129 notes
posted 5 months ago

 Janelle Monae returned to her hometown of Kansas City, Kan., on Friday to visit her family and to appear with Kansas City Mayor Sly James at the Mayor’s Christmas Tree Lighting Ceremony at Crown Center on Friday night. Before a pre-ceremony reception in the American Restaurant, she met with members of the local media. Here’s what she had to say during our brief interview:

Word is you’re working on the next record. What can you say about it? 

I am happy to be here and see my family, and I am eager to get back to the studio and work on finishing my album. I stopped touring so I could finish the album. Actually, I plan on releasing two albums next year.

Any idea when?

I will release them according to my soul clock; so I reserve the right to change that. But I will try to stick to the scheduled release dates, which I know but can’t say. I will be thinking about Kansas City and all the people here who have supported me as I continue to write songs that empower, encourage and make you dance.

Will these new records build on the themes you established in your first two recordings?

Again, that’s all according to my soul clock. Right now all I can say is, the music comes from the space I’m in.

How far along are you in your wriitng?

I would say 84.799 percent of the writing is done.

Will you tour next year?

Oh, absolutely. We already have a tour set, but it hasn’t been announced yet. I’ll be with some really big artists. We’ll hit the Staples Center three nights in a row in L.A. It’s a really big band. I can’t say who it is. I think next week you should probably hear something.

 - Timothy Finn, The Star 

Read more at the source!

37 notes
posted 1 year ago (by: virtuouslyvindicated)
virtuouslyvindicated:

— #JANELLEINELLE! ;) [♥]

virtuouslyvindicated:

— #JANELLEINELLE! ;) [♥]

22 notes
posted 1 year ago (by: subashini)
Douglas Wolk on Janelle Monae's Cold War video, and other uses of the tight shot

Monáe isn’t really singing directly and emotionally to us: she’s an archandroid, simulating emotion very convincingly except for the moments when the technology slips.