Janelle monae

I've cried over string arrangements.

When you realize it's your responsibility to be a leader and create the world that you want to see, you have to do it.

Even if it makes others comfortable, I will LOVE who I am

Some songs you get. Some songs you may not. And I think that's the beauty of art: to question and to ask, to understand the deeper meaning after two or three or four listenings.

I don’t even know at what age I started, because it’s always been there. Performing … creating … it’s in my DNA.

One of my core values is to help redefine what it means to be a strong and beautiful woman in the music and fashion worlds and to empower the wonderful things that make us unique.

Perfection is often the enemy of greatness.

I'm really thankful to have my own record label. I've always looked up to people like Madonna when she launched Maverick Records. Even Jay Z and Sean "Puffy" Combs, who's a mentor and also gave me a shot when I was an independent artist in Atlanta. He came to my show, and he said, "I just want people to know about you."

It's hard for me to be serious. I can't really rub oil on me and go all the way with it [laughs]. I hear some screams and I laugh to myself. I always get a kick out of it. I'm three feet tall, basically.

I'm not a politician; I'm an artist. So I always feel the need to give the unfiltered truth, (or) what I think is the truth, at least.

I won't sit here and say I've never had a pimple, but I try to have a really great diet, you know, lots of vegetables and fish. And I think stress plays a huge part too.

Beauty is about enhancing what you have. Let yourself shine through.

I love the mystery behind things.

Android is a new form of the other, but you can parallel the other to so many different types of people. Even if you don't consider yourself to be the other, at one point in time I'm sure you felt like that.

I'm not focused on being perfect. I like trial and error. You learn through uncomfortable experiences. And now I know what doesn't work for me, and I know what does.

I want people to know about these visionary artists. I want people to know what they stand for and (that) they are representing something unique, something fresh. I am just so excited about their careers.

I'm a believer that the more I'm giving, the happier I am, and the more beautiful my exterior will be.

I hope women feel confident with themselves and realize that we don't all have to look alike or be the same size to be beautiful. I hope they feel like representing what it means to be an individual and to remain comfortable in your own skin.

I wanna scream and dream and throw a love parade / Is that okay?

I feel like Harriet Tubman, except I am trying to free people through underground music, to free themselves creatively and inspirationally.

Silence is our enemy, and sound is our weapon.

I take goldenseal, Echinacea and cod liver oil when flying to boost my immune system.

First, before I'm an artist, before I'm a celebrity, I'm a human being.

I always think about the next generation and creating a different blueprint for them. That's my goal: to let them know there's another way.

People in my family and camp who grew up listening to rap music love 'We Are Young.' I've heard it play at weddings. I've heard it in graduation parties. It's a big idea and big song.

I speak about androids because I think the android represents the new 'other.' You can compare it to being a lesbian or being a gay man or being a black woman ... What I want is for people who feel oppressed or feel like the 'other' to connect with the music and to feel like, 'She represents who I am.'

I love great music and if it doesn't move me I don't listen to it.

Children go with whatever makes them feel good - like if that's the color green or orange, they do that with their clothes. As I've grown older, everything reversed. My music, my personality - onstage those things became my colors.

You are only as beautiful as the many beautiful things you do for others without expectation.

I think if people genuinely want to help ... that'll shine through, no matter what color or what race. We cannot see race before compassion.

The colors black and white are my uniform, to honor the working class. People like my parents, who were janitors and had to wear a uniform every day. It keeps me grounded.

Redefine what it means to be sexy and what it means to be a woman. Showing my skin is not what makes me sexy. I like skirts and dresses just like everyone else, but I had a message I needed to put out there. It was up to me to show people and young girls there was another way.

I feel myself becoming the fearless person I have dreamt of being. Have I arrived? No. But I'm constantly evolving and challenging myself to be unafraid to make mistakes.

You had to change who you were to become famous. I thought that for a very long time. Even after signing a record deal, and then eventually getting my own recording company, Wonderland Records, I had to say no to a lot of opportunities to become well known. If it didn't align with my values and if it didn't support the image I had created for myself, I'd pass.

Lauryn Hill, P-Funk, Marvin Gaye, Public Enemy - I have a very diverse palate for music. I can go from Judy Garland to Jimi Hendrix to Stevie Wonder to Rachmaninoff. I just love great music.

People don't ask Jay-Z to take his shirt off when he rhymes.

Part of what my music represents is to stand up and be the voice of those who feel like they are not heard and want to be treated with respect regardless of race, color, orientation - android, cyborg, whatever.

I'm inspired by the words: 'electrifying', 'epic', 'minimalistic', 'transcendent', 'timeless' and 'rock n' roll.'

Embrace what makes you unique, even if it makes others uncomfortable.

I always carry my classic black-and-white tux and custom-made George Esquivel saddle shoes.

I'm always thinking about young people first when I'm writing music. Whenever I can reach that young person and inspire them to go after their own dreams, start their own movement just like I did with Wondaland. Starting their own tribe and showing people that we are not all the same, we're not all monolithic. I think that's what it's all about for me.

I believe it's time that women truly owned their superpowers and used their beauty and strength to change the world around them.

As a businesswoman you have to be open. I'm always open to listening and learning and considering. However, I don't look at business as anything other than a partnership. And in any partnership both parties need to leave the table happy.

I enjoy how women dressed in the 1920s with the shimmering jewels and rich feathers.

I'm attracted to things that scare me, like 'Psycho,' my favorite Hitchcock movie.

I believe it's time that women truly owned their superpowers and used their beauty and strength to change the world around them. Becoming a CoverGirl is truly and honor and a gift: it opens up a new platform for me to inspire women to feel stronger, braver and more beautiful inside and out.

When I got into the music industry, I wasn't focused on being the most famous artist or even getting a major record deal. It was just to make music on my own terms or create my own image, do my own hair, do my own makeup.

I was made to believe there's something wrong with me.

I'm always thinking about that young girl or young boy who doesn't quite know if their music, their messaging, their imaging, their voice is going to pop, if people are going to understand them. So I represent the other and those who feel like they don't even want to be normal. They embrace the things that make them unique.

I have not lost any of my crazy, fearless, raw, soulful, eclectic side and I plan on continuing to tell universal stories in an unforgettable way.

No matter if you wear a small amount of makeup, no makeup, or heavy makeup, as long as you feel beautiful internally and you're doing beautiful things for other people, and not just focusing on the exterior to make yourself happy, I think you should do what works for you. You should rock on.

I listen to Prince on my iPad. And I use a Chords & Scales app to warm up before performing.

I love Fun. They're great guys. They're incredible artists and musicians.

I believe that imagination inspires nations. It's something that I live by.

I know what I like; if you go to my closet, I have at least four of everything.

Embrace what makes you unique, even if it makes others uncomfortable. i didn't have to become perfect because I've learned throughout my journey that perfection is the enemy of greatness.

Everything is about balance. You can't work, work, work, work without any play.

Honestly, I don’t believe in menswear. I focus on what pieces are most timeless, transcendent, match my lifestyle, remain remarkable, and command intriguing attention across the room at an art gallery.

There are some groups that for years and years have not gotten the rights that the majority of human beings have, and I think that it's important to continue to draw these parallels so that when we think about our future we can change some of the lives of people who love differently than we do, look different than we do, who come from a different class. It's all about bringing awareness to how important it is to be accepting of people...and there will be oppression if one group thinks they're more important or superior.

It's a big universe. To stay in one tiny place is doing a disservice to yourself.

I will not be a slave to my image, nor will I be a slave to anyone else's interpretations of me.

Perfection is the often the enemy of greatness.

Things might not go as planned, but at the end of the day it’s up to me to take those risks and do what I love most. And I don’t owe anybody an explanation. My journey is my journey.

I don't do a lot of collaborations that I don't believe in. Actually, I don't do any collaborations that I don't believe in.

I always feel the need to give the unfiltered truth, (or) what I think is the truth, at least.

Don’t get high off praises, and don’t get too low on critiques.

I really just want to encourage and inspire people to use their freedom in a positive way and in a way that is inspiring to other people. I want to continue to pass down the seeds of change within the world. I think that it can start with just one person. Just like a rumor can get carried on, so can inspiration.

You cannot police me, so get off my areola

Author details

Janelle Monáe: Biography and Life Work

Janelle Monáe was a notable Singer. The story of Janelle Monáe began on December 1, 1985 in Kansas City, Kansas, U.S..

Janelle Monáe Robinson is an American singer, songwriter, rapper and actor. She has received ten Grammy Award nominations, and is the recipient of a Screen Actors Guild Award and a Children's and Family Emmy Award . Monáe has also been honored with the ASCAP Vanguard Award ; as well as the Rising Star Award (2015) and the Trailblazer of the Year Award (2018) from Billboard Women in Music .

Philosophical Views and Reflections

In late March 2015, Monáe released the single " Yoga " from the album The Eephus . The album debuted at number 22 of the Billboard 200 and at number 5 of the top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums with an equivalent album sales of 47,000 units.

In April 2022, she came out publicly as non-binary on the Red Table Talk saying, "I'm nonbinary, so I just don't see myself as a woman, solely ... I feel like god is so much bigger than the 'he' or the 'she.' And if I am from God, I am everything." In the interview, she also acknowledged having been in both monogamous and polyamorous relationships. Following the interview, a representative of Monáe said that she "continues to use she/her pronouns." In an interview with the Los Angeles Times , however, Monáe identified herself as non-binary and added that her "pronouns are free-ass motherfucker—and they/them , her/she ".

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Empery Quotes
Inspire · Reflect · Repeat