Tuesday, May 17, 2011

Lady Gaga swaps of music for the media, edits Metro paper (Reuters)

London (Reuters) - Flamboyant pop star Lady Gaga crashed music and switched to the media Monday with a passage as editor invited to the headquarters of the global network of free newspaper Metro London.

Widely regarded as the biggest pop star of the world, the 25 - year - old New Yorker has also been busy promoting his second studio album, "Born This Way" album which is available in stores on May 23.

Gaga arrived at the offices of the Metro porter pink hair in a style of the hive, black heels, low backrest and a bra-like black, top of the page.

"I am sorry if my costume of business is a little different" she joked as she shook hands with the staff.

Gaga has supported the drafting session in the morning, offering his opinion on a range of topics, bullying to the earthquake to the Japan who are her hero.

She immediately puts its vision for the paper as editor invited for the day, on topics that she already mentioned its mission as an entertainer.

"I feel so privileged that I get make music every day", she said of the staff. "If you revolutionary potential you have a moral obligation to make the world a better place."

His new record is the follow-up to his 2008 "The Fame" album, which will sell more than 12 million copies and topped the charts. A release of the extended play "the fame monster" was released the following year.

Gaga, whose real name is de Stefani Germanotta, has a huge and famous fans base spent around the world that she calls her "little monsters".

In turn, that she refers to herself as "Mother Monster", whose every public appearance is a piece of performance art and extravagant fashion rolled into one, turning on a cultural phenomenon as a musician.

"I appreciate the opportunity to really and it is a chance formidable to show me the whole world that the little monsters are not only a fan thing, but exist outside the world of music," Gaga says of its publishing in the underground activities.

Held most notorious Gaga to date have included a dress of raw meat that she wore last year at the MTV Video Music Awards, and his arrival at the Grammy Awards in February embedded in a giant egg.

"I live half my life between reality and the imagination at any time," the singer "Just dance" and "poker face" recently told the Guardian newspaper. "It is better not to ask questions and take advantage of all.".

It is not simply about enjoyment, and authors of music and commentators who have interviewed the singer note a messianic dimension to his ambition which seems to go beyond simply selling records.

His own biography Online concludes: "and, now, I'm simply trying to change flakes of a world at once," but with "a blink of eye in the eyes".

It is not all sails of plain for the winner of a prize, however.

The enormous impact of The Fame means that the pressure is on for born This Way correspond to the commercial and critical success.

Religious groups accuse them of blasphemy, there was dissent in the ranks of his legions of fans on the cover art for born This Way and she reacted angrily to suggestions that the first extract single of the new record has been copied from 1989 Madonna's "Express yourself".

(Reported by Mike Collett-White, editing by Paul Casciato)

No comments:

Post a Comment