
Veda’s story is still at the beginning, and that’s exactly why it’s worth paying attention now.
Where to Explore Next
To hear more of her range and see how she’s developing:
- Check out her music on Spotify: https://open.spotify.com/artist/19kItlJC4xbvwxqEjrwMZr?si=xiSxIb3RT_abFKhkYOtrqA
- Watch her cover videos on TikTok: @vedaamaru
Discovery is part of the experience — and Gen Alpha tends to prefer it that way.