Beyonce almost broke the Internet when her nearly naked pictures from GQ cover hit the web. Now we have full sizzling hot spread and the entire article naming her the hottest woman on the planet for the past 13 years! Details below...
Solange recalls how Beyoncé defended her when they were teens.
"I can't
tell you how many times in junior high school, how many boys and girls
can say Beyoncé came and threatened to put some hands on them if they
bothered me," Solange says with a laugh. Beyoncé says she harnessed that
same temper to bolster her nerve and fuel her work. "I used to like
when people made me mad," she says in the HBO documentary, remembering
her suburban Texas childhood, which was shaped (some would say cut
short) by her determination to be a star. "I'm like, 'Please piss me off
before the performance.' I used to use everything." As Jay-Z rapped of
Beyoncé at the beginning of her 2006 hit "Déjà Vu," "She about to steam.
Stand back."
On her collaborators: "I've been working with Pharrell and Timbaland and Justin Timberlake and
Dream. We all started in the '90s, when R&B was the
most important genre, and we all kind of want that back:
the feeling that music gave us."
On the album's influences: "Mostly R&B. I always have
my Prince and rock/soul influences. There's a bit of D'Angelo, some '60s doo-wop. And Aretha and Diana Ross."
On her inspirations: "Even the silliest little thing
that you hear on the radio, it comes from something deeper.
'Bootylicious' was funny, but it came from people saying that I had
gained
weight and me being like, 'I'm
a southern woman, and this
is how southern women are.' My motivation is always to express something
or to heal from something or to laugh
and rejoice about something."
"I now know that, yes, I am powerful," she says. "I'm more powerful than my mind can even digest and understand."
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