Groover City Radio AAC+ Groover City Radio AAC+
Groover City Radio HD Groover City - Tune in, turn up!
play_arrow
Keeana Kee “Tik Tok”: The Ultimate Summer Anthem Groover City
We all keep a drawer in the chest where the ugly things go. The swearing. The pressure. The version of ourselves that got dragged through the mud at the age when everything feels like a public trial. I’ve been there too. Then one day the drawer bursts open, our whole little universe smells like smoke, and a song comes out. That is where Hailey Hermida drops her “17“. Right in that pressure point that I still remember – where youth, shame, anger, and confusion bump into each other like partners.
Hailey Hermida won’t treat you like a baby on this one – oh no… she grabs the nerves and plugs them straight into the amps. “17” is full of bite and grit. A battle scene ripped from a real argument, straight from the wound, where sleep had no chance. I hear a singer who knows exactly how ugly that age can feel when people throw false ideas about your character into the air and leave you standing there, nervous and exposed.
Seventeen always felt like a cursed little number to me. I felt like I had one foot in childhood, one in the adult world, and both sides asking for answers. Hailey wrote “17” from anger after a huge fight with her friends, right before turning eighteen – and here comes that pulse. It’s all here, trapped in the vocals, especially in the lines that pull shame and the echo of other people’s words.
“One day I’m hated / Then I’m all they wanted” – that’s the kind of thought that brings back a lot of moments for me. Then she goes deeper into the mess – images of choking, burning in daylight, lies and words that keep hurting. She writes from the bruise itself, and that’s what gives “17” its character.
Sonically, Hailey Hermida leans into a grungier lane here, and it suits her. The track draws from 90s punk and grunge energy while keeping a modern style in the vocals, so the whole thing feels alive.
Her influences point in a clear direction: punk attitude, precision, and performance with teeth. The guitars scream, the drums go hard, and the vocal tone has that urgency that pulls you right into the artist’s body. According to the press material, some of the final takes came from the day she wrote it, while the anger still sat fresh in her throat. I can hear it.
What I like most here is the fairness behind the noise. Hailey sees music as a place for people who need somewhere to dump their emotions. That idea gives “17” a purpose, and it keeps the song away of those teenage-style theatrics. She wants this track to feel like a scream into the pillow when the walls close in too hard, and that gives the whole thing a reason.
Hailey Hermida started writing at thirteen, calibrating her voice through rock shows, and having serious collaborators around her. That road leads straight into something honest, a bit messy, and fully alive. If you want to see how far she can push this, go find her, follow the trail across Facebook, TikTok, Instagram, X, and YouTube, and stay close to what she’s building. I’ll stick around for this one – I like where it’s going.
Written by: Flav
anger Emotion grunge hailey hermida Indie LosAngeles lyrics poprock punk Release Rock


Hip-Hop Breakroom is Groover City’s nightly deep dive into pure Hip-Hop culture - from dusty classics to fresh cuts. Two hours of raw rhythm, lyrical fire, and curated flow. Every night, 8PM–10PM UK time.
close
+00:00
Groover City PRS & PPL licensed © 2026