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Nicki Minaj: The Billboard Cover Story [img:$uid]http://i54.tinypic.com/2v3it53.jpg[/img:$uid]
November 22, 2010
On the surface, Nicki Minaj is a cartoon: a vivacious, va-va-va-voom 26-year-old girly girl with a fondness for silly voices, hip-hugging Barbie-doll costumes, anime facial expressions and day-glo accessories.
But three years ago, Minaj, born Onika Maraj and raised in Jamaica, Queens, was just another tough, street-wise, potty-mouthed chick who couldn't keep a job.
"The last job I had was as an office manager in a little, tiny room where I literally wanted to strangle this guy because he was so loud and obnoxious," Minaj recalls. "I would go home with stress pains in my neck and my back. That's when I went to my mother and said, 'Look, I'm not going back to work.' I'd been fired like 15 times because I had a horrible attitude. I worked at Red Lobster before that and I chased a customer out of the restaurant once so I could stick my middle finger up at her and demand that she give me my pen back. I swear to God I was bad."
Thankfully, Minaj has found a much more productive way to channel her fury. After being discovered by rapper Lil Wayne a couple of years ago off the strength of a street DVD appearance and becoming the first lady of his Young Money crew, Minaj has become one of rap's most attention-grabbing MCs and this decade's Queen Bee.
Now, three mixtapes -- including 2009's highly touted "Beam Me Up, Scotty" -- and a slew of guest appearances later, Minaj is set to release her solo debut album, "Pink Friday," on Nov. 23 through Young Money/Cash Money/Universal Motown.
Her multiple characters are indeed present on the set. In a matter of bars, Minaj switches effortlessly from the toned-down Onika to the energetic Nicki and then to her tempestuous alter ego, Roman Zolanski. She tosses off British and Jamaican accents, animal-like growls, breathy vocals and rapid-fire rhymes with the blink-and-you'll-miss-it speed of a 14-year-old girl thumbing a text message in homeroom.
Indeed, no rapper has stretched the boundaries of hip-hop quite like Minaj has in the last two years. Aside from her sex appeal and fashion sense, she's become one of music's most in-demand collaborators, recording with Rihanna, Usher, Ludacris, Mariah Carey, Robin Thicke, Sean Kingston, Trey Songz, Christina Aguilera and labelmates Drake and Lil Wayne, among many others.
During the week ending June 26, she had more songs on the Billboard Hot 100 (four) than any other artist, becoming the first female rapper to accomplish the feat. And Minaj's "Your Love" was the first single by a female rapper to reach No. 1 on Billboard's Rap chart in seven years. Ironically, Minaj dethroned current nemesis Lil Kim -- more on that later -- who was the last female rapper to hit the top, in June 2003, with her cameo on 50 Cent's "Magic Stick." In a generally grave year for artist development, Minaj is one of few new acts -- alongside B.o.B and Mumford & Sons -- who can claim legitimate breakthrough status in 2010.
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Part II
Universal Motown president Sylvia Rhone marvels at Minaj's mic skills, noting that she has "proved that she can go toe-to-toe with today's top male rappers."
The buzz began last year when she appeared on Robin Thicke's "Shakin' It 4 Daddy." Even Jay-Z took notice, making a suggestion for her verse. "I had never met Jay at that point," Minaj says, "but he told Robin Thicke that if I did the song I should say, 'I be, I be, I be, I be, I be on that money shit.' So I took that line and just ran with it."
To seal the deal, Minaj leaked the single "Roman's Revenge" a couple of weeks ago, which served as the official introduction of her most belligerent persona, Roman Zolanski. On it, although Minaj claims not to be directing rhymes at her, it seems the rapper takes aim at Lil Kim, who's targeted Minaj in recent rants for not paying sufficient homage to the female rappers who have come before her.
"'Roman's Revenge' is where I've become a different human being," Minaj says. "I didn't give a damn who I offended, whose feelings I hurt -- this needed to be said, and it cracks me up when I listen to it. I'm a maniac on that track. I knew true hip-hop fans would love this."
Minaj credits mentor Lil Wayne for sparking that fire in her. After she dropped out of the second leg of Wayne's 2009 I Am Music tour, he kicked her out the crew -- a turn of events that wasn't made public. "I started to record by myself and I lost track of what I was doing and who I wanted to be," she says. "It wasn't until I linked back up with Wayne that he gave me this speech. He said, 'What happened? You were hot,' and it just hurt me so much. I wanted to prove to him that I was still hot. It hurt my ego so bad that I went back with a vengeance."
"She has done well [on radio]," WQHT (Hot 97) New York VP of programming Ebro Darden says. "'Your Love' was huge, 'Right Thru Me' is growing, and it seems like 'Roman's Revenge' has people interested as well. She developed a following long before she had music on radio."
"There will also be a release-week event -- either a performance or an album release party in New York or Los Angeles."
Minaj is set to do an AOL Sessions performance and a "24 Hours With Nicki" webisode series will air as well. Yahoo is shooting exclusive footage for a "New Now" episode and an in-studio video performance and interview. "As we go forward, we're talking about a partnership with Foursquare for a performance and maybe a Nicki look-alike contest to take place simultaneously in different cities," Bynum says.
Currently, there's a flyaway radio contest and a $1,000 shopping spree competition going on across the country. A tour is also in the works for next year. And while details are scant about her future ventures, Minaj is working with MAC makeup to start her own line, hopes to get into acting and wants to start a children's charity. She also plans to further develop her live show, working with choreographer Laurie Ann Gibson and a voice coach.
http://www.billboard.com/...ory?page=3
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Intresting in hearing the album, but if it is alot of bubblegum mess like Your Love.... Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records. | |
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I'm shocked that SHE of all people could call someone loud and obnoxious
"We may deify or demonize them but not ignore them. And we call them genius, because they are the people who change the world." | |
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I've been listening to the album for the last week or so and I must say, I believe the hype. I haven't enjoyed an album from a female MC this much since Hard Core came out in 1996. She's fun, she's witty, she has catchy shit, and she sings?! I had no idea. Get it, girl! | |
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