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Reply #30 posted 07/09/13 2:51pm

Shawy89

avatar

I know you guys into Electric Lady era, but this performance of Janelle remains as my favorite live performance of her!

Her voice, I mean her voice biggrin!! the way she shows how she loves the song, the set (instruments, bands, suits..) and most the funky Jackson 5 vibe in it.

It's one of the moments when you smile like a fool watching a video. And you keep smiling like a fool whenever you watch it.

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Reply #31 posted 07/09/13 3:04pm

cindymay

Shawy89 said:

I know you guys into Electric Lady era, but this performance of Janelle remains as my favorite live performance of her!

Her voice, I mean her voice biggrin!! the way she shows how she loves the song, the set (instruments, bands, suits..) and most the funky Jackson 5 vibe in it.

It's one of the moments when you smile like a fool watching a video. And you keep smiling like a fool whenever you watch it.

her performance at the nobel with this, Cold war and tightrope was stellar... cool

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Reply #32 posted 07/09/13 3:57pm

mjscarousal

Janelle talks about her upcoming album "The Electric Lady" on the BET 2013 awards red carpet

She is so lovely! So articulate, intelligent, CLASSY and humble. I just love to hear her talk, makes me love her more!

Dreamer

Life through my eyes

Ms. Monae at the 2013 BET awards

Too Fly

The dress style in "Queen" video

Hey sista am I good enough for your heaven? Say will your God accept me in my black and white?- Janelle Monae

Janelle in Dance Apocalyptic video

Janelle singing with one of her idols Prince. Janelle revealed to Billboards that she is collaborating with Prince on her new album, "The Electric Lady"... so excited!

Will your God except me in my black and white?

Prepping for Queen Video

Funky style

Janelle showing her pearly whites

ANDROID 57821

MJ is one of my inspirations

Sir Greendown come wake me in the night

Slick look

I must go

This is a Cold War gotta know what your fighting for

In my world

Im feeling it

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Reply #33 posted 07/09/13 4:50pm

Shawy89

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I would eat Janelle Monae, as I always say... biggrin Her sweetness is just something delicious.

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Reply #34 posted 07/09/13 6:44pm

CarolineC

Shawy89 said:

I know you guys into Electric Lady era, but this performance of Janelle remains as my favorite live performance of her!

Her voice, I mean her voice biggrin!! the way she shows how she loves the song, the set (instruments, bands, suits..) and most the funky Jackson 5 vibe in it.

It's one of the moments when you smile like a fool watching a video. And you keep smiling like a fool whenever you watch it.

Yes, her voice is perfect for that song and, like you said, hearing Janelle perform "I Want You Back" makes you smile.

I just found this short video of Janelle and Erkyah Badu, right before they presented Prince with the Billboard Icon award. Midway through, Janelle talks about the first time Prince called her (out of the blue, after one of her concerts).


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Reply #35 posted 07/09/13 6:50pm

NaughtyKitty

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cool

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Reply #36 posted 07/10/13 2:05am

cindymay

CarolineC said:

Shawy89 said:

I know you guys into Electric Lady era, but this performance of Janelle remains as my favorite live performance of her!

Her voice, I mean her voice biggrin!! the way she shows how she loves the song, the set (instruments, bands, suits..) and most the funky Jackson 5 vibe in it.

It's one of the moments when you smile like a fool watching a video. And you keep smiling like a fool whenever you watch it.

Yes, her voice is perfect for that song and, like you said, hearing Janelle perform "I Want You Back" makes you smile.

I just found this short video of Janelle and Erkyah Badu, right before they presented Prince with the Billboard Icon award. Midway through, Janelle talks about the first time Prince called her (out of the blue, after one of her concerts).


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Reply #37 posted 07/10/13 2:11am

cindymay

I love erykah and jane together..they are amazing artists who really respect each other so much plus they are like best friends ..they call each other twins and erkah said J was the first person to really appreciate her heart...

for understand better the electric lady:she also revelead the q.u.e.e.n acronym here

Here Comes The Electric Lady: Janelle Monáe
At long last, Janelle Monáe—the inimitable, award-winning, songwriter, performer,producer, Cover Girl and avant-garde funkstress—is back again, ready to release her another full-length “emotion picture” to the masses. But as always,Janelle is not ready to talk about music just yet. She’d rather talk about her past and how those fertile powerful experiences forced her to create her coming album The Electric Lady.

According to Monáe, “I went back to Kansas City after my tour for my debut album The Arch Android. And when I looked around me, I decided I wanted to make a raw, revealing album all about my life and the things I’d experienced in my community— about the laughter in the parks, the jams bumping in the cars, the jokes told over kitchen tables, all the life and warmth and struggles I felt there. But I also wanted to figure out how to take Kansas City to the future…like a surreal Parliament album with lyrics by Octavia Butler and album art by Salvador Dali.”

As time passed, Monáe found herself increasingly drawn to the stories and experiences of the strong women in her life, and their ability to electrify and inspire individuals to do the right thing. “At some point I realized that the true heart and glue of the community were the women. My mama and grand mamma and my aunties and who to this day, are some of the most powerful beings on the planet. Under their guidance, I went from cleaning houses everyday in my maid outfit to the world-traveling performer I am today. They made me believe in myself enough to move from Kansas and pursue my dreams. A lot of folks think I work hard onstage because of James Brown. But they’ve never met my mother!”

Inspiredby her mother and other matriarchs, Monáe began to write lyrics and songs aboutrebel women who refused to be marginalized and dared to live their life boldlyand unapologetically in a distant future. According to Monáe, “When Ireturned to the studio, I felt I had to do my part. Through my art, I had tohelp create the woman I wanted to see around me. Incidentally, during concerts,for years I’d been painting this woman’s physique—the silhouette of her hips—

I have hundreds of these paintings with the same feminine figure over and over…this glowing Technicolor woman…seen from behind…regal, powerful and electric…My colleagues and friends told me to name this mysterious figure because she seemed to be a totem, a powerful symbol for me. So I named her The Electric Lady, and that’s where the album’s title came from.”

As she began the audacious task of following up on her acclaimed debut LP The Arch Android—an album that topped critic’s lists in 2010 all over the world—she took along some trusty, brave companions: the original music producers of The Arch Android, Nate “Rocket” Wonder and Chuck Lightning of Wondaland Productions. And together they crafted a new strain of jamming music they called “ish.” In the hip hop community, “ish” is aeuphemism for the profane four-letter word for excrement, but as Monáe explains, they set out, like proverbial alchemists, to turn lesser substances into gold. “This entire project was produced by Wonder & Lightning. We set out to make a soundtrack for the Obama era, something that spoke to the beautiful, majestic and revolutionary times that we’re living in. The musical language we’re speaking now is called ish. In the African-American community, we’ve been turning left-overs (like chitlins) and social depredation (like poverty) into delicacies and fine art for years. So we just set out to turn the rubbish all around us into something beautiful. Is his the bow tie on the funk.”

From the sound of The Electric Lady, ish is an urgent and dangerous form of dance music, rebel music that forces one to fight, jam, and fall in love. Like on The Arch Android, the sonic textures of the album are varied, and the past and present come together to explode and create a mind-blowing future for pop and soul music. For example, wondrous strings reminiscent of Curtis Mayfield and Bernard Herrmann orchestrations abound, Hendrixian guitar solos soar, Outkast-like raps float over punk rock riffs; defiant socially-conscious lyrics extol the virtues of soul-searching and fighting for change, while the funk simply melts your speakers: 808s boom and Prince-like synthesizers squiggle in your ear hole, making it veritably impossible to just sit still.

“As we like to say at Wondaland, the booty don’t lie. The booty always obeys the LAW OF THE JAM. You can’t hate on something that makes your booty move, that makes you jam and have a good time. And the booty will always tell you the truth of a given situation. You can always tell what a community or a person truly believes by just studying the actions of their booties at any given time. They can claim they love this other person or culture, or believe in this peaceful god, or really want freedom, but do their actions prove it? Their actions, what their booties do or don’t do, that tells you the truth.”

The recording process was fun, rewarding, but also strained by Monáe’s new found need to be more courageous and personally revealing in her storytelling. “To do this album properly, I had to revisit some turbulent chapters in my life, deal with some questions and experiences left over from my childhood. There were so many things I had questions about. Sexual things. Racial Things. Gender things. Memories. Things I thought I had left behind me. New things I was discovering. But ultimately I found myself emulating my mother and grandmother and using their strength to surpass my fear. I had to do that before I could write and sing and perform these new songs convincingly. I’m not the kind of artist that can perform something night after night, if I don’t believe in it, or if it’s not true tome or my experience.”

Monáe was also inspired and emboldened by her truly amazing collaborators: Roman Gian Arthur, the wunderkind and Wondaland Arts Society artist-in-residence that,once again, provided the album’s magisterial overture; the soul star Miguel,who crooned his way effortlessly to the stars and helped provide a prime baby-making moment on the lush ballad “Primetime”; Erykah Badu, her self-ascribed “twin,”who used her cosmic grace and poise to help turn the first single “Q.U.E.E.N.”into a female empowerment anthem and a runaway smash; and none other than her life time hero, the legendary Prince, who contributed in countless ways,musically, vocally, and most importantly, spiritually—by conversing with her from his purple telephone in Minneapolis, whenever she was weak and unsure which artistic direction to go.

As she worked, Monáe found herself, as always, drawn again into her other love,science fiction, and the exploits of Cindi Mayweather, the heroine of her first EP Metropolis. In fact, the new album serves as Suite IV and V of her Metropolis saga, and in this chapter, the android hero Cindi moves from self-realization to self-actualization: from the knowledge and owning of her unique superpowers, to actually using them to better the world around her. Monáe says, “I like to think you can hear me using my super powers this time. And not just talking or wondering about them. The Electric Lady is like the big action sequence in the third act of an epic film. Every party this album starts, or every baby born because of it, is actually another victory against the Great Divide.”

As she continued to work on the album, Monáe found herself displaying these super powers in new ways in the recording studio, and found that some of her best creative work was done when she was running entire production sessions by herself. “There were key moments like the rap on Q.U.E.E.N. where I needed to be alone. I dimmed the lights, setup the mic and engineered myself. I just let the words and sounds flow through me. Overall,I’ve been feeling stronger as a producer, as well as writer.” In addition,on this album, Monáe had the chance not only to produce herself, but also to produce her collaborators Miguel, Erykah Badu and Prince. “I’m still humbled by the collaborations and partnerships I have on this album. I actually got the chance to produce and write for some of my heroes. And through my recording label the Wondaland Arts Society, I’ve been executive producing the artists I love. Wondaland artists such as Deep Cotton and Roman Gian Arthur. I’m proud of the Wondaland movement, and this new phase in my life as an artist, producer, and businesswoman.”

The fruits and rewards of this artistic journey can be heard in ample measure on the album’s courageous, outrageously funky first single “Q.U.E.E.N,” which features the queen herself, Erkyah Badu. “Erykah’s one of my best friends, and we talk about everything. That particular song really developed from a deep conversation we were having about a woman’s place in the world. And how we were expected to be freaks and muses and virgin goddesses all at the same time by patriarchal cultures and religions. Rather than answer all the questions we just decided to jam to them and let the booties decide.”

Now that the album is complete, Monáe finally has a concrete formula for the Electric Lady that she summed up by turning her first single “Q.U.E.E.N.” in to an acronym. In Monáe’s own words, “An Electric Lady is Quirky, Unafraid, Electric, Epic and Nicety. That’s when you’re being nice and nasty, noble and naughty all at the same damn time. Because even superheroes need a glass of red wine. Even rebel women need a kiss every once in a while. What’s proper and acceptable behavior simply depends on the time of day…and the kind of week you’ve been having.”

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Reply #38 posted 07/10/13 2:17am

cindymay

CarolineC said:

Shawy89 said:

I know you guys into Electric Lady era, but this performance of Janelle remains as my favorite live performance of her!

Her voice, I mean her voice biggrin!! the way she shows how she loves the song, the set (instruments, bands, suits..) and most the funky Jackson 5 vibe in it.

It's one of the moments when you smile like a fool watching a video. And you keep smiling like a fool whenever you watch it.

Yes, her voice is perfect for that song and, like you said, hearing Janelle perform "I Want You Back" makes you smile.

I just found this short video of Janelle and Erkyah Badu, right before they presented Prince with the Billboard Icon award. Midway through, Janelle talks about the first time Prince called her (out of the blue, after one of her concerts).


about the new album:


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Reply #39 posted 07/10/13 2:24am

mjscarousal


Thanks Cindymay!! That was a good read. I love Erykah too she is soo hilarious and sincere

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Reply #40 posted 07/10/13 2:39am

cindymay

NaughtyKitty said:

cool

speaking about performances ( not new they are from 2011 but I think we can view them again smile )..

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Reply #41 posted 07/10/13 2:44am

cindymay

mjscarousal said:


Thanks Cindymay!! That was a good read. I love Erykah too she is soo hilarious and sincere

you're welcome.. wink yeah she is great...I love them both so much...erykah, janelle and lauryn are like my holy female trinity,,, biggrin

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Reply #42 posted 07/10/13 3:57am

cindymay

her first appearance at roskilde/denmark in 2011.. wink

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Reply #43 posted 07/10/13 4:09am

funkyandy

avatar

cindymay said:

funkyandy said:

Excitable, chaotic persona, this Janelle of 'unannounced sexual orientation' Monae.

Tries overly hard to be 'alternative'...is she a musician, comedienne, drag artist, all 3?...or none at all?

Her music goes nowhere, and is kinda superficial.

Takes more than a 'pretty face' for me, so I remain unimpressed.

Maybe the girls will like her...just because.

is her music superficial? oh really? are you sure you're speaking about janelle monae ???because if you ever listened to one of her records you can't say she is superficial she is the total opposite of a superficial person and artist .. mad the pretty face is a plus ..smh,,,she is always so socially inclined in her music ( and mad creative).you can't say she is a superficial artist..you can't..

[Edited 7/9/13 14:09pm]

[Edited 7/9/13 14:10pm]

[Edited 7/9/13 14:11pm]

.

CarolineC said to funkyandy:


"I'm not sure why you feel you have to label Janelle or put her into some kind of box...do you also wanna say Prince has to choose between being a musician, actor, writer, fashion icon...?

(With all of the usual feminist petulance)...but apart from that, GREAT POINT!

Well, I wasn't labelling...just conjecturing...but I guess I wouldn't conjecture similarly about Prince, since he has a heritage, a history, longevity in the music industry and has long proved himself musically and otherwise.

.

...but as can be demonstrated by the female commentators here, you don't hold female artists to those kind of standards...look at you cindymay!... darlin' u can barely contain yourself...what did Janelle Monae do, breathe or something? Hollee.

I have listened to her music; opposite of superficial you say? Maybe I'll take another listen if I have time...hmmm...she has depth? Where is the real Janelle Monae?

As for her music...sigh...put it this way, if I can create music as good as... often exceeding what she can do on my KORG digital piano...and not finding it that hard to do...plus I have a good pair of pipes on me and I'm cute...well....maybe funkyandy should be out there as well.

.

For many women... all a woman has to do is BREATHE to achieve some sort of 'icon' status...as I say, held to lower standards.

shrug



[Edited 7/10/13 4:11am]

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Reply #44 posted 07/10/13 4:10am

cindymay

2 interviews:

and this was during the creation of the electric lady

and her having fun during an afterparty: biggrinI loved how much lauryn hill's music they played wink

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Reply #45 posted 07/10/13 4:17am

funkyandy

avatar

There's a fine line between having confidence and over-valuing oneself...the latter of which is more common in 'western' women of course, due to the the way current social norms are set up.

Janelle Monae is a-v-e-r-a-g-e...which is fine.

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Reply #46 posted 07/10/13 4:29am

cindymay

funkyandy said:

cindymay said:

is her music superficial? oh really? are you sure you're speaking about janelle monae ???because if you ever listened to one of her records you can't say she is superficial she is the total opposite of a superficial person and artist .. mad the pretty face is a plus ..smh,,,she is always so socially inclined in her music ( and mad creative).you can't say she is a superficial artist..you can't..

[Edited 7/9/13 14:09pm]

[Edited 7/9/13 14:10pm]

[Edited 7/9/13 14:11pm]

.

CarolineC said to funkyandy:


"I'm not sure why you feel you have to label Janelle or put her into some kind of box...do you also wanna say Prince has to choose between being a musician, actor, writer, fashion icon...?

(With all of the usual feminist petulance)...but apart from that, GREAT POINT!

Well, I wasn't labelling...just conjecturing...but I guess I wouldn't conjecture similarly about Prince, since he has a heritage, a history, longevity in the music industry and has long proved himself musically and otherwise.

.

...but as can be demonstrated by the female commentators here, you don't hold female artists to those kind of standards...look at you cindymay!... darlin' u can barely contain yourself...what did Janelle Monae do, breathe or something? Hollee.

I have listened to her music; opposite of superficial you say? Maybe I'll take another listen if I have time...hmmm...she has depth? Where is the real Janelle Monae?

As for her music...sigh...put it this way, if I can create music as good as... often exceeding what she can do on my KORG digital piano...and not finding it that hard to do...plus I have a good pair of pipes on me and I'm cute...well....maybe funkyandy should be out there as well.

.

For many women... all a woman has to do is BREATHE to achieve some sort of 'icon' status...as I say, held to lower standards.

shrug



[Edited 7/10/13 4:11am]

nothing stops you to be a musician if you say you have talent...try and see what you can do.. ;-)wish you luck..

anyway speaking about janelle yes she is far away from being a superficial artist, her music speaks about marginalization, social problems( go listen to sincerely jane,mrs president, dance or die, locked inside, cold war, queen, etc) and even when she talks about love she does it with such creativity see songs like say you'll go, babobbye ya, peachtree blues...

the real janelle monae? you can find her in her music..

you can't compare her with prince and say she hasn't his longevity in the music industry of course she hasn't she is 27 years old now and released a few records...but if we think that we should never accept and recognize the talent of new artists and remain stuck in the past...

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Reply #47 posted 07/10/13 7:34am

funkyandy

avatar

Aww...listen to cindymay!...your defence of this artist is admirable...

I'm already a musician, so don't need to 'try my luck', happy playing for friends.

I'll tell you who's good though. Militant...oh yeah babee.

Anyway...

I didn't compare Janelle to Prince, your little friend CarolineC did that, I just responded to HER comparison, she brought that up.

I listened to ya recommended toons! Check it out...

  • Sincerely Jane - Now this is a good example of what I'm talking about. Sad poignant lyrics, so what does Janelle do? Sings them over some 'over-lavish' instrumentration! So the lyrics suggest one thing, the music another = a mismatch = we don't really believe what she's saying, it's not from the heart. Maybe Janelle has a habit of doing this. This was 2 minutes too long.

  • Mr. President - You wrote Mrs President, I'm sure that was an accidental slip of your gynocentric typing finger, lol (I'm joking). Anyway 20 seconds in everyone is thinking Al Green...next 30 seconds everyone else is thinking Lauren Hill...right? Not saying it's a bad thing. 1 minute too long.
  • Dance or Die - This nearly got me going! Nearly! Seriously! When I heard that "whuppa whuppa" in the synth...I was like 'oh my, this is gonna be a funk jam'...but alas...it turned into a Janet Jackson-ish, rapping thing...then fizzled out...nice little Spanish flavour, again over-instrumentation...somebody gotta tell this girl that sometimes less is more...wish she'd done something with that synth...

  • Locked Inside - ....is like BAM! Starts off as if we should already know what she's singing about, obviously I'm not gonna like the typical 'male-hating' lyrics...but that's typical in current female music so no biggie there, unnecessary sample of Michael Jackson, dozens of different ideas lyrically in one song which is evidence of a chaotic, uncontrolled mind...very much female....these are very 'girly' songs, which is fine for y'all.

  • Cold War - Is good-ish. We like the chorus...hitting the high notes well...lyrics, sure...another mismatch with the lyrics and the music...even more so when we watch the video...hard to be convinced she means what she sings.

  • Peachtree Blues - Glad you suggested this, was starting to think the girl didn't do ballads. Nice n' jazzy, hitting the high notes well...though she sings like she's never been in love before, no passion, no heart...creative though.

  • BaBopByeYa - I presume you meant this track...this...sounded like a movie soundtrack. I wonder if it was for a movie. Hear those horns? Bossanova thing going on...too lavish...she might want to try simplicity at some stage in her career. She's singing lyrics very clearly...but the heart is not there.

  • QUEEN - Are kidding me?! Now you're talking! That is the funkiest funk jam I've heard since...well since I was playing my stuff! Everything right with this track...sounds like...hmmm!

At a loss to say much about Janelle Monae. I do wish her well though.

Getting this in b4 the haterz arrive.

biggrin

[Edited 7/10/13 7:41am]

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Reply #48 posted 07/10/13 7:43am

CarolineC

@cindymay - Thanks for posting that article. Very intertesting. I cannot wait for this album. It sounds amazing!

Now I've got to watch some of the new videos everyone has posted. So glad this thread started while I am on vacation smile

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Reply #49 posted 07/10/13 9:02am

cindymay

funkyandy said:

Aww...listen to cindymay!...your defence of this artist is admirable...

I'm already a musician, so don't need to 'try my luck', happy playing for friends.

I'll tell you who's good though. Militant...oh yeah babee.

Anyway...

I didn't compare Janelle to Prince, your little friend CarolineC did that, I just responded to HER comparison, she brought that up.

I listened to ya recommended toons! Check it out...

  • Sincerely Jane - Now this is a good example of what I'm talking about. Sad poignant lyrics, so what does Janelle do? Sings them over some 'over-lavish' instrumentration! So the lyrics suggest one thing, the music another = a mismatch = we don't really believe what she's saying, it's not from the heart. Maybe Janelle has a habit of doing this. This was 2 minutes too long.

  • Mr. President - You wrote Mrs President, I'm sure that was an accidental slip of your gynocentric typing finger, lol (I'm joking). Anyway 20 seconds in everyone is thinking Al Green...next 30 seconds everyone else is thinking Lauren Hill...right? Not saying it's a bad thing. 1 minute too long.
  • Dance or Die - This nearly got me going! Nearly! Seriously! When I heard that "whuppa whuppa" in the synth...I was like 'oh my, this is gonna be a funk jam'...but alas...it turned into a Janet Jackson-ish, rapping thing...then fizzled out...nice little Spanish flavour, again over-instrumentation...somebody gotta tell this girl that sometimes less is more...wish she'd done something with that synth...

  • Locked Inside - ....is like BAM! Starts off as if we should already know what she's singing about, obviously I'm not gonna like the typical 'male-hating' lyrics...but that's typical in current female music so no biggie there, unnecessary sample of Michael Jackson, dozens of different ideas lyrically in one song which is evidence of a chaotic, uncontrolled mind...very much female....these are very 'girly' songs, which is fine for y'all.

  • Cold War - Is good-ish. We like the chorus...hitting the high notes well...lyrics, sure...another mismatch with the lyrics and the music...even more so when we watch the video...hard to be convinced she means what she sings.

  • Peachtree Blues - Glad you suggested this, was starting to think the girl didn't do ballads. Nice n' jazzy, hitting the high notes well...though she sings like she's never been in love before, no passion, no heart...creative though.

  • BaBopByeYa - I presume you meant this track...this...sounded like a movie soundtrack. I wonder if it was for a movie. Hear those horns? Bossanova thing going on...too lavish...she might want to try simplicity at some stage in her career. She's singing lyrics very clearly...but the heart is not there.

  • QUEEN - Are kidding me?! Now you're talking! That is the funkiest funk jam I've heard since...well since I was playing my stuff! Everything right with this track...sounds like...hmmm!

At a loss to say much about Janelle Monae. I do wish her well though.

Getting this in b4 the haterz arrive.

biggrin

[Edited 7/10/13 7:41am]

glad if you are already a musician.. wink I don't want to hate on you don't get me wrong it's not my point but since this is a thread for her fans ..anyway ..I think this girl is really talented her music really moves me so I guess that's the point of music right? anyway since it seems you liked queen I have to agree partially with U on that point I see a growth in her songwriting with the recent tracks..of course I need to wait for the entire album for having a more accurate idea...but for basically a debut album( because she relased indipendently before a sort of mixtape when she was 18 years old called the audition) I think the archandroid was already really really good..(even more compared to her contemporary peers)

babobbye ya is made on purpose like a movie soundtrack ..indeed for all the archandroid she wanted to evoke a big soundtrack( she said so) and .imo babobbye ya it's an amazing piece because it's so complexy structured...I don't value that complexity as negative..

about her doing ballads she does ballads too..but even if she didn't erykah badu has an almost entire discography of slow songs and she's still here.. you forgot to say your opinion on say you'll go lol another slow track I really love ( if you want ballads from her you could also hear after say you'll go, neon valley street, oh maker, you, you were my everything from the audition)

and about the mismatch between lyrics and music in songs like cold war and sincerely jane..I think it's made on purpose she wants you to dance but also think at the same time..she's not the only artist to do that..

anyway pop music hasn't seen a force like hers (imo of course) in a very long time even..I don't expect you to agree of course but this is my opinion.. wink

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Reply #50 posted 07/10/13 9:04am

cindymay

CarolineC said:

@cindymay - Thanks for posting that article. Very intertesting. I cannot wait for this album. It sounds amazing!

Now I've got to watch some of the new videos everyone has posted. So glad this thread started while I am on vacation smile

you're welcome... wink yes can't wait for september lol

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Reply #51 posted 07/10/13 9:25am

funkyandy

avatar

cindymay...here's my Janelle Monae impression...

bananadance

You're young.

I heard all you said, no reason for any hate, I'll check out more songs...I'm up to date with all modern music simply because I teach 11-19 year olds...not a Prince stan.

bye

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Reply #52 posted 07/10/13 10:04am

Cuddles

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did Prince have anything to do with QUEEN? I wish there was an extended worked-out version of it with Prince on guitar.

To make a thief, make an owner; to create crime, create laws.
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Reply #53 posted 07/10/13 11:00am

CarolineC

Cuddles said:

did Prince have anything to do with QUEEN? I wish there was an extended worked-out version of it with Prince on guitar.

I don't know if Prince had anything to do with the original of QUEEN, but he and 3rdEyeGirl did a long, instrumental remix of QUEEN on a live stream from Paisley Park recently. Have you heard it? If not, org note me and I'll help you find it.

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Reply #54 posted 07/10/13 2:07pm

cindymay

CarolineC said:

Cuddles said:

did Prince have anything to do with QUEEN? I wish there was an extended worked-out version of it with Prince on guitar.

I don't know if Prince had anything to do with the original of QUEEN, but he and 3rdEyeGirl did a long, instrumental remix of QUEEN on a live stream from Paisley Park recently. Have you heard it? If not, org note me and I'll help you find it.

I don't think Prince is linked to queen( the original) ...the song was written by janelle and nate wonder ( she said he wrote the music for this song on 106 and park) in particular she said he wrote the music and she was captured and after that she started to write the lyrics inspired by some private conversation between herself and erykah badu...if I remember correctly.. wink

[Edited 7/10/13 14:09pm]

[Edited 7/10/13 14:10pm]

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Reply #55 posted 07/10/13 2:12pm

cindymay

funkyandy said:

cindymay...here's my Janelle Monae impression...

bananadance

You're young.

I heard all you said, no reason for any hate, I'll check out more songs...I'm up to date with all modern music simply because I teach 11-19 year olds...not a Prince stan.

bye

ok cool

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Reply #56 posted 07/11/13 12:39pm

funkyandy

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.

Sum mo reviews for cindymay...from funkyandy, the weird, misunderstood, skin like pure gold, geeky teacher from the UK...

'Say You'll Go'...you call that a slow song?!...haha!...it's kinda midtempo, lush...you have a repetitive piano note in there that I like...yes, the lyrics are talking about love...the chorus is clever with the 'Samsara' and 'Nirvana'...too clever... from the head more than the heart...when I was sitting with my beloved under a large tree in Summer, totally in love, undying love, staring into each other's eyes, one with the universe we couldn't put the feelings into words...perhaps Janelle can, if only I could believe her when she sings it though...can't quite remember this song after it's finished...

'Neon Valley Street' - reminds me of Lauren Hill (again) not a bad thing...Janelle has a nice voice...then the robotic voice killed the mood for me...it's okay.

'Oh Maker'...are you kidding me? Here's what you have to do here. Go to YouTube and listen to 'Everybody's talkin at me' by Harry Nilsson, compare it to 'Oh Maker' then tell me what YOU think!...but it's nice...not a slow song...

'You' - is fantastic, you know why? Less lush, less instruments, less was definitely more here, lyrics nice...now that's a slow song...singing with Scar right? You hear that soft electric piano? Made me all gooey...

You Are My Everything - nice acoustic...reminds me of a song an 18 year old gay student gave me...who fell in love with me... at my age as well!...but I wasn't... what he was, so I had to let him down very, very, gently...otherwise, anyway I digress...again, can't fault the lyrics...nice lyrics...but...

Janelle sings exquisitely most of the time...but...because she's done so much musically, lyrically already... what's left?...

She's been experimental from day 1...

If you think she's a force...I can sort of see what you mean, as her music is...extra lush, in every aspect...she tries hard with her output...overdoes it...maybe...

Speaking of Erykah Badu, sure, she does slow songs, but she's Erykah Badu!... and her music is more 'organic', more soulful...more natural, more womanly...Erykah's voice moves me immediately...

I mean...I've just put 'Baduizm' on...and I'm immediately LUSHED out...totally believe it when she sings...

Janelle Monae appeals...mainly to young-ish women, I think...

wave

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Reply #57 posted 07/11/13 2:00pm

cindymay

funkyandy said:

.

Sum mo reviews for cindymay...from funkyandy, the weird, misunderstood, skin like pure gold, geeky teacher from the UK...

'Say You'll Go'...you call that a slow song?!...haha!...it's kinda midtempo, lush...you have a repetitive piano note in there that I like...yes, the lyrics are talking about love...the chorus is clever with the 'Samsara' and 'Nirvana'...too clever... from the head more than the heart...when I was sitting with my beloved under a large tree in Summer, totally in love, undying love, staring into each other's eyes, one with the universe we couldn't put the feelings into words...perhaps Janelle can, if only I could believe her when she sings it though...can't quite remember this song after it's finished...

'Neon Valley Street' - reminds me of Lauren Hill (again) not a bad thing...Janelle has a nice voice...then the robotic voice killed the mood for me...it's okay.

'Oh Maker'...are you kidding me? Here's what you have to do here. Go to YouTube and listen to 'Everybody's talkin at me' by Harry Nilsson, compare it to 'Oh Maker' then tell me what YOU think!...but it's nice...not a slow song...

'You' - is fantastic, you know why? Less lush, less instruments, less was definitely more here, lyrics nice...now that's a slow song...singing with Scar right? You hear that soft electric piano? Made me all gooey...

You Are My Everything - nice acoustic...reminds me of a song an 18 year old gay student gave me...who fell in love with me... at my age as well!...but I wasn't... what he was, so I had to let him down very, very, gently...otherwise, anyway I digress...again, can't fault the lyrics...nice lyrics...but...

Janelle sings exquisitely most of the time...but...because she's done so much musically, lyrically already... what's left?...

She's been experimental from day 1...

If you think she's a force...I can sort of see what you mean, as her music is...extra lush, in every aspect...she tries hard with her output...overdoes it...maybe...

Speaking of Erykah Badu, sure, she does slow songs, but she's Erykah Badu!... and her music is more 'organic', more soulful...more natural, more womanly...Erykah's voice moves me immediately...

I mean...I've just put 'Baduizm' on...and I'm immediately LUSHED out...totally believe it when she sings...

Janelle Monae appeals...mainly to young-ish women, I think...

wave

Nice you took time to listen to the songs I mentioned..if you wants more songs don't hesitate to ask lolI will listen to what you suggested soon.. wink anyway I love Erykah too don't get me wrong but they are different artists musically even though similar in wanting to be "conscious artists" I only mentioned her because you asked if janelle makes slow song..anyway Erykah is pure soul with some funk and jazz elements Janelle incorporates more genres in her music..they are different artists...janelle is more entertaining, more catchy..and if I have to choose who see live before between the 2 I would choose Janelle first because I'm more for a rock and roll style concert than a soul concert...but this is my problem of course wink

don't know if you're familiar with her concerts something was posted I think but they are hella fun.. wink anyway I respect and love both these artists and I really think J. is a force especially in today pop music's landscape..there are very few people that can be compared to her I mean from approximately her generation (janelle was born in 1985)..

[Edited 7/11/13 16:55pm]

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Reply #58 posted 07/11/13 3:38pm

mjscarousal

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Reply #59 posted 07/11/13 4:40pm

cindymay

mjscarousal said:

too much talent in a picture

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