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Tag: Zane Lowe

  • Cardi B tells Apple Music about making ‘Imaginary Playerz’ and ‘Am I the Drama?’

    Cardi B joins Apple Music’s Zane Lowe for an in-depth conversation about her highly-anticipated second studio album, ‘Am I the Drama?’. In the conversation, Cardi B reveals what exact time JAY Z approved ‘Imaginary Playerz’, and opens up about overcoming writer’s block, the pressure of following her chart-topping debut, personal challenges over the past few years, and more.

    Video | Cardi B tells Apple Music about making ‘Imaginary Playerz’ and ‘Am I The Drama?’

    [youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7QkmgCjW2XY&h=315]

    Video | Cardi B gives advice to fans via her 1-800-DRAMA Hotline

    [youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TM2jANLp4CY&h=315]

    Video | Full interview

    [youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7QkmgCjW2XY&h=315]


    Cardi B tells Apple Music about having writers block while creating ‘Am I the Drama?’

    Zane Lowe: There’s a lot of life going on around this time as well. It wasn’t just like you were sitting on music, you were trying to find balance, I’d imagine that was what was going on.

    Cardi B: Yeah. It was just trying to find balance in life. And not only that, but it’s just like I don’t know, it got to the point for me that it’s like nothing was pleasing me. And it’s so funny because even when I get dressed up, when I wear clothes and stuff, there’s sometimes I’d be like, “Oh my gosh, I feel like I already did this. Oh my God, I feel like somebody already wore something similar to this.” And that is the same way that I feel about music. And it’s just, you’ll be surprised. I got 80 songs that I did probably these past seven years. And it’s just like I just be like three weeks later, it’s like I don’t love it, I don’t want it, I feel stupid, it sounds dumb, it’s sounds this. And even when people come and try to help me, it’s like I still don’t like it. It’s like I really went through a crash that nothing was pleasing me, nothing.

    Cardi B tells Apple Music about matching the success of her debut album ‘Invasion of Privacy’

    Zane Lowe: How much was the success that you achieved with ‘Invasion of Privacy’ and the songs that came from that? And then of course the world opens up and people fall in love with you. So music is the key. And then they’re like, yeah, we love the music, but we love her. How much of that got inside your head as well a little bit?

    Cardi B: It’s not really much. It’s just like I don’t go with the pressure of ‘Invasion of Privacy.’ Because what’s funny, when it came to ‘Invasion of Privacy,’ I wasn’t really thinking of like, oh, I need to make these numbers. I need to make these things. I just really felt like it’s like I have to keep my career. Because it was the first time I got pregnant and people were saying it’s like, oh, this never happened before. We never had an artist in the label that got pregnant right at the beginning of their career. So I just was in a rush to do my deadline and deliver my album. So that was on my mind.

    Now things have changed because people criticize me a little bit harder more than I feel like any other artist, which I feel like is not fair to me. But it’s like, you know what? They don’t do it to the people they don’t think that they’re great or they don’t whatever. And it’s like one of the key that I feel confidence that I’m going to be okay because it’s like no matter what I do, it’s like sometimes I could put this fire-ass outfit and I could kill Fashion Week, and it’s like people would be cool, but where’s the music? I could drop a product and people be like, okay, but where’s the album? I could be in a drama, some controversial shit, and people are like, we don’t give a fuck. We want the album.

    Cardi B tells Apple Music about other female rappers not liking her

    In the industry, there is a lot of different female rappers, but for some reason, it’s something about me that these bitches can’t stand. They can’t fuck with me. Some bitches, I feel like they’re on this class right now, they’re sophomores, and I’m a senior. And it’s like you want to fuck with the senior so bad. You think you’re here with the senior. You’re not even a junior. And it’s like you need to worry about them other sophomores before you start worrying about here, the fucking senior. But it’s something about it that it’s like they can’t even focus on them. They got to focus on me. And they always got to focus on throwing me shots and throwing me slings. No matter if you’re a fucking sophomore or in motherfucking college, it’s me.

    Cardi B tells Apple Music about the start of ‘Imaginary Playerz’

    I was in the studio last year in the Summertime and I was really caught in a funk. I ain’t got my hair done, I ain’t got my makeup done in weeks. I’m sleeping on the couch. It was the fourth, third day that I’m sleeping on the couch in the studio. And I just feel so down, not down, but I just don’t feel like my best.

    I’m exhausted, I’m pregnant as fuck. And I was just going through some drama in my life and I just was so tired, so over it. And then my engineer was like, “Cheer up.” He’s like, “Come on, come on. We got to wake up, we got to get up.” And I was like, “All right. All right.” Then he started playing [Jay-Z’s] ‘Imaginary Players’. And I just started laughing because it was so random for him to play that. And I was like, yeah. I’m like, yo, imagine if I flip this but my way because it’s like my life. Because it’s like I got a lot of shit to brag about. I really do live a different lifestyle than a lot of people.

    Cardi B tells Apple Music about making ‘Imaginary Playerz’

    Cardi B: It’s like I’m practically rapping about what I’m living. Everything that I’m talking about is the things that I live or the things that my fly friends… Because I be looking like, it’s like what this bitch wearing? What this bitch talking about? What this and that? And it’s like I literally just have to make it rhyme, make it sound good, but it’s like this is my life. And I just took notes of everything that I was doing. It’s like even in the music video, I was really having a fitting. I just had my hair done and my makeup done and the people that were fitting me, they’re really the fashion houses fitting me for a show. All those outfits that I wore, I wore them for a show.

    Zane Lowe: That’s not a set.

    Cardi B: It’s not a set. And it’s like they’re really fitting me couture pieces while I’m doing a music video. This is my life. This is really my life. It’s like I’m wearing couture, but I’m not wearing it for a music video. I’m wearing it because I’m about to wear this to a show this week.

    Cardi B tells Apple Music about feeling like she was dying the past year

    Cardi B: I really like to do my things very colourful. I’m a very colorful person. But it’s just like this past year, I feel like something kind of was dying in me. My humbleness, me trying so much to be unproblematic, me trying to avoid drama, avoid the disses, avoid the bitches, avoid the talks, it’s like that shit is dying, that’s dying out in me. It is like that’s really dying in me. Because I’m really about to show you, bitch, that you are not fucking with me. The cockiness is being born again. And not only that, but it’s like my life, my relationships, everything, it’s like that shit is dying now too. It is giving chances, giving chances to men, giving chances to women, giving chances to people that it’s like just want to see the nice shorty shorty. It’s like, oh, just ignore it, be the bigger person. That shit is dying. Now it’s like I feel like I gave y’all too much grace to think that y’all could fuck with me. And it’s like that shit is dead, bitch. Now I’m going to embrace that. You wanted that, bitch. Now I’m going to give it to you. And I hope you could take it when I motherfucking give it to y’all. That’s how I feel, for real. You see that I’m getting kind of angry?

    Zane Lowe: It’s a real emotion though. It’s a real human energy.
    Cardi B: Yes, yes. Because imagine being in your crib. You’re going through so much, so much drama. You probably got into an argument with your aunt and your cousins and shit. Then your fucking husband doing some bullshit. Then in your music career in the studio, you got fucking writer’s block. You have all these problems going on. Then a bitch starts fucking with you. And it’s like while all this is happening, you got a bitch fucking with me. And it’s like all right, bitch, I can’t get to you at that moment, but I’m going to get to you now. And you’re going to get it on my time as well.

    Cardi B tells Apple Music about JAY-Z approving ‘Imaginary Playerz’ at 4:44 PM

    Cardi B: Life, it just changed for me and I just needed to be outside. So I was just writing fly shit down. Then when it was time to submit it to get approved, I was a little scared. I was a little shaky. Wait a minute, Jay-Z got to approve it. I mean, I always knew that he got to approve it, but it was like, how about if he don’t approve it? How about if he fucking likes it? And he did like it. And it’s so crazy, the text message of him approving it, it was at 4:44 PM.

    Zane Lowe: Are you kidding me? Is he living like that or is that just some crazy universe fucking spiritual shit? Because I don’t really think he’s sitting there waiting till 4, 4, 4.
    Cardi B: No, nobody does.

    Cardi B tells Apple Music how she is processing life after getting divorced

    Zane Lowe: You’re still going through it though? Does it feel like you’re still processing? You talked about life changing.
    Cardi B: Yes. Yes. You know when you graduate high school and now you’re about to go to college, you don’t know what you expecting. Well, not only do you got to go to college, it’s like I had to move out. So it’s like now you really in the real world. And it’s like I feel like I’m getting that reset again, but it doesn’t feel as good because I’m in my 30s and I shouldn’t be having a reset at my 30s. It should just be almost planned out, almost like this is what is coming for the rest of my life. It’s like sometimes I feel like I’m in my 20s and I don’t really want to feel like I’m in my 20s. I want to feel like I’m in my grown 30s because I got three kids. And it’s like I’m not a… I like to be outside. I like to have fun. But it’s like I like to have my things planned out. I’m always a person that thinking about five years from now. You know what I’m saying? I like to think about family. That’s just the type of person that I just am. So experiencing that, experiencing the streets and stuff like that, it’s just a little weird. And then it’s like going through a divorce is very, very tough because you marry somebody and the person that you divorcing is not that person that you married. It’s like you really ask yourself like who the fuck did I marry? Who did I marry? There is no love there. There is no love. There is no love. But to me, I always felt like if I ever walk away from something, I get along with all my exes. Even if we don’t talk, we never ended it on some nasty, nasty stuff. So I never wish them bad. I don’t wish them bad or nothing like that. It has gotten to the point that it’s like, oh my gosh, I feel like I really hate you. I think I hate you. And I never wanted that. I always be wondering, it’s like why do women hate their baby daddy so much? Why do people say that divorce is so tough? I feel like if the love is dead, people should just go their separate way.


  • Lenny Kravitz talks to Apple Music about finding acceptance, the pre-internet 90s, and his famous friendships

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    Lenny Kravitz sits down with Zane Lowe at his home in Paris for a wide-ranging interview discussing his recently released album ‘Blue Electric Light’. Lenny talks about finding acceptance for his unique sound, saying, “I’d been told for so many years that I couldn’t do what I was doing. When I would bring that music around, it was always the story of it’s not black enough, it’s not white enough, it’s too rock, it’s too funky. People recognised my talent but didn’t want me to do what I was doing.”

    He reminisces about the pre-internet 90s, when he first realised he was famous, the two things he bought with his first record label advance, and first becoming a parent to daughter Zoë. He also talks about how his songwriting inspiration comes to him in the middle of the night, and shares his favorite memories from his close friendship with Prince and working with artists like John Paul Jones, Slash, and Michael Jackson.


    Video | Lenny Kravitz: ‘Blue Electric Light’, Songwriting & Prince

    [youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=outhCSk6TOc&h=315]


    Lenny Kravitz talks to Apple Music about finding acceptance for his unique sound, and feeling at home in Paris

    I’d been told for so many years that I couldn’t do what I was doing. When I would bring that music around, it was always the story of it’s not black enough, it’s not white enough, it’s too rock, it’s too funky. People recognised my talent but didn’t want me to do what I was doing. Take your talent and do this. This is the form. This is how it works. This is what a black artist does. These are the radio hits. This is the sound of what’s going on. Anyway, back to Paris, I got the download of ‘Let Love Rule’. I’d been shopping it. I was granted a five minute meeting at Virgin with a woman named Nancy Jeffries, who was A&R there. She came in, played the cassette, played ‘Let Love Rule’, played that song, and then she said, hold on a minute, I’m going to go get somebody. She went and got Jeff Ayeroff, played the song. He said, hold on, I’m going to go get somebody else. He brought in Jordan Harris. The three of them are sitting there. Then they asked me to play a few other songs I did. They kept listening and they were writing notes, passing them back and forth. I’m just sitting there. I’m like, this is going to be another one of those situations. I sat down and they said, we want to sign you, do you want to be with us? And that’s how it happened after being turned down time and time again. So then when the record was done and mixed and it was time for promotion, what box was I going to fit in? How were they going to promote me? It was a bit confusing. So, they sent me to Europe, and so I went to London for the first time. I went to London, Paris, Hamburg, Germany and Amsterdam, and that’s when I came to Paris for the first time, and I absolutely fell in love with this place.

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    Lenny Kravitz tells Apple Music new album ‘Blue Electric Light’ was the most fun he’s ever had making a record

    I don’t think I ever had more fun making a record as ‘Blue Electric Light’. There was a few things going on. COVID was happening, the world was shut down, and I was in The Bahamas. After a few weeks, this whole feeling of I don’t have to be anywhere, I don’t have to do anything. I don’t have to turn something in or show up. It was like, what’s going on? I got into this place of really living in the moment. We all talk about living in the moment, not thinking about what we’ve done and what we’re going to do, but living in the moment, which is this place that I think so many of us want to be in. And I got to exercise that because there was no past or future. It was like, here I am now. Don’t know what’s going on. I just have to be here. And I’m in the middle of all of this beautiful nature. This music started coming. We’d be in the studio every day.

    Lenny Kravitz talks to Apple Music about what life was like when he first became a father

    Lenny Kravitz: Zoë was born at home in the bedroom and the moment I saw her, I’d never felt love like that before. So, it comes from different places.

    Zane Lowe: It’s a crazy time. You become a parent and then all of a sudden your dream start to come true.

    Lenny Kravitz: Yeah, it all happened at the same time, marriage, a child and this career starting all happened at the same time.

    Zane Lowe: When you think back to that particular time, while we’re there and we’re talking about the first few albums, new fatherhood, marriage is running its cost in whatever way it’s going to do that. What was really that time about for you as a person, as a human?

    Lenny Kravitz: It was life coming at you full speed and it was exciting and these were all new experiences, being married, having a child, getting this record deal that I’d wanted since I was a young teenager and then my band was living with us. We were living in this loft on Broome Street in Soho, and there were eight people on just little pads and mattresses. It’s like a commune and pillows just living all over. It was, it was just living all over the floor. Crazy with my wife, with my child, all of us in one place, probably about the size of this room. It was a trip. I mean, we were just in it. Zoë’s mom was filming the television show at the time with Cosby, and she was just so down and she was there for the mission supporting me, and it was a beautiful time for all of us.


    Lenny Kravitz talks to Apple Music about coming up as an artist in the pre-internet 90s

    Zane Lowe: Let’s look at the nineties real quick, because a lot of younger artists and people are fascinated with the nineties right now. It’s a time that I think because it’s just pre-internet and everything is loud and fame is real and success is big, but there’s no internet to divide it up into this kind of democratic opinion. It’s a crazy combination of exceptional noise, but no one can kind of reach you or touch it. We’re all just passively observing it.

    Lenny Kravitz: It was beautiful, man. It was beautiful. I didn’t know it while I was in it, of course, because when you’re in it, you’re in it. Of course, there was still the element of mystique, which I like. All the artists that I grew up listening to, watching had mystique. You only knew so much. Maybe they’d be in a magazine. I remember running to magazine shops because the group would be in the magazine, just to get a picture just to look at them, and then maybe they’d be on some television show if it was Don Kirshner’s Rock Concert or whatever it might be, The Midnight Special. So I grew up in that era. So here we are in the nineties now, and I’m thinking it’s not as cool as that time, but it actually was, was even just simple things like I was looking at some old footage again the other day of the audience. It was from this concert film and documentary I did call Alive from Planet Earth, which I love, and we’re playing and I’m looking at the audience and they’re so free. I forgot. They were so free and people were on each other’s shoulders and people were just grooving and dancing and celebrating, and there wasn’t one fucking phone that was before that time where people could just be in the moment to experience something and not have to prove that they were there.

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    Zane Lowe: Most of us didn’t even bother to bring cameras. Like, who wants that in your pocket? Yeah. All you had was the ticket.

    Lenny Kravitz: Yes, and MTV was the catalyst mean, there was the radio, and there was MTV.


    Lenny Kravitz talks to Apple Music about first realising he was famous

    Zane Lowe: Do you remember when you realised that the walking down the street in New York was not going to be the same again?

    Lenny Kravitz: During the second album. ‘It Ain’t Over ‘Til It’s Over’. It became a big pop hit, and as I said, I was still taking the train to the studio. I remember walking down Broome Street, which led to the Holland Tunnel, so there’d be a lot of traffic there at certain times, and all the cars would be just sitting there in gridlock, and I started hearing my songs. Coming out of the cars was a very big moment for me to hear that. It blows your mind. It still blows my mind, actually. It’s like, wow, people are listening to this. Or I’d hear it coming out of a window of a building, and then I got on the train one day and people started to react, and that was sort of the end of that. And then I started taking a taxi, and then I got a VW van that I used to drive us to the studio in. But yeah, it was a transition because I grew up in the streets of New York and LA and I love the street, and I’m still in the street. I have to maneuver a different way and I have to be aware of things, but it was very strange to have to sort of curb the natural way that I manoeuver.

    Lenny Kravitz Talks to Apple Music about his favourite memories of Prince and Michael Jackson

    Lenny Kravitz: We spent so much time together. He used to call me late at night to meet him at a club to go play, just set up and go play. An audience would be there. Obviously, knowing that we were coming, those were really great nights that were just so free and fun just going to his house to watch funny movies or comedians. He was really, really funny. He had an amazing sense of humor hanging out with him here in Paris when he had an apartment before I had my house, and I was dating Vanessa Paradis at the time, and we’d go over there. Prince is very competitive. He’s a very good ping pong player. He’s very good at pool, basketball, everything. And we went over there one night and Vanessa was really good at pool and she kicked his ass. Oh shit. And that was a hard one for him. Going to visit Michael Jackson, he’d pick me up, we’d go see Michael in the studio and just mess with him.

    Zane Lowe: Which is crazy because he stories were always that Prince and Michael were these kind of arch rivals in the arts.

    Lenny Kravitz: I mean, I don’t know about that. I’m sure there was some kind of healthy competition, whatever. But it was more about having fun and sort of joking around with him. Let’s go fuck with Michael.

    Zane Lowe: You must’ve been tripping out. There must’ve been a healthy level of imposter syndrome just being in that room for a second because of those two people

    Lenny Kravitz: Being, I mean, those are two people that I grew up with and that I studied and that were my teachers and I was actually sitting between the two of them crazy and I kept going like this and this and I felt very normal. They were both in full drag, full makeup, full hair and I’m like this, and Michael was fascinated with my dreadlocks. He’s like, what do you do? What? Touching my hair? Crazy. But I was sort of the wild organic one and they were very done, but both of them were really beautiful people and Prince was very giving and very always speaking to me about certain things that he thought I should know and teaching me about the business. And he also cared about people’s spirits. I remember sitting in his car for two hours once he wanted to show me this purple car he’d gotten. It was this Prowler Chrysler Prowler or whatever. I think that’s what it was called, and he took me down to see it. He had just gotten it and next thing I know we’re sitting in the car for two hours having bible study, like he’s giving me a lesson and we had a lot of respect for each other as musicians and as human beings.

    Lenny Kravitz Talks to Apple Music about producing Michael Jackson

    Lenny Kravitz: We recorded it for the Invincible album and at the time when we were done, they thought it was a bit too rock for that record for whatever reason. I don’t know because Michael always had a cool rock track for sure. Whether it was ‘Dirty Diana’ or ‘Beat It’ or whatever. Michael said, okay, I’m going to hold it for the next record. And he would call me all the time. Remember, he was in the Middle East living for a while and he’d call me just to talk and then we would talk about the song. He’s like, I love that song. I can’t wait to put it out. I’m going to put it on the next record. And then, he passed and then they made that Michael album and it got put on that record. But I’m really proud of the track. The track is beautiful. He sang his ass off.

    Zane Lowe: Because he could produce himself. I mean he was that human being right who knew his way through every element of the creative process. So, to sort of be of any influence in that environment with him must have been…

    Lenny Kravitz: He wanted me to write a song for him, produce it. He said, you come up with it. I had a matter of days to do it. I had nothing. And it came. I recorded it, finished the track, played the instruments, got it together. He came in, I wrote the words down for him and I had a dummy vocal on there that I kept playing to him and he went in the vocal booth and he said, “you stop me when I don’t do it right.” He just learned the song, so anybody would be not remembering everything at first. And I thought, how am I going to push this button and tell Michael Jackson to stop singing? But we got into it. We had a lot of fun. I laughed so much with him. Super funny and a perfectionist and a gift of an experience. What a life.

    Lenny Kravitz tells Apple Music how John Paul Jones ended up playing bass with him at the MTV VMAs

    Zane Lowe: Is it true? In fact, I know what it’s because this was brought up before, your bass player couldn’t make an MTV Awards once?

    Lenny Kravitz: Not only could he not make it, he was missing. He was missing. Tony had some adventures. He even got kidnapped once by two women. Yeah, but that’s another story. But yeah, he was missing in action and we were getting ready to do the MTV Video Awards and we had no bass player, and I was just making a joke with Craig [Ross]. I’m like, yeah, we should call John Paul Jones. That would be really cool. He would nail this song. It was ‘Are You Gonna Go My Way’. Craig was like, well call him. He’s like, he’s not going to do it. He doesn’t know me. He’s John Paul Jones. I had not met him before and I don’t know how I got his number, but somebody got it and I called him and I’m freaking out and like John Paul Jones. Wow. Yeah. He’s like, so what do you want? Well, I’m playing this award show and our bass player’s not around, and I was wondering if you wouldn’t mind playing bass for us, knowing that the guy was going to say no. And he said, of course I’ll do it. I’d love to do it. And I couldn’t believe it. He flew to Los Angeles. We did one rehearsal.

    Zane Lowe: What was it like when he fired up in the first time in rehearsal?

    Lenny Kravitz: There’s no footage of that rehearsal. I didn’t have cameras around a lot. And he’s nailing it and we get to the break and he comes in with the line. I was like, you learned the line. And it was amazing. It was so amazing for me to be playing with this giant and we won the award.

    Lenny Kravitz tells Apple Music about reconnecting with high school classmate Slash

    I was at the American Music Awards. This is after my first album, so I hadn’t started the second album yet, and Guns N Roses is sitting in front of me and I see this guy and I’m like, I know this guy. And I’m looking at him, I’m like, wait a minute. We went to high school together, we, and then we both realised, and so we exchanged numbers and kept in touch, and he was just finishing a tour in England and said he wanted to do something. He jumped on the Concord, which got into New York City at 8:30 in the morning or something, and came to my place. He had me search for a gallon of vodka and a bag of ice, which by the time he got to me, it was like 9:30 AM. Ended up going to banging on neighbor’s doors, got the vodka, got the ice. We took the train to Hoboken where the studio was with the vodka, couple guitars, bag of ice that was slowly melting, got to the studio and we just did it.

    Lenny Kravitz tells Apple Music about the two things he bought with his first record label advance

    The Bahamas was so natural for me, growing up in The Bahamas, going twice a year, my mother always set me down to The Bahamas. I’d spend Summers there. I’d spend winters there. So, after I got my record deal, when we used to get advances, I bought property in The Bahamas because I thought, well, if I ever make another dollar, at least I got somewhere to go. I can build a shack. And I bought a Harley Davidson motorcycle.

    Those are the two things. I still have it though. Those are the two things I bought, and The Bahamas just means so much to me. It’s a place where I can just be me. I’m just a local, the Bahamian people are very special people, and my roots are there, and I’m very comfortable there. And I lived in an Airstream trailer for fifteen years. There was something I loved about getting off of tour and going to this place where it was this really limited space. You only have room for what you really, really need.

    Lenny Kravitz talks to Apple Music about how songwriting inspiration comes to him in the ‘Middle of the Night’

    I mean, when I’m there making the records, most of the writing happens in my sleep. Yeah. I’m just an antenna. So, I’m being given whatever’s transmitted to me, and it tends to happen between 3:00 and 5:00 AM. Whatever vortex it is, it opens between those hours and I’ll just hear it and I hear it like a record playing in my head. So, it already exists. So then I have to wake up, grab the phone, grab a guitar. A lot of times I don’t even grab the guitar. I’ll just start humming the melody and then humming the chord structure. Sometimes I’ll grab a guitar and then hope that I put enough information down so that I’ll recognize it when I wake up. Sometimes, I wake up and I’m like, what the fuck is that? It’s horrible, but that’s how it works. And then I wake up, go to the studio, walk over to the studio and start to make this thing that I’ve been given.

    Zane Lowe: Well, that’s super ego free.

    Lenny Kravitz: It is, but it makes it so much easier and so much more magical because it’s not limited by a thought process. And I’ve fought with tracks. Sometimes this beat, it’s not what I wanted or the vibe or what is this style? And then, I’ll try to change it to make it hipper maybe in my mind, and then I’ll work on it, work on it where I’m like, Nope. And I’ll go back to what it was, even if it was odd to me. But I do have a new found acceptance of my music because when I’m done, I’m done and I go on to the next thing. And these last few months of listening back to a lot of the records and the master tapes, because I’m teaching musicians what I need them to learn, I’ve been sitting there going, wow, this is pretty good. That melody or that thing or, wow, I never thought about it. It’s a beautiful thing to listen back to something you did so many years ago and hear things you didn’t hear or appreciate it. You thought it was just whatever, but actually it’s very special. So, that’s a beautiful gift to be given at this point in my life, to really appreciate and see what it is and feel what it is.

    Lenny Kravitz talks to Apple Music about collaborating with Mick Jagger

    Zane Lowe: I think about you as a collaborator on records and for someone who can play everything yourself. You have had such a rich life of collaborating with people. Is there another one that really jumps out that you really felt was like a great turning point for you, a great learning for you?

    Lenny Kravitz: Mick Jagger. God gave me everything. Yeah, he came to my place in Miami and I’d written the track. I had a little bit of melody, but I didn’t want to finish it. I wanted him to come up with the verses especially. So, I played him the track. I sang him the basic melody of the hook and he said, okay, I’ll be right back. He asked for a pad and a pen and he went into this little corner of my house for about 30 minutes. Comes back with the words. He’s got it. So I said, okay, why don’t you go in there and do a vocal? In his mind he was doing a dummy vocal. It was just a guide vocal. So he goes in there and I’m sitting behind the console. He starts singing it and Craig was sitting next to me and I looked over Craig and I said, holy shit. It sounds like Mick Jagger. All of a sudden it was a record and that was blowing my mind to hear his voice coming through the microphone into the studio on this song that we’re writing. And so he comes out, he kills it. One take, comes out and he says, yeah, that’s cool, but I’ll get the real vocal later. And I’m thinking to myself, are you out of your mind? That vocal was incredible. Feel, pitch, everything, rhythm. Day after day after day after day, he kept going in to sing it again and again and again.

    Zane Lowe: Do you know what he was looking for?

    Lenny Kravitz: Maybe it happened too fast. Sometimes, you think, well, if it just happened like that, I need to work on it or make it better. I don’t know what he was thinking. Maybe he didn’t like it that much and he and I got into it a bit and that’s my man. I respect him so much and love him so much. He’s been a great friend throughout all these years. But I said, this vocal is incredible. And finally, after doing it 10 times, he finally gave in and I thought, thank God. And that’s the vocal you hear on the record, one take done. Yeah.

    Lenny Kravitz talks to Apple Music about why he works out in his street attire

    I don’t care what I’m wearing. I’ve worked out in everything. If I’m doing cardio, no, I’m going to put on something that I can sweat in. Sure. If I’m lifting weights, I don’t sweat so much. I show up in what I show up in. And it’s funny because I also train with professional athletes, NFL players, major league, baseball players, wrestlers, boxers. They’ll see me come in some jeans and boots and one of those shirts that my daughter talks about that was brilliant, and they laugh. It’s like, we’re going to work out with him wearing that. And then, I destroy.


  • Ice Spice tells Apple Music about ‘Gimmie a Light’, explains what fans can expect from her forthcoming album, and reflects on Coachella

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    Ice Spice joins Zane Lowe for New Music Daily on Apple Music 1 for the release of her new single, ‘Gimmie a Light’ out now. Ice Spice also gives hints on her album, ‘Y2K’ telling Zane, “This will be the last couple times I can say I don’t have an album out yet.” She also teases what fans can expect from the upcoming project, and talks her recent Coachella performances.


    Ice Spice on continuing to work with her producer Riot and the success and confidence they’ve achieved together

    It does feel really different in the best way possible. I’m so grateful to have this comfort and bond that we have. You know what I mean? Because recording was a challenge in the beginning, and now, I’m just so much more comfortable and I’m just willing to say anything that comes to mind without feeling any type of way. You know what I mean? Even when it came to ‘Think You the’, I just said it and I didn’t have to think twice. If it was two years ago, I probably would’ve been like, “No, no.” I probably would’ve never even let it come out my mouth.

    [youtube=https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2KC-8IULfqY&h=315]


    Ice Spice on her new single ‘Gimmie a Light’

    I was really nervous because we really wanted to have a very authentic ‘Y2K’ sample in there, and Sean Paul, he’s legendary. And that song alone, his ‘Gimme the Light’, is so iconic that I was so nervous to sample it, because I’m like, “This isn’t going to get cleared, so what’s the point?” But thankfully, we got it cleared. Shouts to Sean Paul. He’s so real.


    Ice Spice on her forthcoming album, ‘Y2K’ and how she approached the concept as somebody who wasn’t born into that era

    Thankfully, I had my mom, so growing up I’d see her really embody the ‘Y2K’ aesthetic in its truest form. [To me, the aesthetic is…] It’s duck nails. It’s a tramp stamp. It’s brown lip liner no matter where you go. So, thankfully I had her [my mom] as my inspo growing up. And of course just like the internet, you feel me? Just like anyone else.

    The crazy thing is it wasn’t just a definitive moment, it was just this ongoing process of, “What should we name the album?” And then I have a book full of pages of album names and different ideas, and I just really find the beauty and simplicity and I was just like, “You know what? I want it to be short. I don’t want it to be this super long phrase.” It was going to go either way. It was going to be super long phrase or one word. There was no in between for me.

    Actually a lot of the time, well, either one of us [Ice and Riot] will have an idea, or just anybody else on the team will have an idea and we’ll add it and sit on it for a couple days and then be like, “Now, let’s bring it back to where it was at.”

    Ice Spice on her recent Coachella moment

    Coachella was so fun. Definitely my most fun time on stage ever in my career up until this point. And I was just so amazed because I was looking up acts that have done the same slot and stage just because, you know, you want to prep, and I’m like, “What do I expect?” whatever, and I did not expect that. I swear I didn’t know that that stage goes that far back. I really did not expect that. They showed so much love. I was overwhelmed by the love, for real.


  • Lianne La Havas tells Apple Music about new song ‘Paper Thin’

    Lianne La Havas joins Zane Lowe on Apple Music to chat about her new song ‘Paper Thin’. She tells Apple Music about wanting to feel useful during this time, her desire to always create, previews her new album, and says she is considering doing a covers project.

    Audio | Lianne La Havas Tells Apple Music About New Song ‘Paper Thin’

    Listen via this link.