Canadian-born Caroline Cecil, known professionally as
Whipped Cream, produces dark, intricately designed bass music that evades easy categorization. Splicing together elements of trap, post-industrial sound design, rave, and traces of seductive pop, she has released music on labels such as Nest (2017's
Persistence EP), Dim Mak, and
Monstercat, and performed on the main stage at festivals including Ultra, Shambhala, and Electric Zoo. Her first major-label EP,
Who Is Whipped Cream?, appeared in 2020, and she subsequently collaborated with
Big Freedia,
UNiiQU3, and
Moore Kismet on the 2022 single "Hold Up."
Born in Toronto and raised in the city of Nanaimo on Vancouver Island, Cecil grew up interested in competitive figure skating, but a broken ankle derailed her plans. After attending a music festival when she was 19, she began dedicating time to DJing and producing music. Inspired by the likes of
Nero,
Baauer,
Zeds Dead, and other EDM and bass music producers, she released her debut EP as
Whipped Cream,
Law of Attraction, in 2015. A closing set at the Shambhala festival that year became a turning point in Cecil's career, and her gig schedule rapidly increased. In 2017, following an EP with
Hekler titled Mirrors,
Whipped Cream's
Persistence EP, featuring the defiant track "Ignorant," was released by
Skrillex's Nest imprint. The following year brought singles on Dim Mak ("Gray," with
KTRL), Deadbeats ("Blood"), Big Beat ("Bad for Me," "Luv"), and others. In 2019, after Cecil relocated to Los Angeles, "You Wanted It" and "Time" both appeared on Mad Decent, and
Whipped Cream's remix of
Zhu's "Desert Woman" was also released.
Cecil signed to Atlantic imprint Big Beat Records in November 2019. Her EP
Who Is Whipped Cream? appeared the following year, with guests including
Lil Xan and
Finn Askew. She also contributed the song "So Thick" (with
Baby Goth) to the soundtrack of the superhero film
Birds of Prey. "Light of Mine," a collaboration with Jimorrow, appeared in 2021.
Whipped Cream teamed up with
Big Freedia,
UNiiQU3, and
Moore Kismet on the 2022 track "Hold Up." ~ Paul Simpson