Author | Message |
Janelle Monae Covers Elle Canada - Lengthy Interview
January 10, 2013
There is a socialite clapping thunderously in my ear. I can't blame her. Janelle Monáe just put on a cape while spinning like a top onstage and singing her smash hit "Tightrope." Then Monáe drops the cape and walks offstage. The energy follows her, sucked out of the room like a vacuum. When I meet the 26-year-old singer the next day, I'm surprised by how slight she is.
"I am naturally shy," she says softly. "That's what people are most surprised by, because when I'm onstage there's nothing shy. It's all electricity. I feel fearless."
"I got this Facebook message and it really just touched my heart and reminded me where I came from and how I can never complain. I'll show you," she says, scrolling down her wall, which is bursting with exclamation points from fans. The message is from a girl whom Monáe worked alongside as a maid, cleaning houses while trying to make money for college; she's congratulating Monáe on her success and reminiscing about listening to her sing while they cleaned. There are a lot of emoticons. There are a lot of actual emotions too.
"A lot of the women I worked with had rough lives," says Monáe. "They were recovering addicts or getting out of jail." The cleaning service hired desperate women who couldn't get a job anywhere else. Monáe herself was desperate to leave her hometown and attend the American Musical and Dramatic Academy in New York. Monáe made it to the academy, but she eventually dropped out and moved to Atlanta. It was there that she co-founded the Wondaland Arts Society, a co-operative of artists, musicians, writers and performers.
He introduced her to his friend Diddy, and, in a flash, Monáe was signed to Bad Boy Records and working on her debut album, The ArchAndroid. Released in 2010, the record introduced her patented blend of soulful, funky R&B.
| |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Part II
I'm expecting Monáe to be starry-eyed while recalling this climb to fame. But that just shows how little I know about her so far. She doesn't really party at clubs anymore. In fact, she seems disinterested in the trappings of the pop-star world - she's too preoccupied with her responsibilities. "I have responsibilities to make sure I'm setting an example," she says at one turn.
"I have a responsibility to my community," she says at the next. "I have a responsibility to tell the universe a story in an unforgettable way," she says again. The ArchAndroid certainly told a mesmerizing story.
I find myself thinking of Lena Dunham's oft-quoted line in Girls: "I think I might be the voice of my generation." What made that statement so powerful - and so hilarious - was Dunham's stoned, sheepish delivery.
Maybe that's why she talks about her new role as a CoverGirl spokesperson with the lofty idealism of a political candidate. "I felt very honoured," she says. That sounds incredibly daunting, I blurt out. Monáe just smiles like a Cheshire cat. "I have no problem with it; I think it's necessary," she explains. "I have to be a role model. I think there are certain people - and I think that I am one of those people - who naturally have leadership qualities."
It seems that Monáe thinks of herself as a modern Pied Piper, using her music to stir young girls. When we talk about The Electric Lady, the album she's nearly finished recording, set to drop later this year, Monáe isn't interested in discussing her musical references. (Though, off the record, her fellow Wondaland artist Nate Wonder eagerly describes what he says will be a brilliant follow-up to her first full-length album.)
| |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Part III
Instead, Monáe talks at length about the effect she wants her record to have on people. Like much of what Monáe says, it's sweeping, grand and brave - but imprecise, somehow intangible. Listening to her can feel like trying to stand on a cloud before realizing it's made of mist.
So I crank up a Michael Jackson tribute station and "Black or White" is soon washing over the racks of monochromatic wardrobe.Then the tribute portion of the station's programming kicks in.
Justin Timberlake and Ciara take over. Monáe's assistant, Kim, a friendly classically trained opera singer who loves French music, slides over with a smile and message that boils down to "Um, no."
She pops in one of Monáe's old iPods, and soon Stevie Wonder's "Superstition" is thumping and Nate is shimmying quietly across the room, humming, his dreads swaying like willow branches.
Standing among her team, who are also all clad in signature black and white, Monáe looks like a diminutive army officer. Today's uniform of white top, cropped black pants and patent Repetto slippers channels her unlikely roster of style icons, ranging from Karl Lagerfeld to Albert Einstein.
But, just as listening to the same two albums over and over would eventually make you blow your brains out, wouldn't dressing only in black and white - sharply tailored pantsuits for the most part - get a little dull?
"The colours come out in your music, the colours come out in your personality, the colours come out in performance," she starts to explain. Then she stops. "I started wearing this uniform, to be perfectly honest, because I have an amazing body."
I feel my expression shift into the facial equivalent of "WTF." Over the years, she has given many reasons for her sartorial choices - most often, she says the look is to pay homage to her parents, who wore uniforms while working as a janitor and a garbage-truck driver, respectively.
"I'm serious - I'm not playing," she maintains. "When I look at myself in the mirror, I'm attractive. I really have a nice body. And I had to pick: Do I want them to focus on my body? Do I want them to focus on how curvy and really, really gorgeous my figure is? Or do I want them to look at my music? What has more value? And I made that decision. I want them to focus on the message and the music because I feel like I have a higher calling."
This is not the kind of talk you hear very often. It's jarring. Especially for those of us who were raised in an era that served girl power with a heaping side of cleavage.
| |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |
Part IV
But I wonder why she can't challenge people musically while showing some skin. Are the two really mutually exclusive? "It's not that I never wear miniskirts," she explains.
The crew on set at the photo shoot is getting edgy. We've been here for hours without so much as a click of the camera.
We're jittery when she steps on set; she's got a plane to catch, and the clock is ticking. Then the flash goes off, and I'm dumbstruck.
| |
- E-mail - orgNote - Report post to moderator |