San Diego Union-Tribune

FROM CULT STAR TO SUPERSTAR

R&B SINGER-SONGWRITER SZA’S FIRST ARENA TOUR INCLUDES A SOLD-OUT SAN DIEGO SHOW ON MONDAY

- BY SUZY EXPOSITO

As the sun sets on a balmy February afternoon in West Hollywood, the Grammy-winning singersong­writer known as SZA has just wrapped her second photo shoot of the day, inside a historic three-story house off Sunset Boulevard. She wears rainbow chakra beads around her neck and rhinestone­s on her cheeks; sinking into an antique armchair, she details her weekly agenda in spurts, as if releasing a long-repressed sigh through a pressure valve. She’s recovering from a carousel of winter illnesses: tonsilliti­s, then a respirator­y infection, followed by a sinus infection.

“And I still gotta put in 30 minutes on the treadmill!” she says.

With more than six years between the release of her first and her most recent album, SZA, 33, is making up for lost

time. Her first arena tour, in support of the chart-topping LP “SOS,” kicked off Feb. 21 in Ohio. The 17-show run marks her first proper North American tour since 2018.

She describes the stage show as a “Cinderella moment where there’s weird, ethereal, mystical, soft things,” but with a “hardcore” edge.

“There might be a little blood,” she adds with a grin.

Distinguis­hed by SZA’s biting candor around love, sex and other social entangleme­nts, “SOS” evokes the therapy-informed prose of girlfriend­s venting over lattes. Such intimacy has paid off beyond anyone’s expectatio­ns.

Released in December, “SOS” has been the No. 1 album on the Billboard 200 for 10 nonconsecu­tive weeks, the longest stretch for a female artist since 2016, when Adele’s “25” topped the charts for 10 nonconsecu­tive weeks.

“SOS” is SZA’s first No. 1 album — her acclaimed 2017 debut, “Ctrl,” reached No. 3 — and the revenge fantasy “Kill Bill” currently sits at No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100.

“It’s funny,” she says, when I stress the magnitude of those accomplish­ments. “I guess I’m not mad that I’m busy. I’ve been un-busy for so long. I just wish I had better planning. I’m still learning how to assert myself.”

SZA says she spent years trying to live up to her reputation as an A-List hit-maker.

She wrote for Rihanna, Nicki Minaj and Beyoncé, and collaborat­ed with Kendrick Lamar and Maroon 5 before being nominated for the best new artist Grammy in 2017. First, she booked sessions with producer and artist whisperer Rick Rubin in his Malibu studio, Shangri-La, and tinkered with singing bowls at his home in Hawaii. She also met with Timbaland in Los Angeles, and penned a few songs with Sia while sitting crisscross on the floor of her Malibu home.

Yet none of those sessions yielded anything SZA felt comfortabl­e sharing. By the spring of 2022, she had more than a hundred songs written, and no impetus to share a single one.

“I was pretending to be an artist,” she says of those sessions, nervously thumbing one of several rings on her fingers. “That was me doing what I thought I should be doing — people-pleasing — because I felt hella ashamed that I didn’t do it sooner. But I’ve done the opposite of pleasing my fans by not dropping music for almost six years.”

By the fall, SZA’s cache of songs was finally whittled down to 23, but not without the usual shame spiral that precedes her releases.

“She was still picking songs after the album was out,” says Terrence “Punch” Henderson, president of Top Dawg Entertainm­ent, better known as TDE.

SZA, born Solána Imani Rowe, was signed to TDE in 2013. She became both the first woman and singer on the roster, which then featured such acts as Jay Rock, Schoolboy Q and Kendrick Lamar.

Henderson met SZA in 2011 at one of Lamar’s shows in New York, where she, a doe-eyed fashionist­a from Maplewood, New Jersey, sold merch for a sponsor’s clothing line.

Even though her demos cribbed beats from other rappers, “it was such an easy call,” he says. “I was thinking of ways to further the label. She matched our energy, creatively.”

But in the decade since he signed SZA, the two have publicly butted heads, with Henderson cast in the role of evil corporate suit trying to wrangle new music out of her. During recording sessions,

“Women sell so much music! A lot of y’all that are talking down on women — we sell more records than you.” SZA

he says, he’s learned to be scarce, only popping in to discuss surface-level matters, like deadlines.

In 2020, SZA implied to fans on Twitter that her new album was being held up by Henderson.

“Y’all gotta ask Punch,” she tweeted, noting that their relationsh­ip had “been hostile.”

SZA eventually scrubbed those tweets. In the last year, says Henderson, the two have shared a more compassion­ate understand­ing.

“I think it’s hard living under the magnifying glass,” he offers.

“You want to give an artist as much creative freedom as possible so they can do their thing, but sometimes you have to push them to go,” he says. “You gotta let the artist be upset with you. Because if you sharpen the pencil too much, and you keep sharpening, you’ll have none left.”

She learned that only in the sanctuary of her home — or in the lived-in spaces of others — can she incubate songs worth hatching. “I made ‘SOS’ lead single ‘Good Days’ in my attic at home in Malibu — same thing with ‘Kiss Me More’,” she says of her Grammywinn­ing pop collaborat­ion with Doja Cat.

Other spaces of inspiratio­n include a cottage in the woods that belongs to producer Carter Lang’s grandma, a coat closet in producer Felix Snow’s apartment and underneath a blanket in engineer Matt Cody’s basement.

“Working in a fancy studio is bad for me,” she explains. “I’ve never made anything real at ShangriLa. When you’re in ShangriLa, you’re supposed to be a star. I’m a person. It’s easier to feel like a person in personal surroundin­gs. I made more stuff in Rick Rubin’s bedroom in Hawaii, just being there with producer and co-writer Rob Bisel for a week.”

SZA also decided that, to fully gestate “SOS,” she needed to shed her dependenci­es.

First, she stopped smoking weed — “I feel so much better now that I’m not a slave to it” — and cigarettes, a habit she laughingly credits to trying Backwoods cigars in her youth.

“Backwoods will make you ugly,” she says. “My teeth are too big to be yellow. Vanity stopped me from smoking, or really doing any drugs. I’d try them, but then I’d realize, ‘This sucks.’ Drugs suck!”

And where she previously sought out solace in men, she now finds it in therapy. Although she generously detailed her romantic mishaps in “SOS,” she’s much too private to reveal the subjects themselves.

“I know who I am and what I bring to the table,” she says of her love life, reflecting on stinging guitar ballads like “Special” and “Good Days.” “Have I felt like I’ve actually given the best of me to a loser before? Yes! Does that mean I’m actually a loser? Well, I felt that way in the moment. It’s OK to acknowledg­e, ‘Damn, I made a mistake dating this person. I’ll never shortchang­e myself like that again.’”

As tabloids run circles trying to sniff out her suitors, fans rejoice in reading between the lines of her songs. In the Tarantinoi­nspired “Kill Bill,” she openly fantasizes about killing her ex (and his girlfriend) to the tune of a soda-shop doo-wop gone noir.

Spotify reported that SZA’s murder ballad was the second most-played track on the platform on

Valentine’s Day. (She was upstaged by Miley Cyrus’ “Flowers.”) On social media, listeners questioned why SZA would echo a common thought pattern among domestic abusers.

“It doesn’t mean I’m supporting violence,” she explains. “The actualizat­ion of a human being is when the Buddha and the demon meet each other — they’re two ends of the same spectrum. You can’t kill your shadow, it just has to be part of you. Cleansing oneself of negative feelings is an act of healing. I wish healing for everybody.”

How did it feel to come out guns blazing on this album, after the extreme vulnerabil­ity of “Ctrl”?

“I was tired and angry. I feel like men just pick on women so much in music, it’s corny. Women sell so much music! A lot of y’all that are talking down on women — we sell more records than you. We literally make more money.”

The extreme of that misogyny is the ordeal that Megan Thee Stallion went through in court last year, after being shot by Tory Lanez, who was ultimately convicted of three felony counts.

“It was embarrassi­ng for men,” SZA said. “Megan was harmed — why did we require so much from Megan to have empathy for her? It was inhumane how it all went, with the bizarre level of scrutiny on her sex life. But justice was served. I hope that Megan’s somewhere healing. I always find that Black women are constantly protecting everyone without being asked. What happened to protecting Black women?”

However personal this record is for SZA, the musical breadth of “SOS” is a bid for the industry to properly recognize the artistry of Black women, beyond oft-racialized genres like urban or R&B. These designatio­ns feel outdated in the increasing­ly blurred pop topography of 2023.

“Sharing all those sides of ourselves will beget a clearer understand­ing,” says SZA.

 ?? ANNIE NOELKER FOR THE LOS ANGELES TIMES ??
ANNIE NOELKER FOR THE LOS ANGELES TIMES

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