|
Alicia Keys says comments to magazine
were ‘misrepresented’
NEW YORK—Alicia Keys says she’s not a conspiracy theorist. In a
statement issued Tuesday, Keys said she was clarifying “comments that
were made during my recent Blender magazine interview since they have
been misrepresented.” According to an interview in the magazine’s May
issue, the 27-year-old singer says: “`Gangsta rap’ was a ploy to
convince black people to kill each other. `Gangsta rap’ didn’t exist.”
She also is quoted as saying that she wears a gold AK-47 pendant around
her neck “to symbolize strength, power and killing ‘em dead.”
“We stand by our story,” Blender spokeswoman Kate Cafaro said on
Tuesday. “My comments about `gangsta rap’ were in no way trying to
suggest that the government is responsible for creating this genre of
rap music,” Keys said in a statement issued by J Records. “The point
that I was trying to make was that the term was oversloganized by some
of the media causing reactions that were not always positive. Many of
the `gangsta rap’ lyrics articulate the problems of the artists’
experiences and I think all of us, including our leaders, could be doing
more to address these problems including drugs, gang violence, crime,
and other related social issues.”
As for the AK-47 remark, Keys said Tuesday that AK-47 is a nickname
given to her by friends “as an acronym for Alicia Keys and a metaphor
for wowing people with my music and performances, `killing ‘em dead’ on
stage. The reference was in no way meant to have a literal, political or
negative connotation.” When attempted to reach Keys last week about the
Blender interview, her publicist, Theola Borden, said the singer was on
vacation and unavailable for comment. The multiplatinum star behind the
hits “Fallin’” and “No One” most recently had success with her latest
CD, “As I Am,” which has sold 3.4 million copies, according to Nielsen
Soundscan.—Agencies
|