Janelle Monáe (born December 1, 1985) is an American R&B/soul
musician signed to Bad Boy Records and Atlantic Records.
Monáe debuted with a conceptual EP, Metropolis: Suite I (The
Chase). The EP failed to make much of an impact commercially-speaking
with the general public; however, the EP at the time peaked at the
115th Spot on the Billboard Charts in the United States.
In 2010, Janelle Monáe released her debut studio album, The
ArchAndroid (Suites II and III), a concept album sequel to her first
EP; it was released widely to the general public under Bad Boy Records.
This album received acclaim from critics and gained a Grammy Nomination
for Best Contemporary R&B Album. The song "Tightrope" was
also nominated for "Best Urban/Alternative Performance";
this album was also more successful commercially officially reaching
the 17th Spot on the Billboard Charts.
Monáe was born Janelle Monáe Robinson in Kansas City,
Kansas, where she spent her early life; Monáe has stated that
the fictional character of Dorothy from the Wizard of Oz has been
one of her musical influences. She has told reporters that she has
dreamed of being a singer and a performer since she was very young.[6]
Monáe moved from Kansas City, Kansas to New York to study
drama at the American Musical and Dramatic Academy.
"There was a lot of confusion and nonsense where I grew up,
so I reacted by creating my own little world ... I began to see how
music could change lives, and I began to dream about a world where
every day was like anime and Broadway, where music fell from the
sky and anything could happen."
Monae talks about her musical inspiration from her childhood.[6]
She attended a Performing Arts School called Freedom Theatre, which
is the oldest African-American theatre in Philadelphia. After moving
to Atlanta, Georgia, where she met OutKast's Big Boi, Monáe
founded the Wondaland Arts Society with like-minded young artists
and made appearances on Idlewild, where she is featured on the songs "Call
the Law" and "In Your Dreams". Big Boi told his friend
Sean Combs about Monáe, whom he had not heard of before. Combs
promptly visited her MySpace page, and according to Bad Boy Records'
A&R Daniel 'Skid' Mitchell in an interview with HitQuarters,
the label boss loved it straight away, "[He] loved her look,
loved that you couldn’t see her body, loved the way she was
dancing, and just loved the vibe. He felt like she has something
that was different - something new and fresh."[7] Monáe
signed to Bad Boy in 2006. The label's chief role was in facilitating
her exposure on a much broader scale rather than developing the artist
and her music, because in the words of Mitchell, "She was already
moving, she already had her records - she had a self-contained movement." Combs
and Big Boi wanted to take their time and build her profile organically
and allow the music to grow rather than put out "A hot single
which everyone jumps on, and then they fade because it's just something
of the moment."[7]
[edit] 2007 to 2010: Metropolis - The Chase Suite and The ArchAndroid
(Suites II and III)
Janelle Monáe and her band performing at Sudoeste Festival
2011, by Sander Bakkes.
Janelle Monáe and her band performing at Sudoeste Festival
2011.
In 2007, Monáe released her first solo work, titled Metropolis.
It was originally conceived as a concept album in four parts, or "suites",
which were to be released through her website and mp3 download sites.
After the release of the first part of the series, Metropolis: Suite
I (The Chase) in mid-2007, these plans were altered following her
signing with Sean "Diddy" Combs's label, Bad Boy Records,
later in the year. The label gave an official and physical release
to the first "suite" in August 2008, which was retitled
Metropolis: The Chase Suite (Special Edition) and included two new
tracks. The EP was generally well-received by critics, garnering
Monáe a 2009 Grammy nomination in the Best Urban/Alternative
Performance for her single "Many Moons",[8] festival appearances
and opening slots for the indie pop band Of Montreal. Monáe
also toured as the opening act for band No Doubt on their summer
2009 tour.[9] Her single "Open Happiness" was featured
in the 2009 season finale of American Idol.[10] Monáe told
MTV about her concept for her new album and also discussed her alter-ego
named Cindi Mayweather, she said:
"Cindi is an android and I love speaking about the android
because they are the new “other”. People are afraid of
the other and I believe we’re going to live in a world with
androids because of technology and the way it advances. The first
album she was running because she had fallen in love with a human
and she was being disassembled for that."[11]
In a November 2009 interview, Monáe revealed the title and
concept behind her album, The ArchAndroid. The album was released
on 18 May 2010. The second and third suites of Metropolis are combined
into this full-length release, in which Monáe's alter-ego,
Cindi Mayweather—also the protagonist of Metropolis: The Chase
Suite— becomes a messianic figure to the android community
of Metropolis.[12] Monáe noted that she plans to shoot a video
for each song on The ArchAndroid and create both a movie and graphic
novel based on the album.[13] The Metropolis concept series draws
inspiration from a wide range of musical, cinematic and other sources,
ranging from Alfred Hitchcock to Debussy to Philip K. Dick. However,
the series puts Fritz Lang's 1927 silent film Metropolis, which Monáe
referred to as "the godfather of science-fiction movies," in
special regard.[14][15] Aside from sharing a name, they also share
visual styles (the cover for The ArchAndroid is inspired by the iconic
poster for Metropolis), conceptual themes and political goals, using
expressionistic future scenarios to examine and explode contemporary
ideas of prejudice and class. Both also include a performing female
android, though to very different effect. Where Metropolis android
Maria is the evil, havoc-sowing double of the messianic figure to
the city's strictly segregated working class, Monáe's messianic
android muse Cindi Mayweather represents an interpretation of androids
as that segregated minority, which Monáe describes as "...
the Other. And I feel like all of us, whether in the majority or
the minority, felt like the Other at some point."[14][16]
Monáe received the Vanguard Award from the American Society
of Composers, Authors and Publishers at the Rhythm & Soul Music
Awards in 2010.[17] Monáe covered Charlie Chaplin's Smile
on Billboard.com in June 2010. In an NPR interview in September 2010,
Monae stated that she is a believer in, and a proponent of time travel.
Monáe performed "Tightrope" during the second elimination
episode of the 11th Season of Dancing with the Stars on September
28, 2010.[18] Monáe performed at the 53rd Annual Grammy Awards
in 2011 alongside artists Bruno Mars and B.o.B; Monáe performed
the synth section of B.o.B's song "Nothin' On You" and
she then performed her track "Cold War" with B.o.B on the
Guitar and Mars on the drums. Her performance received a standing
ovation.[19]
Her single, "Tightrope" was featured on the American Idols
LIVE! Tour 2011, performed by Pia Toscano, Haley Reinhart, Naima
Adedapo, and Thia Megia.
[edit] 2011 to Present Day: Suite IV
Janelle has confirmed that she is working on new material for her
next album she officially stated that her new album aims to be larger
in scope than The ArchAndroid and its predecessor, 2007’s EP
Metropolis. “This album will have very strong concepts and
bigger ideas and the music will just go forward to another level,” Monáe
tells Hive. “It will still be, I believe, common to the people.
We have really big ideas, I must say, and we’re just trying
to make sure we execute them properly.” [20] Monáe went
on tour as the opening act leg North America for fellow Capitol artist
Katy Perry's California Dreams Tour in 2011.
[edit] Artistry
[edit] Musical styles and influences
The Telegraph released their interview with Monáe talking
about her first studio album where they said "I begin to worry
for a moment that Monáe may not just be a humourless science-fiction
nerd, but actually an android herself, created in a laboratory as
a super-musical cross between James Brown, Judy Garland, Andre 3000
and Steve Jobs, invented to test the desperate incredulity of music
journalists". They also compared Monáe to artists such
as Lady Gaga, Annie Lennox and Lauryn Hill.[21] Her musical styles
have been described as "a soaring orchestral trip enlivened
with blockbuster vocals, mysterious imagery and notes of Sixties
pop and jazz".[22] The Guardian have noted some of her influences
as: Michael Jackson, Prince, OutKast, Erykah Badu, James Brown, Grace
Jones, Stevie Wonder, David Bowie, Jimi Hendrix, Bernard Herrmann,
Funkadelic and the Incredible String Band.[23] Monáe has stated
that she has an alter-ego named Cindi Mayweather who according to
Monáe is from the year 2719.[24] In her first EP she gave
her alter-ego a back-story stating that she is on the run after breaking
the law in her home town of Metropolis after falling in love with
a human named Anthony Greendown. Monáe explained about Cindi,
saying "The Archandroid, Cindi, is the mediator, between the
mind and the hand. She's the mediator between the haves and the have-nots,
the oppressed and the oppressor. She's like the Archangel in the
Bible, and what Neo represents to the Matrix."[25]
[edit] Public image
"I feel like I have a responsibility to my community and other
young girls to help redefine what it looks like to be a woman. I
don't believe in men's wear or women's wear, I just like what I like.
And I think we should just be respected for being an individual….
I've been in Vogue, now, and different publications, which is cool,
because I think that it just shows a different perspective of how
women can dress."
Monáe talks about her image and artistic freedom.[25]
Monáe has gained a signature clothing style of wearing a
Tuxedo wardrobe and she said on the matter to Honey Magazine "I
bathe in it, I swim in it, and I could be buried in it. A tux is
such a standard uniform, it’s so classy and it’s a lifestyle
I enjoy. The tux keeps me balanced. I look at myself as a canvas.
I don’t want to cloud myself with too many colors or I’ll
go crazy. It’s an experiment I’m doing. I think I want
to be in the Guinness Book of World Records."[26] In Monáe's
concerts she has been noted to hand out her Ten Droid Commandments
which encourages her fans to be individuals.[25] The Telegraph also
commented on her image as an artist saying "Sitting in a grey,
airless record company office, this slight, stiff young woman delivers
her speech in slow, deliberate tones, utterly expressionless. Dressed
in her trademark starched shirt and tuxedo, hair immaculately coiffed,
Monáe’s face is an opaque mask of perfection: all silken
smooth skin, button nose and glassy brown eyes. I begin to worry
for a moment that Monáe may not just be a humourless science-fiction
nerd, but actually an android herself."[21] She has described
her Tuxedos as being a uniform for her career and she has stated
that when she wears them that she is working.[25] She also featured
in the "Style 100" of InStyle Magazine.[27]
[edit] Discography
[edit] Unreleased albums
Year Album details
2003 The Audition
Unreleased album
Recorded in friend's studio and self-distributed[28]
[edit] Studio albums
Year Album details Peak chart positions
US
[29] US R&B
[29] GER
[30] IRE
[31] SWI
[32] UK
[33] NLD
[34]
2010 The ArchAndroid (Suites II and III)
First studio album
Release date: May 18, 2010
Label: Bad Boy Records
17 4 12 24 36 51 96
[edit] Extended plays
Year Album details Peak chart
positions
US
[29] US R&B
[29] US Heat
[29]
2007 Metropolis: Suite I (The Chase)
First extended play
Release date: August 24, 2007
Label: Bad Boy Records
115 20 2
[edit] Singles
Year Single Album
2006 "Peachtree Blues" Broadcasting The Definition
2006 "Lettin' Go" Got Purp? Vol 2
2007 "Violet Stars Happy Hunting!" Metropolis: Suite I
(The Chase)
2008 "Sincerely, Jane"
"
Many Moons"
2009 "Come Alive (The War of the Roses)" The ArchAndroid
(Suites II and III)
2010 "Tightrope" (featuring Big Boi)
"
Cold War"
[edit] Guest appearances
2005: In "House" Sessions
2005: Broadcasting the Definition
2005: Purple Ribbon All-Stars - Got Purp? Vol 2 ("Time Will Reveal," "Lettin'
Go")
2006: Outkast - Idlewild ("Call the Law," "In Your Dreams")
2008: "Big" Collaboration with Big Boi and the Atlanta Ballet [35]
2009: Chester French- Jacques Jams, Vol. 1: Endurance (Mixtape) ("Nerd
Girl")
2009: Open Happiness
2009: Stargate Universe - "Earth" Episode 7, Season 1
2010: B.o.B. - B.o.B Presents: The Adventures of Bobby Ray ("The Kids")
2010: Big Boi - Sir Lucious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty ("Be Still")
2010: of Montreal - False Priest ("Our Riotous Defects," "Enemy
Gene")
2010: Without a Fight - For Colored Girls: Music From and Inspired by the Original
Motion Picture Soundtrack
2011: fun. - We Are Young
[edit] Awards and nominations
Year Award Category Result
2009 Grammy Awards Best Urban/Alternative Performance ("Many
Moons") Nominated
2010 ASCAP Awards Vanguard Award Won
MTV Video Music Awards Best Choreography ("Tightrope")
Nominated
MTV Video Music Brazil Aposta Internacional (International Bet) Nominated
Soul Train Awards Centric Award Won
2011 Best of the Booth Award Best R&B/Pop Album of 2010[36] Won
Grammy Awards Best Contemporary R&B Album (The ArchAndroid (Suites
II and III)) Nominated
Best Urban/Alternative Performance ("Tightrope") Nominated