Top 100 Quotes & Sayings by Kelela - Page 2

Explore popular quotes and sayings by an American musician Kelela.
Last updated on September 19, 2024.
When it comes to melodies, production, and sound in pop music, people try to be formulaic and solely concerned with what's resonant in a way that is so cheap and ugly. It actually just devolves culture, ultimately.
At the end of the day, I would like to have the farthest reach in terms of being able to communicate to as many people as possible. So it's not that I enjoy being obscure; it's that I sonically don't want to be situated here or there.
I know my ticket is vulnerability. Most people point to some emotional experience, some hardship, some high or low when they talk about my music... a time when they need to feel those feelings more.
My queer black women peers are the ones who make me not feel crazy. The way we act is so instinctive. — © Kelela
My queer black women peers are the ones who make me not feel crazy. The way we act is so instinctive.
It definitely feels different to perform to people who know your music. Because people's feedback is not just, 'Oh my God, that was amazing. Who are you?'
I don't care about the underground, even if that's where I'm currently residing sonically.
I'm interested in bridging and filling in space that hasn't already been filled, so when it comes to making music, I've just always wanted to be able to reference things that producers in the big pop major label context do, without compromising the entire sound of the record.
I'm very into familiar things, popular things. I'm into things that no one seems to know about or be into. I'm trying to draw a line between those two things and make it clear... that it all makes sense to me. That it's not disparate. That it's all one thing inside me.
Innovating something that is familiar. That's the general approach, and that's what I want to do with the melody as well. It should ring true - you should like every melody sequence without knowing what's happening next.
It is very rare that I am just coming up with melodies off the top of my head. I usually am responding to something - it could be chains dragging on the floor - but I am usually responding to something.
I do like things the way that I like them. But I'm trying not to be - I don't wanna be that way. I'm not a control freak; I wanna protect my agency. It's a weird question as a black woman.
I want to speak in the tradition of rhythm and blues and soul music, but also push how it's dressed and how it's delivered to the audience. And hopefully that gets embraced by as many people as possible, but the goal isn't necessarily to speak to everyone. The goal is to get it out as exact as it is in my head.
As a black person on the outside, because there's so much black art and so much of black people's work circulating, so many people imitating what black people do, you would think that there'd be more black people on the business side. It didn't cross my mind that every label head, for the most part, is a white guy.
I would say there is a zone of R&B that hadn't been quite innovative. — © Kelela
I would say there is a zone of R&B that hadn't been quite innovative.
I'd like to change what people expect. I want to evoke something that's not nameable, for people to go, 'Huh?'
Before I collaborate, it's important that I have a conversation about what I care about before we make anything, so that it's very clear.
I try to make it a sonic experience so that when you put your earbuds in or when you're in your room, it sounds like an enveloping feeling. I think that is the most important thing, that wherever you are, it is wrapping you up and making you feel safe and comfortable.
I remember the day I first heard what Timbaland and Aaliyah did - that intersection of her pretty voice and his weird, resonant production. I remember where I was and what I was doing. It was a major situation. We're trying to continue that legacy.
I have something stupid, like, 12 credits, to graduate.
Music in the U.K. is not racialised in the same way as it is in the U.S. In the U.S.. it's more rigid and conservative. And white people in the U.K. have more close proximity with black people and people of colour in general.
Often, I write to feel better and to heal - to cope with things that I'm dealing with. I'm either writing to get out of a feeling or to get into the feeling, to feel it more. Usually it's the perfect remedy, but if it isn't, I focus on other parts of what I'm making that don't involve writing. If neither are working, I simply forfeit the day.
Self-care is a requirement.
I want to soundtrack people's layered feelings.
I'm quite scrutinous when it comes to who I put myself in the room with.
The whole thing about 'progressive R&B' blows my mind. Black music has always been progressive.
Most artists are going into the studio for a fixed period of time, and they say that's their album. I can't relate, because I've never made music in that way. I come from a culture of editing and remixing.
Sounding like I have agency in a song is important to me. I want to feel empowered by the music.
In Maryland, I didn't grow up around poor white people. Where I grew up, the white people were middle class or upper-middle class. It's interesting how screwed up it is in reality, because most people who receive assistance from the government are white, but not in my head or in my experience.
The most rewarding thing for someone like me is for someone else to find solace through my music. — © Kelela
The most rewarding thing for someone like me is for someone else to find solace through my music.
I'm definitely seeking to challenge tropes.
I'm coming from the zone of Faith Evans, but with weird production.
That's pretty much how every song of mine works - I start with gibberish and melody and phrasing. I speak it naturally first. And then I think about lyrics that fit into that.
For those of us who make music together, I think it's important to realize that generosity on both sides is actually going to produce the biggest possibility.
As much as we like to pretend we're just getting on stage and whatever, it's like, no, I practiced in front of the mirror my whole life.
Growing up in an Ethiopian household allowed me to feel like I had an audience before I had an audience.
Even on my most angry song, I'm also still saying, 'Thank you for helping me to learn.' I've always wanted to give voice to that complexity in our experience.
It means so much to be able to share myself with the world.
It's gratifying to hear something familiar and challenging at the same time.
How much closer can I get to the common ear, the mainstream, and how much it can still be from this other world, this other place? That's the line I keep trying to tread but have my wings extend more on both sides.
We don't want it to be obscure music. We're not trying to be indie. We want to be popular. — © Kelela
We don't want it to be obscure music. We're not trying to be indie. We want to be popular.
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