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10 Questions For Fefe Dobson [img:$uid]http://i51.tinypic.com/igz1bo.jpg[/img:$uid]
December 2010
Fefe Dobson’s back catalog shows little signs of hip-hop fare, but that doesn’t mean her iPod isn’t filled with some good boom bap.
The spunky songstress has a fondness for some of the industry’s major players. “Drake, I support,” Fefe tells us. “We’re fellow Canadians; we’re both from the same city. [And] I’ve been digging Wiz Khalifa.” But Dobson, whose latest album Joy, is soaked in the same pop liquid as her previous efforts, still keeps the tunes of classic acts close to her soul. “I love Fleetwood Mac and Johnny Cash.”
The self-described music lover gave fans and critics a nice surprise last month when she debuted the remix to her J.R. Rotem-produced single “Stuttering,” which featured a verse from an “amazing” artist she’s been a loyal supporter of over the years: Pusha T.
Perhaps the Fefe Dobson of 2003 wouldn’t have tapped into the rap spectrum, but seven years later, she’s earned a welcomed reception after serving it to the masses.
While the 25-year-old sits on a plush chair tucked in a conference room at Def Jam’s New York City headquarters, she’s vocal in discussing her journey to musical adulthood.
She’s written songs for the Disney Channel set, saw an album get shelved, and returned to the label that brought her to the forefront.
Read on as the ever-smiling Torontonian explains to us why Kanye West is a genius, what a collaboration with Nicki Minaj would sound like, and what really comes to mind when the Rihanna comparisons pop up.
1. Joy is the name of this album. Name three things that bring you joy.
When I was bummed out, sometimes she would just make me smile. She’s awesome, she’s a great dog. [Also], music, good music. That’s my world, so definitely that brings me a lot of joy. Hmm, what else? Love. That’s self-explanatory.
2. It’s been about seven years since your self-titled debut album. How does that record differ from your new one?
Naturally you have to change. If you’re the same person you were when you’re 18, and now I’m in my early 20s, if I was the same person there’d be a problem. So I had to change that up as well as my music.
3. Your second album Sunday Love was never released. How did you get past that and not get discouraged to create a third album?
And that really helped because that song was actually gonna be on Sunday Love and we decided not to do it. It just inspired me to know that there’s a place and time for those songs and maybe that place and that time wasn’t with me, but for sure it had a moment and that inspired me. Then I got in and started working on Joy.
4. Pusha T hopped on the remix to “Stuttering.” How did that come about?
5. Word is that you want to collaborate with Kanye West. What about him draws you to his work?
6. If you did a collaboration with Nicki Minaj, what would it sound like?
7. In the past, you’ve penned songs for teen pop stars Miley Cyrus and Selena Gomez. Do you work one-on-one with an artist when you write for them?
8. Are there any songwriters you’re particularly fond of?
9. Some people have accused Rihanna of “borrowing” your style, being that you’re on the same label, Island Def Jam. How do you feel about that?
10. Do you have a New Year’s resolution for 2011? | |
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11. Seriously, off the record: how do you really feel about Rihanna borrowing your sound?
[Edited 12/29/10 1:30am] | |
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Yeah, that's how she really felt. | |
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This is kind of funny. But I find the fact that Dobson doesn't go there -- whether, in fact, she feels this all or not -- refreshing. We need more like her who decide not to be part of that dog-eat-dog scene. Ὅσον ζῇς φαίνου
μηδὲν ὅλως σὺ λυποῦ πρὸς ὀλίγον ἐστὶ τὸ ζῆν τὸ τέλος ὁ χρόνος ἀπαιτεῖ.” | |
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I wish I could agree with you but political correctness is what is holding these artists back. It is that same social conditioning that allow them to be exploited in the way that they are. Its the same social conditioning that manipulates the public opinion the way it does. Its what the rich use against the poor to keep them in line: "you should turn the other cheek and blah, blah, blah." The truth is often times not politically correct and we have come to a point in American/Western culture where the restraint of political correctness has become more important than the truth and offending someone has become a cultural crime. The fact that she and other artist like her who "don't go there" may make them appear "nice" to the culturally conditioned general public but to those looking to exploit, she looks WEAK and ripe for the picking. So, to keep it real, her nice girl demeanor is only helpful if she is doing (or havinng something done) behind the scenes to counteract Def Jam and Rihanna's team.
The label pulled a power move on Fefe. In most cases, when someone comes along with something new(ish) or hot (ex: Lady Gaga), labels will quickly scramble to mold an artist on thyeir roster to fit that current "hotness" (see: Christina A.). In this case, Def Jam was so desperate that they stole from THEIR OWN artist to make their biggest artist bigger. Its because record sales are low and they figure they can afford to poop on Fefe and her base for the sake of re-inventing Rihanna, who is their biggest artist.
Sorry for the long post. My first post was a joke and not really meant to be taken but many a truth is said in jest. | |
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Interesting.
It could be, though, that Dobson simply doesn't feel she's been slighted and, therefore, harbors no such contempt. On the other hand, if she does, maybe she employs other ways of navigating this -- like forging on with a dignified career in lieu of public neckrolling and catfights, which only truly facilitate the industry's exploitation machine. Diss Rihanna and BOTH their public currency go up, lining exec pockets and, in the meantime, making Fefe and Ri Ri look like the pissed off, loudmouthed, can't-get-along-with-anyone black women so much popular culture would paint them to be.
I just think there's a way to be righteously indignant and yet tactful, effectual and not complicit in further BS. [Edited 12/29/10 10:13am] Ὅσον ζῇς φαίνου
μηδὲν ὅλως σὺ λυποῦ πρὸς ὀλίγον ἐστὶ τὸ ζῆν τὸ τέλος ὁ χρόνος ἀπαιτεῖ.” | |
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Oh, there is. | |
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question 11 is hilarious hahahha I was acquaintances with fefe when she was a kid, as my best friend was in her classroom and my coworker later on went to high school with her | |
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