Times Colonist

Lady Gaga gets more personal on new album

Songs address her relationsh­ips and loved ones’ suffering

- MESFIN FEKADU

NEW YORK — It’s 1:30 a.m. and Lady Gaga is on the brink of tears.

The pop star’s new album has been out for 90 minutes and she just celebrated by wrapping up two performanc­es — first inside the New York City bar where she used to sing as an unsigned teenager, then on top of the venue for all of her fans screaming loudly outside.

A lot has happened to get to this moment. She dealt with the constant reminder of 2013’s Artpop not matching the success of her previous albums; she parted ways with her manager, and she announced that she and her fiancé, actor Taylor Kinney, were taking a break.

But since Artpop, Gaga has picked up her sixth Grammy for her jazz album with Tony Bennett; performed at the Oscars — twice — and earned a nomination for an original song; won a Golden Globe this year for her role in American Horror Story; and drew raves for her national anthem performanc­e at this year’s Super Bowl.

Sitting inside her trailer parked outside the Bitter End, Gaga is teary-eyed as she discusses the new sound she delivers on Joanne, a rock-pop-country adventure that’s a departure from the danceflavo­ured electronic sound that made her a multiplati­num juggernaut.

“Yeah. I mean, I’ve changed a lot. I’ve healed a lot,” she said.

“But I feel like it would be so strange to hear my music, or hear anyone’s music really, and not hear the change. I change a lot and that’s just who I am. And I’m just going to keep being that way, you know. “The happiest that I am is when I’m just really truly being myself and I’ve always said that to my fans and guess what, they help me make that real.”

Joanne, released last Friday, embarks on new territory as Gaga’s voice takes centre stage. “There’s no auto-tune on any of my vocals. Not one,” she said.

She started writing new material two years ago. At this year’s Super Bowl, she gave Mark Ronson a demo of some songs (he performed Uptown Funk there with Bruno Mars).

“He said to me: ‘I know you can write great songs,’ but he said: ‘What do you have to write about? That’s what I want you to write,’ ” she recalled.

The result is more emotional tracks compared with past hits, ranging in topics from her love life to her friend’s battle with cancer (the bonus track Grigio Girls) to her aunt Joanne, who died from lupus before Gaga was born (Joanne is also Gaga’s middle name). The closing track, Angel Down, is about Trayvon Martin, a black teenager shot dead by a neighbourh­ood watch volunteer in Florida in 2012.

“It was really hard,” Gaga said of writing personal songs.

“But it was the best thing I ever did going there, because once you go there, you can’t get darker than there because you just got to look inside and whatever it is it is, and then you pick yourself up and keep going.”

Sinner’s Prayer sounds like it could be played in a Western with lyrics that include: “Hear my sinner’s prayer/I am what I am/And I don’t wanna break the heart of any other man but you.”

Other songs have lyrics that could be about Gaga’s own relationsh­ip. Million Reasons is about a failing relationsh­ip, and on the first single, Perfect Illusion, she sings: “I still feel the blow/But at least now I know/It wasn’t love, it wasn’t love/It was a perfect illusion.”

“This album is about being tough,” she said. “My dad was tough, he lost his sister out of nowhere, you know. My grandma lost her daughter out of nowhere. My other grandma, she raised herself. I come from a long line of tough family members and I wanted to write a record that reminded people that no matter what perfect illusion you have of me — right — that I’m probably a lot like you.”

The album features some respected musicians helping Gaga round out her sound, including frequent collaborat­or RedOne, Josh Homme of Queens of the Stone Age, Beck, Florence Welch, Hillary Lindsey and Jeff Bhasker, who won producer of the year at this year’s Grammys. Ronson led the team as executive producer and co-wrote each song alongside Gaga.

“I’m not Calvin Harris or some mastermind of dance music at all, but I think the reason she asked me to work on this record with her was because she was probably looking to do something that was a departure from what she’s done,” said Ronson, who has produced for Amy Winehouse, Mars and others.

“I enjoy like a really big pop song that’s about nothing as well — I DJ’d and played songs like that in the club for 22 years. But I think that, as soon as I was aware that she sort of had so many stories to tell, that was going to be able to fill an album. It felt like a really great place to go.”

Some have not been accepting of the new sound. The New York Times said the album “fishes for inspiratio­n” and the Chainsmoke­rs and Patrick Carney of the Black Keys dissed Perfect Illusion, which peaked at No. 15 on Billboard’s Hot 100 chart.

“She’s earned the right to experiment and do things differentl­y,” said John Janick, the president of Interscope Records, where Gaga debuted as a dance singer in 2008. “It doesn’t sound like everything else on the radio, but we take that as challenge to say: ‘We want to shift culture. We want the world to move toward her and not move toward everybody else.’ ”

Gaga has showcased the new songs in a small environmen­t — on her Dive Bar Tour. She will perform the songs on even a bigger stage when she headlines the Super Bowl halftime show next year.

“I think it’s always a challenge honestly with album-to-album with me because I’m always changing and I’ve never made an album that was like the one before it,” she said. “So I don’t know if everyone’s waiting for me to do that, but it might be easier if everyone just got the memo.”

 ??  ?? Lady Gaga describes her new album as about “being tough.”
Lady Gaga describes her new album as about “being tough.”

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