No time for wardrobe changes: Erykah Badu

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No time for wardrobe changes: Erykah Badu
Erykah Badu introduces R. Kelly at the 2015 Soul Train Awards at the Orleans Arena in Las Vegas.

Erykah Badu has her hands full with Soul Train, music.

By AP

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Published: Fri 27 Nov 2015, 11:00 PM

Last updated: Sat 28 Nov 2015, 10:01 AM

ERYKAH BADU IS answering a phone call: her new eyeglasses are ready, and the frames are available for pick-up when she has time. "I figured you'd probably been busy," the guy from the optical shop says.
He's right. Badu hosted the 2015 Soul Train Music Awards earlier this month in Las Vegas, and she's been doing press ahead of the show's premiere on BET and Centric. "I've had this on for about two months," Badu says of the outfit she's wearing - shiny black overalls, sky-high top hat and a chambray button-up with a wooden bowtie that reads "HELLO"). "It was the last thing I had on at Soul Train. (and) I haven't had a break since then."
She's also been sharing material from her upcoming mixtape, BUT YOU CAINT USE MY PHONE, titled after a famous line from her equally famous 1997 single, Tyrone. It released Friday.
In an interview backstage at The Tonight Show with Jimmy Fallon, 44-year-old Badu talks about the hosting gig, new music and platinum-selling rapper Drake, whose Hotline Bling single she remixed and released in October.
You hosted the Soul Train Music Awards in 1998. How was your experience this year?
It was really fun. And this time around they made me an associate producer, so I had an opportunity to write my material, which I think is really cool - to, you know, see my things crystallise - my words and my sense of humour, which is pretty unique and self-serving.
What made you say yes to the job?
I thought that, 'Hey, this is a great opportunity to expose myself to this naked place. This place that I had not been welcomed before.' I'm known for the singing, and stuff like that. No one knows that I direct all my videos and write all of the treatments. No one knows that I do all of my own artwork. No one knows that, you know, this is me. I pick my clothes out. No one knows any of those things. So I think that it's a good time to start exposing my art to the air.
What's up with the mixtape?
It's really, really, really, really awesome. I first did a remake of Drake's Hotline Bling because I thought it was an awesome song. I actually did it for Big Mike's birthday. Big Mike's my road manager, tour manager. That's his favourite song. as well as a lot of other people's, too. And it came out good. And I just stayed in that studio, in the bedroom, and I just kept writing songs, making songs, writing songs. And about 10 days later, I had this mixtape.
Are there any special guests?
Absolutely.
Can you tell us who?
I really cannot tell you. All 12 apostles. Matthew, Mark, Luke, John.
Everyone seems to love Drake - you included. Why do you think that is?
He's a brilliant genius. He's a genius. He's a talented actor. He's a brilliant comedian - comedic timing is perfection. He's a talented songwriter. He's a talented singer. He's an exquisite, extraordinary producer. He's a great person...He invited me to Canada to listen to (2011 album) Take Care, and you know, I went there and listened to the album. You know, (I'm) just really proud to see his evolution. He's one of the few artists I can say is really evolving each time he appears. And that's inspiring to me. And that's my challenge.
You do a lot of things - make music, write comedy, help deliver babies as a doula. How do you stay so 'unstuck'?
I don't know. I just, I guess I don't judge. You know, that helps you not be stuck. You know, people say hip-hop is dead, and they say soul music is dead and those kind of things, but it won't die if you allow it to evolve. If you allow its essence to grow inside of the young people - because they carry it. As they grow, I grow with them. AP


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