Meet Alexia Vigör | Singer, Artist, Socialite, Global Influencer.


We had the good fortune of connecting with Alexia Vigör and we’ve shared our conversation below.
Hi Alexia, how has your perspective on work-life balance evolved over time?
The changes that happened were for the better. As you grow, you understand more of your work, you start creating more structure for yourself, and your flow becomes easier — almost like play during the creative process. The seriousness is still there, but now there’s a sense of lightness too. You move with more confidence, more organization, and more control. Business is still business, and you still have to keep your mind sharp and focused.
For me, it was owning who I am and realizing, wow, these things come to me naturally, voice, songwriting, dancing, flexibility, art. And it’s okay if not everyone is aware of it or fully receives it. As an artist, sometimes you feel chosen or touched by something bigger than yourself. You feel like a vessel — you receive it, and then you put it into the world.
With music video production and creative work, you get to create worlds, and that part is fun to me. But I also learned you can be a shark in business and still be an artist. The artistic side of you is something that chooses you. As a musician, dancer, and full artist, I’ve experienced moments where it feels like my nervous system is downloading or receiving information faster than my body can process it. There have been times where something higher takes over my nervous system — my body moves, shakes, and trembles on its own. It’s like a seizure. You can feel the tree branch on your nervous systems shooting up this energy right to the top of your head, between your eye brows where your third eye is located. Your pre- frontal cortex lights up. Then, the words and song, melody everything just flows. You are literally going with the words. It’s like so serious, professional but feels like play. It’s powerful, physical, and overwhelming. It happens when you are writing songs for yourself or other artists, specially when I write rap songs or parts.
Most of the time I’m serious, controlled and composed, but there are those moments where your thoughts are coming fast and you got to stop what you are doing and write the ideas down.
The people around me know by now how to respond and stay calm instead of immediately panicking or calling a hospital every time it happens during the creative process. For me, creativity has never just existed in the mind — I experience it through my entire nervous system and body.
For a long time, I ran from that. But what I learned is you can’t run away from who you are forever. You got to be able to understand when you are chosen, whichever field or talent you have it has been given to you for a purpose. Get out of your own way and be aware and conscious enough to receive with grace. Use your art, intelligence, intuition and the information that comes to you from the God or the Universe, whichever you believe, responsibility, because it is given it to you because It knows your heart, soul and deep down who you truly are. Create from your heart and welcome the people who understand you.


What should our readers know about your business?
What sets me apart is that my work comes from a very real place. I’m not trying to fit into a box, I am expressing ideas and visions that come to me. Yep, that’s what you call a visionary. My brand is built around artistry, emotion, performance, beauty, movement, music, and expression as a whole. I believe people connect to me because they can feel that it’s authentic. It comes with care. I am actually a very serious person at my core. I care deeply about my art, work, goals and relationships. I believe people sometimes only see the artistic, playful, or expressive side, but there’s also a very focused and disciplined side of me that is on 99% of the time. Whether it’s through my voice, visuals, dancing, songwriting, or even the way I speak, there’s a personality behind it.
I’m most proud of the fact that I kept going and kept evolving. A lot of people see the final product, but they don’t see the inner growth it takes to become comfortable with who you are creatively and learning to believe in yourself in a world full of noise. For a long time, I resisted certain parts of myself because being an artist can feel different than what society expects, not everyone thinks or process information how you do. You feel deeply, you think differently, and sometimes people don’t fully understand your vision at first. One of the biggest lessons I learned was that not everyone has to understand it immediately for it to still be real and valuable. Once you get to produce your ideas, you start putting a team together and their minds start working with your visions, that is when magic and great creations/productions happen. I am also proud if my music videos. I’m so glad I got to produce them with the visions I had, exactly how I wanted. There’s something special about being able to bring what you see and feel internally into real life without compromising the energy behind it. That’s the part I’ll always value most, creating from instinct and vision.
Business-wise, even though business always came naturally to me, I had to learn structure, discipline, and confidence. I learned that you can be creative and still think strategically. You can be artistic and still be sharp in business. That changed everything for me because I stopped seeing those things as opposites.
I learned resilience, self-belief, and the importance of protecting yourself and your vision even before the world fully sees it.
What I want the world to know about me and my brand is that it’s rooted in authenticity, transformation and love. Isn’t it all about love? I want people to feel inspired to fully become who they are instead of running from it. My story is really about embracing your gifts, trusting your instincts, and understanding that sometimes the things that make you different are actually the things that make you powerful.
And for me, a huge part of the journey was understanding that I am part pf the foundation.
I’ve had opportunities where people reached out to me about products, creative ideas, collaborations, and different things we could build as a brand. And honestly, there are a lot of ideas in the vault right now. I’ve realized that timing matters. Great things sometimes, not always, take time, and I don’t want to rush through the process just to put something out quickly. I am skilled and I have lived and live my life on #godspeed, so it is nice to keep some things to myself, protected enough for me to be able to slow down.
Right now, I’m really enjoying developing different parts of myself, discovering what I naturally thrive in, what feels aligned, and allowing myself to experience life more deeply before revealing everything creatively. There’s something beautiful about protecting your vision while it’s still growing.
Nothing feels better than finding your center, strengths and becoming confident and competent in your abilities.
I’ve never really been the type to constantly announce things before they’re ready. I usually speak on things once they’re done. At this point in my life, as I continue growing, I’ve become more private with certain creative projects and ideas. I like working on things low-key, nurturing them quietly, and letting them fully develop before the world sees them. And honestly, that’s been an amazing experience for me.
At anything you are doing in life, the best advice I can give is when you love what you do, do it with passion, love and add more love to it, it will show in your work and results. Things will flow, mistakes will be minimized or non-existent and the quality of your work will be shown in the results.


Any places to eat or things to do that you can share with our readers? If they have a friend visiting town, what are some spots they could take them to?
I had this question before, and my answer back then was definitely more luxurious — and honestly, I still stand by that answer. I love beautiful experiences, exciting places, movement, music, good energy, and creating memorable moments.
But because I’m giving this interview at 6AM on a breezy spring Sunday, my mindset right now feels softer, simpler and more grounded. At this moment, what sounds the best to me is honestly something low-key and comforting. After a fun day of activities — working out, dancing, being outside, moving around, just living life, I’d probably want to come home, put on sweatpants or pajamas, cook dinner, relax, watch something, and just genuinely talk and connect.
I think that says a lot about where I am in life right now. I still love luxury and beautiful experiences, but I’ve also learned to appreciate comfort, calmness, and real connection.
I deeply value relationships. For a long time, I used to be almost an anxiety ball around people because I cared so much. I felt things very deeply, and because of that, I would sometimes hold back instead of expressing how much I appreciated someone or how much I liked them. I think I was afraid of vulnerability in a way.
But as I’ve grown, one of the biggest things I’ve learned is that it’s important to let people know how you feel about them while they’re here. Now, if I love someone, appreciate someone, admire someone, or simply enjoy their presence, I make sure they know. Life feels better that way.
Relationships are honestly one of the biggest parts of my life. My best friends, my family, my dog — those connections mean everything to me. I wouldn’t want to experience life without them. They keep me grounded, inspired, comforted, and connected to who I really am outside of work or creativity.
Even professionally, I value relationships deeply. I genuinely care about the people I work with and the people around me. I think people can feel when your energy is real — when you genuinely want the best for them, when you care about their well-being, when your kindness isn’t performative. That kind of connection creates trust, loyalty, and meaningful bonds.
I think one of the most beautiful parts of life is being able to connect with people in a genuine way. At the end of the day, success means a lot less if you don’t have people you can laugh with, grow with, love, trust and share life with.


The Shoutout series is all about recognizing that our success and where we are in life is at least somewhat thanks to the efforts, support, mentorship, love and encouragement of others. So is there someone that you want to dedicate your shoutout to?
The credit absolutely goes to everyone close to me who loves me and my fans. I have people who have been sending me ‘I love you’ messages for years, almost daily on my socials. A lot of women get inspired by me, and men, well, men are men. They’re direct, blunt, expressive. They love not only my art, but me as a whole. They connect with my looks, my voice, even my speaking voice, and my personality. And I’m talking not only about straight men. My LGBT supporters are some of the most loving and protective people ever. They really ride for me. They’ll call me ‘their Diva,’ and they show up with so much loyalty and love. Those are truly my ride-or-die supporters, and they deserve a lot of credit in my story because that kind of support keeps an artist going.
Also, my big brother will always deserve credit. He believed in me and trusted me with songs he wrote, knowing I could bring them to life. We’re siblings, but we’re also both artists, and that creates a really special bond. We understand each other’s minds, I believe artists understand each other’s minds and hearts. I love that we both share that creative side.
Website: https://linktr.ee/alexiavigor
Instagram: @alexiavigor
Youtube: https://m.youtube.com/@AlexiaVig%C3%B6r?ra=m









