Unreleased -117x Tracks With Og Fi... - Kim Petras
The OG files remind us that the pop star we see is the final draft. The leaks show us the outlines, the crossed-out words, the wrong turns, and the moments of accidental genius. They are messy, often unfinished, and never meant for our ears.
Word count: ~1,500+
In the sprawling, often chaotic world of pop music fandom, few names inspire as much fervent archival dedication as Kim Petras . The German-born, Los Angeles-based singer-songwriter has cultivated a hyper-loyal fanbase, affectionately named Pretty Perfect after her 2019 mixtape, not just through her official discography—which includes chart-topping hits like "Unholy" (with Sam Smith) and cult classics like "Heart to Break"—but through a vast, shadowy, and incredibly rich underworld of unreleased material . Kim Petras Unreleased -117x Tracks With OG Fi...
Songs like and "All She Wants" lean into mainstream EDM-pop, but the most fascinating OG file here is "Problem (Solo Version)" – a track that eventually leaked with a featured artist (redacted) but here exists only as Petras herself, double-tracked harmonies, no pitch correction. It’s raw and vulnerable, directly contradicting the "banger" image.
For years, whispers on forums like Lanaboards , Reddit’s r/KimPetras , and Discord servers spoke of a "vault": hundreds of demos, alternate versions, and finished songs that never saw the light of day. Then, in waves starting from late 2022 and culminating in a massive 2024 dump, the internet witnessed something unprecedented. A collection now known as surfaced. The OG files remind us that the pop
But now that they are here, they offer a unique, unauthorized, and unforgettable portrait of one of pop’s most fascinating architects at work.
As of this article’s publication, the full 117x collection is not available on major streaming platforms. It lives in the grey area of Reddit archives, Discord pins, and fan-run Tumblrs. Search carefully, respect the artist, and listen with curiosity, not entitlement. Word count: ~1,500+ In the sprawling, often chaotic
For fans, the justification is simple: Kim’s label refuses to release this music. Some of these tracks are years old, fully mixed, and mastered. By leaking them, fans argue they are "preserving pop history." Detractors call it theft.