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911Porsh Returns With Emergency, Leads Upcoming EP The Baddest

911Porsh’s new single Emergency opens her The Baddest rollout, with her own company steering a comeback built on club-tested dancehall and R&B.

Sam Ortega··2 min read
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911Porsh Returns With Emergency, Leads Upcoming EP The Baddest
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911Porsh has turned Emergency into more than a comeback single. As the lead statement from her upcoming EP The Baddest, the track puts her name, her sound, and her company front and center, with the release coming through 911Porsh International Entertainment.

The timing matters because Emergency arrives after a long stretch away from the center of her recorded output. Her last widely noted track was Running in 2019, and Spotify still lists Running as a 2020 single in her catalog. That gap gives Emergency the feel of a reset, not just a quick follow-up. 911Porsh has spent years writing, traveling, and testing the sound in clubs, then locking in what she describes as an international vibe rooted in her journey and heritage.

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AI-generated illustration

That self-directed build is the sharpest part of the rollout. Instead of handing the moment to a one-off label push, 911Porsh is introducing Emergency through her own imprint, which makes The Baddest feel like an artist-led era from the first move. The single is being framed as bold, polished, and personal at the same time, with a sound meant to move between dancehall, R&B, and the club without losing its edge. That balance is exactly what gives the record its stakes: if Emergency lands, it can set the tone for the entire EP campaign.

Her live profile gives the release more weight. 911Porsh has performed at S.O.B.’s, the downtown Manhattan room in Lower Manhattan founded in June 1982 by Larry Gold. Long known as one of the first New York stages to spotlight hip hop, R&B, Latin, African, Caribbean, Haitian, Brazilian, South Asian, alternative, and world music, S.O.B.’s has hosted early-career performances by DMX, Wu-Tang Clan, Erykah Badu, OutKast, Mos Def, Mobb Deep, De La Soul, Jill Scott, Raphael Saadiq, and Musiq Soulchild. That history matters because it places 911Porsh in a venue that has helped break artists with crossover potential.

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Her YouTube artist page pushes the same identity, describing Porshia, professionally Nine Eleven Porsh, as a young independent artist in her own lane, introducing herself to the dancehall and R&B scene. Put together, Emergency and The Baddest signal a cleaner, more deliberate next phase: one built on independence, club-tested instinct, and a clearer sense of image than the typical one-song return.

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