To celebrate her feat, the singer
uploaded a video of a group of little girls dancing fervently and joyfully to
‘Nowo’, a Wizkid, DJ Spinall collaboration.
“When I found out that I was the
first female artist to cross 2 billion worldwide streams on Apple Music! God is
too lit,” the ‘Stay’ singer had written.
Although relatively unknown at
the time, the girls were later discovered to be YouTube sensations who are
members of an Ikorodu, Lagos-based group known as Dream Catchers.
In a follow-up post uploaded on
Tuesday, Rihanna said the girls’ performance “brought pure joy” the hearts of
many.
She wrote: “awww my Lil squad…..I
love YOU guys! I speak on behalf of the entire social media when I say this…
you really brought a pure joy to our spirits just by seeing how happy you are
when you dance.
“You personally made my day! Keep
up the great work kids.”
The members of the group were
taken from the street by Seyi Oluyole, a dancer, and screenwriter, who helped
them develop their talent.
“The children are from bad homes,
united and finding hope in dance and drama. These children are the future and
more is to come from them,” reads the information on their YouTube page.
The Dream Catchers have 8,284
subscribers on their page. Their most-viewed video is a choreography of
Olamide’s ‘Wo’, which has been watched 728,000 times.
See below a video of the Dream
Catchers dancing to Olamide’s ‘Science Student’.
Buy/Sell Bitcoin, Perfect Money, Ethereum, Neteller, InstaForex in Nigeria.
ReplyDeleteVisit: www.mytopexchange.com. Call 08144333114. WhatsApp: 08065167701.