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	<title>Clutch Magazine &#187; estelle</title>
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	<description>The Digital Magazine for the Young, Contemporary Woman of Color</description>
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		<title>Ready to Shine: Estelle</title>
		<link>http://clutchmagonline.com/lifeculture/feature/ready-to-shine-estelle/</link>
		<comments>http://clutchmagonline.com/lifeculture/feature/ready-to-shine-estelle/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Tue, 01 Jan 2008 04:11:39 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Sylvia Arthur</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Celebrities]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Feature]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[estelle]]></category>

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<p>UK-born rapper<strong> Estelle Swaray</strong> is living the life of a black Carrie Bradshaw. Having relocated to New York to pursue her art&#8230;</p>]]></description>
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<p>UK-born rapper<strong> Estelle Swaray</strong> is living the life of a black Carrie Bradshaw. Having relocated to New York to pursue her art (music), she&#8217;s also been able to indulge her passion—fashion. Just don&#8217;t call her the British Lauryn Hill. Already a star in her homeland, the 27-year-old daughter of Senegalese and Grenadian parents has drawn comparisons to the force that was L-Boogie because of her talent for switching effortlessly and credibly between harmonious singing and hard-core rapping. She isn&#8217;t likely to suffer a public meltdown though. Last year <em>Rolling Stone</em> dubbed her one to watch, and she&#8217;s all set to break the US having signed to her friend John Legend&#8217;s Homeschool label. And she&#8217;s certainly got powerful backing. Working with a battalion of the hottest producers in the game, including Kanye West, Will.i.am and Wyclef, the Londoner has every reason to shine on her new album. </p>
<p>Displaying a supreme confidence not to be confused with arrogance, Estelle is self-assured, streetwise and without airs and graces. Talking to her is like talking to your best girl friend. The self-confessed fashion-addict and round-the-way girl talks to<em> Clutch</em> about her strategy for success and how she plans to be herself in the music industry. </p>
<p><strong>Q: You&#8217;ve been called the British Lauryn Hill. How do you cope when everyone&#8217;s expectations are so high?</strong><br />
I let people deal with their own expectations. I don&#8217;t bother with that. I just do what I&#8217;ve got to do. For me, I just want to make great music that people want to listen to. If saying Lauryn Hill is going to get the message over, cool. Then I&#8217;m gonna play you my stuff and hope you like it. I&#8217;m not too bothered about it &#8217;cause if you wanna see Lauryn, go and see Lauryn. I&#8217;m not her.   </p>
<p><strong>Q: The British hip-hop sound is very different to the American one. Are you afraid that your music will be lost in translation?</strong><br />
People love it. Now they&#8217;re a little more open to our sound because of Amy Winehouse and Floetry, and back in the day we had British artists out here like Monie Love and Slick Rick. Everyone&#8217;s becoming a little less like ‘What?&#8217; and more like ‘Yeah! That&#8217;s fresh, that&#8217;s new&#8217; so it works better for me.  </p>
<p><strong>Q: Is it refreshing that you&#8217;re starting from zero in the US market, or is it frustrating that people think you&#8217;re new to the biz when you&#8217;re a veteran?</strong><br />
It&#8217;s refreshing because in England I can&#8217;t really go back and do a lot of things that I&#8217;d like to do because of the way my career is perceived, like doing the club circuit. People will be like, ‘Why are you doing the clubs? You&#8217;re a big star&#8217; and it diminishes your work. Whereas in the States it&#8217;s like I get a second chance at this so I can do it this way, let me try that.  </p>
<p><strong>Q: Does it bother you that people see you as more of a rapper than a singer? Will you be showcasing more of your singing on this record?</strong><br />
There&#8217;s a whole bunch of singing on the album, the same amount as on the first album—no one bought it though, so no one would know. I think people saw me as a rapper more because I started in the industry as a rapper. I always sung. I don&#8217;t really care about whether people think I&#8217;m a singer or a rapper because I&#8217;m just doing my thing and I&#8217;m not too bothered about what people generally believe about me. </p>
<p><strong>Q: So what can we expect from the album <em>Shine</em>?</strong><br />
It&#8217;s just my most honest piece of work to date. It&#8217;s great music and great lyrics. It&#8217;s inspiring. It&#8217;s going to keep getting better. Every song has a life situation attached to it. So all these guys that I&#8217;ve been going out with and dealing with that are crazy, they&#8217;re all in there. For instance, I&#8217;ve got a song called &#8220;More Than Friends,&#8221; which is about a guy I was dating, well, not dating but going out with, and he wasn&#8217;t quite sure whether I was his girlfriend or his f**k buddy. And I was like ‘Really? I feel like you&#8217;re my boyfriend, which one do you wanna be?&#8217; So I said, ‘You are not ready for me so peace out!&#8217; It was just that whole moment of empowering myself rather than just being a victim and crying, ‘Why won&#8217;t he date me anymore? Why won&#8217;t he claim me?&#8217; I just got sick of it.</p>
<p><strong>Q: Does he know that song is about him?</strong><br />
Yeah he does. And he&#8217;s a friend still, so it&#8217;s pretty fun.  </p>
<p><strong>Q: On the album you&#8217;ve worked with John Legend, Kanye West, Will.i.am, Wyclef and many others… that&#8217;s like, wow!</strong><br />
It wasn&#8217;t a time to be star struck, it was more a case of getting the job done. John is my friend so I never think about him like that. The rest of them I knew through people, and when we got in to the studio they were like, ‘What do you do again? Let me see what you do? Cool!&#8217;</p>
<p><strong>Q: When you met John five years ago did you ever think that five years later you&#8217;d be sitting in a studio recording with these people?</strong></p>
<p>No, not in this capacity but at the same time I&#8217;m not the kind of person who walks in to something without some kind of plan. They say if you don&#8217;t plan, you plan to fail.  </p>
<p><strong>Q: Why did you decide to call the album <em>Shine</em>?</strong><br />
There&#8217;s a song on the album called &#8220;Shine,&#8221; and it&#8217;s about saying that this is how I feel, this is my crazy, this is my year. The chorus goes, ‘This is my song / I&#8217;m just like you / I&#8217;ve got to fight to stay strong / Just &#8217;cause it glitters, don&#8217;t mean that it&#8217;s gold / But I&#8217;m a shine while my lights on.&#8217; That&#8217;s how I feel. It&#8217;s a hard struggle and when you listen to the album you&#8217;ll be like I&#8217;ve been through that too on almost every song. But while I&#8217;m here and while I have the time and when I get the opportunity I&#8217;m gonna have a great time with it. It&#8217;s me laid bare. </p>
<p><strong>Q: Where do you get that confidence from?</strong><br />
There are a lot of artists out here who are media trained, and I&#8217;m not that person. I speak my mind. And when people come to meet me or see me on stage, exactly how I&#8217;m speaking to you now is exactly how I speak to them. I feel like it&#8217;s easy to be yourself. It got to the point where people were trying to tell me I should do this and do that but I wasn&#8217;t really feeling it. Now I listen to people talk and I just use what I want to take from it. That&#8217;s my attitude.  </p>
<p><strong>Q: You&#8217;ve got a great sense of style. Where do you get your fashion ideas from?</strong><br />
I&#8217;m a fashion freak! I really have issues! I don&#8217;t quite know where to go shopping yet (in New York). Those that are obvious are not so good. Between just loving to shop and loving fashion, I like being ahead of the times and fresh. Every day is an outfit, every day is a look. The first two or three months I was in New York I was very <em>Sex and the City</em>, high-heels everywhere. People were like, ‘Do you style yourself?&#8217; and I was like, ‘Of course I do!&#8217; I was so happy. It was so funny. </p>
<p><strong>Q: Finally, you&#8217;re going out with your girls on a big night out. What three things do you take in your clutch?</strong><br />
My Blackberry, which is terrible because I shouldn&#8217;t be anti-social in a club, but I am; my lip gloss and some money, a bank card or some cash.</p>
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