Entries in fuse (1)

Friday
Nov202009

Lady Gaga Goes "On The Record" With Fuse Music Network

Let me start by saying this: As a former fuse employee, I'm so upset that NOW is when they decide to do all the cool stuff. I had The Sauce (which was cool), but c'mon... Jay-Z concert? Lady Gaga Interview? New Hosts? *sigh*

Anyhow...the music network is getting up close and personal with today’s top artists in its new one-on-one interview series titled “On The Record with Fuse.” Their latest victim... Lady GAGA! Viewers can catch the singer on November 23 at 9pm ET as she sits down to chat about her upcoming tour, fans and androgyny in women. Below is a video snippet of the interview & a few highlights:

On the song PokerFace:

“Well that song was about fantasizing about women when I was in bed with my ex-boyfriend so I didn’t really want him to know because it bothered him, but I couldn’t help myself. And it was me struggling with my sexuality and my, not struggling with I should say, enjoying, celebrating and that was the inspiration behind the song.”

On Androgyny:

“Grace (Jones) is such an inspiration to me, which is why with all the rumors that have flown around over the year, I was always excited because the androgyny of the woman. It’s this kind of fascinating thing that nobody understands or wants to understand unless you’re in the beautiful subculture that is my fans and the gay community.”

On calling her fans “Monsters”:

“I see myself in my fans, and they see themselves in me. I felt like a freak for so long, in school, growing up, you know I wore a uniform, but when I went home I used to put makeup on in the house and I used to sleep with my makeup on. My mother used to say, ‘Where the hell are you going kid?’ And I’d say ‘Well, what do you think of Marilyn today? Or I did Judy Garland today, mom.’ It was my way of expressing myself, so I think that the kids in the audience, they feel like freaks too.”

On her Monster Ball tour:

“There’s a theme of evolution and change. So I begin as a cell and grow throughout the show. Tremendously innovative choreography. Insane fashion installations. It’s of course in the vein of what my aesthetic has become which is the work is always in some sense half performance art, half installation. So it’s both. And we’re doing things that have never been done before. And I’m playing all the music from The Fame, and all of the music from The Fame Monster and I’ve been telling my fans it’s a giant post-apocalyptic house party.”