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To watch the video of Lady Gaga's song "Poker Face," please Click Here
Dance/Pop/Electronica Artist Lady
Gaga Talks About Her Debut Album The Fame, And Her Songwriting
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| LADY GAGA |
By Jason Blasco
Ever since
Stephania Gabriella Germanotta, better known by her stage name Lady Gaga, was
four-years-old, she was enamored with music and would bang on the piano for
hours, even though she didn’t know how to play. “My mom told me that I just
basically hoisted myself up on a piano seat, and I used to always try to play,”
she said. “I think I always had a strong pull to music.”
This passion grew
exponentially and she was encouraged by her father, who used to play her records by
Bruce Springsteen, Queen, David Bowie and Elton John, who became her artistic
influences. Gaga is now ready to launch her highly-anticipated debut album, The
Fame, which is due out on Interscope Records on Oct. 28. This album will
continue the momentum which she built this summer, when Gaga broke through with
her hit single “Just Dance,” which reached #1 in both Canada and Australia. And
notably, Gaga is currently on tour opening for pop icons, the New Kids On The
Block.
“I don’t know
quite how to explain this - I am not really made for anything else,” Gaga said.
“My brain doesn’t function in a way to permit me to have any other kind of life
outside of music, art, fashion, and expression. I remember sitting in jazz
clubs and being wide-eyed and so excited. I don’t know how to explain my
passion for songwriting and performing. It’s just in my blood, and there was
never a point where I wanted to do anything else.”
Gaga started to
learn about being a performing artist when she attended New York University’s
Tisch School for the Performing Arts, when she was only 13. Four years later,
she was performing regularly in club on New York’s East Side. “That is where I
learned theater - I did so many shows,” she recalled. “I would take myself on
auditions and practice. Truthfully, I learned how to develop characters and
communicate with the audience through monologues and really punctuated speech.”
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| The CD cover of Lady Gaga's debut album, The Fame, on Interscope Records. |
At first, Gaga
said it was difficult performing on the New York club circuit. Going to
auditions for record labels was sometimes daunting, because she didn’t fit into
one particular category. Some industry insiders would describe her as either
“too poppy” or “too theatrical,” making it extremely difficult for her to break
into either genre because she refused to be pigeonholed.
“I was really
trying to follow their philosophy (of theatrical performers she admired like
Queen and David Bowie),” said Gaga. “I started to understand how I could make
music and perform in that way without being so watered down. I don’t have any
interest in performing in [a typical, boring way]. I believe there is something
in my performances that is more honest about who I am at heart.”>
During her
adolescent years of performing in the clubs of New York, Gaga developed an
affinity for songwriting by writing her first song at age 13. Whether sitting
at the piano, jamming around in her comfortable clothes, or finishing
housework, inspiration for her songwriting can strike anywhere for Gaga. “I
love songwriting. It’s so funny - I will just jam around in my underwear or I
could be washing my dishes. I wrote the song ‘Dirty Rich’ and several other
songs just at the piano.” Gaga said that another song on the album she closely
connects with is "Russian Roulette,” particularly for the lyrics.
"'Russian
Roulette’ is an urban myth where you take a gun and you spin the cage,” she
explained. “You basically shoot it into your head - you are gambling. If I pull
the trigger and play this game with a lover, I am playing this sort of morbid
game. That is the gamble of dating, love, lust and sex. It’s very animalistic
and a very primitive relationship. Love can really f*ck you up. That makes it
such a powerful and perfect pop song.”
Gaga said she
would probably consider her flagship song on her upcoming album to be
“Paparazzi,” where the hook goes, “I am your biggest fan, I’ll follow you until
you love me, papa, paparazzi. Baby, there is no other superstar, you know that
I’ll be your papa, paparazzi.”
“I would say that
the paparazzi makes a good subject for very powerful pop song,” she said. “This
song is about narcissism, and about finally meeting that person in your life
you feel so strongly about, you just want to take their picture.”
Gaga said her
songwriting also has been misinterpreted and panned in some early reviews, but
her friend Perez Hilton perhaps articulated her message in a clearer way after
he told her about his interpretation of her work. “I get tired of reading
reviews about people who say my work is all about shallow b*llshit,” Gaga said.
“I talked to one of my good friends, Perez Hilton, about my record. He said
‘don’t take this the wrong way, but you write really deep intelligent lyrics
with shallow concepts.’ Perez is very intelligent and clearly listened to my
record from beginning to end, and he is correct.”
Notably, Gaga is starting to
co-write songs with other artists for their albums. She wrote the song “Full
Service” with Donnie Wahlberg, for the latest New Kids On The Block album, which
is called The Block.
Jason
Blasco is the publicist for composer/keyboardist/songwriter Kevin Stratton, and a freelance
journalist. Blasco can be reached at
JBlasco7@hotmail.com
or JBlasco7@yahoo.com.
Special Feature: Streaming Video
You can watch the video Lady Gaga's single "Poker Face," by clicking the link directly below:
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