Stefani Joanne Angelina Germanotta (born March 28,
1986), better known by her stage name
Lady Gaga,
is an American singer, songwriter and performance artist.
After
being signed to and quickly dropped from Def Jam Records at age 19, she began
performing in the rock music scene of New
York City's Lower East
Side
. During this time, she was also working at
Interscope Records as a
songwriter for several established acts, including
Akon, who, after hearing Gaga sing, convinced
Interscope chairman
Jimmy Iovine to
sign her to a joint deal with the label and Akon's
Kon Live Distribution label.
Her debut album
The Fame, was
released in August 2008 and was a critical and commercial success.
In addition to receiving generally positive reviews, it has gone to
number one in four countries, also topping the
Billboard Top Electronic Albums
chart in the United States. The album's first two singles,
"
Just Dance" and "
Poker Face", have become
international number-one hits, and the former was nominated for
Best Dance
Recording at the
51st Grammy
Awards. In 2009, after having opened for
New Kids on the Block and the
Pussycat Dolls, Gaga embarked on her first
headlining tour,
The Fame Ball
Tour.
Gaga is inspired by
glam rockers such as
David Bowie and
Queen, as well as
pop
singers such as
Madonna and
Michael Jackson. She is also
inspired by fashion, which she has said is an essential component
to her songwriting and performances. To date she has sold over 20
million digital singles and more than four million albums
worldwide.
Biography
1986–2004: Early life and education
Born on
March 28, 1986 in New York
City
, New York, the eldest child of Joseph and Cynthia
(née Bissett) Germanotta, she is of Italian heritage.
At age 11,
she was set to join Juilliard School
in Manhattan
, but instead attended Convent of
the Sacred Heart
, a private Roman Catholic school. Playing
piano by ear from the age of 4, she went on to write her first
piano ballad at 13 and began performing at
open
mic nights by age 14. At age 17, she gained early admission to
the New York University's
Tisch
School of the Arts. There, she studied music and improved her
songwriting skills by composing essays and analytical papers
focusing on topics such as art, religion and socio-political order.
She later withdrew from the school to focus on her musical
career.
2005–2007: Career beginnings
Germanotta signed with
Def Jam
Records when she was 19, after record executive
L. A. Reid heard her singing down the hallway from his
office. However, she claims Reid never met with her, and after
three months, she was dropped from the label.
She moved out of her
parents' house and started performing downtown in the Lower East Side
club scene, with bands Mackin Pulsifer and
SGBand. Around the same time, she started taking drugs and
performing at
burlesque shows. Gaga said
her father, "just didn't understand it," and that he could not look
at her for several months.
Music
producer Rob Fusari, who helped Gaga
write some of her earlier songs, compared her vocal style to that
of
Freddie Mercury. He nicknamed her
Gaga, after the
Queen song "
Radio Ga Ga." She began to use it as her stage
name and was known thereafter as Lady Gaga.

Gaga performing at Bazzaar Urban Bar,
Atlanta, GA, 30 October 2008
Throughout 2007, Gaga collaborated with performance artist Lady
Starlight, who helped her create her onstage fashions.
The pair began playing
gigs at downtown club venues like the Mercury Lounge
, The Bitter
End
, and the Rockwood Music Hall, with their live
performance art piece known as "Lady Gaga and the Starlight
Revue". Billed as "The Ultimate Pop Burlesque Rockshow",
their act was a low-fi tribute to 1970s variety acts. In August
2007, Gaga and Starlight were invited to play at the American
music festival Lollapalooza. The show was critically
acclaimed, and their performance received highly positive reviews.
Having initially focused on
avant-garde,
and
electronic dance music,
Gaga found her musical niche when she began to incorporate
pop melodies and the vintage
glam rock of
David
Bowie and
Queen into the mix.
During this time, she began writing for artists signed to
Akon's
Konvict label, as
well as
Fergie, the
Pussycat Dolls,
Britney Spears, and
New Kids on the Block. After hearing
her sing a reference vocal for one of his tracks, Akon formed the
opinion that she was also a good singer. He ultimately convinced
Interscope Records chairman Jimmy
Iovine to sign her to a joint deal with his own label,
Kon Live Distribution, and would later
call Gaga his "franchise player." Through her affiliation with
Akon, Gaga started to work on her own new material for her debut
album with producer
RedOne. Already having a
solid selection of electro-glam,
David
Bowie-esque, and
Queen-inspired
songs, Gaga wanted to mix her retro dance beats with urban
melodies, a pop chorus and still retain a
rock and roll edge. The first song they
produced together was "Boys Boys Boys", a
mash-up of
Mötley Crüe's "
Girls, Girls, Girls" and
AC/DC's "
T.N.T."
2008–present: The Fame and The Fame
Monster
By 2008, Gaga had relocated to Los Angeles, working closely with
her record label to finalize her debut album
The Fame. Gaga said that she combined a lot of
different genres on the album, "from
Def
Leppard drums and handclaps to
metal drums on
urban tracks." She began to work with a
collective called the Haus of Gaga, who collaborate with Gaga on
her clothing, stage sets, and sounds.
The Fame received
mostly positive reviews from critics; according to the music review
aggregation of
Metacritic, it has
received an average score of 71/100.
Times
Online described the album as "a fantastic mix of
Bowie-esque ballads, dramatic, Queen-inspired
midtempo numbers and synth-based dance tracks that poke fun at
celebrity-chasing rich kids."
The Fame peaked at number
one in Austria, the United Kingdom, Canada, and Ireland, and at
number four in Australia and the United States; worldwide sales as
of July 2009 stand at 3 million copies. The album's lead single,
"
Just Dance," was released on April 8,
2008, and has topped the charts in six countries - Australia,
Canada, the Netherlands, Ireland, the United Kingdom, and the
United States. It received a Grammy nomination for the
Best Dance Recording,
but lost to
Daft Punk's "
Harder, Better, Faster,
Stronger." The second single, "
Poker Face", was released on
September 23, 2008, and has reached number one in nearly twenty
countries, including almost all major music markets in the world.
"Poker Face" became Gaga's second consecutive number one on the
Billboard Hot 100 in
April 2009.
Afterward, the Haus of Gaga turned its focus further upon the
American market with Gaga going on her first ever concert tour with
fellow
Interscope pop group, the
reformed
New Kids on the
Block. Gaga started her stint with them in Los Angeles on
October 8, 2008, and continued through the end of November. She
appeared as a guest artist on the song "Big Girl Now" from their
new album,
The Block.
Gaga's first headlining North American tour,
The Fame Ball Tour, began on March 12,
2009, and has received critical acclaim. Gaga opened for the
Pussycat Dolls on the U.K leg of
their
World Domination Tour
and Australia in May. Her performance there was well-received, with
a reviewer claiming that she upstaged the Dolls. Around the same
time, the music video for her international third single, "
LoveGame," was banned by the Australian channel
Network Ten, who refused to play the
video reasoning that it contained sexually explicit imagery.
Gaga appeared semi-nude, wearing only plastic bubbles, on the cover
of the annual 'Hot 100' issue of
Rolling Stone in May 2009. In the issue
she discussed that while she was making her beginnings in the New
York club scene, Gaga was romantically involved with a
heavy metal drummer. Gaga described their
relationship and break-up, saying of it, "I was his Sandy, and he
was my Danny [of
Grease], and
I just broke." He later became an inspiration behind some of the
songs on her debut album
The Fame. Gaga also stated that
she is bisexual and is inspired by beautiful women, which she says
makes her boyfriends "uncomfortable." She later regretted
disclosing her orientation, saying, "I don't like to be seen as
somebody who is using the gay community to look edgy. I'm a free
sexual woman and I like what I like. I don't want people to write
that about me because I feel like it looks like I'm saying it
because I'm trying to be edgy or underground." She had previously
told a crowd at one of her concerts that her song "
Poker Face" lyrically discusses
fantasizing about a woman while being in bed with a man. Gaga
appeared on rapper
Wale's single
"
Chillin."
Gaga was nominated for a total of nine awards at the
2009 MTV Video Music Awards
including
Video of the
Year,
Best
New Artist,
Best Female
Video and
Best Pop Video for
"
Poker Face" and
Best
Direction,
Best Editing,
Best
Special Effects,
Best
Cinematography and
Best Art
Direction for "
Paparazzi. Gaga managed to win
the award for "Best New Artist" while her single "Paparazzi" won
two awards for "Best Art Direction" and "Best Special Effects." In
October, Gaga received
Billboard magazine's Rising Star of
2009 award. Later she appeared on
Saturday Night Live, in a comic
skit with
Madonna and
performing a part of her upcoming single "
Bad Romance", from her forthcoming
studio album titled
The Fame Monster. Gaga attended the
Human Rights Campaign's
"National Dinner" on October 10th, 2009, before marching in the
National Equality March in
Washington, D.C. "In the music industry there's still a tremendous
amount of accommodation of
homophobia.
[...] So I'm taking a stand," she commented. She then started to
perform a rendition of John Lennon's "
Imagine" while changing some lyrics to
reference
Matthew Shepard's 1998
murder, the college student's death which has been a rallying cry
for the gay rights movement. "I'm not going to play one of my songs
tonight, because tonight is not about me," Gaga said before she sat
in front of a grand piano to sing and play, "It's about you." In
November 2009 Gaga announced the release of
The Fame Monster, a collection of
eight songs that dealt with the darker side of fame as experienced
by Gaga over the course of 2008–2009 while travelling around the
world, and are expressed through a
monster
metaphor. "
Bad Romance" was released as
the first single from the album. It topped the Canadian and Swedish
charts while reaching the top ten in the United States, Australia,
United Kingdom, Ireland. Gaga also announced
The Monster Ball Tour associated with
the release.
Musical style and influences
Lady Gaga has been primarily influenced by pop singers
Michael Jackson and
Madonna, as well as
glam rock stars such as
David Bowie and the band
Queen. The Queen song "Radio Ga Ga" inspired
her stage name. Artist
Andy Warhol, poet
Rainer Maria Rilke, fashion
icon/actress/singer
Grace Jones, and
fashion as a whole, have all been cited as inspirations as well.
Gaga's vocals have drawn frequent comparison to Madonna and
Gwen Stefani, while the structure of
her music is said to be reminiscent of classic 1980s pop and 1990s
Europop. In reviewing her debut album
The Fame,
The Sunday
Times asserted "in combining music, fashion, art and
technology, Lady [Gaga] evokes Madonna, Gwen Stefani circa
Hollaback Girl, Kylie [Minogue] 2001 or Grace
Jones right now." Similarly,
The
Boston Globe critic Sarah Rodman commented that Gaga draws
"obvious inspirations from Madonna to Gwen Stefani... in [her]
girlish but sturdy pipes and bubbly beats." Madonna herself had
once commented to
Rolling Stone that she sees "[her]self
in Lady Gaga." The entertainer explained, "[w]hen I saw her, she
didn’t have a lot of money for her production. She’s got holes in
her fishnets, and there’s mistakes everywhere [...] it was kind of
a mess, but I can see that she has that
it Factor. It’s
nice to see that at a raw stage." Baby A. Gil of
The Philippine Star asserted that
Gaga's voice is "just right for the mix of dance and rock that she
does." As an artist, Alexis Petridis of
The Boston Globe
commented that although Gaga lacks originality, "pop music doesn't
have to be blindingly original or clever to work: it needs tunes,
and Lady [Gaga] is fantastically good at tunes." Though Gaga's
lyrics are said to lack intellectual stimulation, "[she] does
manage to get you moving and grooving at an almost effortless
pace."

Gaga has stated that she is "very into fashion" and that it is
"everything" to her. Her love of fashion came from her mother, who
she stated was "always very well kept and beautiful." She claims
that: "When I'm writing music, I'm thinking about the clothes I
want to wear on stage. It's all about everything
altogether—performance art, pop performance art, fashion. For me,
it's everything coming together and being a real story that will
bring back the super-fan. I want to bring that back. I want the
imagery to be so strong that fans will want to eat and taste and
lick every part of us." She has her own creative production team
called the Haus of Gaga, which she handles personally. The team
creates many of her clothes, stage props, and hairdos. Gaga has six
known tattoos, among them a
peace
symbol which was inspired by the late
John Lennon who
The
Guardian stated was Gaga's "hero," and a curling German
script on her left arm which quotes the poet
Rainer Maria Rilke:
Gaga described Rilke as her "favorite
philosopher," commenting that his "philosophy of
solitude" spoke to her. In response to Gaga saying that she
considers
Donatella Versace her
muse, Melissa Magsaysay of
Los Angeles Times commented,
"[Gaga's] aversion to wearing a top and bottom at the same time
[...] swigging champagne and being fanned by oily men in
Speedos [is] very Donatella-esque." Toward the
end of 2008, comparisons were made between the fashions of Gaga and
recording artist
Christina
Aguilera, noting similarities in their styling, hair, and
make-up. Aguilera later claimed she was "completely unaware of
[Gaga]" and "didn't know if it [was] a man or a woman." Afterward,
Gaga released a statement in which she welcomed the comparisons due
to the attention providing useful publicity. Gaga said, "She's such
a huge star and if anything I should send her flowers, because a
lot of people in America didn't know who I was until that whole
thing happened. It really put me on the map in a way." Gaga is a
natural
brunette, but her hair is bleached
blonde because she was often mistaken for fellow musician
Amy Winehouse.
Gaga attributes much of her early success as a mainstream artist to
her gay fans and is considered to be a rising
gay icon. She claimed difficulty in the early
stages of her career in getting her songs to receive radio airplay
and stated, "The turning point for me was the gay community. I've
got so many gay fans and they're so loyal to me and they really
lifted me up. They'll always stand by me and I'll always stand by
them. It's not an easy thing to create a fanbase."
Gaga thanked FlyLife,
a Manhattan
-based LGBT marketing company
with whom her label Interscope
works, in the liner notes of her debut studio album, The Fame, saying, "I love you so much.
You were the first heartbeat in this project, and your support and
brilliance means the world to me. I will always fight for the gay
community hand in hand with this incredible team."
After
The Fame came out, she revealed that the song "Poker
Face" was about her bisexuality. In an interview with
Rolling Stone, she spoke about how her
boyfriends tended to react to her bisexuality, saying "The fact
that I’m into women, they’re all intimidated by it. It makes them
uncomfortable. They’re like, 'I don’t need to have a threesome. I’m
happy with just you'." One of Gaga's first televised performances
was in May 2008 at the
NewNowNext
Awards, an awards show aired by the LGBT television network
Logo, where she sang her song
"
Just Dance." In June of the same year,
she performed the song again at the
San Francisco Pride event.
When she appeared as a guest on
The Ellen DeGeneres Show in
May 2009, Gaga praised
DeGeneres for
being "an inspiration for women and for the gay community," and
while accepting the Best New Artist trophy at the
2009 MTV Video Music Awards, she
dedicated the award to "God and the gays."
She proclaimed that
the October 11, 2009 National
Equality March rally on the national mall
was "the single most important event of her
career." As she exited, she left with an exultant "Bless God
and bless the gays" similar to her
MTV Video Music Awards speech a month
earlier.
Discography
Awards and nominations
References
External links