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  • Welcome to the show.

  • Thank you so much for having me.

  • It is such an honor to have you on the show,

  • um, not just because I'm a big fan of your music,

  • but I'm a fan of how...

  • like, just how you've created your music, you know?

  • Like, you-you're one of the few artists

  • where it feels like you make what you want to make

  • just because you want to make it.

  • It's a riskier choice.

  • It takes, uh, you know, more time.

  • Like, where do... where do you think you got that from?

  • In a world where so many people go,

  • "What's commercial? What sells the best?"

  • you went, "I'm just gonna make amazing music,"

  • and it actually has turned into a commercial hit as well.

  • Thank you. Um...

  • I think so much of my work is about world-making.

  • I think as a young girl,

  • I felt this sense of absence of home, you know?

  • I started, actually, dancing for Destiny's Child when I was 13,

  • -Wow. -and so a lot of my life,

  • the early years of my life, were spent, um, in tour buses,

  • in venues and airports, and even paying attention

  • to sort of the architectural language

  • in these spaces.

  • These spaces became my home.

  • So a lot of my work

  • is really about creating universes, you know?

  • I'm trying to create cities on stage.

  • I'm trying to leave behind worlds

  • for young black girls, really, to discover

  • ten and 20 years from now.

  • And, um, I think a lot of the courage

  • just comes from seeing and-and creating work

  • that I wanted to see when I was a young girl.

  • It's interesting that you say your music has been touched

  • by the life that you've lived and where you've lived it

  • because, you know, this album in particular,

  • When I Get Home...

  • It's beautiful when you listen to it,

  • but I-I truly appreciate that you've created

  • the short film that goes with it

  • because it's very rare that you get a visual representation

  • of what your mind couldn't even comprehend.

  • -Yeah. -It-it feels like it's architecture

  • whilst at the same time being about choreography.

  • It feels like it's modern art whilst at the same time

  • being about, like, Houston chopped and screwed.

  • It-It's a combination of all musics in a space.

  • I mean, you see, like, imagery of cowboys

  • but, at the same time, in, like, a fine arts space.

  • You know, Jaboukie, who loves your music here at the show,

  • -he described it to me as... -I love him.

  • He said it... He said it feels to him

  • like chopped and screwed meets MoMA.

  • -Oh, okay. (laughs) -That's what it feels like.

  • Okay, I'll take that.

  • But, like, how-how did you choose that style?

  • And-and, like, why did you choose

  • to signify this album in that way?

  • Um, so, when I was about ten years old,

  • I went to this church camp.

  • And there was a woman who came the last day of the church camp,

  • and she came over and started praying

  • over all of these young girls.

  • And they started hollering and hooting

  • and speaking in tongues and shouting,

  • And I was looking at her like,

  • "Don't come over here with all of that."

  • You know, like, "Stay away from me with that shit."

  • Um, but she came over to me,

  • and I sort of surrendered to the supernatural.

  • And, so, from that period on,

  • I really actually developed a fear of power

  • and feeling powerless

  • -and not feeling control of my body. -Wow.

  • And, so, going back home to Houston

  • was really me reclaiming that

  • and the black cowboys and-and their stories

  • and reclaiming their stories.

  • I did a, uh, fashion campaign,

  • and I remember it was supposed to be about Americana

  • and American Western culture,

  • and it was all white men.

  • And I was like, "That don't look like the cowboys

  • -that I grew up seeing in Houston, Texas." -Right, right.

  • Like my uncles and the thousands of men

  • who get on horses from Houston

  • -to Louisiana and do trail rides. -Mm-hmm.

  • And-and saying through this film

  • that our black stories are art,

  • our everyday notions are art.

  • The way we move and the way we speak

  • and-and just elevating the experience and, um...

  • I don't know. I just feel like,

  • when I think about creating these landscapes

  • that I want to leave behind

  • and reimagining what the Coliseum could look like

  • in 20 years with these bodies and these faces

  • and these stories and these celebrations,

  • that's what I'm trying to achieve.

  • I-I think you're achieving it more than just trying

  • -to achieve it. Really, you are. -Thank you.

  • -(cheering and applause) -Thank you.

  • Because...

  • because I think that is a big part of what resonates

  • with so many people about this album,

  • both in the visual format and if you're just listening to it,

  • is that it is unashamedly black

  • and it feels very specific

  • but, at the same time, it has broad appeal, you know?

  • A lot of the time, people think, "Oh, if it's--

  • "if it's an album made from a black point of view

  • "by a black person about black people,

  • then nobody else can listen."

  • But, I mean, you've got accolades from Rolling Stone,

  • Pitchfork, The New Yorker, Time

  • and so many more who've come and said,

  • "This is one of the best albums of the year."

  • I mean, they said that about your previous album as well.

  • But-but it feels like it has connected with so many people

  • because it's-it's authentic.

  • Was Houston a specific choice in that?

  • -Was choosing, like, your home... -Oh, absolutely.

  • -...part of what you think makes it so real? -Absolutely.

  • Um, I think growing up in Houston

  • and coming back to Houston,

  • I was able to find groundedness

  • in, sort of, all of the things that I might have thought were,

  • you know, mundane or that I didn't pay attention to.

  • And coming back and appreciating the architecture,

  • appreciating-- which never lost--

  • uh, never left me-- screw culture

  • and the innovation between choppers and our--

  • the way that we candy paint our cars.

  • Like, all of that is innovation at the highest level of me.

  • Um, so being able to just celebrate that

  • and pay homage to all of those things

  • that made me who I am today, it-it meant a lot to me.

  • One thing you-you are a proud--

  • are really proud to speak about,

  • -being a part of who you are today is a black woman. -Yes.

  • And in your music, it is beautiful how you express that,

  • how you speak with and for and about black women.

  • That is something that resonates with so many black women

  • in a-- in a completely new way.

  • It was intentional,

  • and you really drive it as a purpose in the album.

  • Why did you feel that you needed to do it that explicitly?

  • You know? Some people will be like, "Oh, I'm gonna--

  • I'm gonna bury the message." Like, no. Here, it's like,

  • "No, this is truly me celebrating the black woman."

  • -Why? -I grew up in a hair salon.

  • My mom owned a hair salon.

  • I grew up with every type of black woman

  • from lawyers to doctors to...

  • teachers to the everyday black woman

  • -to the side chick to... -(Noah laughing)

  • -you know, you name it. -Right.

  • And this women were my aunties, they were my teachers.

  • They were the reflections of everything

  • that I wanted to be as a woman.

  • These women cared for me, they nurtured me,

  • they unapologetically were themselves.

  • Um, and they were my heroes.

  • And so, I was really fortunate to be raised by a tribe

  • of beautiful, strong, phenomenal women.

  • And everything that I do, I try to center myself and my purpose

  • and the things that I needed to see

  • -and be fed as a young girl. -Right.

  • And so, all of my work really, you know, I'm making

  • for ten, 15 years from now, and the way that Augusta Savage

  • as a, a-a sculptor, me being able to see

  • that work and say, "Hey, I can do that, too."

  • Um, or even the way that Kelis sort of, you know,

  • really opened my eyes in her artistry,

  • -ten, 15 years later, -Mm-hmm.

  • now you have girls on Instagram

  • on the Internet, paying homage

  • when maybe they didn't fully understand at the time.

  • -Right. -Um, but, you know,

  • I am a black woman, so the work will always

  • be through the lens of a black woman.

  • I think we're the most popping, popping ones.

  • -(laughs) -(applause, cheering)

  • You definitely have created another masterpiece.

  • -Thank you. -It's beautiful to listen to.

  • The best, the best way I... I can describe it is, like,

  • just sitting with it, it's beautiful because it feels like

  • it is how we think as human beings, you know?

  • It-it's a, it's an exploration of the mind that just goes

  • continuously, you know how we, we have multiple thoughts

  • at the same time-- that's how the music feels.

  • It feels like you're thinking about many different things

  • that all come into one coherent space at the same time.

  • When someone listens to the album, like,

  • how would you, what do you want them to take from it?

  • Because you, you have so many messages and you have

  • so many themes, but I-I know a lot of the time, artist go,

  • like, "I just want you to focus on this or this is

  • something I wish more people would pay attention to."

  • Is there one specific theme that you think shows off,

  • "Hey, when you're listening to this album, "I just want

  • "you to feel this message that I'm trying to get to you

  • I want, I want you to feel this feeling

  • that I'm trying to get to you"?

  • Yeah, I think the feeling for me

  • is the sense of home and being able to express and create

  • that sentiment of home wherever you are.

  • Um, for me that involved me actually going

  • back to the origin, going back to the beginning,

  • answering those questions of power and fear

  • and energy and spirituality.

  • But I really want people

  • to hear the sort-of experience

  • from start to beginning of me discovering

  • that sense of self through home and lineage.

  • -It's a beautiful album. -Thank you so much.

  • Thank you so much for being on the show.

  • -Thank you, Trevor. -You've done an amazing job.

  • The director's cut of the performance on film

  • for her album When I Get Home

  • is available now on digital platforms.

  • Solange Knowles, everybody.

Welcome to the show.

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ソランジュ・ノウルズ、"When I Get Home "で帰属意識を表現| デイリーショー (Solange Knowles - Expressing a Sense of Belonging on “When I Get Home” | The Daily Show)

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    林宜悉 に公開 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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