[8] She began her musical activities in 2009, at the age of 15 in Aracaju, Sergipe, where she was raised by her familya[12] after a period in Piracicaba, São Paulo.
Still in 2018, she took part in a festival supporting the Free Lula movement[1] and in the documentary A Thousand Women, by Rita Toledo, alongside fellow artists Lena Chen (from the USA), Florencia Duran (from Uruguay) and Ana Luisa Santos (from Brazil).
[21] On 10 March 2022, she released the song "Agora Vai", alongside Xamã and Lia Clark, discussing financial empowerment.
[22] Since the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic, Ferreira has been preparing her second studio album, which will be released by Natura Musical and distributed by Altafonte Brasil.
[6][13] In some more recent shows, she's been adopting lyrics more focused on offering solutions for the problems she would previously comment; according to her, this is part of a strategy to "present tenderness as a survival technology and information as the key to liberating black, native or LGBTQIA+ people who have suffered any form of oppression".
[6] Her debut studio album, Igreja Lesbiteriana, Um Chamado, contains elements of soul, reggae, blues, funk, R&B and gospel.
[2][11] Among her influences are Angela Davis, Assata Shakur, Leci Brandão, Conceição Evaristo, Erica Malunguinho, Preta Rara, Eva Rap Diva, Sueli Carneiro, Audrey Lorde, Manu Coutinho de Aracajú, Jaêmia, Laine Almeida, Anaia, Débora Ambrosia, Bruna Amara, Luz Ribeiro, Dani Monteiro, Talíria Petrone, Ellen Oléria, Kimani, Mel Duarte, Kelly Estácio, Preta Ferreira, Luciane Dom, Renata Souza, Carol Daffara, Ryane Leão, Sueide Kinté and Nara Couto.