Muse Magazine

Friday, July 28, 2006

LIFE: Don't be mad

We know we're dead wrong for letting so much time go between posts. But it's not like we've been slacking. We've just been working really hard on the fresh, sexier and new website that will launch very soon. So stay tuned dears.

-Team Muse
info@musemag.net

Friday, July 21, 2006

SOUNDS: Profile



Le visionnaire

Pharrell Williams is conquering so many different subcultures, it's easy to forget he's a music man first


“I just pulled back the curtains too fast. I was being artistically minded and not following protocol,” says Pharrell Williams of his album “In My Mind,” which might be one of the most delayed albums in hip-hop/R&B history. “As a producer, there’s no rush on me for anything, but as an artist, you have to answer to your fans, so I put on my artist hat and finally got it done,” he adds over the phone from Los Angeles. Forget “the trucker” he made trendy — Williams wears so many hats now that it’s a wonder his debut solo release, originally due last December, will finally hit stores Tuesday.

From his new gig as the face of Louis Vuitton to his upcoming work with the rap group the Clipse, Williams seamlessly transitions from the hip-hop world to the cloistered subculture of the fashion elite and back again with more ease than any other “urban” artist. He’s even gained entrée into the world of British royals, with an upcoming collaboration in the works with Prince William.

“In fashion I’m getting great exposure and support,” says Williams, who Esquire magazine declared the best dressed man in the world. He has a cult-like influence over his fans and peers, who have often co-opted his look to the point of becoming an army of Mini Me’s. "Credit is not to be taken,” he says of the legions of men who have rocked foam baseball caps and A Bathing Ape sneakers because of him. “It has to be given. The truth of the matter is that I didn’t invent the trucker hat or Bape or anything else that someone would relate to me. I just saw them and liked them. But I couldn’t take credit for it.”

After years spent producing hits and singing catchy hooks for other artists as one-half of the Neptunes, his foray into solo-dom came about casually. “I don’t know if my aspirations are so clear. I never sat down and said I’m going to conquer the world. I just seized opportunities that presented themselves,” he explains. In this case, Williams’ manager, Rob Walker, encouraged him to record a solo album, which now features seven refreshingly left-of-center R&B songs and seven gritty hip-hop tracks.

“I was like, ‘If I do it it’s going to be incredibly quirky.’ This album is like a great art piece. It’s for people who are down with my movement, which is individuality,” says the 33-year-old who grew up playing drums in his high school marching band and skateboarding in Virginia Beach, Va. “I make records for everybody else that sells 5, 6, 10 million. But I don’t see myself as pop,” he says. “I’m a boutique artist in a lot of ways. I don’t have that kind of audience. My audience is 1.5 to 2 million, but we’re strong in our army. We wear the clothes we want to wear, we make the music we want to make, we listen to what we love. It’s just different.”

-Malcolm Venable
info@musemag.net

Saturday, July 01, 2006

PALETTE: Your skin can never have too much color

“Excuse me. But can black girls really tan?” A friendly blonde girl asked me before borrowing my suntan oil with SPF. Our respective group of friends had struck up a casual conversation while lying poolside in South Beach. I thought about all of the discussions I had with my white suite mates in college in which I fielded their questions and explained the complexities of black hair and why I sunbath to get that summer glow even though I’m already quite brown by nature. “Heck yeah,” I replied turning on my back to roast my front half. In fact, I totally recommend it (with proper protection and in small doses, of course).



Murad Essential-C Day Moisture
With SPF 15, this face cream not only protects your skin from the sun, it slows down aging, clears up hyperpigmentation and gives a major antioxidant boost.



Banana Boat Protective Tanning Oil SPF 15
Last year, I vacationed in Belize and started salivating over the golden brown skin tone that all of the women there seemed to have. This drugstore staple helped me replicate it.



The Body Shop Sheer Sun Gel
So you’ve left the beach and you’re trying to keep the luminosity factor at a premium. This translucent gel is lightweight and will help your skin retain that “I’ve been swimming all day” bronze glow.

LIFE: And then we started listening

It’s like that Chris Rock standup routine about the cultural climate in America, post 9-11:

"'I'm American, man! I'm American! F*ck all these f*ckin' foreigners!' …'I'm American, man! I'm American! F*ck the French!' That was cool. Then 'I'm American, man! I'm American! F*ck all these Arabs!' And that was cool. Then they went to: 'I'm American! I'm American! F*ck all these illegal aliens!' Then I started listening, because I know that niggas and Jews is next."

I couldn’t help but think of that routine when I got onto an elevator headed up to my office last week and saw a fluorescent orange bumper sticker produced by a white supremacist group called the National Alliance complaining about the debate over immigration and that “non-whites are stealing all of our jobs.” The sight was jarring, but given recent headlines, not surprising.
-Muse
info@musemag.net
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